From Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Southern Arkansas, Vol II, pg 1074
Anthony H. Davies was born at Derby, Conn., April 28, 1798. When quite young he came South, and
first located at Nashville, Tenn., where he found employment as book-keeper with a firm by the name
of Flowers & Co.; after having served, faithfully in that capacity for several years, he moved to
Columbia, Ark., where he engaged in merchandising for some time, gaining the confidence and esteem
of all whom he came in contact with. Finding the business too close and confining, he sold out, and
while on a visit to Taseumbia, Ala., he fell in love with and married a Miss Aldridge, by whom he
had four children. After having spent five or six years in Alabama, he returned to Arkansas and
purchased a plantation on Lake Chicot, which he named Lake Hall plantation. While on a visit to
Louisville, Ky., Mrs. Davies was taken sick and died July 19, 1839. Three years later, on
February 12, 1844, he married a Miss Mildred P. Gaines, of Boone County, Ky., who at the time was
visiting her brother, B. M. Gaines, at Natchez, Miss. Immediately after the marriage, Mr. Davies
returned to Lake Hall, where he lived some twenty odd years, a useful and honorable life, and on
September 10, 1862, died of flux. He was for many years judge of the county court, over which office
he wielded the sword of justice with an unerring hand and a clear conscience. He was a man of many
line traits of character and undoubted integrity, and, like Abou Ben Adhem was one who loved his
fellow-men. He was also a loving husband and a good and kind father. At his death Chicot County
lost one of her most worthy and foremost citizens. By his second marriage he had eight children:
Pollard, Harpin, Fannie Walker, Fredrick Walter, Anthony Legrand and Abner Gaines (twins), Robert
Geddes, Minnie Pollard and Joseph.