Saturday, May 31, 2014

picture: Era Maude Kidd Welch photo

November 1955


©JaycieSmith

Kidd Brothers


May 1972

left to right: Jack Kidd, Neal Kidd, Verdon Kidd, and Paul Kidd

©JaycieSmith

Kidd Brothers

May 1972

Left to right: Jack Kidd, Coleman "Buster" Kidd, Paul Kidd, and Neal Kidd


Kidd Brothers

before 1966

kneeling: Jack Kidd
standing: Holland Kidd, Elton Kidd, Neal Kidd, Verdon Kidd, and Coleman "Buster" Kidd


Juanita Kidd Hardwick


birth: November 15, 1915
location: Henderson County, Texas
death: June 9, 2006
location:

father: Coleman Kidd
mother: Minnie Lee Clayton

spouse: Russell O Hardwick

1920 census

1930 census

marriage to Russell O Hardwick

1940 census

burial

children with Russell O Hardwick:

Sherry Ann Hardwick - 1936
Gary Don Hardwick - 1938

Mimi

Era Maude Kidd Welch




42 at Mimi's

42 game at Mimi's house. Left to right: Era Maude Kidd Welch, Verdon Kidd, Wendell Welch, Ima Dell and Neal Kidd.

I remember the fruit hanging on the wall.



©JaycieSmith

Kidd Brothers photo

Left to right: Jack Kidd, Verdon Kidd, Neal Kidd, Wendell Welch


©JaycieSmith

Saturday, May 24, 2014

Jas A M Davis - 1900 census


1900 census
location: Ballinger, Runnels County, Texas
date: June 11, 1900

Jas A M Davis  head  white  male  Oct 1832  67  widow  Alabama  capitalist


"United States Census, 1900," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M35Q-C3X : accessed 25 May 2014), Jas A M Davis, Justice Precinct 1 Ballinger town, Runnels, Texas, United States; citing sheet 11B, family 211, NARA microfilm publication T623, FHL microfilm 1241667.

James Anderson "Andy" Munroe Davis


birth: July 1833
location: Alabama
death: January 13, 1913
location: Scurry County, Texas

father: 
mother: 




children with Malissa J Castellaw: 

James M Davis - 1870 census


1870 census
location: Fincastle, Henderson County, Texas
date: August 31, 1870

Jas M Davis  37  male  white  farmer  value of real estate: $300  value of personal estate: $400  Alabama
Malissa J Davis  23  female  white  keeping house  Alabama
John V Davis  11  male  white  Alabama
Eliza V Davis  4  female  white  Alabama
Mary Davis  1  female  white  Texas



"United States Census, 1870," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MXLB-2N1 : accessed 25 May 2014), Eliza V Davis in household of Jas M Davis, Texas, United States; citing p. 39, family 281, NARA microfilm publication M593, FHL microfilm 000553090.

Julia McKay death




"Texas, Deaths, 1890-1976," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K3H1-5RC : accessed 25 May 2014), Julia Mckay, 02 Mar 1937; citing certificate number 17807, State Registrar Office, Austin; FHL microfilm 2117171.

Andy Davis - 1880 census


1880 census
location: Fincastle, Henderson County, Texas
date: June 21, 1880

J A M Davis  white  male  46  married  farmer  Alabama
Mallissa J Davis  white  female  39  wife  married  keeping house  Alabama
John V Davis  white  male  21  son  single  works on farm  Alabama
Eliza V Davis  white  female  14  daughter  single  at house  Alabama
Mary L Davis  white  female  10  daughter  single  at house  Texas
Julia P Davis  white  female  8  daughter  single  at house  Texas
Lucy C Davis  white  female  7  daughter  single  at house  Texas
Maggie Davis  white  female  5  daughter  single  at house  Texas
Munroe Davis  white  male  2  son  single  at house  Texas



"United States Census, 1880," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MFNK-39W : accessed 25 May 2014), Julia P Davis in household of J A M Davis, Fincastle, Henderson, Texas, United States; citing sheet 197C, NARA microfilm publication T9.

Julie Pearl Davis Hopson McKay

Julie Pearl Davis Hopson McKay

birth: April 23, 1871
location: Henderson County, Texas
death: March 21, 1937
location: Smith County, Texas

father: James Anderson "Andy" Munroe Davis
mother: Malissa

spouse: William H. Hopson

spouse: Henry McKay

1880 census

marriage to William H. Hopson

1900 census

photo with William H. Hopson

1910 census

death

burial

children with William H. Hopson:

Ida Hopson
Ella Mae Hopson
Tina Lee Hopson
Jim Hopson
Riley Hopson
Henry Hopson
Walter Hopson
Willie Hopson
Elmer Hopson

Friday, May 23, 2014

History 5373 - Civil War and Reconstruction

History 5373 - Civil War and Reconstruction
Summer I - 2014

Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory, by David W. Blight
Blight, David W. Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory. Cambridge: Belknap Press, 2001.
Book Review
Before the American Civil War even ended people looked for meaning in the dead and the living. David W. Blight’s Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory provides readers with three leading memories of the Civil War: (1) the reconciliationist vision that extolled the dedication of Union and Confederate soldiers without entertaining discourse on the causes and motives of the Civil War, (2) the white supremacist vision that would minimize the role of race and slavery as a cause of the war and justification of the South’s social order before the war, and (3) the emancipationist remembrance that struggled to provide the rebirth of the nation with black citizenship and black equality. These three visions would propel Americans out of the Civil War and Reconstruction years to well into the nineteenth century. 
Blight relies heavily on poet Walt Whitman for the root of reconciliationist thought and ideology. Serving the wounded and dying of both armies, Whitman became the epitome of the sectional reconciler: understanding of soldiers’ death and their need to mourn, commemorate, and memorialize all the death on both sides.(1) In fact, Blight credits Whitman with building and illuminating “the literary avenue to reunion.”(2) After the Civil War many Americans wanted to forget the Civil War and its causes. Sectional reconciliation would allow both the North and South to come together and rebuild the nation. Just days after the surrender at Appomattox the first mutual ceremony involving a parade and the decoration of the graves of the dead with spring flowers took place. (3) What was known then as ‘Decoration Day,’ would later become known as Memorial Day, spread throughout the North and South as a way to mutually sympathize and respect the dead of both sides. (4) Veterans themselves also needed a way to recollect and reunite. With a wave of fraternalism, soldiers’ reunions became a way for veterans to reminisce and express their shared trauma. These aging veterans were able to reconcile themselves together through commemoration of a common valor shared in the Civil War. 
Even with themes of reconciliation abounding in American culture and literature, Blight maintains that the white supremacist vision of the Civil War and Reconstruction took the place of the reconcilationist vision, especially in the South. In the beginning, Southerners had begun to remember the Civil War as the Lost Cause. The Lost Cause was the voice of reconciliation, but equally demeaned blacks, and crushed black adult’s rights. (5) The three elements that maintained prominence in the Lost Cause were the movement’s effort to write and control history, its use of white supremacy, and the place of women in its development. (6) And so, what began as a white counterrevolution during Reconstruction became the genesis of the Ku Klux Klan in 1866. (7) The Lost Cause developed into the South’s narrative of racial victory. (8) Specifically using the literary works of Thomas Nelson Page, Blight proves his point about the white supremacist vision. Because of Page’s fiction that depicted the plantation legend and agrarian virtue, he became a literary superstar for the South.(9) Undoubtedly, one of the most racially biased figures Blight utilizes as an example of white supremacy and black hatred is Mildred Lewis Rutherford of Athens, Georgia. As historian general of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, Rutherford was able to collect a massive library of the racist underworld and Lost Cause ideology. With essays, photographs and postcards, Rutherford filled scrapbooks with examples of lynchings, ‘loyal’ ex-slaves and Klansmen. (10) The white supremacist vision took deep root in the South, eventually leading to the Jim Crow era of Southern society and becoming ground zero for the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. 
According to Blight, lingering in the background of both the reconciliationist and white supremacist visions stood the emancipationist remembrance of the Civil War and Reconstruction. Led by abolitionists like Frederick Douglass, the narrative of black Civil War memory was of a national rebirth and redefinition. (11) In a lengthy chapter, “Black Memory and Progress of the Race,” Blight cites Booker T. Washington as leading the rhetoric on the “progress of the race” and the race problem. (12) Washington’s “progress of the race” theory viewed the beginning of of Negro life in America as the end of slavery, along with blacks emerging from slavery as a Christian people. (13) Washington pushed an “accommodationism” society, where blacks should demonstrate gratitude for past lives laid down and sacrifices made. (14) Blight goes on to paint Washington as the ultimate apologizer for the black race, both for their color and inability to live up to standards set by whites. Emancipationism fused the rebirth and redefinition led by Douglass and the accommodationism vision led by Washington.
As the 50th anniversary of the Civil War loomed, Americans had seen economic and social change, along with sectional reconciliation. (15) At the supremely segregated reunion at Gettysburg in 1913, Blight points out that whites took the memory of the Civil War and Reconstruction from blacks, leaving blacks as outsiders looking in - a trend that would continue throughout the nineteenth century. (16)
Blight’s use of contemporary literature and resources is impressive; however, Race and Reunion is not easy to read, in part because of the frequent borrowing from other sources. Blight could have had a greater eye for detail, as in his frequent omission of a closing parenthesis. Even more detracting is the transposition of the abbreviation for the Son’s of Confederate Veterans as SVC instead of SCV. (17) Other than Presidential elections in the two decades following the Civil War does Blight reference the political climate. Perhaps anticipating such criticism, Blight points out in his prologue that he does put considerable attention on Reconstruction politics while leaving out “late-nineteenth-century presidential politics.” (18) This omission of nineteenth century political climate by Blight leaves much unsaid for the plight of African-Americans into the nineteenth century. 

As the Director of the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance and Abolition at Yale and Professor of History at Yale University, David W. Blight is a leading expert on the Civil War and Reconstruction era. Race and Reunion received many book awards, including the Bancroft Prize, the Abraham Lincoln Prize, and the Frederick Douglass Prize. (19)


1 David W. Blight, Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory. (Cambridge: Belknap Press, 2001), 23. 
2 Blight, Race and Reunion, 20. 
3 Blight, Race and Reunion, 65. 
4 Blight, Race and Reunion, 84. 
5 Blight, Race and Reunion, 272. 
6 Blight, Race and Reunion, 259. 
7 Blight, Race and Reunion, 112.
8 Blight, Race and Reunion, 291. 
9 Blight, Race and Reunion, 225. 
10 Blight, Race and Reunion, 289-290.
11 Blight, Race and Reunion, 303. 
12 Blight, Race and Reunion, 300. 
13 Blight, Race and Reunion, 320. 
14 Blight, Race and Reunion, 348. 
15 Blight, Race and Reunion, 359. 
16 Blight, Race and Reunion, 366. 
17 Blight, Race and Reunion, 272. 
18 Blight, Race and Reunion, 2. 

19 Yale University Department of History. “David Blight.” accessed May 19, 2014, history.yale.edu/people/david-blight.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Gaines C. Smith - Civil War Pension application



















Alabama Department of Archives and History; Montgomery, Alabama; Confederate Pension Applications, 1880-1940; Collection #: Microfilm in the Research Room; Roll Description: Smith, G. T. - Smith, J. A..

Gaines C. Smith - pension application


National Archives and Records Administration. U.S., Civil War Pension Index: General Index to Pension Files, 1861-1934 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2000.

Gaines C. Smith: Mexican-American War service


name: Smith  Gaines C.  
age at enlistment: 20
eye color: black
hair color: black
complexion: dark
height: 5'9
birth state: Tennessee
birth county: Giles
occupation: schoolmaster
enlistment: August 10, 1847
where: Athens
by whom: Capt. Jones
discharged: July 15, 1848
cause of discharge: exp. of service
where: Mobile, Alabama

Ancestry.com. U.S. Army, Register of Enlistments, 1798-1914 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2007.
Original data: Register of Enlistments in the U.S. Army, 1798-1914; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M233, 81 rolls); Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1780’s-1917, Record Group 94; National Archives, Washington, D.C.

Friday, May 9, 2014

William Smith

birth: about 1760
location:
death: about 1836
location:

father:
mother:

spouse:

children:

Briant Smith
Edith Smith
Samuel Smith
Mary Smith
Phelps Smith

Phelps Smith

birth:
location:
death:
location:

father: William Smith
mother:

spouse: Elizabeth

1820 census

1830 census

children with Elizabeth:

Gaines Chisholm Smith
Aroma Catherine Smith

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Gaines Chisholm Smith - Civil War extract

Gaynes Chisholm Smith - Company H, Lt. Col., age 32, date enrolled: June 10, 1861, wounded at Gaines' Mill, Captured at Gettysburg.

Gaynes Chislom Smith - (1827-1910) would become the captain of Company H, 9th Alabama Regiment (replacing David Houston), and was later promoted to colonel of the 9th. Smith was captured at Gettysburg and later released. he was born in Giles County, Tennessee, and moved to Limestone County, where he was a farmer, a teacher, a justice of the peace, and a member of the state legislature (Krick, Lee’s Colonels 351). The privates in David Houston’s company had petitioned for Houston’s removal but were unsuccessful. Houston, however, was arrested in early September 1861 for being drunk at recitation, and that incident would lead to his resignation a month later (page 345).

William Cowan McClellan to Matilda McClellan 

Army of the Potomac
Campt Centreville. Va.
Dec 10th 1861
Dear Sister

I have just returned from one of the most heart rending scenes ever witnessed by man. I saw two men tied to a post and shot dead. They were of the far famed Tigers. Men who fought Bravely upon the plains of Manassas on the ever memorable .21. of July. The offence for which they were punished was chargeing bayonets on a Lieut(enant). They inflicted upon him two mortal wounds. They were drunk when they committed the crime. There were tried by a regular courtmartial and doomed to be shot. There were dressed in striped pants and red shirts with little red caps on their heads. All of the Tigers wore a similar dress. They were marched up in the presence of fifteen thousand men as boldly as a Tiger ever walked among a flock of sheep. They were then ordered to kneel down by the post they were tied to. The priest then prayed one of the most powerful prayers I ever heard. He pressed the cross to their lips and imprinted a kiss upon them. 12 of their own company were ordered to shoot them. When they had taken their places 10 paces in front of them, the caps were drawn over their eyes, one of them pulled it off, and said I will die looking in the muzzels of those rifles. The command was given, ready, aim, fire. Neither of them flinched until the balls had pierced their Bodys. The Priest then made a very brief and appropriate talk to the Soldiers - telling them that drinking caused the death of those men and Putting an enemy in their mouths to steal their brains away. It will have a good effect upon our army. Nothing of any importance has transpired since writeing a few days ago, some are disposed to think that the enemy have retreated to the Potomac. I believe all idea of an attack at this point has subsided. Quietness again reigns in Camp save now and then a report that is started in Camp that gains admittance into the minds of the credulous. We soldiers all rest satisfied that Beauregard and Johnston couldn’t be outgeneraled by the Feds and we can do the fighting. Gaines Smith is one of the finest looking men I ever saw every step he takes is that of a Military man every look and gesture. Smith is about 6 feet 2 inches high strait as an arrow, Gen. Johnston is also a fine looking man. Gen B. (Beauregard) has nothing very striking in his appearance save his eyes. They flash and sparkle like lightening all the time - searching to penetrate each wink upon which they rest. I frequently get invitations from these gentlemen to visit them at their head quarters. I have always declined doing so upon the plea that I am private. I suppose the caus of their partiality towards me is the close relationship I have existing between Gen. McClellan and my self. My health is tolerably good at this time. I am just getting over a very bad cold and cough. The health of our company is very good at present. Capt Smiths company are as ragged as Beauregards. The weather is very mild here at this time. I am making arrangements to get a swap to Capt Malones co, it will probably be a month or so before I can effect the change. The last letter I received from home was dated Nov. 24, except one tonight. Write soon. 

Your Brother, 
William C. McClellan Manassas Virginia


page 114

McClellan, William Cowan. Welcome the Hour of Conflict: William Cowan McClellan and the 9th Alabama. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press, 2007.

Ninth Alabama - Infantry

Ninth Alabama - (Infantry)

This regiment was organized at Richmond, Virginia, the latter part of May 1861, and moved to Winchester several weeks later. It was there brigaded under Gen. Kirby Smith of Florida, but failed to reach the battle-field of Manassas because of a railroad accident. The regiment lay at Manassas Centerville till March 1862, when it marched to Yorktown. 

Gen. J. H. Forney of Calhoun succeeded to the command of the brigade, and was relieved by Gen. Wilcox in January. The regiment was under fire at Yorktown, with slight loss. It participated in the battle of Williamsburg, but the loss was not severe. At Seven Pines it was held in reserve, and did not suffer. It was now brigaded with the Eighth, Tenth, Eleventh, and Fourteenth Alabama regiments, still under Gen. Wilcox. At Gaines’ Mill the regiment sustained severe loss, and was rent and torn by the wall of fire at Frazier’s Farm. With the army it took up the line of March for Maryland, and was under fire but not actively engaged at the second Manassas. It was part of the investing force at Harper’s Ferry, and hastened from there to the field of Sharpsburg, where it lost 8 killed, 42 wounded, and 9 missing. The Ninth wintered on the Rappahannock, and was underfire, with few casualties, at Fredericksburg. Its brightest renown was won at Salem, where it bore the brunt of a successful assault, and lost very heavily. The regiment moved into Pennsylvania, and sustained severe loss at Gettysburg where the brigade had 781 killed and wounded. The fall and winter were passed in camp, near Orange C. H., and the Ninth participated in the fierce struggles at the Wilderness and at Appomattox, with severe loss in each battle. Gen. Sanders of Greene then took command of the brigade. The fighting was almost continuous for several weeks, culminating in the terrible repulse of the invading army at the second battle of Cold Harbor, in which the Ninth shared without severe loss. From June till the end - nine weary months - the regiment was in the trenches of Petersburg, or engaged in the majority of the numerous and bloody battles that relieved the monotony of the last, long, and desperate collision of the great rival armies that had so long struggled on Virignia soil. A remnant of the Ninth surrendered at Appomattox, the brigade having been in commond of Gen. W. H. Forney of Calhoun for some months. Of 1138 men on its rolls, about 200 fell in battle, over 175 died of disease, and 208 were discharged or transferred. 

Field and staff. 

Colonels - Cadmus M. Wilcox of Tennessee; promoted. Samuel Henry of Marshall; resigned. Horace King of Morgan; wounded at Gettsyburg. 
Lieutenant Colonels - Samuel Henry; promoted. Edward A. O’Neal of Lauderdale; transferred. Gaines Smith of Limestone. 
Majors - E. A. O’Neal; promoted. Jere Williams of Jackson; resigned. James M. Crow of Lauderdale. 
Adjutants - John Burtwell of Lauderdale; transferred. John Featherston of Limestone; transferred to line. James W. Wilson; killed at Sharpsburg. William Holcombe of Limestone; captured at Petersburg. 

CAPTAINS, AND COUNTIES FROM WHICH THE COMPANIES CAME

Mobile - F. H. Ripley; resigned. W. C. Murphy; wounded and captured at Williamsburg; killed at Salem. A. H. Hays. 

Jackson and Marshall - Jere Williams; promoted. Blake Moore; resigned. Elias Jacobs; wounded at Gettysburg; retired. Patrick Seward; captured. 

Limestone - Thomas H. Hobbs; killed at Gaines’ Mill. John Featherston; wounded at Gettysburg. 

Butler - E. Y. Hill; killed at Gaines’ Mill. Thomas Mills; resigned. Matthew Patton. 

Lauderdale - D. W. Gillis; killed at Williamsburg. John Chisholm; captured at Gettysburg; died at Fort Delaware. B. F. Taylor; wounded at Sharpsburg; captured at Petersburg. 

Lauderdale - J. Butler Houston; resigned. William C. Reeder; resigned. James M. Crow; wounded at Gaines’ Mill; promoted. Wm. J. Cannon.

Marshall - James L. Sheffield; resigned. John Rayburn; killed at Sharpsburg. A. W. Ledbetter; wounded at Salem and Petersburg. 

Lawrence - James M. Warren; resigned. M. G. May; wounded at Sharpsburg. 

Morgan - Horace King; promoted. Wm. Todd; retired. 

Limestone - David Houston; resigned. Gaines Smith; captured at Gettysburg; promoted. 


Brewster, Willis. Alabama, Her History, Resources, War Record, and Public Men: From 1540 to 1872. Montgomery, Ala: Barrett & Brown, Steam Printers and Book Binders, 1872. 

injury at Gettysburg

No. 44--(30) Mentioned by Gen. Dan Tyler, U.S. A., Maryland Heights, June 25, 1863. (288) Wilcox's brigade, Anderson's division, Third corps, Gen. A. P. Hill, army of Northern Virginia, Gettysburg, July 1-3, 1863. (332, 343) Casualties at battle of Gettysburg, 3 killed, 55 wounded. (619-621) Report of General Wilcox: "Capt. G. C. Smith, severe wound through the body (entitled to promotion to lieutenant-colonel). Capt. J. H. King (entitled to promotion to colonel) had a finger shot off. Private Brundridge severely wounded." He gives special praise to Captain King and Captain May on second day.

Taken from: http://www.civilwarhome.com/9alainf.htm


Friday, May 2, 2014

John David German Adrian - 1870 census


1870 census
location: Garden Valley, Van Zandt County, Texas
date: August 11, 1870


John Adrin  55  male  white  farmer  value of real estate: $600  value of personal estate $520  Georgia
John C Adrin  18  male  white  farm labor  Texas
King Adrin  16  male  white  farm labor  Texas
Buchanan Adrin  15  male  white  Texas
Andew Adrin  11  male  white  Texas



Year: 1870; Census Place: Garden Valley Beat, Smith, Texas; Roll: M593_1605; Page: 320B; Image: 244; Family History Library Film: 553104.

Buchanan Breckenridge Adrian and Mary E Davidson marriage


location: Van Zandt County, Texas
date: March 25, 1874

Ancestry.com. Texas, Marriage Collection, 1814-1909 and 1966-2011 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.
Original data: 


John David German Adrian - 1860 census


1860 census
location: Tyler, Smith County, Texas
date: September 1860

J D G Adrian  45  male  farmer  value of real estate: $1500 value of personal estate: $800  Georgia
Sarah Adrian  30  female  Indiana
Fleming Adrian  23  male  farm laborer  value of personal estate: $100  Alabama
John Adrian  9  male  Texas
Buchanan Adrian  3  male  Texas
King Adrian  1  male  Texas
Lewis McAdams  15  male  farm laborer  Texas
Matthew Mathis  13  male  Texas
Laura McAdams  9  female  Texas
Joshua Mathis  2  male  Texas



"United States Census, 1860," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MXFV-5YN : accessed 02 May 2014), Buchanon Adrian in household of J D G Adrian, Tyler Beat, Smith, Texas, United States; citing "1860 U.S. Federal Census - Population," Fold3.com; p. 166, household ID 1145, NARA microfilm publication M653; FHL microfilm 805305.

Buchanan Breckenridge Adrian - 1880 census


1880 census
location: Van Zandt County, Texas
date: June 14, 1880

Buckanon Adron  white  male  23  married  farmer  Texas
Mary Adron  white  female  22  wife  married  keeping house  Texas
Oliver Adron  white  male  4  single  Texas
Franklin Adron  white  male  1  son  single  Texas


"United States Census, 1880," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MFJN-4WZ : accessed 02 May 2014), Buchanon Adron, Precinct 1, Van Zandt, Texas, United States; citing sheet 15A, NARA microfilm publication T9.

James J Colley - 1930 census


1930 census
location: Van Zandt County, Texas
date: April 3, 1930

James J Colley  head  male  white  53  married - @ age 18  Mississippi  farmer
Romilda Colley  wife  female  white  49  married - @ age 16  Texas
Vardaman J Colley  son  male  white  14  single  Texas
Mary J Philen  granddaughter  female  white  7  single  Texas



"United States Census, 1930," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-1-10174-19780-75?cc=1810731 : accessed 02 May 2014), Texas > Van Zandt > Precinct 7 > 0025 > image 3 of 17; citing NARA microfilm publication T626.

Breckenridge Buchanan Adrian - 1930 census

1930 census
location: Van Zandt County, Texas
date: April 3, 1930

Buckhanan B Adrian  head  male  white  73  married - @ age 17  Texas
Mary A M Adrian  wife  female  white  73  married - @ age 17  Texas



"United States Census, 1930," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/H2VP-RW2 : accessed 02 May 2014), Buckhannon Adrian, Precinct 7, Van Zandt, Texas, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 0025, sheet 2A, family 29, NARA microfilm publication T626, roll 2405.

Breckenridge Buchanan Adrian - death



"Texas, Deaths, 1890-1976," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K3Q7-WPK : accessed 02 May 2014), B B Adrian, 24 Jun 1933; citing certificate number 28768, State Registrar Office, Austin; FHL microfilm 2115548.

Buchanan Breckenridge Adrian - 1900 census


1900 census
location: Van Zandt County, Texas
date: June 2, 1900

B B Adrian  head  white  male  Feb 1857  43  married - 26 years  Texas  farmer
Mary E Adrian  wife  white  female  Dec 1856  43  married - 26 years  10, 5  Texas
Lillie A Adrian  daughter  white  female  Mar 1886  14  single  Texas
Claud C Adrian  son  white  male  Fev 1891  9  single  Texas



"United States Census, 1900," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M35K-6B5 : accessed 02 May 2014), B B Adrian, Justice Precinct 7 (voting precinct 11), Van Zandt, Texas, United States; citing sheet 2A, family 21, NARA microfilm publication T623, FHL microfilm 1241675.

Buchanan Breckenridge Adrian - 1910 census


1910 census
location: Van Zandt County, Texas
date: April 18-19, 1910

Buchanan B Adrian  head  male  white  53  married - 36 years  Texas  farmer
Mary E Adrian  wife  female  white  53  married - 36 years  10, 5  Texas
Claud C Adrian  son  male  white  19  single  Texas
Omega L Adrian  daughter  female  white  6  single  Texas
Arlillian Brooks  daughter  female  white  24  widowed  2, 2  Texas
Mary E Brooks  granddaughter  female  white  5  single  Texas
Joseph B Brooks  grandson  male  white  3  single  Texas
Roy Wells  hired man  male  white  19  single  Texas



"United States Census, 1910," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MRQ3-PD7 : accessed 02 May 2014), Buchanan B Adrian, Justice Precinct 7, Van Zandt, Texas, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 120, sheet 2B, family 36, NARA microfilm publication T624, FHL microfilm 1375609.

Buchanan Breckenridge Adrian - 1920 census


1920 census
location: Van Zandt County, Texas
date: January 26, 1920

B B Adrian  head  male  white  62  married  Texas  farmer
Mary E M Adrian  wife  female  white  62  married  Texas
Omega L Adrian  daughter  female  white  15  single  Texas



"United States Census, 1920," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MC9L-TTR : accessed 02 May 2014), B B Adrian, Justice Precinct 7, Van Zandt, Texas, United States; citing sheet 6A, family 111, NARA microfilm publication T625, FHL microfilm 1821854.

Buchanan Breckenridge Adrian

birth: February 4, 1857
location: Texas
death: July 24, 1933
location: Terrell, Kaufman County, Texas

father: John David German Adrian
mother: Sarah Turner

spouse: Mary Ellen Davidson

1860 census

1870 census

married to Mary Ellen Davidson - 1874

1880 census

1900 census

1910 census

1920 census

1930 census

death

burial

children with Mary Ellen Davidson:

Oliver Adrian - 1876
Andrew Franklin Adrian  - 1879
Rosa Adrian - 1880
Acy Jerome Adrian - 1883
Arlillian Adrian - 1886
Claude Culberson Adrian - 1891
Mary Omega Adrian - 1904

Rosa Adrian

Mrs. Rosie

birth: September 7, 1880
location:
death: November 9, 1953
location:

father: Buchanan Breckenridge Adrian
mother: Mary Davidson

spouse: J. B. Philen
spouse: James Jonathan Colley

1910 census

1920 census

1930 census

1940 census

burial

children with J. B. Philen:

Sylvan Philen - 1897
Olin W Philen - 1898
Franklin Truehart Philen - 1900
Margie Philen - 1901
Lillian Philen - 1904
Joe H Philen - 1905

children with James Jonathan Colley:

Annie Ruth Colley - 1911
James Vardaman Colley - 1915

Coleman Kidd and Minnie Clayton marriage


location: Smith County, Texas
date: December 6, 1896

Ancestry.com. Texas, Marriage Collection, 1814-1909 and 1966-2011 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.
Original data: 

Coleman Kidd - 1940 census


1940 census
location: Henderson County, Texas
date: April 17, 1940

C Kidd  head  male  white  65  married  Texas  farmer
Bertha Kidd  wife  female  49  male  Texas 
Jack Kidd  son  male  23  single  Texas  farm laborer
Verdan Kidd  son  male  20  single  Texas  farm laborer
Bill Kidd  son  male  14  single  Texas
Louise Kidd  daughter  female  13  single  Texas
Marline Kidd  daughter  female  11  single  Texas
Buster Kidd  son  male  white  9  single  Texas


"United States Census, 1940," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/KWK6-YYQ : accessed 02 May 2014), C Kidd, Justice Precinct 4, Henderson, Texas, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 107-16, sheet 6B, family 116, NARA digital publication of T627, roll 4061.

Coleman Kidd World War I draft card




"United States World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/KZX6-YZ2 : accessed 02 May 2014), Coleman Kidd, 1917-1918; citing Henderson County, Texas, United States, NARA microfilm publication M1509, (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d); FHL microfilm 1953529.

Coleman Kidd - death


"Texas, Deaths, 1890-1976," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/K3ZS-J6S : accessed 02 May 2014), Coleman Kidd, 03 Dec 1951; citing certificate number 63288, State Registrar Office, Austin; FHL microfilm 2074926.

Coleman Kidd - 1920 census


1920 census
location: Henderson County, Texas
date: January 16-17, 1920

Coleman Kidd  head  male  white  44  married  Texas  farmer
Minnie Kidd  wife  female  white  38  married  Texas
Earl Kidd  son  male  white  18  single  Texas  farmer
Era Kidd  daughter  female  white  16  single  Texas
Evalee Kidd  daughter  female  white  14  single  Texas
Hallin Kidd  son  male  white  12  single  Texas
Elton Kidd  son  male  white  11  single  Texas
Johnnie Kidd  daughter  female  white  9  single  Texas
Neal Kidd  son  male  white  7  single  Texas
Juanita Kidd  daughter  female  white  5  single  Texas
Jack Kidd  son  male  white  2 9/12  single  Texas
Paul Kidd  son  male  white  21  married  Texas
Blanch Kidd  daughter-in-law  female  white  18  married  Texas


"United States Census, 1920," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MHYH-6KR : accessed 02 May 2014), Coleman Kidd, Justice Precinct 4, Henderson, Texas, United States; citing sheet 8B, family 148, NARA microfilm publication T625, FHL microfilm 1821818.

Coleman Kidd - 1900 census


1900 census
location: Henderson County, Texas
date: June 18, 1900

Coleman Kidd  head  white  male  Jan 1875  25  married - 3 years  Texas  farmer
Minnie Kidd  wife  white  female  Nov 1881  18  married - 3 years  1, 1  Texas
Paul C Kidd  son  white  male  Aug 1899  1  single  Texas



"United States Census, 1900," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/M3GP-JRW : accessed 02 May 2014), Coleman Kidd, Justice Precinct 4 (east part), Henderson, Texas, United States; citing sheet 12A, family 207, NARA microfilm publication T623, FHL microfilm 1241644.

Coleman Kidd - 1930 census


1930 census
location: Henderson County, Texas
date: April 23, 1930

Coleman Kidd  head  male  white  55  married - @ age 19  Texas  farmer
Bertha R Kidd  wife  female  white  39  married - @ age 30  Texas
Neil B Kidd  son  male  white  16  single  Texas
Juanita Kidd  daughter  female  white  14  single  Texas
Jack Kidd  son  male  white  12  single  Texas
Verdan Kidd  son  male  white  10  single  Texas
Alfonzo Kidd  son  male  white  4 1/12  single  Texas
Louise M Kidd  daughter  female  white  2 11/12  single  Texas
Marline F Kidd  daughter  female  white  9/12  single  Texas



"United States Census, 1930," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/CMS4-6ZM : accessed 02 May 2014), Coleman Kidd, Precinct 4, Henderson, Texas, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 0015, sheet 16B, family 330, NARA microfilm publication T626, roll 2355.