Friday, July 22, 2011

A tribute to my Dad

David Thomas Cates Jr.

 Dad was born July 26, 1921 in Plainview, Hale County, Texas.  His father David Sr. was a roustabout for an oil company at the time and therefore traveled where ever there was work in the surrounding towns of west Texas and eastern New Mexico.  His mother was Ruth Carter whose parents were what were called "dry farmers".  In other words in west Texas they didn't farm much because there was little rain.  Dad graduated from Hobbs High School in 1939 (Hobbs, New Mexico) and joined the Army the next year.  Once in the army he applied and was accepted into the new Army Air Corp.   And then WWII began.

He met Dorothy while he was stationed at Kearns, Utah.  They married in Salt Lake City in July 1943.


They had 4 children.  He was a building contractor.  Dorothy died in 1990 and he remarried Anna Christensen.  As of the last 10 years his cognitive abilities declined due to head injuries caused by several falls.  He had lived in assisted living since the last fall in Dec of 2009. 

He died 10 July 2011.  Sixteen more days and he would have been 90 years old

He loved his family, his fellowmen and the Gospel of Jesus Christ.  He is now with his beloved Dorothy and free from the physical fetters of this life.  I am sure there was a big party since he was the last man standing of his siblings on this earth.

Thanks Dad and until we meet again:

We love you.

Kathleen & Pat & the boys (and now all the girls too)

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Alexander Ware: Case #3


Well, this is the last of the Ware family that is often combined with each other.  We separated the  two Williams and this is the last of the three Alexanders.  


I have enjoyed doing the research for these individuals because it brings them to life.  It has also been a great exercise in learning computer/blogging skills to get these to the blog with a semblance of form and order.  I have acquired new skills in doing so.


Alexander Ware. #3  AKA "Sandy"or "Alex"

Born 29 Aug 1821 in Madison County Georgia to James Ware II and Lettice Ware.  He married Cynthia Dupree (b.20 Jun 1830; d. 26 Feb 1909; daughter of Joseph Dupree and Caroline Spratling)  on 16 Dec 1845 in Floyd County, Georgia.  He died 9 May 1906 in Henderson County, Texas.  He was known in the family as “Sandy”.
He is the nephew of William Alexander Ware b. 11 September 1789, Amherst county Virginia; d.8 Jun 1836, “Alexander #2 and the grand nephew of William Alexander #1 b. @1747 Amherst County, Virginia; death unknown but probably Georgia.  He is also the bother of William Ware b 1828-d.1865, who married Martha Gee Ford.  
On 12 May 1899 Alexander Ware #3 sat for questioning for a Confederate Pension Application for the state of Texas[1].  The following answers help to fill out his life after  his marriage to Cynthia Dupree.
What is your name?  Alex Ware   
What is your residence & how long?  Catfish, Henderson Co. Texas.  41 years.  
How old are you?  80 years. 
State company and regiment of CW service:  Company D 13 Texas Infantry.  Served 3 years.
He is able to sign; Alex Ware,  Date of signature; 1 Aug 1899 
 
The 1850 Census of Paulding Co. Georgia[3] shows Alexander and Cynthia with 2 children, Cloy Ann a female age 3 yr. and “Babe” a male age 1yr.  Family tradition[4] says that the Wares left Paulding county in the mid 1850’s and “traveled with others from Macon, Georgia to Texas by covered wagon to Mobile Alabama where they boarded a boat to Galveston, Texas.  They settled first around the Livingston/Conroe area but were attacked by Indians and felt it better to move on to Henderson County.  A concrete trough found in Athens indicates the Wares were in Henderson County by 1858.”
According to Alexander in his application for Confederate pension (1899) he said he had lived in Henderson Co. Texas for 41 years.  Cynthia in her statements for pension in 1908 stated that she had lived in Henderson Co. Texas for 51 years.  So we know from personal statements that they came to Henderson Co. about 1857/58. 
By 1860[5] their home was in Baxter a community east of Athens.  Alex’s occupation was listed as “mechanic”, he has $6700.00 of real estate and $8000 of personal property, The children are all listed as being born in Georgia but the last child, “one nameless” a male, is listed as “age 1” so he must have been born in Texas.  Even Alexander Stephen listed as age 3, was probably born in Texas if they left Georgia in the “mid 50’s”.
The 1870 Census[6] shows only the last two children being born in Texas @1864 and 1866.   The property value is down to $500.00 and the real property $250.
Both Alex and Cynthia appear on the 1880[7] Census as a family unit with two youngest children still in the Athens.  However, by the 1900[8] Census Alex is living with his daughter Ophilia and her husband, Nathan Frizzell.  While Cynthia[9] is living with Buster and his wife Fanny.

Summation for Alexander #3 or "Sandy" 
Born; 29 Aug 1821 Madison County Georgia
Parents: James Ware II and Lettice Ware
Married; Cynthia Dupree 16 Dec 1845 in Floyd County Georgia
Resided: Paulding County Georgia 1845-@1855.  Henderson County Texas @1858-1906
Died; 9 May 1906, Henderson County Texas






[1] Confederate Pension Application Comtroller’s File # 6691: filed 16 March 1900.       
Texas State Library & Archives Commission Web Site.   Archives & Manuscripts; Texas State Library and Archives Commission:  Confederate Pensions Search.
[2] In 1861, Col. Joseph Bates raised the 13th Texas Infantry Regiment in Galveston and Brazoria County with headquarters in Valasco, Texas. The regiment was assigned coastal duty between Galveston and Matagorda most of the war. From May to September 1863, the regiment was moved to Louisiana and served under Gen. Richard Taylor with headquarters in Bashgear City.
[3] 1850, U.S. Census Georgia, Paulding Co. page 117, stamp 59; family #89; Lines 19-22.
[4] Information given by Celeste Harris, Lela Ed Harris West Fannin, Moral Harris on two page monograph.
[5] 1860, U. S. Census Texas, Henderson Co. Post office; Athens, pg. 19 stamp 26; Family # 118, Lines 28-35.
[6] 1870, U.S. Census Texas, Henderson Co. Post office; Athens, pg 5-6,  stamp246-247; Family # 36 Lines 36-40 on pg 5 and lines 1-6 on page 6.
[7] 1880, U.S. Census Texas, Henderson Co. ED #31, pg 14B, Family #84 lines 49-50 and pg. 15C, stamp #110, Family #84, lines 1-5.
[8] 1900, U.S. Census Texas, Henderson Co., ED 54, Sheet B, page 1180 Family # 42, lines 57-64
[9] 1900, U.S. Census Texas, Henderson Co., ED 54, Sheet B, pg. 1297, Family #163, Lines 76-79.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Maureen Taylor the Picture Detective

I went to RootsTech 2011 conference in February and Maureen Taylor was there taking 15 minute appointments for photo identification.  I have had some old leather bound cases with photo's in them that came from my Ware/Ford family and I despaired of ever knowing who they were.  Maureen took one look and gave me enough information that I could pin point exactly who 4 of the six were and she gave me a good clue as to the possibility of the remaining two individuals.

 She identified these 1st two pictures as "ambrotype" pictures probably taken @ 1854-1856 because of the dress and Hair style and the fact that this type of photography had a very limited time in production.  
















The 2nd set is the same couple some 5-7 years later @1860-1865.  These are daguerreotypes. 
The clothing for both male and female have some distinctions that she pointed out but it is the hair that I noticed.  In the 1st picture the woman's hair is pulled severely down and back where as the 2nd picture the hair is pulled down on the top but is left full over the ears and sides of the head.  It is possibly in a snood or net of some kind in the back this loose type hair was popular after 1860.  Also the lace gloves were popular in that period also.

There were several more things she mentioned but in 15 minutes it was hard to write down everything she mentioned and the foregoing is what I was able to take note of.

 Ms. Taylor was very firm that these are pictures of the same couple and in our family there is only one couple that fits that time period  and that is William Ware and Martha Gee Ford.

These pictures; according to my father, David Cates, came from Grandma Cates home.  His mother, Ruth Carter Cates was adamant about preserving these and kept them in a box along with Grandma's bible and other family records some of which I described here.

There was another couple in another small leather case and when I showed all of them she said, "well these two women are related.  Most likely mother & daughter".  I will post these two pictures in another post but again there was only one family that would fit those parameters.  Joseph Ford and Sarah Smith.  Ms. Taylor said that the picture is an Ambrotype and therefor probably taken at the same time as the 1st set.

Sarah Smith died in 1862 and William Ware died in 1865.  If you recognize these names or pictures please leave a comment and let me know.  I have some wonderful information on these families.  I have been to both homes and taken pictures of both cemeteries.  I am happy to share.

This information was worth the price of the conference!

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Alexander Ware; Case #2


Alexander Ware #2
Always so interesting to find that you had documentation all the time that helped with the sorting out.
Alexander Ware #2 was born 11 September 1789 in Amherst, Virginia to James Powell Ware and Mary Veale.  A nephew to William Alexander Powell Ware (b.  about 1748 and married to Martha “Patty” Davis), a brother to James Ware who married his cousin Lettice Ware, also a brother to Edward who married Sarah Daniel Penn.  Alexander is the name he is always called in the family bible of Edward Ware (his brother) and Sarah Daniel Penn.
Alexander #2 is the individual who lived in the area of Line Creek, Fayette Co. Georgia.  He was a fairly large land owner and slave holder.  He was a soldier in the War of 1812 and eventually became a state brigadier-general.   He also worked with the Creek Indians and it was to his house the 2 widows of Chief William McIntosh came when their husband was killed.
“McIntosh’s remaining family, including the two wives and two sons, refuged to General Alexander Ware’s home in Fayette County.  Ware’s home and property was on the eastern side of Line Creek, near the border of Georgia and the Creek Nation, in the vicinity of present day Peachtree City. With them came 120-150 other Creek Indians who feared for their lives. General Ware and friendly whites did what they could for the refugees. Ware reported to Governor Troup, “The road is covered with refugees, and upwards of four hundred warriors of hostile party are feasting on McIntosh’s cattle and would be marching toward the settlement of whites in three days. I will prepare for an invasion of perhaps as many as four thousand warriors. Whites, who have lived among Creeks a long time and know them, are sending their families out of the Creek Nation.” Near General Ware’s home, in fear of a Creek up-rising, Fort Troup was constructed to protect the settlers and friendly Indians, but the attack ever came.”   From the web site Historical Exploration  by Edward Jordan Lanham and John Lynch,  April 2007  “Chief William McIntosh And The McIntosh Road”
 As I have researched the Alexander Ware on Line Creek, Fayette County Georgia he has always been mentioned in compiled genealogies or other books of historical information as “never married”.  Last week in preparing for this article after “googling”  Alexander Ware the following information  from “Biographical souvenir of the States of Georgia and Florida” pg 812-813  An article about Col. George M. T. Ware b. 17 Nov 1824 in Fayette county Georgia includes the following;
Gen. Alexander Ware, his father, was a soldier in the war of 1812, and later a State brigadier-general.  He had charge of the McIntosh party of the Creek Indians who ceded lands to Georgia, which created a division in the tribe known as the Hostiles and the McIntosh party.  He was also a planter and an enterprising man of means, investing when and where the outlook appeared inviting.  He was killed July 7, 1836, at about the age of forty years, in Texas, by parties who belong to the “Murrell gang,” which was a band of outlaws headed by one John A. Murrell.  They originated in Tennessee during the thirties, and operated mostly in the southern States, and notably in Tennessee, Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama and the Carolinas and Mississippi and in the great Mississippi Swamp, where they had their headquarters.  Their business was mostly stealing “niggers,” selling them and stealing them again as often as possible or prudent, and then killing them, on the theory that “dead men tell no tales.”  This band was finally broken up under the surveillance of Detective Virgial A. Stewart.”
Now this is an interesting turn of events, a son who was about 11 years old at his fathers death, especially a man of great wealth and position as this particular Alexander Ware, should be easy to find in the land and guardian records of the day.  So that is an area of research to be pursued in January 2011 h
The following is a transcription of the newspaper article of July 12, 1836 announcing the murder of General Alexander Ware and requesting contact from any heirs to claim the property, both land and slaves. 
Macon, July 7—We are informed by a Mr. Clark, a gentleman recently from Texas, that General Alexander Ware, Formerly a resident of Fayette county, in this state, was murdered in Veilon Zavalla Colony, about the last of May.  He was traveling with a man by the name of Eaton, by whom he was shot and robbed of his money,(probably 5 to 6,000 dollars.  Eaton was pursued into the United States, but it is not known whether he has been taken.  General Ware left, it is believed, about 15 negroes on his farm, near the town of San Augustine, and as he has no connections in that country, that our informant knows of, it is probable that his property could be obtained, if claimed by his relatives in the United States.  Our informant thinks that further information, might, probably be obtained respecting his property, by writing to Col. John Thomas, recently of Upson county, in this State, at San Augustine, via Fort Jessup.-Messenger
 
Recap of Facts        
#2 Alexander Ware; Parents are James (Powell alias) Ware #1 and Mary Veal.  His known siblings are James Ware #2 and Edward Ware #3.    
He was born 11 September 1789 in Amherst, Virginia.   
His family moved to Elbert County Georgia in 1790 and settled in a part of that county that later became Madison County.   
As an adult he fought in the War of 1812 and later in several Indian conflicts.  He was elected a state Brigadier General.  
 He was an early settler in Fayette County, electing to purchase property on the very edge of the frontier with the Creek Indians. 
In early 1830’s he began to sell off his property in Georgia and moved to Texas when it was really frontier.  
 The Edward Ware III and Sarah Daniel Penn bible gives the date of his murder as 8 June 1836. He was 46 years old




Saturday, June 12, 2010

You Never Know What You Have.

I don't know if this has ever happened to you but I'm telling the story so that maybe it won't happen to you.

Last June 2009 we cleaned out an apartment that my Dad, bless his heart, had been using as a storage place.  If you knew my dad you would know that he never has enough storage places.  While my mom was alive she sort of kept things under control but she has been gone 20 years now and he doesn't have the foggiest idea how to sort, choose the best, and get rid of the rest.  To him it is all the best.

Anyway it had been a long hot morning of sorting and tossing stuff to go to Goodwill, stuff to sell, stuff to throw away.  My sister in law said, "Have you looked in that box, I think I saw your mother's scriptures in there" My response, "Yes, I have looked in there!  I agonized over throwing my mother's scriptures away but I think I got everything out of them and I already have 3 sets of my own at home that I need to get rid of.  So I don't want to ......"    As I am saying all this she is shaking the book over the container and out falls this piece of paper with a black "ribbon" woven through it.  I remember seeing this as a child in one of the bibles my father brought back from the funeral of his parents (future blog story).  I was seven at the time and over the years as I became interested in Family History my mother allowed me to peruse those bibles.  I remember it as a book mark but at the time did not recognize it's significance.

Yes, it really is what it says it is.  An "announcement" of  a funeral service in 1865.   Do the math folks!  This is 144 years old.  It is hand written and as you can see William died at 2:30 am and this was going out to neighbors and relatives probably as soon as they could reasonably knock on someones door to give it to them.  Notice the date, April 18th, 1865.  Nine days after Lee's surrender at Appomattox.  These were all (we don't know how many there were) hand written and probably went by horse back because the area was rural.   It was on the path of the Union Army's march to the sea in 1864 and most of the outlying farms and plantations suffered significantly by Sherman's "scorched earth" policy.  Both sides raided these folks for food over about a 6 month period.  The Ware's  had been well off before the Civil War but now some of the families began to disintegrate.  William's family was completely broken up less than ten years latter, scattered from Rome to Texas and in between.   Those are stories for later posts.

I heard one story of William death from my father who heard it from William's daughter Sarah Emma Ware, dad's grandmother.  She would have been seven or eight years old when this happened because she was born in 1858.    However, recently I have been contacted by a descendant of Emma's brother, George Harrison Ware (about 2 years older than Emma) and he has a completely different story from his family.   These stories are not in any sense similar,  in fact they are so different we would be hard pressed to figure out how the "legends" became so different.  I looked several years ago at microfilm of newspapers in Rome to see if I could find any mention of this death to no avail.  But, things are different now and maybe I need to revisit the newspapers because both stories would have been spectacular for the day.  I will post the stories later on.   If and when I can figure out my new picture program I will try to get the pictures up of who we consider must be William and his wife Martha Gee Ford.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

All Roads Do Lead To Rome, Georgia, That Is

This is to be a place where I can post my family history finds. A place to possibly connect with others looking for the same families and a place to "chat" about the possibilities for finding those elusive connections we are all looking for.

I have several families that lived in, or passed through, going both east and west, Rome, Floyd Co. Georgia in the 19th century. By the latter half of the 20th century no close family members live there, however, I have visited and it is a beautiful and peaceful town and would be a delightful place to live were circumstances such that I could do that.

The family surnames of those who lived or passed through this area are Ware, Cates, and Ford. Slowly I hope to post pictures of these folks and have help on finding who they are.

Thanks
Kathleen