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Pleasant Tackett : ウィキペディア英語版
Pleasant Tackitt

Pleasant Tackitt (or Tackett) (April 22, 1803 – February 7, 1886) (sometimes rendered as James Pleasant, but there is no official document to support this name) was a 19th-century politician, pioneer Methodist minister, stockman, teacher, farmer, Indian fighter and Confederate Officer. Tackitt was a key figure in the history of Arkansas and north Texas, including a state representative of the Arkansas General Assembly. Because of his battles with Indians in Texas, Tackitt became known as "The Fighting Parson."
==Early life==
Tackitt was born in Henry County, Kentucky to Virginia-born Langston Lewis Tackitt and Mary Elizabeth Bashum and was one of seven children. The Missouri Methodist Conference assigned Pleasant as missionary to the Western Cherokees in Arkansas in 1829. He was a circuit rider for two years and then assigned to mission schools. He married August 20, 1830 in Pope County, Arkansas, Kezia Frances Bruton. He served one term in the Arkansas General Assembly before joining a Texas-bound caravan in the autumn of 1853.

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