Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, & Kniffin, 6th ed., 1887, Henry Co. DR. JOSEPH T. BRIGHT was born June 6, 1842, in Louisville, Ky. His father, Dr. John W. Bright, a native of Virginia was brought to Kentucky by his parents when but two years old, who settled at North Elkhorn near Lexington, and lived there a short time, moving thence to Eminence, Shelby [sic] County. Having studied medicine John W., in 1820, began to practice in New Castle, and followed his profession until his death. In 1835 he moved to Louisville, and thence, after twenty-three years, to Lexington, where he died in July, 1879. He was one of the ablest physicians in the State, and the author of the "Mother's Medical Guide," which was very popular throughout the South. This work he afterward revised and issued under the name of "Bright's Family Practice." In 1852 he wrote and published a popular work on theology, called "Bright's Essay," which he revised in 1876 and re-published as the "Philosophy of Christianity." His next work written, but unpublished, was the "Philosophy of all Nations." He was a self-made man, having mastered Greek, Latin and French. He was a graduate of Transylvania University, was of English descent, a relative of Jesse D. Bright, the statesman, and comes of the same family as John Bright, the English statesman. He was the oldest practicing physician in Kentucky at the time of his death. He was a mineralogist, and at one time purchased the "Black marble land" of 2,000 acres in Arkansas, which is now in possession of his son, William Bright, cashier of the National Exchange Bank of Lexington. Dr. Bright's wife was Charlotte M. Raddie, who was born in 1802 in New York. She is also of English lineage, being a direct descendant of Lord Butler, Duke of Ormonde. She has had several relatives of distinction in the naval and other departments of the Government. She is now eighty-five years of age, and a resident of Lexington. Our subject, Joseph T., the third of six children, was reared in Louisville, and educated in Lexington and Millersburg. He began the study of medicine, but before completing the course, entered, in 1862, the Twenty-first Kentucky Infantry, Federal Army; was detailed from the ranks as hospital steward, and was honorably discharged in 1863. In 1864-65 he attended lectures at Ann Arbor, Mich., and in the latter year graduated from the University of Pennsylvania. In the fall of 1866 he located at Moorefield, Nicholas Co., Ky., where he lived two years, moving thence to Bourbon County, and returning in 1872 to Moorefield, where he remained two years. He next moved to Pleasant Hill, Mo., where he remained four years, but ill health caused him to move again, and this time he located in East Union, Nicholas County, where he lived five years. He then settled in New Castle, where he has since enjoyed a large practice. Since 1867 he has been a member of the Christian Church; is an Odd Fellow and Royal Arch Mason. In 1866 he married Miss Mary F. Berry, daughter of Milford Berry, one of the oldest citizens of Nicholas County. To Dr. and Mrs. Bright ten children were born: Louise, William Bell, John M. (deceased), James O. (deceased), Lizzie (deceased), Mary M., Lewis Moyer, Sanford, Cleora (deceased) and Mattie Gray. Bright Raddie Berry = Louisville-Jefferson-KY Lexington-Fayette-KY Nicholas-KY Bourbon-KY MO PA NY AR http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/henry/bright.jt.txt