Lebanon, Ohio native
Cyrus Ball (1804–1893) was the youngest of a family of six children — four boys and two girls. He worked on his family farm and, while still quite young, began teaching at a
country school. In 1825, Ball left the farm to begin studying law. He was admitted to the Ohio bar the following year, when he also moved west with his cousin, Justice Harlan. In the spring of 1827, he moved to Lafayette, Indiana, with merchandise stock purchased in
Baltimore, Maryland, and he and one of his brothers started a general store. Eighteen months later, he had become the sole owner of the business. In 1828, Ball was admitted to the bar in Indiana, and the following year he was elected
Justice of the Peace, as which he served for five years. He formed a dry goods business with James Hill and Peter S. Jennings. Hill died in 1837, at which point the firm became Ball & Jennings. Ball eventually sold the business to Jennings, and with the capital bought the property at the northwest corner of Third and Main Streets in Lafayette for $150. Ball married Cornelia Smith, who died within three years of their wedlock. They had two children together (Cornelia and Margaret), but both died in infancy. He remarried in 1838, to Rebecca Gordon (1816–1900), of Philadelphia, with whom he had five children. The
Wabash and Erie Canal made Ball collector of tolls in 1840, and the following year he was appointed cashier at the Lafayette branch of the
Bank of Indiana. Ball was elected one of the three associate Judges for the district in 1840. He became the president of Lafayette Artificial Gas Company upon its formation, holding a large amount of stock in the company. With
Albert S. White, Ball became a key factor in the construction of the
railroad to Indianapolis, which became part of the
Big Four system. Upon retiring, Ball built a residence on South Ninth Street (where
William Lloyd Garrison was once a guest), where he lived until his death in 1893, aged 89. He is buried in Lafayette's Greenbush Cemetery, where both of his spouses are interred, as are all but one of his known children (Cyrus Gordon Ball is buried in Spring Vale Cemetery, two miles to the northeast). ==References==