HomeMy WebLinkAboutFall 19894enealojical 2
CONTENTS
Page
Wheelock - by Mrs. Lewis Perkins
123
Editorial
125
President's Message
125
Bryan City Cemetery Records Ccont'd7
126
Courtesy of Mary Cooper
Queries
136
Book Review — RAINBOLT
136
Washington County Marriages — Female
137
Courtesy of Mrs. M.S. Rubenstein
Microfilm at A & M Library — Bill Page
142
'Family Stuff' — ,Janis Hunt Ccont'd7
145
Pedigree Charts
149
Jane Courtney Portzer
More 'Family Stuff',cont'd from p.148 157
Index of Surnames 158
Dues Reminder and Membership Facing inside
Application Blank back cover
Volume X Number 4
Fall 1989
Bryan-College Station, Texas
THE BRAZOS GENEALOGICAL ADVERTISER
P.O. Box 5493 Bryan, TX 77805
OFFICERS 1989
PRESIDENT ..........DONALD F. SIMONS
VICE PRESIDENT ......VICTORIA SIMONS
SECRETARY ..............L. A. MADDOX
TREASURER .............HARRY PORTZER
LIBRARIAN .........DORIS FRANCESCHINI
EDITOR -IN -CHIEF .........To be named
PAST PRESIDENT .........L. A. MADDOX
The Advertiser is available for ex-
change with other organizations who
have publications to offer. Send in-
quiries or samples to P. 0. Box 5493,
Bryan, T.( 77805.
SOLICITATIONS
ADVERTISER STAFF
ED. PRO i ',YPORE ....... HARRY PORTL ER
LOCAL HISTORY .......NAOMI McCORMICK
STAFF EDITOR ...........CARL LANDISS
CE'•IETERIES ...............DON SIMONS
INDEXING .........NADINE BILLINGSLEY
Meetings are on the third Monday of
each month: 7:00 P.M., - 9:00 P.M.
in the Bryan Public Library. Members
are encouraged to arrive a bit early
to socialize and to transact any of
their individual business. We must
be out of the Library by 9:00; thus
there is often vent little time for
anything after the meeting.
MEMBERSHIP AND DUES
Membership is based on the calendar
,rear, and we hope to bring this one
to a magnificent ending! Your 1989
dues must be paid before you can get
any more numbers of the ADVERTISER;
if not paid soon enough there'll be
none waiting for you November 20!
(See the tear sheet opposite inside)
(back cover for 1990 dues details.)
You may mail your dues check either
to us at the above address, or else
to our treasurer, H. J. Portzer, at
2501 Sumter Dr., College Station TX,
77845. (Note Zip code change!)
Vol. :(, No. 4, Fall, 1989
We solicit queries, family pedigrees,
copies of family Bible records, stor-
ies and articles with Brazos. Valley
ties. Family charts should be 8 1:'
x 11, should fit a std. 3 -ring binder
and should contain no text outside of
our specified margins of 1" top, 3/4"
bottom, 1 1/4" at side to be bound:
this could turn out to be either left
or right: and 3/4" at unbound side.
EDITORIAL POLIC`f
Neither the Brazos Genealogical Asso-
ciation nor the staff of the ADVERTI-
SER will be responsible for error of
fact or opinion expressed herein. Ev-
ery effort is made to publish inform-
ation from only reliable sources. The
editorial staff reserves the right to
accept suitable material with editing
privilege on a space - available basis.
Members of the Association are encou-
raged to submit articles of interest
concerning the Brazos Valley. Items
pertaining to deeds, Bible records,
schools, churches, cemeteries, and
other groups or organizations are de-
sired. Research on material before
the turn of the century is especially
we 1 come .
PUBLICATION SCHEDULE
Published quarterly: Winter, Spring,
Summer and Fall issues, in sequence.
The dues cover the cost. Non - members
are charged $4.00 per issue.
2 Ver i
Brazos eea o ica ser
t
Volume `( Number 4 Bryan/College Station
Fall 1989 Texas
WHEELOCK - ROBERTSON COUNTY SEAT FROM 1850 - 1856
Mrs. Lewis Perkins
Wheelock was founded by Eleazer Louis Ripley WHEELOCK; he was born in
New Hampshire and graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point at
the age of nineteen. He married Mary PRICKETT in 1314, and was a business
man in Illinois in 1820. In 1823, after reading about Stephen F. Austin's
colony, he rode horseback to Texas. He met Sterling C. Robertson at San
Felipe, then returned to Illinois in 132' to move his family to Texas. In
the spring of 1834 he secured fifteen leagues of land from Sterling Robert-
son, and called this prairie "Wheelock ".
In 1834 James and Isabella DUNN, Irish settlers at Staggers Point,
joined the Wheelocks on the south side of Wheelock village, calling their
home "The Groves ". The CANFIELD family, and others, came also. A block-
house was built, which later was used as the general land office and as the
Court of the Alcalde under Mexican rule. The community they built was more
desirable for homes than was the (then) county seat town, Old Franklin, to
the north. By 1845 Wheelock was the best known town in central Texas. It
was on the main stage and mail routes; ox- wagons passed over its streets and
great herds of cattle were driven from the town to distant markets. Homes,
churches and taverns were built. The main avenue of the town was named
"State Street ", in hopes Wheelock would become the capital of Texas. By
1841 the town had twenty business establishments. Henry KELLOGG had a gene-
ral store in 1841; there were the land and freight offices, a race track,
cock - fighting pits, the Stage Coach Inn, a doctor's office, the Irish Church
and also the First Presbyterian Church, built by Isabella CANFIELD DUNN in
1835.
Dr. John CAMERON from Scotland was one of the more famous doctors; Dr.
COLLARD, Dr. Belvedore BROOKS and Dr. .Jade HEDRICK were others.
The Wheelock Cemetery is one of the oldest and most beautiful in the
County of Robertson, the Platt given by George DUNN. The Irish built the
Old Irish Church on Red Top Prairie; some of the ministers were Isaac
ADDISON, Robert CRAWFORD. W. E. PENN, George and Joseph SNEED, R. E. B.
BA`(LOR, Rufus BURLESON, D. W. GARDNER, Robert ALEXANDER, G. B. CORNFIELD,
and B. H. CARROL.
The town became the county seat of Robertson County in 1850. The first
term of court was held under the open sky on October 11, 1850. Oaths of of-
fice were administered by T. J. WINKLER, the new County Clerk, and Samuel
Blackburn KILLOUGH, who would soon become the Chief Justice, introduced the
following officials: Adam STREET, Sheriff; W. H. WHEELOCK, Deputy Sheriff;
Cavitt ARMSTRONG and J. F. McGREW, Commissioners; Harrison OWEN, who was re-
tiring from public life. At first, county records were kept in temporary
buildings, until the courthouse could be built. A. L. BRIGANCE was awarded
the contract for the construction of a two -story a,vooden building_ 1,aith out -
side stairways, and it was built in 1853.
123
124
Some of the families who lived there in the early days were the WHEEL -
OCKS, George and Nancy KILLOUGH DUNN, Felix ROBERTSON who married Mary DUNN.
Later, after his death, she married David LOVE. Also among these early
settlers were Joseph CAVITT and wife Catherine Ann DUNN, M. C. ARMSTRONG,
T. A. SIMMS, MITCHELL's, CURRY('s, John YOUNG and wife Mary Ann DOUGLAS (my
ancestors), and many more.
In 1850, the first commissioners elected from precincts within the
county were: Granville ARNETT, Thomas R. WEBB, C. W. BRATTON and Clark COBB.
The following persons were to work on the road: Mrs. Ann ARMSTRONG's hands,
Valne,y CAVITT and his hands, T. L. WINKLER, S. B. KILLOUGH, J. C. BROOKS,
C. C. HEARNE, James 'YOUNG, Henry SHEETS, Early BROWN and all persons resid-
ing at the BROWN home, John. ARNETT, William CHEEK, J. H. KILLOUGH and his
hands, and all other persons living at Wheelock.
The Court met for the last time at Wheelock on August 19, 1856. The
Chief Justice ordered that the county records be moved to Owensville, a new
community fifteen miles away. The jail held three prisoners, so the sheriff,
William WHEELOCK, ordered that they remain until a new jail could be built
at Owensville.
The Gillespie Lodge, A.F. & A.M. No. 55, Wheelock, was run by Worship -
full Master Byrum WICKSON; some of the officers were Joshua SEALE, Thomas
ROGERS, Albert PERRY, Claiborne VARNER, Harvey MITCHELL, W. C. CASE, G. H.
LOVE, John REYNOLDS, John LLOYD, B. W. COBLE and John CASE`.
125
PRESIDENT'S
MESSAGE
EDITORIAL__�_________�_r�
As our President asks, do come
IMMEDIATE REPLY NEEDED: SEARCH forward, someone, and take on
FOR NEW EDITOR OF THE ADVERTISER, th is Job! Time grows short in-
AND FOR TALENTED INDIVIDUALS TO deed. That big New `(ear's Day
WORK ON THE ADVERTISER. of 1990 draws close!
Harry Portzer, our editor, has given of his
time and effort to make the Advertiser the
outstanding publication that it is and we need
to have another assume this position. It
requires time, patience and talent, which a
number of our members possess. It is time
for you to step forward and help keep our
Advertiser at this high level of acceptance.
As genealogist, we need to continue our quest
on a daily (or at least a weekly) basis in order
to keep current on the earlier family members.
One is never closer to the solution of the
"missing" member of the family than you are
today. You know more about your family now
than your descendants (remember our
constant lament, "If only I had asked Mother
or Dad, or Grandmother ") If you don't ask the
questions now, how long will it take another
member of the family to become as interested
as you are in your family? Do you have some
assurance that they can take your records and
find the family lines as well as you? Have you
been writing down 'those possible connections
that might lead to the right ancestor or locale?
Or like so many of us, do you leave it in your
mind to work on later and then realize that
you can't remember the logic or name and
that possibility is lost to the next person trying
to locate this relative. For your sake, please
write it down and save the time.
Please try to attend our meetings on the third
Monday night of each month and share your
experiences with others.
Our roster for January of 1990
has now been prepared, starting
from scratch with only those of
our members who are paid up for
1989. Keep in mind that you can
save $2.00 by paying 1990 dues
before the end of this year, if
you wish the four issues mailed
to you.. To be fully informed,
read the "tear -out" page oppo-
site the inside back cover for
complete details about our 1990
dues policy.
We have not heard many comments
about the AMERICAN ROOTS puzzle
as yet. How many members were
able to solve it?
More "Family Stuff" appears in
this issue, but there are still
thirteen pages left for 1990.
Your new Editor will need lots
of QUERIES, and other contribu-
tions, to get him or her off to
a flying start. Get these in to
the new staff by early January.
And again thanks to Mary Cooper
for Bryan City Cemetery data in
this issue. She has very kind-
ly promised to contribute more
Census and Cemetery pages next
year, as well.
Donald F. Simons H. J. Portzer, Ed. gro tempore
126
Bryan City Cemetery Book No. 5
2
old age
59
3
Pages 3
DATE OF DEATH NANZ
AGE
44
LOT BLOCK
REMARKS
Manth Day
Year
killed by cow
45
2
Poisined
Page 34
(Contd)
Nov 12
1906 Yrs. H. C. ROBINSON Texas
°'
69
4
Heart failure
it 24
°' G. S. MOORING Ala
90
3
Heart failure
Dec 14
Phs-s. F. A. LEIGH Ala
52
yrs
34
19
°` Jno SHAW Tenn
58
1 A
16
2
General healh
it 28
M. PARKER Tenn
66
8
2
Aplexisony
Jan 4
1907 Mxs. Ylinie DAWSON Ill
38
"
22 4
3
Gastretius
Feb 18
" I. H. NZVTON Tenn
50
°'
43
1
Phneumonia
Apr 16
" N. B. COLE Ala
59
°'
47
4
"
1° 17
" Hiss Yary ALLEN Tex
14
'°
55 x1 2
4
Yinegetis
" 22
" Inft Yx & Yxs .
1
525E4
1
Cholra Infantiun
W. W. ERWIN Tex
25 '° Inft Mr & Pars . 40 dys 475W4 3
Tony SAUSOGE( ?) Tex
31 " Nr. Linn BANKS Va 45 yrs
[in pencil: Pottersfield]
May 26 `° Mr. B. F. LEMON Ala 73
'° 28 "' P Raymon FRE ICHE La "
it 30 " lb: C. A. IZ^1IS Tex 34 „
July 12 " Boby BROUN Tex 1 It
°° 19 °° J. P. WILSON Tex 41
" 19 °' Sidnie E. RHODES Tex 30 „
to 24 " iyr. GERKE German 12 "
[in pencil: son
Page 35
Sept 7 1907 Inft . DIx & Mrs
Joe GRELAND Tex
22 " Pox. A. GRELEN Ala
Oct 22 " Wm. CIRENGHAN Ohio
Nov 15 " Inft W.T. SHOY=
Dec 10 11 I-Irs Sam ADA2. Tex
4 1 Consumption
2
2
old age
59
3
Consumption
in vault
44
1
Hemorage
109
3
killed by cow
45
2
Poisined
19SE4 1 Diptheria
61 2 Still born
78 yrs 61 2 old age
50 " 77 3 hurt from fall_
2 da S.E.Corner Dyphteria
In potersfield No 1.
23 yrs 92 4 Consu=ticn
127
Bryan City Cemetery Book No. 5 Page 35
DATE OF DEATH ME AGE LOT BUCK REMARKS
Month Day Year
Page 35 (Contd)
Dec
21
1907 Mr Frank HAWAKER Ga
38
1
General health
if
19
"
Mrs Will KERRY Tex
29
yrs
61
2
Heart Failure
Feb
2
1908
Mrs DILLARD Tex
28
"
74SE4
3
from opration
of
5
"
Ed RIDON Tex
20
"
44
1
Phmeumonia
if
16
"
Geo . PIETZER Germany
75
"
69N2
i
or
"
23
"
Frank PADARO Italy
24
45SE4
3
Consumption
to
25
"
S. R. HENDERSON Tex
53
'°
68
1
nerrous failure
Mar
16
"
Infts. of {children] M one da.
old
permature birth
in potesfield South east
portion?
Apr
16
Mrs Clara WESON Tex
21
-yrs
81
4
taking posion
June
18
'°
M.rs Lillie SPELL Tex
45
'°
62
1
parayslsis
it
19
Mss B. F. WATKINS Ala
71
to
19
1
dysentery
July
9
"
Inft. Mr & Mrs L. WREN
4
hrs
48
1
permature
Tex
Aug
11
Malcom CARNES Tenn
38
yrs
106
4
nervous prostration
12
Albert McGEE Tex
7
15 p
3
Apendicts -
Sept
7
Henry E. NALL Tex
112
3
R.R. Accident
to
11
Steve LOBLLO Tex
18
67
1
Conswzrption
it
13
Ed. WALKER Tex
40
17
4
Brights desease
Oct
27
"
Ir.rs Bettie SCOTT Tex
24
75
4
Consumption
if
20
"
Drs BUCKEiOLTS Tex
81
°'
9
2
acute malaria
if
20
"
Inft Mr & Mrs.
99 N 2
4
still Born
Chas JENKINS Tex
Dec
23
"
D. T. WILLIAMSON Ala
77
36
2
Brights desease
it
24
"
Allie G. SCOTT Tex
3
mo
75
4
Bronchitis
Jan
1
1909
Inft Mr & Mrs.
1
"
107
4
Diptherea
Ros. WALKER Tex
It
4
"
Robt. M. ROWLINS Tex
19
"
96
4
Consumption
it
17
"
Mrs. L. Po=LA Tex
35
"
57 1 2
3
Congestion
Feb
8
Inft. Mr & Mrs.
98
4
Permature
Lewis WHITE Tex
128
Bryan City Cemetery Book No. 5 Pages 35 ,36
DATE OF DEATH NAME AGE LOT BLOCK REMARKS
Month Day Year
Page 35 (Contd)
Feb 17 1909 Capt. W. A. BELL Tex
Apr
19 "
T +rs E. Ti.AWHIYEY Tex
it
20 "
TJrs Lula BAKER Tex
it
29 "
J. L. HEARNE Ala
Feb
28 1908
1J1iss Charlotte GALAti ^JAY
Mar
7
Tom HARRINGTON
L aF
83
May
22 1909
Thomas RHOWAN La
"
26 "
A. D..EDWARDS
June 21 Inft . Yx & Mrs.
C. M. BETHANY, Tex
it 21 D. E. BATTE Texas 28 yrs 1 1 kicked b mu1
54 yrs
1
1
heart failure
46 "
118
3
Appoplexy
29
104
4
Confinement
75
21
2
General health
83
48�'�
1
Hemiplegra
1 Yr
97 N
4
--- - - - - --
79 yrs 7 3 heart failure
not S.E No 1. not known
known potersfield
3 hrs 10O 4 permature
e
[ iR- W- r- peteEsfield ] y
July 10 '° Lillian MUSGRAVES Ill. 50 95 4 Lunges
1 Dobson HOYLE Ga 5 mo 29E2 2 Ibocolitis
19 '° S. M. DERDEN Tex 33 yrs 40 1 Suicide by poison
23 " Tars. M. E. WALL Ala 59 " 105SE4 3 Consumption
Aug 2 '" R. W. CARR Ala. 19 � 2 old age
Aug 6 Dr. SmS
------- - - - - -- [No explanation for this line, except length ngth of time
between above entry and the next one. The following
entries are different ink and different handwriting.]
Oct 30 " J. J. KERR 41 yrs 754 3 Car hemorage
" 30 " Tars J. RAWLINS 52 96 4 Liver Trouble
it 30 " Willie Lee KELLY 2 " Pottersfield Congestion
7 7� S . E. Cor No 1 of Brain
M
Nov 24 " Infant . & lr 1 s . W. CONLEE 110 4 Premature
Jan 11 1910 Mrs.
'{ .W + C
W. / H t H. OL N ER 35 " 8 2 Pneumonia
Nb ,S, S
11 1 10 . S. C. N A T L.LLI 57 " 119 3 Nephrites
to 12 " Tom GARTH 29 " 33 1 Bright Disease
l `�
l `�
129
Bryan City Cemetery Book No. 5
Pages 3
DATE OF DEATH ME
Month Day Year
Page 36 (Contd)
Mar 5 1910 Mrs. E. P. PRESTRIDGE
to 6 " Mrs. Caroline VOGLE
It
25 "
W. J. ROBERTS
Apl
18 "
J. R. CARLETON
May
12 "
Ernest ETTLE
June
7 "
Infant of Mr . & Nrs .
2
Chronic Derran
C. M. BETHANY
of
7 "
G. F. H. BITTLE
it
20 "
G. M. BRANDON
it
13 "
Roy Searcy ADAMS
Aug 1 1910 Jno NARRATIL
AGE LOT BLOCK REV=
93 Yrs 15 4 Old Age
59
" Jewish
'°
Stomach trouble
50
burial ground
53
" 63
1
Brights Disease
62
" 56
2
Chronic Derran
25
°° 67
2
Hepatic absess
C. A. Y=LER
100
4
Still Born
22
27
4
Typhoid fever
53
6
4
Intestial Neuretis
7
92
4
Tuberculosis
53
Pottersfield Suicide
No. 1
of it Burns
If it Killed by cars
75 4 Consumption
64 2 Dropy
50 2 Elusion of blood
47 1 Old age
61 1 Appoplexy
46 1 Brie.. is Disease
80 3 Premture Bi-r✓h
44 1 Hurt by fall
S
69 2 1 ---------------
58 1 Shooting Self
484 . 3
111 1 Genera Debilty
74 4 not know
43 3 Poisined
-New randwriting and slightly different way of recording. Lot and Block
numbers are recorded differently, but will continue to be transcribed
as before.
2
'°
Lendra COLNGA
50
7
Funk OLEJAK
35
Sept
15
°'
Ernest ACOTT-
32
"
27
"
C. A. Y=LER
67
Oct
1
"
Lewis l'ETCHELL
68
7
'"
Jim HENRY
74
"
18
G. S. PARKER
41
11
"
W. S. KNOX
49
Aug
26
1909
Inf Randal STUART
Sept
3
"
H. F. IZ. IS
45
"
9
"
V. PARIZEK
51
Dec
4
1910
Jim DOBROVOLNEY
43
Jan
1
1911
Lawrence RAZATTO
*Feb
7
1911
R. H. GOaVIN Ala
75
Feb
11
1911
Dorcas A. LAWRENCE
Tenn 92
Feb
21
1911
W. A. HASS ELL
Pottersfield Suicide
No. 1
of it Burns
If it Killed by cars
75 4 Consumption
64 2 Dropy
50 2 Elusion of blood
47 1 Old age
61 1 Appoplexy
46 1 Brie.. is Disease
80 3 Premture Bi-r✓h
44 1 Hurt by fall
S
69 2 1 ---------------
58 1 Shooting Self
484 . 3
111 1 Genera Debilty
74 4 not know
43 3 Poisined
-New randwriting and slightly different way of recording. Lot and Block
numbers are recorded differently, but will continue to be transcribed
as before.
130
Bryan City Cemetery Book No. 5
Page 37
DATE OF DEATH NAME
Month Day Year
Page
37
(Contd)
June
14
March
18
1911
B. H. KNOWLS Ala
April
13
1911
M. W. BAKER
"
5
1911
Roxie HASS=
of
-13
1911
Rev. W.C. FRLL'EY
April
29
1911
Saran M. QUELAH
June
13
1911 Mose LIPSCOY3
June
14
1911 DR. B. KNOX
Oct
6
1911 Mx°s H. R. HAYSE/HOYSE
Sept
3
1911 Morrisce KING
Augst
19
1911 infant Mr.& Mrs.
Corner
43
Jessie GOMYON
Dec
7
1911 Margret HIGGS
of
9
1911 W. J. WALKER
Nov
25
1911 J. L. BATTE
Nov
50
Mrs M. S. WHITE
Dec
9
1911 H. G. RHODES
Oct
22
1911 Miss Elizabeth RHODES
Feb
10
1912 Hugh E. DJA=
Jan
28
1912 Pearl PALERMO
March
8
1912 Mary SASUAGE
Jan
18
" W. B. ROYAN
'"
12
" D. M= Sr.
It
14
W. G. MITCHELL
Aug
23
1912 Bill LACY "Col"
July
29
1912 Mfrs. H. T. LFiVIS
June
7
1912 Will WYATT
July
23
1912 A'frs Nary W. FORD
June
15
1912 infant of Mr. SATERWORH
June
27
1912 Pv'rs . D. M. MYSE
69 yrs 28 . 4 Nalthis Cr -b --
32 112 4 Kiled by Cars
2 yrs
43
3
Diptheria
61
105
113
4
45
117
Buried
in Potersfield No
1
62N2
South East
Corner
43
37
115
4
South 4
115
56
34
1
North 2
34
67
50
2
West 12
50
20
69
2
South 2.
69
70 SW 2
68
2
80
70
2 yrs
114
4
Diptheria
61
105
4
Pneumonia
45
117
4
Tuberculosis
62N2
2
43
21
4
69 NE 4
2
40
70 N1 2
1
Approplexie
4 yrs
4 7 NE 4
3
*Nalerial.
70
119
4
Approplexie .
50
70 SW 2
1
tuburculosis
80
70
3
paralysis
66
50w2
2
heart faliure
70
Yalaria Fever
46
44
1
72
1
North 2
76
15
2
73
1
North 2
104
4
North 4 104
These 'n's are probably 'm'; but they are recorded as written.
131
Bryan City Cemetery Book No. 5 Pages 37,3
DATE OF DEATH NATO AGE LOT BLOCK REMARKS
Month Day Year
Page
37
(Contd)
79
if
July
31
1912 Ms. TUTSTON
81 yrs
83
4 North East 4
Aug
2
1912 Willie A. WILLIAMS
Colored 17
-
- --
Augst
5
1912 Ba ?? KING
42
31
4
Sept
10
1912 R. T. DUNCAN
69
114
4 North 2
Sept
20
1912 Mexican
Buried
in
Potersfield No 1 South
Page 38
109
May
13
Augst
16
1912 Mrs. Rosie HOWELL
42
30
2
Aug
7
1912 Lum JOHNS
78
25
Cholra Morbus
July
21
1912 Ed LIGHTFOOT Jr.
10
Gun Shot Wound
May
20
1912 Henry FREEMAN
65
Dropsy
April
28
'° Fannie SZIAM EE
80
Hemerage from -q-
3/6/13 J. V. CURRY Trnsfd Aug 1929 from Lot 58-'Blk 4
to Lot 68 Blk 5
10/9/1897 Neva CURRY '° '° from Lot 58 Blk 4
to Lot 68 Blk 5
No record here of above deaths.
P age 39
I
�l
.III
May
7
1913 Rose YOUNG
79
if
14
1913 A. WORLEY
70
64
to
21
1913 T. J. GRAY
74 -2 -5
14
it
24
1913 W. B. BA=
76 -3 -1
22
Jun
5
1913 W ill SMITH
17 das
It
12
1913 Lenore WILKINSON
11 mos
1°
13
1913 Jno NERO
54 yrs
April30
1914 Old Man KENNARD
109
May
13
" Mrs. Josephine ABERCROMBIE 58
i
74N2
1°
25
" Rudolph DRABEK
June
2
" Hillman FIGUNEV "Col"
25
of
22
" Rufus RANDLE
27
Died Old Age
4 Nephritus
2 Senility
1 old age
Infantile paral ysis
Dropsy Adomen
Senility ( Colered)
1 Cancer
Acute Gastritis
Pneumonia
Not known
132
Bryan City Cemetery Book No. 5 es 40
39s
DATE OF DEATH NAND
Month Day Year
Page 39 (Contd)
July 15 1914 W. T. YOUNG
1° 26 " Prince ADAMS "Col"
Sept 30 " Jasper N. COLE
Oct 23 " TV.-s. Alma DERDEN
it 27 " nary Lucille STALLINGS
Nov 19 Madison WILLIAMS
? 10xs . Nary C AT,FT°P
Jany 15 1915 James LEONARD
Parch 11 °' Bertha SHHEL,TON
1t I T.
e. oe " L, WILLIAMS
IAMB
e 40
Jan 29 1915 E. J. BRITTEN
AGE LOT BLOCK PZUJ KS
54 yrs
57 4
4 Nephritis
50
Heart failure
77
30
4 Apoplexy
39
18
3 Broncho Pneizraonia
11
Potersfield
Acute Endo Contitis
Feb
19
and Nephritis
100
99
Old age
60 yrs
102
"
67
Tuberculosis
Hem. orage
NO
Heart Failur
age given
John W. TALLY
2 °'
68
Ulcer Stomach
87 yrs 106 4 Chronic Intestild
Note: This entry is puzzling. Reader will have to interpret.
3/28/55 R. J. COLE -- said Coo? in Eagle fowd
8 5 15 Lew HALL passed away 7 1
?---t--
Feb
11
"
Julia CABRANO Mexican
22
Potersfield
No 1
Feb
19
"
M-s Emily YcALLISTON
99
8
3
Old Age
"
2
"
John W. TALLY
2 °'
83
Mch
4
°'
J. L. ROBERTSON
41
ill N2
4
Tubercolosis
It
18
B. F. CLARK
40
35
3
Gin Shot
it
19
T+bss. Zelydia JOHNSON
76
Gen Debility .
If
20
"
Mrs. Nosy C. REED
64
17
1
Bronchial Pnei nonia
Oct
1
°'
P+Iollie 0 NEAL "Col"
Not Stated
If
3
"
Lizzie JOHNSON "Col"
Not Stated
Nov
7
Derry E. HASLAM*
80 yrs
Cholecrysety
Note: This entry is puzzling. Reader will have to interpret.
3/28/55 R. J. COLE -- said Coo? in Eagle fowd
8 5 15 Lew HALL passed away 7 1
133
Bryan City
Cemetery Book No. 5
Page 41
DATE OF
DEATH NAND
AGE LOT BLOCK RZI1ARKS
Mm h Day Year
Page 41
6
26
17
Zula STONE
33
Pulmonary Emb --
1
19
17
Pearl I. JOHN
35 78
1
7
10
17
Lawrence H. CASTLE
18 4
2
Small Pox
6
'6
17
Herod ROOT
5 mos gO
1
7
11
17
Mrs. James LEVNARD
48
Urer,� Posion
5
10
17
Joseph RANSE(R ?)
65
6
13
17
Walter Ray GOOSBY
1 °' (word is
not decipherable)
2
16
17
Jno S. FAULKES
76 26
2
Chronic Nephritis
(added in different ink:
FAWLKS)
2
12
17
Geo Woodhull EDIORY
46
4
Gun Shot Wound
6
14
17
Emma LEES
Col (in pencil)
6
12
17
Pal FRANKLIN
Col "
7
21
17
Sarah KENARD
Col "
8
9
17
Hardy SANDERS
Dysentery
10
6
17
Author Tillman KEATS
18
Diabetic Coma
8
28
17
Josephine HUNTER
3
21
16
A. MOORE
69 -22 das 21
1
Brims is Disease
5
18
16
Poeva NAPPLES
Not Given
Don't know
John K. DAVIS
5 2 94
1
Not Lnown
mos
4
29
16
Au JACOBSIN
65
Tubercolosis ,
5
28
16
Joshua HARRIS
Don't know
Dysentery
5
4
16
John ELLI5
Don't know
4
12
16
Jack SMITH
4
12
16
Isaac HOLLINWORTH
3
1
16
Sam GUNTER
Chronic Intersitetial
Nephritis
2
20
16
Precilla JENKINS
Don't know
0 8
5
16
Nrs. Hellen M. BOWMAN
6o
Appoplexy
m•
2
2.
16
William ROBINSON
Not known
Don't know
12
19
15
Eta SANDERS
8
19
16
John White BYER
9
Colic
mo
134
Bryan City Cemetery Book No. 5
Pages 41,42
DATE
OF
DEATH NAB
AGE
LOT
BLOCK REMARKS
Mcmth Day Year
17 W. H. BARROWS
71 43
3 Nephritis
P e
41
(Contd)
33
Dysentary"
8
16
17 Fred COMBER
60 -3
17 Kate ADAMS
Pulmonary Ede- -
8
16
17 Katie SAUSAGE
39
119
4 Dropsy
6
2
17 J. A. FOREMAN
74
54
4 Interstitial
in pencil:
Negro
11
3
Nephritis
8
2
17 Cleve BIRDLE
12
Appendicitis
10
19
17 Albert WILLIAMS
70
59 -4 mo 2
Interstitial
Trouble
Nephritic
10
14
17 James THURMAN
44
Heart failure
10
22
17 Lois HENRY
13-5 -7
47
1 Ruptured
1 Acute cholitis from
(Infant)
Appendicitis
Pale 42
10
19
17 Yolario AUGIANO
34
"Pneumonia"
10
.27
17 W. H. BARROWS
71 43
3 Nephritis
10
31
17 Pearl CARTER
33
Dysentary"
*Died in City and buried in Millican Cemetery.
10
31
17 Kate ADAMS
19
Tuberculosis
11
11
17 Infant DODSON Milton 101
3 Born Dead
11
11
17 Harriett HALL
60 yrs
Nephritis
in pencil:
Negro
11
3
17 Oscar PIERCE
34
Urenic Poisio
in pencil:
Negro
11
10
17 James Cobb BOYETT
59 -4 mo 2
5 Organic Heart
Trouble
11
10
17 Ed LUCK
not
known
Small Pox
in pencil: Negro
11
13
17 Lewis David WRIGHT
5 mo,23 da 78
1 Acute cholitis from
(Infant)
bad dairy milk
11
14
17 Lee TAYLOR's "infant"
Born Dead
11
25
17 Author H. DARWIN
25 -4 -28 94
1 LaGrippe
11
17
17 Rosa TAYLOR
34
Acute Nephritis
11
30
17 Neville LANDRY
not
known
Pneumonia
in pencil:
Negro
11
17
17 Algie T. EASLEY Jr.
5 days
not known
in pencil:
Negro
Does
this refer to Pearl CARTER
or Kate ADAr+1S ??
r
i
135
Bryan City Cemetery Book No. 5 Pages 42,43
DATE OF DEATH NAND AGE LOT BLOCK RE:J=
Month Lay Year
Page 42 (Contd)
11
13
17 Pearle NICLES
known
Not Known
1
in pencil: Negro
18
^'This
party died in "Tulsa Okla" and Buried in Bryan Cemetery
12
6
17 Wesley DARWIN
2 - 3 - 7 94
1 LaGrippe with
Mrs.
Annie L.- TATMAN 73Y,8 mo,5
°
Dysentary
12
10
17 r.'ary ROBERSON
67
Pneumonia
12
11
17 Nancy BLAKE
32
Pulmonary
49 yrs
Dropsy
j 1
in pencil: Negro
Tuberlocis
12
12
17 Nettie SHARP
70
Pneumonia
18
Rev.
Charles C. WHEELER
in pencil: Negro
9 5 Railroad Accident
12
13
17 Jane JOHNSON
70
Appoplexy
Note
in pencil: Negro
the entry.
12
9
17 Henritta RICHMOND
50 16
5 Cardiac Weakness
12
14
17 Infant of Geo. NEDBALEK Infant 16
5 Still Born
j 12
15
17 Edward CRADY
3 yr,6 mo
Diphtheric
Laryangeal
12
18
17 H. Y. MOaEMAN
73 y, 6 mo 84N
1 Hepatitis
12
20
17 Judge J. W. DOREMUS
66 9
1 Carcolic Acid
Poising
12
23
17 Jno. Coulter HOPPESS
(Infant) 105
4 Born Dead
This
body was shipped here from Hillsboro
and buried in
Bryan Cemetery.
12
17
17 P.rs. I. J. DERDEN
70 Died in Waco Bronchi actasis
and
shipped here -- Buried in Bryan Cemetery
and Heart
Dec 18
- 1917
Co�,�plication
Page
43
1
8
18
Jno
H. BURDEN
44
2 5 Pneumonia
1
10
18
Mrs.
Annie L.- TATMAN 73Y,8 mo,5
das Pulmonary Ordema
Was shipped to
Siloam Spring
Ark. for Burial
1
12
18
Jim
JOHNSON
49 yrs
Dropsy
j 1
13
18
Spencer BERRY
21 -11 -14
Tuberculosis
1
14
18
Rev.
Charles C. WHEELER
31 -11 -16
9 5 Railroad Accident
Note
seems to follow
the entry.
� may assume this refers to
I
Pearle
NICLES..
136
QUERIES
BARNES
Seeking information on origin siblings, cause and place of death for -
Pleasant L. Barnes. Birthdate unkowo, lived in DeWitt County, Texas
in the 1860's, had daughter Ruby Belle Barnes born 19 Dec 1871 Bryan.
in 1874 and 75 had 50 acres in Brazos County. Probably died between '
1875 and 1878, Widow Sallie E. Barnes married James T. 8,ashier in
Brazos Co, 22 Jan 1879. Pleasant Barnes served in the Davis Guards
Minute Cavalry Co., 24th Brigade, TST and in Spy Company, Cavalry,
Waul's Legion, CSA.
Ms Carol L. (Sally) Radebauyh, 3212 High Point Drive, El Paso TX 79904.
#18 GOWBN GAWAN, GOAN, GOIN, GO}NES, GOING, GOVAN, GOVEN, GOWAN GOWBN
GOWIN, GOWINE, GOWING, GOUN, GOUWBN, GOYEN GOYN, GOYNE, GUYNES
Seeking information on families and descendants interested in contribu
ting data to the Gowen Research Foundation, a non-profit family heri-
tage society, devoted to the publication of Gowen family history.
Founded through a grant from Miller A. Gowen of Geneva, Switzerland.
Above from Gowen Research Foundation, 5708 Gary Ave, Lubbock, TX 79413.
#19 BELL, CHANCE, DERDEN, GORDON, HARDER, McDOUGAL, PARKER WILKINS
Seeking to exchange information on above families; l have the PARKER
lineage back to England. Milton PARKER's wife, Mary JOHNSTON PARKER.
was featured on pages 43 and 44 of the ADVERTISER, Volume IX, Number 2,
Spring 1988. Milton and Mary PARKER reared John PARKER CHANCE, born 07 ! \
Dec 1859 who was featured in the Bryan./College Station "Eaglp" recent-
ly as an "old news item". Other family names listed are connected.
Above from Mrs. Lewis Perkins, Rt. 2, Box 193, Franklin, TX 77856.
#20 MARSHALL
Seeking information on Cyrus S. MARSHALL born 1829 in Talbot County,
Georgia a son of Benjamin MARSHALL and Bathsheba SIMMONS MARSHALL. He
moved to Texas in the mid-1800's and died in Brazos County TX about
i890- 1900.
From James M. Richardson, 240 Hickman Fork Rd, Thomaston. GA 30286.
Book Review Section
THE RA}N8OLT FAMlLY, by Brown, Norman and McBride. Allied families include
BEYERS BROWN CHOATE, DAVIS, GRAY, KINDRICK, MAIZE, NORMAN, SMITH SUTTER-
FIELD, TINDALL.
Joseph Rainbolt was first fouod io North Carolina in 1756 and then wen ioto ~
East Tennessee. His descendants spread westward into Kentucky, Indiana, Al-
abama Louisiana, Arkansas Dklahoma. Texas and points West. This work won ~
first place in the 1988 History and Geoealogy Award contest of the Texas
State Genealogical Society, It is hardcover. 500+ pagps, indexed with pho-
tographs. The price is $35.08 and it may be ordered from Dorothy Rainbolt i--/
McBride, 23O2, Harlingen, TX 7 855U.
137
WASHINGTON COUNTY MARRIAGES 1836 - 184E FEMALE SIDE
FLN FFN MLN MFN DOM
Abney
Elizabeth
Miller
William H.
,3 -03 -1843 1
AIIcorn
Mary Ann
McNeese
Parrott W.
06 -24 -1839 1
Allen
Ella (Mrs)
Sorsby
Wm. A.
02 -18 -1845 1
Arnold
Cinderella
Roges
Armstead
07 -14 -1838 1
Ath::inson
Mrs. L.
Whitaker
Jahn C.
12 -24-44 1
Baker
Ann
Yoo
Henry
04 -07 -1838 1
Barker
L. L. D. (Mrs)
Jacobs
John J.
05-24 -1844 1
Barnett
Rebeccah P.
Gentry
Frederick: R.
10 -26 -1840 1
Barnhill
Eli? abeth
Hodge
Alex E.
08 -28 -1835 1
Bartlett
Louisa
Niel
John C.
09 -06 -1839 i
Nancy
Crawford
Jos. W.
1
Berry
Eliz.
Bradbury
James
1 2 -16 -1837 1
Biddy
S_i =_.an
Overtander
John
01 -15 -1844 1
Bird
Ella
Allen
Jessie J.
04 -15 -1841 1
Boatright
Elizabeth
Charles
W. L.
07 -14 -1838 1
Bend
Mary C.
F.'eyn._lds
Lewis A.
08 -08 -1833 1
Bone
C. H.
Robinson
Andrew
12 -18 -1841 1
Batts
Jane
Perry
Burrell
01 -05 -1838 1
Brawn
Eliz. A.
Wyatt
James W.
10 -7 -44 1
Browny
Caroline C.
Banks
J. B.
01 -22 -1846 1
Bur chard
Hannah H.
Pierce
Earl
12-05 -1839 1
Burkett
Edney
Cork:re11
S. W.
0 " -12 -1338 1
Buster
Frances
Armstrong
James
01 -16 -1846 1
Jane
Wills
Reuben
5 -27 -43 1
Mary
Gregory
Jacobs C.
01 -ii -1841 1
Byrd
-
Newman
William S.
0 6 - 0 2 - 13 42 1
131 arles
Anna
Fisher
Wm. G.
08 -18 -1841 1
Mary
Milam
James F.
12 -24 -1844 1
Ca ark
B. (Mrs)
Belcher
Isham G.
31 -13 -1837 1
Julia H.
McDaniel
Benjamin
12-03 -1838 1
Sarah Jane
Connell
David C.
09 -23 -1845 1
Coe
F:actiael
Cleveland
F. J.
01 -? -1846 1
Crabtree
James B.
02 -03 -1841 1
Coles
Maria
Hill
W. W.
04 -05 -1838 1
Collins
Mary Rachel
Hollingsworth
James
07 -30 -1838 1
Conn
Elizabeth
Pitts
Isaac
05 -06 -1843 1
Melba Jane
Pitts
John G.
10 -12 -1842 1
Connell
Elizabeth
Mitchuson
Jacob
03 -25 -1941 1
Cooper
Caroline F.
McDade
James W.
03 -27 -1840 1
Emily
Lee
Joel
09- 25 -1SS9 1
Mary Virginia
Dallas
James L.
09 -08 -1841 1
Cop 1e
Eliz.
Alcorn
Jahn H.
08 -2 -1839 1
Crane
Eliza
Robbins
John
09 -26 -1837 1
Crawford
Sophonia
Blake
Edwin
12-21 -1841 1
Crosby
Mary A
Cartmell
Henry R.
04 -10 -1839 1
Cummins
Mary E.
Robertson
Jerome B.
05 -24 -1838 1
CUrd
Mary
Langham
Melvin
07 -23 -1838 1
Dallas
Catherine
Pitts
John G.
01 -24 -1838 1
Mary A
Clampitt
Nathan A.
04 -21 -1842 1
Davis
Eliz
Fuller
Jahn
01 -11 -1845 1
DeVaUlt
Mrs. Lucinda
Calvert
Hugh H.
12 -26 -1843 1
Dillard
Sarah
Baldridge
Wm. H.
04 -28 -1841 1
Dobbins
FUrnash
John
04 -19 -1838 1
Earley
Mary Ann
Dunlop
John
11 -15 -1837 1
Obora
Bush
Maples H.
02-26 -1840 1
Early
Sarah
McK.issicI..:
J.W.
11 -15 -1837 1
VOL
138
WASHINGTON COUNTY MARRIAGES
1836 - 1346
FEMALE SIDE
FLN
-----------
FFN
---------------
MLN
-------------
MFN
DOM
VOL
Edney
k-'atheryn G.
Hood
------------
Thomas
------------
05-30-1843
----------
1
Eldridge
S.A.
Parker
Geo. D.
11-10-1941
1
Z.
Whitehead
Richard
10-6-42
1
Elgin
Elizabeth A.
Ralston
Joseph
08-28-1845
1
Mary A.
Hervy
Walter
06-14-1042
1
Erwin
Juan F.
Hensley
Andrew J.
05-30 -1333
I
Estes
Emily
Lyall
Wm. S.
12-24-I833
1
Estil
Amanda M.
Bartlett
Joseph
04
1
Evitts
Ann Elizabeth
Millican
Willie
01-06-1841
1
Farley
Elmira E.
Grimes
Fred
01 -29 -1838
I
Ferrell
Mahala
Lynch
James
07-18-40
1
Fisher
Mary S.
Wills
R.-
11-28-45
1
Fitzgerald
Indiana
Hensley
Charles
02-22-1939
1
Nancy
Hensley
Andrew J.
03-17-1838
1
Nancy B.
Neille
Samuel C.
06-13-1841
1
Fleming
Ann
Delk
Wm.
06-2
1
Franks
E. A.
Fur n ash
Charles
03-01-1838
1
Furnasch
Lucinda
Thompson
David A.
6-9-33
1
Gay
Elenor (Mrs)
Roberts
Luke
01-15--1844
1
George
Josephine
Rogers
Wm.S.
07-05-1e44
1
Margaret B.
Ford
Wm. G.
oe-05-1845
1
Gi I I ston
Gracy
M
John
11 -20 -1837
1
Givens
Rebecca
Kyes
Horatio
08-01-1639
1
Greer
Wi 1 muth
East
Ed W.
09-25-1e39
1
Griffin
Winnie
Roberts
Red d i n
01-23-1840
1
Hall
Elizabeth
Cannon
James M.
02-11-1839
1
Madden
D.B.
01-17-1842
1
Irenah S.
Graves
Jno. A. F.
10 -06 -1837
1
Hammun
Eliz.1
Daniels
James B.
05-03-1943
1
Hampton
Minerva
Rock
Joseph
07 -19 -1837
I
Hargrove
Haynie
John A.
04-10-1844
1
Mary E.
Haller
Jacob
(:)3-(
1
Harrell
Christine
Short
Wm.
12-23-1840
1
Harrington
Mahala
Outlaw
L.B.
06-25-1838
1
Harris
Amanda C.
Jackson
Wm J.
12-04-1e43
I
Eliza-V.
Underhilll
D. M.
1-3-46
1
Helen
g e r
Dan I.
11-26-1839
1
Mary E.
'- amp i t t
Francis G.
09-03-1641
1
Mary R.
Butler
Anthony
02-17-1840
1
Harvey
Margaret Ann
King
W. H.
() -26-1838
I
Henderson
Julia
Winsett
John
10-1-39
1
Hensley
Margaret
Lawrence
Claiborne
02-20-132e
I
Higgins
E.
Bell
F. N.
02 -01 -18.6
1
Hill
Serina R.
Kerr
George A.
12-13-1837
1
Hitchcock
Sarah Ann
Eldridge
Arthur
10-17-1639
1
Hope
Ann
Shapard
Thos. P.
05-31-1838
1
Howard
Jane A.
Reavi I I e
Benj. T.
04-25-1343
1
Hutchison
C:--
Wilds K.
(.)5-(-')5-1343
1
Hutson
Poll
Ferguson
Robert
05 -02 -1840
I
Irvin
Eliza Jane
Dodd
John
C.)7-08-1843
I
Wi 1 Mut h
Fisher
Jobe
06-16-1841
1
Jackson
Lucy
Parks
John
04-2
1
Mary Ann
Rutledge
Wm. P.
07-20-1841
1
La Rue
Charles
04-04-1838
1
Minerva
Ridens
Barthol G.
09-17-1942
1
Olivia E.
Isbell
Wm.
01-30-1e43
I
Jamison
Margaret
Gray
John
03-03-1e42
1
139
WASHINGTON COUNTY MARRIAGES 1936 1846 FEMALE SIDE
FLN
FFN
MLN
MFN
------------
DOM
------------
VOL
----------
----- - - - - --
Jaques
---------------
Adeline (Mrs.)
-------------
Graves
Dr. Ralph
08-16-1842
1
Jenkins
Harriet A.
Jenkins
James R.
08-05-1e45
I
Johnson
Elizatath Ann .
Moore
William H.
04-25-1345
1
Margaret
Raymond
James H.
03-06-1843
1
Sarah Ann
Pennington
El ijah
05-05-1840
1
Jones
Marcella
Neille
Geo. J.
04 -18 -1840
I
Rhoda Ann
Webb
Thomas H.
e-29-42
1
Sarah
Gallatin
Albert
11-23-1837
1
Jordan
Elizabeth (Mrs)
Munson
Henry 1.
12-13-1842"
1
Kerr
Jane H.
Hill
James M.
o9-02-1e43
1
Kigins
Nancy
Brown
Wm. A.
11-16-1839
1
king
Rachael M.
ErnUl
Brice
03 -1e -1839
1
Kirby
S.
McGee
Drury
09-03-1837
1
Lamb
Sarah (Mrs)
MaySLLr y
Jon A.
12 -14 -37
1
Lares-nn
Louisa
Mc. f f i tt
W.
09 -09 -1837
1
Lawrence
Dicy
Boatwright
Levi
05-25-1840
1
Sally (Mrs.)
Hunter
J. L.
10 -19-1e37
I
Lee
'
Tibetha Ann
Santa(Santee)
W.A.
06-22-1841
1
Lewis
Louisa (Mrs.)
Ford
John S.
09-24-1e45
1
Mary Ann
Jones
John S.
12-27-1839
1
Little
E.E. (Mrs)
Perry
D.A.
o1 -21-1845
1
Loc 1--.r i d ge
E. A.
Crawford
C. W.
04 - -11 -1843
1
Loehman
Eliz.
Davis
William
06-04-1843
1
Lott
Sarah Ann
Cool....
James R.
12-19-1837
1
Lowdon
Sc,phia. A.
Byers
Noah T.
01-21-1838
1
Lowry
Roddy
Guy
John
12-19-1942
1
Lucas
Amy E.
Shaw
Jonathon
08-14-1843
1
Lucas
Martha E
Cooper
Enos
10-05-1841
1
Lynch
Mrs. Mahala
Wilkinson
Livingston
C-13-43
1
Manaha
Maria W.
Lopez
Pethro
07-16-1839
1
Manchas
Mary S.
Lopes
Francisco
12 -'1 -1844
1
Marchman
Martha A.
Hatton.
G. H.
04-19-1e43
1
Marsh
Margaret A.
Stokes
John L.
10-15-1837
1
Matson
Deadamia
Fuller
Samuel
01 -04- 1840 -1
4
Maxcey
Lucinda E.
Gillett
Henry A.
02 -22 -1842
1
Mayfield
Elvira M.
Davis
Moses H.
01-11-1839
1
McCalister
E.
Pennington
E.
11-20-1e44
1
M c 1. 0 y
Elizabeth
Williams
Christopher
5-9-39
1
McDade
E. A.
Hurdman
Wm. N.
C)2-(-')B- 1842-'
1
McDaniel
Julia H.
Welch
Robert G.
7-7-41
1
McGary
Lawrence
Joseph
01-12-1839
1
M c I n t y r e
Sarah A.
Williams
Edward A
12-27-41
1
M c M u l l i n
Ann
Carothers
Robert J.
08 -24 -1843
1
Middleton
Amanda
Walker
Thomas
5-20 -40
1
LUC i nd a
Wal 4.--.er
Saunders
4-21-40
1
Mary Ann
Price
James M.
04-21-40
1
Nancy
Jackson
Wm.E.
01 -05 -1842
1
P. M.
Jackson
Joseph M.
07-03-1341
1
Miller
Celia a
Lot t
John
11 -12 -1840
1
Mary
Williams
R.
1-21-33
1
Minerva
Sharp
John
02-24-1e38
I
Millican
Nancy
Ellis
Wm. S.
C)6-11-1338
1
Moffitt
Marianne
Tom
John F.
G-23-40
I
Moore
Elizabeth
P e n i c k
Thomas M.
12-25-1940
I
Mary Ann
Hall
Warren D. C.
05-22-1e43
I
Merrell
S. D.
Jordan
John
o1 -01-183e
I
Morrison
H.
Caldwell
M.
- 1- ?-183
1
Mreeiwether
E.
La Grasse
John B.
05 -19 -184'2
1
140
WASHINGTON COUNTY MARRIAGES
1856 - 1846
FEMALE SIDE
FLN
FFN
- - --
MLN
-------
MFN
DOM
VOL
Murray
Ann M.
- - - - --
Crenshaw
----- ^ - - - - --
John C.
------------
05 -20 -1845
- - - - --
1
Northcross
Sarah
Alford
Wright
07 -01 -1845
1
Nunley
Drur_illa
Hall
Wm. A.
07 -27 -1839
1
Eliz.
Curd
Isaac W. F.
03 -28 -1839
1
Nunn
Elizabeth
Lester
Elias
01 -15 -1844
1
Melissa
Hensley
Wm.
01 -08 -1841
1
Oliver
Sarah
Harding
Thomas B.
0re -02 -1841
1
Orick
Elizabeth
Hughes
Thomas M.
08 -23 -1842
1
ParF::er
Elizabeth
Hampton
Edward
03 -18 -1843
1
Par[.-.s
Luving (Mrs.)
Little
E. D.
10 -19 -1843
1
Penningtcm
Mary Jane
Hac4wcrrth
Wm. W.
08 -01 -1859
1
Matilda
Dupuy
John
08 -31 -1838
1
Perry
Dianna
Dikes
Mark: W.
10 -20 -1843
1
Mary
Fisher
John
03 -13 -1838
1
Polly
Fisher
Jahn
11 -09 -1837
1
Pickard
Jane Ann
Gorman
Oliver
10 -15 -1838
1
Pitts
Mary Ann
Dallas
Walter R.
01 -08 -1844
1
Power
Jane
Haynes
Charles
09 -29 -1840
1
Pruitt
Catherine
Harvey
Samuel H.
05 -18 -1839
1
Putmann
Pamelia
Odom
Redick F.
OB-07-1B42
1
Reed
Jane
Harvey
James W.
10 -15 -1837
1
Polly
Harvey
John H.
10 -15 -1837
1
Reynolds
Eliza C.
Ransom
Thomas J.
01 -06 -1845
1
Rise
Margaret T.
Davis
Madison M.
02 -20 -1839
1
Mary
Rice
Spencer
09 -27 -1838
1
Mary Ann
Haile
Mason
08 -10 -1842
1
Hale
Mason
Oe -10 -1842
1
Ringold
Nancy
Mott
Jahn
1' -11 -1838
1
Roberts
Catherine
Tarver
B. C.
12 -16 -45
1
Julia Ann
Hope
Prosper
08 -19 -1837
1
Robertson
Minerva
Gee
Richard N.
0r9-20- 1'845
1
Roddy
Amar yl i s
Wood i of
Thomas C.
9 -17 -33
1
Rucl::er
Frances A.
Heard
Thomas J.
05 -07 -1839
1
Santee
Eliza
Wyatt
Jno. P.
12 -' -37
1
Sapp
Ellen C.
Coe
Jahn H.
11- ^ -1S42
1
Scott
Sarah
Crr.
Euclid
08 -07 -1837
1
Shannon
Estes
Jahn
02 -10 -1844
1
Shaw
Mary
Allen
Wm.
06 -17 -1845
1
Rattikin
John A.
05 -30 -1842
1
Shuff
May (Mrs)
Pipk:in
ShaducE -' W.
07 -23 -1843
1
Simenton
Mary T.
F :ister
Richard M.
05 -15 -1841
1
Simms
M. S.
Hall
John W,
02 -04 -1844
1
Smith
E,mnline D.
Sternes
Christopher
(j5-07-1 8-
1
Sara
Tandy
A.
6 -9 -42
1
Sparks
EDY
McGee
Drury
04 -21 -1838
1
Splann
Margaret
Jenkins
Thomas
12 -14 -1845
1
Stanley
Emily
Roberts
Charles
01 -14 -1842
1
Stevens
Mary Ann
Love
Young E.
02 -10 -1843
1
Sara (Mrs)
Sterlings
Lorenzo
12 -28 -42
1
St. ckston
Sophia W.
Buchanan
Gilbert M.
12 -01 --1841
1
Stock:t m
Adeline
Darby
Willis P.
01 -31 -1843
1
E.
Coc,ke
F. J.
12-7 -1845
1
Summers
Sarah
La Rogue
James E.
10-0' -1859
1
Sutherland
Cassa
Patterson
W.B.
13 -08 -1838
1
SuttonfieId
' .
Coffee
Hal land
01 -29 -1839
1
Swisher
Mary Ann
Fontaine
Ed
11 -1' -1240
1
McAdory
Robert
12 -06 -1839
1
141
ERRATA
The previous issue (Summer, 1969) has an error on page 103 in the fourth line
of text. This line now reads:
Shaw Jonathon Lucas Amy E. 08-14-1843
It should have read:
Shaw Jonathon Lucas Amy E. 08-14-1843 1
WASHINGTON
COUNTY MARRIAGES
1836 - 1846
FEMALE SIDE
FLN
FFN
MLN
MFN
------------
DOM
------------
VOL
---- - - - - --
-----------
Tandy
---------------
Mary E.
-------------
He =4:: l::
Randell D.
12
1
Taylor
J.
Massee
W.W.
01-03-1844
1
Tom
Nancy B.
Estes
John
05-08-1840
1
Trammell
Bydy
Bowmann
Samuel
11-12-1838
1
Trimmier
Emily A.
Hughes
John
12-28-1e39
I
Tucker
Evelin M.
Brigance
Foster
01-13-1e42
i
Harriet
Lockhart
Charles M.
11- 5 -1 e45
1
TL11 I - -'.WS
Piercy
Winters
James
9-12-37
1
Tomlinson
Sarah
Bruner
G. C.
02-03-1833
1
Votan
Lucinda
Ch ear s
Samuel
02-12-1938
1
Walk:er
Eliza
Abney
Ira
04-02-1338
I
Elizabeth
Long
Jacob
1
Miranda
Stevens
John M. Jr.
07-19-1837
I
Sara
Stevens
James R.
06-25-1838
1
Walton
Hannah
Gray
James
04-22-1842
1
Warren
Mary Ann
Biggs
Washington
11-18-1844
1
Washington
Biggs
4-18-43
1
Waters
Emaline
Dobbins
S. J.
10 -28-1945
I
Webb
Sarah
Williams
John
1-4-41
1
White
C. R.
Cock.rell
J. A.
07-24-1e44
1
Evelin
Wilkinson
Melville
11 -18-43
1
Whiteside
Eliza
Wilson
Wm. C.
-21 -38
1
Mary
Bone
John
07 -16 -1840
1
Wick
Elizabeth
Reed
James
09-17-1833
1
Wilhelm
Hu I d a
Gilbert
F. Y.
12-02 - 1337
1
Willingham
'
Hab--
James M
01-03-1344
1
Adeline
Brown
Wm.
03-23-1e42
1
Wills
Louisa
Connell
Wm.
07-31-18
1
Tabetha
Dallas
Alex. J.
12-30-1341
1
Wilson
Pac h le 1 C.
Cunningham
Wm. J.
05-25-1842
1
Wingfield
Sara Stevens
Stevens
John M.
11-18-37
1
Winnia
Lockhart
Robinson
Andrew
?
1
Wood
Harriett V.
Petty
Isham T.
03 -02 -1844
1
Jane
Merritt
Robert
09-25-1936
1
Nancy
Claud
Jackson
05-o'2 -1833
I
Woodward
Cinderella
Coles
Wm. A.
06-23-1840
1
Wooten
Kitty Ann
Darr
Geo.
02-01 -1e38
1
Wright
Sarah
McKissick:
John W.
09-
1
ERRATA
The previous issue (Summer, 1969) has an error on page 103 in the fourth line
of text. This line now reads:
Shaw Jonathon Lucas Amy E. 08-14-1843
It should have read:
Shaw Jonathon Lucas Amy E. 08-14-1843 1
142
NEW MICROFORM COLLECTIONS AT THE TEXAS A8M LIBRARY
July 1989
compiled by Bill Page
CALIFORNIA INFORMATION FILE Microfiche /C/11,272
The file indexes early California newspapers, important
magazines, biographies, manuscript collections, and other
materials concerning California pioneers and other notables.
About 65% of the entries are under persons' names.
This set reproduces 721,000 index cards on 550 microfiche.
The collection covers the period from 1846 to 1986.
Access: User's Guide (MICRO 063).
COMPILED SERVICE RECORDS OF VOLUNTEER Microfilm /B/3739
SOLDIERS WHO SERVED DURING THE MEXICAN
WAR IN ORGANIZATIONS FROM THE STATE OF TEXAS
This set is especially important since fire destroyed Texas'
records for soldiers who served during the Mexican War, 1846
to 1848. The service records include not only a record of a
soldier's service, but may also include his age, physical
description, place of enlistment, whether he was injured or
died during set a description of any equipment he
carried into service, and miscellaneous other information.
Access: The collection is arranged in order first by the
military units and then in alphabetical order by
the soldiers' names.
Spurlin, Charles D. Texas Veterans in the Mexican
War: Muster Rolls of Texas Military Units (F / 385
/ M 88 / 1986; also in Sp Coll). This work allows
researchers to identify the units in which soldiers
served.
Guide (MICRO 045).
INDEX TO COMPILED SERVICE RECORDS OF Microfilm /A/219.2
CONFEDERATE SOLDIERS WHO SERVED IN
ORGANIZATIONS FROM THE STATE OF TEXAS.
This set indexes the service records for many of the Texans
who served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War.
Access: The names are arranged in alphabetical order.
Guide (MICRO 046).
143
INDEX TO PASSENGER LISTS OF VESSELS Microfilm /A/416.5
ARRIVING AT NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA,
1853 -1899
This set indexes lists of passenger entering the United
States through the port of New Orleans during the period
from 1853 to 1899. It is unknown whether all passengers
arriving at New Orleans during the period they city was
controlled by the Confederate States of America are listed;
however, few passengers probably arrived during that period
due to the northern blockade of the port.
Passengers destined for many different areas passed through
New Orleans. A cursory examination of a few records
included persons bound for Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana,
Louisiana, Missouri, Ohio, Texas, and Wisconsin. In a few
cases specific cities were named, such as New Orleans or St.
Louis. Many entries noted only "United States." Though
this might appear redundant at first glance; some passengers
merely passing through New Orleans on their way to other
destinations (such as China or Cuba) are included in these
records.
Most of the passengers originally sailed from European ports
or locations in the Caribbean, but a scattering of
passengers from other origins are included.
This index is especially important since many immigrants who
eventually settled in Texas legally entered the United
States through the port at New Orleans
The index cards reproduce much signficiant information,
including country of origin, place of sailing, age, and
destination.
The Library does not have the passenger lists this work
indexes, but copies of individual records can be ordered
from the National Archives.
Access: The names are arranged in alphabetical order.
INDEX TO TEXAS BIRTH RECORDS
Microfilm /A/414.5 -414.7
Index Probate Birth Records 1945 S Prior
Microfilm /A/414.7
Index to Probate Birth Records, Texas Delayed
Microfilm /A/414.5
Index to Birth Records, Texas 1920
Microfilm /A/414.6
These indexes apparently index both the certificates filed
at the time of birth and delayed certificates. The delayed
14
birth certificates were obtained by persons (usually adults)
whose births were not recorded when they occurred. The
certificates cover the period from about 1880 until 1945.
Because the certificates were obtained in the counties where
the person currently resided, the delayed certificates
include some births which occured outside of Texas.
The indexes are arranged in alphabetical order and give the
name of the person born and the county (and state if not
Texas), plus the date of birth. Copies of the birth
certificates can be ordered from the Bureau of Vital
Statistics in Austin.
No readily apparent criteria have been found for determining
whether an individual is most likely to be listed in the
first or the second set, and researchers should check both
indexes in order to be sure all significant information has
been identified.
Texas was slow to enforce the law mandating registration of
births, and many births prior to 1940 were never recorded.
Related work: Early Texas Birth Records, 1833 -1878
(F/385/G7/1978). Almost all of the births in
this work date from the 1870s.
Access: Names are arranged in alphabetical order.
SAN FRANCISCO NEWSPAPERS INDEX Microfiche /C/11,270
The file covers state and local news and includes references
to the San Francisco Call (1904 - 1913), the Examiner (1913-
1928), and the Chronicle (1913 - 1949).
The set reproduces 918,000 index cards on 699 microfiche.
Access: Users' Guide (MICRO 39).
145'
Eventually he acquired a few slaves and pretty much left the
actual farming to them, taking up carpentry, in which he seems to
have been especially skilled. In time he became a contractor.
The family had become pretty well established, and the old love
of change must have been nagging at Grandpa, when there was a sudden
excitement through the country. GOLD! Gold in California! Buckets
of it. Nuggets as big as your fist to be had for the mere traveling
across the continent on horseback or by covered wagon and staking
your claim and then digging. Grandma again put her foot down. No
more pioneering for her. The children were in school and they had a
little home of their own and a crop in the ground. Well, he could do
as he pleased, but she and the children would remain where they were.
Before you could say scat, she was helping him pack his saddle
bags and waving him goodbye. He was probably happier than he had
been in years - a good horse under him and all of his
responsibilities temporarily on someone else's shoulders and him off
to seek adventure. So far as anyone was ever able to discover, that
and just that is what he found. Eventually he arrived home quite
unexpectedly, with a handful of gold nuggets which he gave to his
friends, the old Chinese work box, and an inexhaustible fund of the
most hair- raising stories a small girl ever listened to. He had been
captured by Indians and had had the presence of mind to present the
chief with his watch, thereby winning his actual freedom. He had
come home by way of Cape Horn and been shipwrecked. A lot of these
yarns were real no doubt, but I imagine there was a bit of very
colorful embroidery too. Still - giving him his due such tales
were true at that time of less adventuresome souls than Grandpa,
fantastic as they sound now.
It was in Mansfield that Mother was born - the youngest of a
large family, several of whom I think must have died quite young.
I'm sure there were seven or eight in the family originally, yet I
can only remember the little artist boy whom I have mentioned, and
Sarah and Elizabeth and Thomas and John and Mother (Julia).
Lizzie, it seems, was the family beauty, and also the artistic
one. She did exquisite needlework and little bits of painting. She
was slightly crippled, from having walked into the embers of a
bonfire when she was very small, and burned her feet so badly that
all of the toes of one foot were lost.
Aunt Sallie was, I think, the oldest. At any rate, she inherited.
Grandpa's temper and unpredictable nature. She seemed to
rule the feminine portion of the family through the expedient of
going into violent temper tantrums when crossed.
Grandfather had built Mansfield College soon enough after his
advent in Mansfield that his children could all attend school there.
Both Aunt Sallie and Aunt Lizzie were among the early graduates. By
W
the time Mother could hitch two words together, Aunt Sallie began
teaching her - and it is a wonder she didn't make a complete wreck of
the poor child, who was delicate and oversensitive anyway. At seven
she was studying Latin and French, and her punishments for failure to
recite perfectly were swift and merciless. Mother had an insatiable
love for learning that was hard to discourage, and by the time she
was eight she was reading Dickens and Thackery and Scott and
everything else she could get her hands on.
Strangely enough, though the family was far from wealthy by the
old Southern standards of wealth consisting of untold acres and
hundreds of slaves, they stood exceedingly well in this old town, and
seemed to be greatly looked up to, for both Sarah and Lizzie were
unusually brilliant girls, and they were friends with the "old guard"
and went to their parties and invited them to their own. In one of
those old houses, the father one day came upon little eight year old
Julia curled up in a chair reading an important leather bound book,
and upon examination found it was Ivanhoe. A little questioning
brought forth the fact that she fully understood what she was
reading, and he immediately threw his huge library, with its shelves
reaching to the ceiling, open to her allowing her to borrow any book
she wanted, and upon its return to take out another. This was heaven
to her, and she would take home a book which she and "Sister Sally"
would read aloud together in the evenings. Steadily she read her way
through Dickens, Scott, and Thackery. Much of this reading was done
aloud as the family sat around the fire evenings, and through it my
grandmother, with her alert mind, was compensated for lack of early
education. Her knowledge of literature was amazing and her use of
English far better than the English used by the average college
student today. Any deviation from pure English, or of slang was
frowned upon by her always. Her use of it was not merely correct,
but filled with vitality and enormous variety.
In some ways Julia might have been lonely, but from her own
accounts she must have owned whole droves of cats. They followed her
about the farm and she talked to them as though they were perfectly
capable of understanding and replying in comprehensible English. I
can see plainly where Grandma got her undying hatred of cats. She
must have had to brush new born kittens out of the seams of her
clothes.
Of all the family, her brother Thomas was her favorite. He must
have been an unusually kind and thoughtful person. I remember her
telling of his coming upon her one time when she was trying to learn
the multiplication table, and learn it apparently all of a gulp. He
sat down and took her arithmetic away from her and then explained to
her that if he were trying to get a large amount of stove wood into a
given space that he would never do it by throwing it all in every old
way. He would have to pile it in carefully and in order. So she was
to take the business of learning the same way. Just learn one thing
at a time and then go on from there. She never forgot it. Until
that time it seems that she had never learned how to study. Aunt
147
Sally had demanded that she know so many tables and so many Latin
conjugations the next day, but had never given her an inkling of how
to go about it.
It was about this time that the War landed like a bombshell in
the midst of their lives. There had been anger and unrest and bold
talk one week, and the next there were hurried goodbyes and
frightened women packing saddle bags with hastily got - together
clothing and such articles as they thought might be needed during the
few weeks it would take our boys to wipe the last hated Yankee off
the face of the earth.
This dearly beloved brother was going. He talked it over with
Grandfather, who was fifty, and urged that he stay with Grandmother
and the girls and him take cars of the fighting for the family.
He left with his Blackstone packed in his saddle bags, along with Dr..
Thatcher, his teacher of law. In his letters from the front until
the time of his death he spoke frequently of "reading law with
Thatcher last evening ".
But one morning he looked up to see Grandpa standing over him.
I'd like to have seen the man who was able to keep my Granddad out of
a good war. Of course I do think he was fighting for home and loved
ones and all that, but they were just stand -ins. He was really
fighting because a fight was pure ecstasy to him, and so that was
that and the family was getting along finely without him, which of
course they really did, along with thousands of other southern
families.
If he had but known it, that war was to be his undoing. So far
as actual injury went, I don't think a single bullet ever grazed him,
but a man of fifty -odd doesn't rebound always from sleeping on the
wet ground, having measles and shivering with chill and fever in cold
and wet, and coming down with an especially virulent dysentery that
swept the camps. When he returned home at the close of the war he
was a broken man, and though he was able to take up in some measure
his old work, he gradually continued to fail in health.
But he still had yarns to spin about the war. One of the best I
think was of a time when he was on the extreme right end of his
column and they were advancing on the enemy hell- for - leather. He had
lost the sight of his left eye and the hearing of his left ear years
before in some way, so he had failed to notice the fact that the
column had been ordered to retreat until, upon looking around, he
found that he was advancing alone upon an entire Yankee outfit which
was pouring lead into the air around him until it was practically
solid. He always said that he decided at first to withdraw in a
quiet and dignified manner, but right then a coffee pot full of
grape -shot landed almost in his hip pocket and so - well, he hurried.
There was a wonderful trip the family took to visit the branch of
f' the family in the north which must have been taken before the war, as
ram
I doubt if they could have afforded it afterward. They all went up
the river to Illinois on one of the great old "floating Palaces" and
when they returned they went clear down to New Orleans, coming back
to Mansfield by a smaller boat.
Their descriptions of this trip were thrilling: the long,
beautiful days on deck and the wonderful scenery of the upper
Mississippi and the steam boat racing. Gradmother was thrown into a
tizzy, though by the discovery that the broiled lobsters served at
dinner had actually been thrown alive on the hot coals.
This trip was one of the few really joyous experiences of
Mother's childhood, which was so soon to be overshadowed by the War.
I write it in capital letters because that was the way I always heard
and thought of it. The War. It seemed to need no other
qualification.
Among other changes in their lives, the War turned Mansfield into
a sort of cooperative village. So many workmen, craftsmen and men of
every calling were off at the front, they had to piece out what
little skill was left to do for everybody. One man made the shoes
for the town, using scraps of cloth for the uppers, as leather had
become scarce. Aunt Sally made hats and bonnets - using everything,
even making bonnet crowns from the lacy dishrag gourds.
Grandmother made dresses when she was not making uniforms for the
soldiers, and trained some of the daughters of those rich planters in
the fundamentals of sewing. I remember how she used to laugh at the
story of one girl who was making a coat for her husband in the army,
and she put in the sleeves upside down so that they stuck straight
up. She said a few more like that and the South would have
surrendered before it did.
Uncle John, who was about twelve, got a gang of boys together and
they drilled every day. Someone called them the Shirttail Brigade
and the name stuck. The Shirttail Brigade would have grown into the
real service in another year or so.
Mother told of having the Yankees camped near them, and the state
of fear they were in because they had a wounded Confederate soldier
concealed in the house. Everything had been taken from them, but the
old negro mammy had managed to retrieve one hen. Just as they were
about to decapitate her to make soup for the soldier she saved her
neck by laying an egg. Certainly an egg a day was better than soup
for, say two days at the best, and then -?
The hen was put in an upstairs room, and every day she laid in
the fireplace, an old white doorknob being used as a "nest egg ". It
was Mother's job to sit beside the fireplace until the egg was a "fait
accompli"and then grab the hen and hold her mouth so she could not
cackle.
Carit'd on page 157)
149
Jane Courtney Porter ANCESTOR CHART
2501 Sumter Drive $
College Station, TX 77840
November 20, 1989
4 John Francis Courtney
b. 10 Sep 1847
p.b.Union Springs, Cayuga Co.,
m. 17 Dec 1891 NY
d. 08 Apr 1908
p.d.Union Springs
taliIl Francis Courtney
b. 15 Jun 1892
p.b.Union Springs
m. 26 Jun 1919
d. 25 Jun 1973
p.d.Tonawanda Twp., Erie Co., NY
s LBe ss i e Mae Shaw
b. 05 Sep 1868
p.b.Michigan
m. 17 Dec 1891
d. 1906
p.d.Union Springs
Jane Courtnetr
b. 15 Apr 1922
p.b.Sparrows Point, MD
m. 21 Feb 1946
d . ---------------
p .d.--------- - - - - --
6 William Thomas Win
b. 22 Jan 1862
p.b.Stanford Twp., Dutchess Co.,
m. 11 Oct 1892 NY
d. 38 Mar 1953
p.d.Stanford T44p.
3 IMarti Gertrude Win
b. 11 Jul 1893
p.b.Stanford Twp.
m. 26 Jun 1919
d. 01 Jul 1981
p.d.Buffalo, NY
b. 20 Jan 1870
p.b.Arlington, Dutchess Co.,
M. 11 Oct 1892 NY
;. d. 16 Apr 1939
p.d.Stanford Twp.
b. 1801
p.b.Duleek, Co. Meath, Eire
m. 05 May 1833
d. 1856
p.d.Union Springs
slCatherine HoburntsD.?
b. 1814
p.b.Eire or Quebec
m. 05 May 1833
d. 25 Apr 1892
p.d.Union Springs
to
b. 22 Jun 1846
p.b. ?
M. 03 Jul 1869
d. ? p.d. ?
1 1 JEmma David
b. 22 May 1846
p.b.Cayuga, Cayuga Co., NY
m. 03 Jul 1869
d. 13 Dec 1883
p.d.Auburn, NY
12 Phineas Bice Win
b. 14 Feb 1833
p.b.Latt,ntown, Ulster Co., NY
M. 16 Nov 1858
d. 30 Oct 1923
p.d.Stanford Twp., Dutchess Co.
13 Mary Sands
b. 03 Mar 1836
p.b.New York City
M. 16 Nov 1858
d. 08 Jun 1865
p.d.Stanford Twp.
1 4 John Sands W i n g
b. 18 May 1835
p.b.Clinton Twp., Dutchess Co.,
m. 11 Oct 1860 NY
d. 07 Jan 1917
p.d.Arlington, Dutchess Co., NY
15 IMary Marriott Unc
b. 14 Jul 1837
p.b.Stanford Twp.
M. 11 Oct 1860
d. 16 Nov 1907
p.d.Arlington
15®
Jane Courtney Portzer ANCESTOR CHART
2501 Sumter Drive 96
College Station, TX 77840
November 20, 1989
48 George W. Win
b. 07 Jan 1766
p.b.Dover Twp., Dutchess Co., NY
m. About 1793
d. 04 Jan 1823
p.d.Clinton Twp., Dutchess Co.
Thomas Wing
b. 03 Feb 1740
p.b.Dartmouth, Massachusetts
m. About 1762
d. 10 Dec 1823
p.d.Dover Twp., Dutchess Co.
a7 [Hannah White
b. 03 Mar 1742
p.b.Rhode Island
m. About 1762
24 Hiram Wing
d. 03 Jun 1825
b. 26 Jan 1804
p.d.Dover Twp., Dutchess Co.
p.b.Clinton Twp., Dutchess Co., NY
m. 14 Oct 1827
98 Agrippa Martin
d. 18 Feb 1840
b. ?
p.d.Stanford Twp., Dutchess Co.
p.b. ?
M. ?
49
Mary Martin
d. ? p.d. ?
b. 11 Oct 1774
p.b. ?
99
Susa nnah Marsh
m. About 1793
b. 31 Oct 1743
d. 16 Dec 1850
p.b. ?
p.d.Clinton Twp., Dutchess Co.
M. ?
d. 27 Sep 1833
1? Phineas Ri Wing
p.d.Clinton Twp., Dutchess Co.
b. 14 Feb 1833
p.b.Lattintown, Ulster Co., NY
104 Elnathan Lyon
M. 16 Nov 1858
b. 07 Aug 1732
d. 30 Oct 1923
p.b.Greenwich, Connecticut
p.d.Stanford Twp., Dutchess Co., NY
M. ?
d. About 1810
S4 Isaac Lyon
p.d.Clinton Twp.
b. 14 Apr 1765
p.b.Northcastle, Westchester Co.,
141
Susannah --- - - - - --
m. 27 Jul 1793 NY
b. ?
d. 21 Jul 1851
p.b. ?
p.d.Clinton Twp., Dutchess Co.
M. ?
d. About 1800
=s
Catharine
Lyon
p.d.Clinton Twp..
b. 11 Aug 1801
p.b.Clinton Twp., Dutchess Co., N`(
m. 14 Oct 1827
d. 21 May 1885
p.d.Poughkeepsie, N`(
51 lEster Timoson
102
b.
p.b.
'n.
D.d.
b. 28 Jul 1771
p.b. ?
m. 27 Jul 1793
d. 21 Jul 1851
p.d.Clinton Twp.
103 L
b .
p.b.
m
d.
p.d.
151
Jane Courtney Portzer ANCESTOR CHART
2501 Sumter Drive 104
College Station, TX 77840
November 20, 1989
52 _John Sands
b. 10 Mar 1767
p.b.Bedford, Westchester Co., N'(
M. ?
d. ?
p.d.Westchester or Dutchess Co.
2s Thom Sands
b. 11 Nov 1798
p.b.Northcastle, Westchester Co.,
m. 22 Oct 1829 NY
d. 02 Jan 1879
p.d.Stanford Twp., Dutchess Co.
53 LtIary Hal 1
b. ?
p.b. ?
M. ?
d. ?
p.d.Westchester or Dutchess Co.
13 Mary Sands
b. 03 Mar 1836
p.b.New York City
m. 16 Nov 1858
d. 08 Jun 1865
p.d.Stanford Twp., Dutchess Co., NY
54 - - -- - -
b.
p.b.
M .
d.
p.d.
=% IAnna Gr i +fen
b. 21 Dec 1799
p.b. ?
m. 22 Oct 1829
d. 23 Dec 1869
p.d.Stanford Twp., Dutchess Co.
55 1 - -- -- - -- - - --
b.
p.b.
m*
d.
p.d.
aleb Sands
. 23 Jul 1727
.b.Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., NY
About 1756
28 Apr 1807
.d.Bedford, Westchester Co.
105 1Peninnah Owen
b. 24 Jan 1734
p.b. ?
m. About 1756
d. 17 May 1824
p.d.Bedford, Westchester Co.
lob --- - - - - -- Half
b. ?
p.b. ?
M. ?
d. ? p.d. ?
107 L ------- - - ----
b. ?
p.b. ?
M. ?
d. ?
p.d. ?
103
b.
p.b.
M.
d.
p.d.
log L_
b.
p.b.
M.
d.
p.d.
110
b.
p.b.
M.
d.
p.d.
111 L_
b.
p.b.
M.
d.
p,d.
152
Jane Courtney Portzer ANCESTOR CHART
2501 Sumter Drive 832 "Ca Lain" J ames Sands
College Station, TX 77840 b. About 1622
November 20, 1989 p.b.Reading, England
m. About 1645
416 5-James Sands Jr. d. 13 Mar 1695
b. About 1672 p.d.Block Island, RI
p.b.Block Island, RI
m. About 1697 833 Sarah Walk
d. About 1731 b. ?
p.d.Sands Point, Long Island, NY p.b.Prob. Portsmouth, RI
m. About 1645
2 0 8 0thnie Sands d.
b. About 1699 p.d.Block Island, RI
p.b.Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., NY
m. About 1723 a34 John Corn
d. About 1757 b. ?
p.d.Sedford, Westchester Co., NY p.b. ?
M. ?
417 I MaryCornell d. ? p.d. ?
b. ?
p.b.Cow Neck (Sands Point),
M. ? Oyster Bay Twp, L.I.
d. ?
p.d. ?
10+ Caleb Sands
b. 23 Jul 1727
p.b.Oyster Bay, Nassau Co., NY
m. About 1756
d. 28 Apr 1807
p.d.Bedford, Westchester Co., NY
1
418 - - --- Lan
b.
p.b.
M.
d.
p.d.
209 1Susannah Lan
b. ?
p.b. ?
M. ?
d. ?
p.d.Bedford, Westchester Co., NY
4ia1 - - - -- - - - - - --
335 Mary Russell
b. ?
p.b. ?
M. ?
d. ?
p.d. ?
$36 -- - - - - -- Lang
b.
p.b.
M .
d.
p.d.
b.
p.b.
M.
d.
p.d.
ess
b.
p ..b.
M.
d.
p.d.
ass 4-
b.
p.b.
M .
d.
p.d.
153
G
b
Jane Courtne Portzer ANCESTOR CHART
2501 Sumter Dri"a 6656
College Station, TX 77540
November 20, 1989
3328 Edw Sandys*
b. about 1516
p.b.Furnesse Fells, Lancashire
m. ?? Feb 1558 (2nd marriage)
d. 10 Jul 1588
p.d.Buried Southwell Minster
J 6 65 4 Henry S andes
b. 30 Sep 1572
p.b.London, England
m. About 1610 (2nd marriage)
d. About 1630
p.d.Culworth, Northamptonshire
3329 JCicely Wilford
b. ?
p.b. ?
m. ?? Feb 1558
d. ?
p.d. ?
sae "C aptain" James Sands
b. About 1622
p.b.Reading, England
m. About 1645
d. 13 Mar 1695
p.d.Block Island, RI
3330 Sir Tobias Chauncey * **
1665 1Priscilla Chauncey
b. ?
p.b.Northamptonshire, England
m. About 1610
d. ?
p.d.Cuiir , jorth, Northamptonshire
3331 Bri Shel ley
b.
p.b.
M .
d.
p.d.
George William Sands **
b. About 1492
p.b.Furnesse Fells, Lancashire
n. ?
d. ?
p.d. ?
6657 F` argaret D
b. ?
p.b. ?
M. ?
d. ?
p.d. ?
6658
b. ?
p.b. Of Cranbrook, Kent
d. ? p.d. ?
6859 - - -- - - - - - --
b. ?
p.b. ?
M. ?
d. ?
p.d. ?
Archbishop of York in the time
of Queen Elizabeth I. Held
Scrooby Manor, where William
Brewster of Pilgrim and May-
flower fame grew up. Wm.'s
father was bailiff (manager)
of Scrooby.
# Lord Chamberlain to Henry VIII.
The dram atis Aersonde in Wm.
Shakespeare's play lists him
therein as "Lord Sands ".
#?� Sheriff of Northamptonshire.
154
Jane Courtney Portzer ANCESTOR
CHART
2501 Sumter Drive
120 Jacob Un derhill I
College Station, TX 77845
b. 25 May 1730
November 20, 1989
p.b.Newcastle, Westchester Co.,
m. 29 Oct 1747 NY
80 Jacob Underhill II
d. 26 Sep 1807
b. 05 Mar 1764
p.d.Newcastle, Westchester Co.
p.b.Newcastle, Westchester Co.,
m. About 1785 NY
121 1 Amy
Hallock
d. 27 May 1829
b. 03 Jun 1728
p.d.Yorktown, Westchester Co.
p.b.8rookhaven, Long island, N`(
m. 29 Oct 1747
30
Aaron Underhill
d. 30 Jul 1808
b. 07 Jul 1803
p.d.Newcastle
p.b.'Yorktown, Westchester Co., NY
m. 23 Oct 1833
lc^2 David Conklin
d. 23 Feb 1846
b. ?
p.d.Yorktown
p.b. ?
M. ?
81
Anna Conklin
d. ? p.d. ?
b. About 1765
p.b. ?
123
Mar aret - - - - - --
m. About 1785
b. ?
d. 08 Feb 1825
p.b. ?
p.d.Yorktown
M. ?
d. ?
85
Mary Marr iott Underhill
p.d. ?
b. 18 May 1837
p.b.Stanford Twp., Dutchess Co., NY
124 Pa ul Upton. Sr.
m. 11 Oct 1860
b. 29 May 1742
d. 16 Nov 1907
p.b.Lynn, Massachusetts
p.d.Arlington, Dutchess Co., NY
m. 01 Mar 1768
d. 1828
82 Paul Upton, Jr,
p.d.Stanford Twp., Dutchess Co.
b. about 1781
p.b.Stanford Twp., Dutchess Co.,
m. 25 Nov 1804 NY
125 Phoebe Smith
b. Apr 1749
d. 12 Jan 1862
p.b.New York City
p.d.Stanford Twp.
m. 01 Mar 1768
d. 05 Mar 1817
31
Phoebe Smith Upton
p.d.Stanford Twp.
b. 06 Oct 1809
p.b.Stanford Twp., Dutchess Co.,
m. 23 Oct 1 833 NY
d. 29 Oct 1892
p.d.Poughkeepsie, NY
83 Lnna Carman'
b. About 1786
p.b. ?
m. 25 Nov 1801
d. 07 Jun 1859
p.d.Stanford Twp.
128
o.
p.b.
'n.
d.
D.d.
12? `fare
b.
p.b.
m.
d.
p.d.
155
Jane Courtney Portzer
2501 Sumter Drive
College Station, TX 77845
November 20, 1989
480 Nathaniel Underhill
b. 22 Dec 1663
.b.0yster Bay, Long Island, NY
m. 10 Oct 1685
d. 10 Nov 1710
p.d.Throg`s Neck, Westchester Co.
240
b. 1697
p.b.Throg's Neck, Westchester Co.
m. About 1720
d. Oct 1750
p.d.Newcastle or White Plains, N`(
481 (Mary Ferris
b. ?
p.b. ?
m. 10 Oct 1685
d. About 1710
p.d.Newcastle or White Plains, NY
Iz® Jacob U nderhill I
b. 25 May 1730
p.b.Newcastle, Westchester Co., NY
m. 29 Oct 1747
d. 26 Sep 1807
p.d.Newcastle, Westchester Co., N`(
1
482 - - - - -- Cromwell.
963 1Mary Jackson
b. ?
p.b. ?
m. ?
d. ?
p•d• ?
961 - - - -- Cromwell
b.
p.b.
M.
d.
p.d.
Captain John Und erhill*
b. About 1597
p.b.Killingworth # *, Warwickshire
m. (2nd) 1658
d. 21 Jul 1672
241 jHannah Cromwell
b. ?
p.b. ?
m. About 1720
d. ?
p.d.Newcastle or White Plains, N''r
443 L -- --- - --
b.
p.b.
M.
d.
p.d.
p.d.Oyster Barr, Long Island, NY
961 Elizabeth Feake
b. Mar 1633
p.b.Watertown, Massachusetts
M. 1658
d. About 1674
p.d.Oyster Bay. Long Island, N`(
962 John
b.
p.b.
M.
d.
?
? p.d. ?
Hired by the governor of the
Massachusetts Bay Colony to
form a militia and Guard the
Colony from Indian attacks.
Immortalized in a poem by
John Greenleaf Whittier. He
became a Quaker (as +..gas Eliz-
abeth), which seems inconsis-
tent with his military career,
but so the facts are.
The Underhill family were her-
editary stewards to the Earl
of Warwick at Killingworth in
Warwickshire. It was also
known as Kenilworth; under
this name it became the title
of and was featured in one of
Sir Walter Scott's "Waverly"
novels.
ANCESTOR CHART
960
M
Jane Courtney Portzer ANCESTOR CHART
501 Sumter Drive
College Station, TX 77845
November 20, 1989
3844 James Feake
b. ?
p.b.Probably
?
d. ?
p.d.Probably
1922 RnhaP+ POAVO
(goldsmith)
in London, England
in London
b. 1602
p.b-Norfolk, England
M. Dec 1631
d. 1661
p.d.Watertown, Massachusetts
3845 - -- - - - - --
b. ?
p.b. ?
M. ?
d. ?
p.d. ?
96t
b . Mar 1633
p.b.Watertown, Massachusetts
n. 1658
d. About 1674
p.d.Oyster Bay, Long Island, NY
1
3846 Thomas Fones# (Apothecary)
b. ?
p.b. ?
m. 25 Feb 1604
d. 15 Apr 1629
p.d.London, England
It is an almost unbelievable coinci-
dence that Jane Courtney Portzer
and our own Marian Graham, who did
not know of each other's existence
prior to 1985 when they first met,
are both descendants of Adam Win-
throp (1548 -1623) and Anne Browne
Winthrop ( ? - 1629). Marian is a
descendant of their daughter Lucy
Winthrop Downing (1600- 1679). Jane
and Marian are eleventh cousins,
once removed.
1523 (Elizabeth (Fones) Winthrop
b. 1610
p.b.London, England 7694
M. Dec 1631 (2nd)
d. About 1656
p.d.Newtown, Flushing, Long Island
3847 14nngWintilrop_
b. 16 Jan 1585
p.b.Probably Edwardstone
m. 25 Feb 1604
d. 1619
p.d.London, England
Adam Winthrop (Magistrate)
b. 10 Aug 1548
p.b.Probably Suffolk, England
n. 20 Feb 1579 (2nd)
d. 28 Mar 1623
p.d.Groton Manor, Suffolk
?655 Wynne Browne
b. ?
p.b.Edwardstone, Suffolk
m. 20 Feb 1579
d. 19 Apr 1629
p.d.Groton Manor, Suffolk
157
Mother had her daily stint of weaving to do: so many hours alone
in the weaving room and no nonsense.
a Fortunately the Yankees did not leave Mansfield quite as
devastated as they did some places, largely because they were turned
back at the battle of Mansfield: but there were hard enough times
even so, and the time came when there were not enough shoes to go
around for the family and slaves, and it was decided that the
children did not have to go out in bad weather and the slaves did -
so the slaves got the shoes.
During this time Mother's Latin and French were of necessity
neglected. There was no time or thought for school. The college was
turned into a hospital and Mother was left to the company of her
rapidly increasing drove of cats and the unlimited use of one of the
finest libraries in Mansfield. The gentleman who owned it had
continued to encourage her to make complete use of it. While Grandma
and the girls sewed in the evenings, Mother read aloud from the
borrowed books.
It was about this time that she began making up stories and
putting them on paper using the backs of letters or bits of wrapping
paper - anything that could be written on. She used to wonder just
how rich people had to be before they could have their stories
published in papers and magazines.
Eventually the war was over and the men who were left returned to
try and save something from the wreckage. It was a sad homecoming.
The ones who stayed on the battlefield were the ones to be envied.
The others who returned — neither with their shields, nor borne upon
them - broken in health and in spirit, faced a well nigh impossible
task, that of starting life over again with neither stock nor money
nor help; truly the task of making bricks without straw.
Julia's beloved Thomas did not come home. He was killed in the
Battle of Shiloh, the day before he was to have come home on
furlough.
Grandpa was in his middle fifties, and the exposure and illnesses
contracted in the army had left his health permanently affected. He
suffered tortures with rheumatism and added to that, shortly after
his return was taken with what the doctors declared was a sporadic
case of Asiatic cholera. He was almost.dead of it, and a number of
times after that had other attacks of the same terrible illness.
Somehow, in spite of all of it, he managed to get the family on
it's feet again and in some miraculous way he put John-and Julia
through school. No public schools then, remember -- and to send John
through Tulane Medical and Mother through Mansfield must have
required tremendous effort and sacrifice. He had his faults, that
old man, but I really take my hat off to him.
(to be cor,t'4)
INDEX OF SURNAMES
ABERCROMBIE 131
ACOTT 129
ADAMS 126, 129,
132, 134
ADDISON 123
ALEXANDER 123
ALLEN 126
ARMSTRONG 123, 124
ARNETT 124
AUGIANO 134
BAKER 128, 130,
131
BANKS 126
BARNES 136
BARROWS 134
BATTE 128, 130
BAYLOR 123
BELL 128, 136
BERRY 135
BETHANY 128, 129
BEYERS 136
BIRDLE 134
BITTLE 129
BLAKE 135
BOWMAN 133
bOYETT 134
BRANDON 129
BRASHIER 136
BRATTON 124
BRIGANCE 123
BRITTEN 132
BROOKS 123, 124
BROUN 126
BROWN 124, 136
BROWNE 156
BUCKHOLTS 127
BURDEN 135
BURLESON 123
BYER 133
CABRANO 132
CALETT 132
CAMERON 123
CANFIELD 123
CARLETON 129
CARMAN 154
CAR.NES 127
CARR 128
CARROL 123
CARTER 134
CASE 124
CASEY 124
CASTLE 133
CN41TT 124
CHANCE 136
CHAUNCEY 153
CHEEK 124
CHOATE 136
CLARK 132
COSS 124
COBLE 124
COLE 126, 132
COLLARD 123
COLNGA 129
COMBER 134
CONKLIN 154
CONLEE 128
CORNELL 152
CORNFIELD 123
COURTNEY 149
CRADY 135
CRAWFORD 123
CROMWELL 155
CUMINGHAN 126
CURRY 124, 131
DARWIN 134, 135
DAVID 149
DAVIS 133, 136
DAWSON 126
DERDEN 128, 132,
135, 136
DILLARD 127
DIXON 153
DOBROVOLNEY 129
DODSON 134
DOREMUS 135
DOUGLAS 124
DRABEL 131
DUNCAN 131
DUNN 123, 124
DOWA ING 156
EASLEY 134
EDWARDS 128
ELLIS 133
EMORY 133
ERWIN 126
ETTLE 129
FAULKES 133
FEAKE 155, 156
FERRIS 155
FIGUNEN 131
FONES 156
FORD 130
(continued
FOREMAN 134
FRANKLIN 133
FREEMAN 131
FRENCHE 126
FRILEY 130
GALAWA`( 128
GARDNER 123
GARTH 128
GAWAN 136
GERKE 126
GOAN 136
GODWIN 129
GOIN 136
GOINES 136
GOING 136
COMMON 130
GOOSBY 133
GORDON 136
GOUN 136
GOU,dEN 136
GOVAN 136
GOVAN 136
GOVAN 136
GOWEN 136
GOWIN 136
GOWINE 136
COWING 136
GOYEN 136
GOYN 136
GOYNE 136
GRAHAM 156
GRAY 131, 136
GRELAND 126
GRELEN 126
GRIFFEN 151
GUNTER 133
GUYNES 136
HALL 132, 134, 1
HARDER 136
HARRINGTON 128
HARRIS 133
HASLAM 132
HASSELL 129, 130
HAWAKER 127
HAYSE 130
HEARNE 124, 128
HEDRICK 123
HENDERSON 127
HENRY 129, 134
HIGGS 130
HOBURN 149
inside back
wo
HOLLINWORTH 133
HOPPESS 135
HOWELL 131
HOYLE 128
HOYSE 130
HUNTER 133
JACKSON 155
JACOBSIN 133
JENKINS 127, 1
JOHN 133
JOHNS 131
JOHNSON 132, 135,
136
KEATS 133
KELLOGG 123
KELLY 128
KENARD 133
KENNARD 131
KERMEY 127
KERR 128
KILLOUGH 123, 124
KINDRICK 136
KING 130, 131
KNOWLS 130
KNOX 129, 130
LACY 130
LANDRY 134
LANG 152
LAWRENCE 129
LEIGH 126
LEMON 126
LENNARD 133
LEONARD 132
LEWIS 126, 129,
130, 133
LIGHTFOOT 131
51 LIPSCOMB 130
LLOYD 124
LOBLLO 127
LOVE 124
LUCK 134
LYON 150
McALLISTON 132
McDOUGAL 136
McGEE 127
McGREW 123
MAI`E 136
MANLEY 130
MARSH 150
cover)
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(Surname) (State and /or Country found) ,Period of time?
INDEX OF SURNAMES
MARSHALL 136
MARTIN 150
MAWHIME'( 128
MENDOLA 127
MIKE 130
MILLER 129
MITCHELL 124, 129,
130
MOEHLMAN 135
MOORE 133.
MOORING 126
MUSGRAVES 128
NYSE 130
RIDON 127
ROBERSON 135
ROBERTS 129
ROBERTSON 124, 132
ROBINSON 126, 133
ROGERS 124
ROMAN 130
ROOT 133
ROWLINS 127
RUSSELL 152
SANDERS 133
SANDES 153
SANDS 149 151,
152, 153
SANDES 153
SAUUAGE 130
SATERWORH 130
SAUSAGE 134
SAUSOGE 126
SCOTT 127
SEALE 124
SEWANNIE 131
SHARP 135
SHAW 126, 149
SHEETS 124
SHELLEY 153
SHELTON 132
SHOMAKER 126
SIMMONS 136
SIMMS 124, 128
SMITH 131, 133
136, 154
SNEED 123
SPELL 127
STALLINGS 132
STONEHAM 133
STREET 123
STUART 129
SUTTERFIELD 136
VARNER 124
VOGLE 129
NALL 127, 128
NAPPLES 133
NARRATIL 129
NEAL 132
NEDBALEX 135
NERO 131
NEWTON 126
NICLES 135
NORMAN 136
OLEJAK 129
OLIVER 128
OWEN 123, 151
PADARO 127
PALERNO 130
PARIZEK 129
PARKER 126, 129,
136
PENN 123
PERRY 124
PIERCE 134
PLETZER 127
PORTZER 149, 15.6
PRESTRIDGE 129
PRICKETT 123
QUELAH 130
RAINBOLT 136
RANDLE 131
RANSE .133
RAWLINS 128
RAZATTO 129
REED 132
REYNOLDS 124
RHODES 126, 130
RHOWAN 128
RICHMOND 135
TALLY 132
TATMAN 135
TAYLOR 134
THURMAN 134
TIMPSON 150
TINDALL 136
TULWLER 127
TUTSTON 131
UNDERHILL 149, 154
155
UPTON 154
WALKER 127, 130,
152
WALL 128
WATKINS 127
WEBB 124
WESON 127
WHEELER 135
WHEELOCK 123, 124
WHITE 127, 130,
150
WICKSON 124
WILFORD 153
WILKINS 136
WILKINSON 131
WILLIAMS 131, 132,
134
WILLIAMSON 127
WILSON 126
WING 149, 150
WINKLER 123, 124
WINTHROP 156
WORLEY 131
WREN 127
WRIGHT 134
WYATT 130
YOUNG 124, 131,
132
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BRAZOS GENEALOGICAL ADVERTISER
P.O. Box 5493
Bryan, Texas 77805
Yol erne X Number 4
Fall 1989
R21
4 -1/2"
Half page: Once/year $26.00 4x /year $78.00
Whole page: Once/year $52.00 4x /year $157.00
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