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StephensTHE STEPHENS FAMILY with The Dedoehdants of WILLIAM BARNET STEPHENS by Pat Trask Dedicated to EULA STEPHENS BOMAR DAVIE CO. PUBLIC UBRAW MOCKSVtLLE� NU � f HAUS Hurricane Ch & c dm.. 30 Community Club House Tullaho To ' ..tet..$ •� N w- j ouser ~, «'�....�^-----'--'tom'"" `'••w-- . S ITH _/ C PEL - Di t ,�FBo em. Rod ' c G Royce StC&Ppris ' HILL J. Harold OP , Stephens r � ` lifus Hid r o(19o9. r' Will Locke a ,.o (1924) T.Y. Ste ens 1910) ichard Gordon's oaf To j L ichburg-.. r FLATCREEK-RAUS AREA ` BEDFORD CO: TENN. cem. ,� awIE Co. PUBLIC US F T CRE � �� to' ,; r A 12 MOCKSVtu.4 no o _ f Dido, Texas ,. February 219 1881 Mr. Jefferson Stephensi I will write you a few lines to inform you of the death of your brother Marion, which took place about 10 o'clock at night the 14th instant. Father Boone has moved the children to his house, to take care of them, it being Marion's request. We still have the baby. Your friend, W. S. Coleman ( EXPLANATION FOR LETTERS OF W. Me STEPHENS AND W. S. COLEMAN) The wife of "Father Boone" 'was Elizabeth Floyd, sister of Jane Floyd, who was the mother of Arrilea Bearden Stephens. Thus, after raising her own children, Elizabeth accepted the sir children of William Marion and Arrilea Bearden Stephens into her home, as they were the.grandchildren of her sister. W, S: Coleman was the step -brother of Arrilea, and he was also the son-in-law of "Father" Howard Boone and Elizabeth Floyd Boone. The Boones and the Colemans had preceded the William Marion Stephens to the Fort Worth, Texas, area by a few years and they had been neighbors An the Flatcreek area of Bedford, Cob, Tenn., prior to going to Texas. When W. S. Coleman used the terra "Father" Boone, it Was because he was referring to him as his father-in-law. When William Marion referred to the sadness of leaving Tennessee, he had in mind the death and burial of his baby daughter Arrilea'Moss Stephens, only four months prior to the writing of the letter of February 8, 1880. (Provided by Gilley T. Stephens) OAVIE CO. PUBLIC LIBRARY M.00KSVILLE; No A-3 LETTER OF WILLIAM MARIO$ STEPHENS# TARAANT CO.t TEXAS. JAN 2091881 Dear brother and family. I #ill try to drop you a fear lines this morning with a sad heart and feeble body. I am sick; have•been bad -near two weeks, it is all that I can do to hold..the pencil. I have been in bad health nearly all the winter but have kept up till now. I feel like my time in this world was nearly over, I am worked nearly like I was back there. We have moved into our new home, hard life and mis- fortune follow close upon our heel. One of my horses died with blind staggers and the other liked to. Great many horses have died.. Jefferson, I .can't write much, I am so nervous. It took nearly all my cotton crop to have it picked, we did not pick much on account of chills. I have come .out behind. - I know all of you think hard of me for not writing more often but I have seen so mush trouble -it seemed like I could not write. I want you to send me $25.00, this will surprise you I know, but the facts are that way. I am needing medicine, can't get it without money and other things we are obliged to have. If you see Jim Hix see if maybe he will help me some. This may be the last request that I will make of you in this world and if it is and if this should be my last letter to you all I want you all to meet me in heaven. The Lord knows what will become of my poor children. I must close I have wrote more now than I thought I could. If you cfi.n'e �:�1 that money, send it right away, the stamp that brings this letter is the last and no money to buy anymore so far. Well write soon. W. M. STEPHENS P.S. Since I wrote I am feeling a little better though very week, ean,,scarcely walk across the house. Don't disappoint me in sending th:e money, if it can be had. Anyway I need medicine now and don't have the money to buy it. I will have to sell my interest in the dower if I can't do anything better. W. M . S . A-2 oAVIE GO. PUBLIC LIBRARY M.00KSVILE6 NO THE BOONE AND COLEMAN FAMILIES The Boone family descends from George Boone : I, I &III who were ancestors of the famous frdntiersmani Daniel Bone. The community of Boonesville, Lincoln Cot Tenn.was named for this Boone family who settled there in the early 18dolsi: The 7th generation down from George Boone I was William ( Billy) Boone who was born in Rowan Co., N: C. Dec. 12, 1790 and died at F_ eek, Tenn June 99 1854.. On. March 25, 1824 he married Sally(Toward a daughter of William and Mary Ste hens Howard. Sally o was born Dec. 29, 1803 and died Jan:�i' ;84.3. William Boone -served in the war of 1812 with his brother James. William and Sally Howard Boone were the parents of 11 children among whomwas Howard Boone born Dec, 22, 1824. On Nov. 14, 184.49 he married Elizabeth Floyd, an aunt of Arrilea Bearden' Stephens d�e_� Elizabeth was a daughter of Elijah and Sally Watso loy wardF. Boone died Aug. 5, 1883 and Elizabeth died Sept. 20, ., Azle, i� Tex. They were the parents of 11 children, plus they took all the -;4,J"1 children of William Marion and Arrilea Bearden Stephens except the baby, Lula who was taken in by the W. S. Coleman family, then later the Pedent s. Sarah Ann Boone, a daughter of Howard and Elizabeth Floyd Boone, was born' Sept 10, 1855 and married William Samuel Coleman ( a step- brother of Arrilea Bearden Stephens) at Flatcreek, Tenn. W. S. Coleman was a son of James and Sarah Byrd Coleman. We So and Sarah Boone Coleman were the parents of 13 children plus the baby of Arrilea .and Wm. Marion Stephens. In 1873, the Howard Boone family and the 1•1. S. Coleman family went to Texas in .covered wagons, settling first near the little village of Smithfield, Texas, in Tarrant County, near the frontier town of Fort Worth. During the last part of 1876, the Boone and Coleman families decided to make a move. They bought a farm near the Trinity River, about 3 miles Northwest of the Dido, Texas, postoffice. They built a log house, and moved in, and started cotton and corn crops. TfAs was the beginning of a neighborhood called Boone -Lane. (This is the same farm now owned and occupied by one of Sam and Sarah Coluiiians great grand so n t s , Richard Vance Hall.) Sam and Sarah Coleman moved into a log cabin on a branch about n. mile to the Northeast of the Boone' s new home. ( This land was purchased in the last part of 1876 -by Jim D. Peden and wife Maggie Stennis, who had just arrived from Kemper Co., Miss.) In the fall of 1880 Sam and Sarah Coleman moved to their new farm about 1 mile West of Boone Lane. In the fall of 1888 they rented their farm and moved to Springtown, Texas, in Parker Co. In 1898 William Samuel Coleman passed away.. Sarah Ann and her children, continued to live on this Coleman farm. She was a widow for 46 years after the death of her husband. ..She died at the age of 89, near Ringling, Okla.,, and is buried in the Ringling Cemetery. Note: A William Stephens made his will in Rowan Co. NC, Sept. 3, 1803 :(Rowan Co. will Bk. D, pg 43) naming 3 children- Sarah Stephens, Joseph Stephens, and Polly (Mary) Stephens. Also a marr. record in Rowan Co. N. Co for Sarah Stephens to Benjamin Howard 1812. OAVIE CO. PUBLIC UBRARII A 17 MOCKSAIS-9 NO