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Anna Holman

Female 1839 - Abt 1923  (83 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Anna Holman was born on 15 Jan 1839 in Texas (daughter of William Sanford Holman and Clementine G. "Mentie" Cartwright); died about 1923.

    Notes:

    Along with her cousins Mary Garrett and Victoria Thomas, she "Attended St. Mary's Hall, an elite Episcopalian finishing school founded in 1837 in Burlington, New Jersey, near Philadelphia...(enduring) terrible homesickness and culture shock upon...arrival in November 1854." (Henson and Parmelee, THE CARTWRIGHTS OF SAN AUGUSTINE, p. 174)" She and her husband moved to Kaufman County soon after the civil war, but their relationship with her Uncle Matthew Cartwright seemed strained by his handling of some of her inheritance. (ibid, p. 264).

    (Research):

    Census Listings:

    1850 Census
    Texas, San Augustine, San Augustine District
    Enumerated 14 Sept 1850
    Stamped 336
    77-77
    Wm. Garrett 38 M Farmer 14700 Tenn
    Lucette Garrett 22 F Texas
    Clementine Garrett 14 F Tenn
    Mary Garrett 12 F Tenn
    William Garrett 2 M Tenn
    Anna Holman 10 F Tenn
    Wm Holman 8 M Tenn

    Anna married Richard F. Slaughter on 13 Jan 1857 in San Augustine County, Texas. Richard was born before 1839; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  William Sanford Holman was born on 12 Sep 1816 in Fayette County, Kentucky (son of Col. Isaac Holman and Anne Wigglesworth); died on 23 Dec 1843 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Holman Cemetery, Sabine County, Texas.

    Notes:

    Biographical Notes from the Texas Archival Resources Online, A Guide to the Sanford Holman Papers, 1839-1845

    William Sanford Holman was born in Fayette County, Kentucky, on 1816 April 12, a son of Isaac (1775-1835) and Anne Wigglesworth (1783-1841) Holman. A veteran of the War of 1812 and an attorney, Isaac Holman served as a Kentucky legislator and Tennessee state senator.

    Sanford Holman moved with his family to Lincoln County, Tennessee, around 1818. A shortage of money and a resulting credit crisis in that state in 1834 prompted the Holman family to move to San Augustine County, Texas, in three groups between 1834 October and 1835 March. The family soon became prominent in the area, with Sanford's brother, William W. (1806-1873), representing San Augustine in the first Congress of the Republic of Texas. Another brother, James Saunders Holman (1804-1867), served as the first mayor of Houston after it was incorporated in 1837.

    Sanford Holman served in the Texan army during the Texas Revolution and was a member of Captain William Kimbro's "San Augustine Company" at the Battle of San Jacinto. In 1842 September, President Sam Houston appointed Holman as Customs Collector for the San Augustine District. Owing the government more than $2,600, he was removed from office by 1843 July.

    Sanford Holman married Clementine Cartwright (1819-1847) in San Augustine...The couple had two children, Annie (1839-1923), who married Richard Fendall Slaughter (1829-1904), and William Sanford, Jr.

    Sanford Holman died in San Augustine on 1843 December 23. His brother William W. Holman and his widow Clementine were named administrators of his estate the following month.

    References

    Daughters of the Republic of Texas. Daughters of the Republic of Texas Patriot Ancestor Album. Paducah, Kentucky: Turner Publishing, 1995.

    Daughters of the Republic of Texas. Founders and Patriots of the Republic of Texas: The Lineages of the Members of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas, Volume II. Austin, Texas: Daughters of the Republic of Texas, 1974.

    Daughters of the Republic of Texas. Muster Rolls of the Texas Revolution. Austin, Texas: Daughters of the Republic of Texas, 1986.

    Dixon, Sam Houston, and Louis Wiltz Kemp. The Heroes of San Jacinto. Houston, Texas: Anson Jones Press, 1932.

    Holman, Dixon W. "James Sanders Holman." Handbook of Texas Online. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fho38.

    Holman, Dixon W. "William W. Holman." Handbook of Texas Online. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fho39.

    Ingmire, Frances Terry, compiler. San Augustine County, Texas, Marriage Records, 1837-1880. St. Louis, Missouri: Frances Terry Ingmire, 1980.

    Noble, Harry P., Jr. Texas Trailblazers: San Augustine Pioneers. Lufkin, Texas: Best of East Texas Publishers, 1999.

    San Augustine Public Library. 1828-1940: Probate Cases of San Augustine County, Texas. Nacogdoches, Texas: Ericson Books, 1984


    William married Clementine G. "Mentie" Cartwright on 14 Jan 1838 in San Augustine County, Texas. Clementine (daughter of John Cartwright and Mary E. "Polly" Crutchfield) was born on 14 Apr 1819 in Wilson County, Tennessee; died on 10 Mar 1847 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Holman Cemetery, Sabine County, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Clementine G. "Mentie" Cartwright was born on 14 Apr 1819 in Wilson County, Tennessee (daughter of John Cartwright and Mary E. "Polly" Crutchfield); died on 10 Mar 1847 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Holman Cemetery, Sabine County, Texas.

    Notes:

    Henson and Parmelee wrote that after her husband died suddenly at a young age, his widow, Clementine was only age twenty-four, with two small children. The probate court named the widow and Sanford's brother, William W. Holman, administrators of the estate. The Treasury Department of the State of Texas had filed suit agains Sanford prior to his death, and they won this, resulting in his heirs becoming liable for this debt. Both Sanford and Clementine had inheritied land from their parents that in 1842, a year before Sanford died, totaled about 15,000 acres. By 1844, the year after her husbands death, Clementine owed taxes on four slaves and one silver watch plus acreage. The continuing hard times slowed land sales, but Clementine managed to pay some debts by transferring some acreage, while other tracts were sold at sherriff sales for back taxes and other debts. By 1846, the struggling widow owned only 1,476 acres valued at a mere $369, an average of twenty-five cents per acre." (Henson and Parmelee, p. 127). Henson and Parmelee write that she when she died, four years after the death of Sanford, her body was taken by wagon to be interred next to her husband in the Holman family plot northwest of town. (ibid, pp. 150-151).

    Children:
    1. 1. Anna Holman was born on 15 Jan 1839 in Texas; died about 1923.
    2. William "Billy" Sanford Holman, Jr. was born about 1842 in Texas; and died.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Col. Isaac Holman was born on 14 Sep 1783 in Surry County, North Carolina; died on 10 Aug 1835 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Holman Cemetery, Sabine County, Texas.

    Notes:

    Isaac was a veteran of the War of 1812 where he earned the title of Colonel. An attorney by profession, he was attracted to politics. He was elected to the Kentucky legistlature in 1810 and again in 1816. In 1818, he moved his family to Lincoln County, Tennessee, where he immersed himself in public affairs, running for the Tennessee assembly in 1823, and later serving as state senator. A credit squeeze in Tennessee put the Holman family in a financial bind, and the family decided to move to Texas. Sons William W. and James S. made the trip first, arriving in San Augustine in October 1834. (Noble, page 111). Isaac arrived in December with his two younger sons. In March, 1835, his wife and daughters followed. The entire family became citizens of the Redlands. Isaac died only eight months after his arrival in San Augustine. (Harry Noble) In "The Cartwrights of San Augustine" it was written that the family brought 20 slaves with them to Texas. (Henson & Parmelee, p. 84)

    Isaac married Anne Wigglesworth on 25 Dec 1800 in Kentucky. Anne was born on 14 Sep 1783; died on 22 Jul 1841 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Holman Cemetery, Sabine County, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Anne Wigglesworth was born on 14 Sep 1783; died on 22 Jul 1841 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Holman Cemetery, Sabine County, Texas.

    Notes:

    Henson and Parmelee, in their book "The Cartwrights of San Augustine," wrote that Anne, along with her teenage daughters, Amanda, America and Elvira, journeyed "from Lincoln County, Tennessee via Nashville, Natchez, and Natchitoches in only fifteen days, a remarkably short time, having connected with steamboats at all three places by mere minutes. In Natchitoches a drove of horses from Arkansas had just arrived and they bought three for only $180. The colonel had been Sandford, his youngest son, to Tennessee to escort his mothers and sisters, but he had unknowingly passed them on the river. From this brief account, it is clear that Anne Wigglesworth Homas was an unusually self-reliant woman, unafraid to travel alone over unfamiliar territory. She and her three teenage daughters were relatively safe on board the steamboats, but the journey from Natchitoches seems unusual. The ladies most have been accompanied by loyal servants who could hitch the horses to their vehicles and act as an escort past Fort Jesup and through the Sabine Bottom. (pp. 84-85). Aldophus Sterne in Nacogdoches noted that a number of pope suffered from fever and died during the month [of July 1841, when both John Cartwright and Anne Wigglesworth Holman died]. While no local people identified the sickness that summer, it may have been yellow fever. Two men who left Nacogdoches in September died of the dread disease as soon as they reached Vicksburg. (p. 117).

    Notes:

    Married:
    Shown as marrying in Woodford County, Kentucky by some. Henson and Parmelee instead cite their marriage as taking place in Harrison County.

    Children:
    1. James Saunders Holman was born about 1804 in Kentucky; died about 1867 in Texas.
    2. William W. Holman was born on 8 Dec 1806 in Harrison County, Kentucky; died on 5 Nov 1873 in San Augustine County, Texas.
    3. Polly Anne Holman was born about 1811 in Kentucky; died after 1890.
    4. John W. Holman was born between 1808 and 1813 in Kentucky; died about 1853.
    5. Isaac Holman, Jr. was born about 1809 in Kentucky; died about 1833.
    6. Elizabeth "Betty" Holman was born about 1815 in Kentucky; died about 1886.
    7. 2. William Sanford Holman was born on 12 Sep 1816 in Fayette County, Kentucky; died on 23 Dec 1843 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Holman Cemetery, Sabine County, Texas.
    8. Amanda "Mandy" Holman was born on 24 Jul 1817 in Shelbyville, Bedford County, Tennessee; died on 26 Jun 1894 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Oakland Memorial Park Cemetery, Terrell, Kaufman County, Texas.
    9. America "Meck" Holman was born on 22 Oct 1822 in Tennessee; died on 6 Feb 1892.
    10. Elvira "Ella" Holman was born on 14 Oct 1825 in Tennessee; died on 6 Apr 1855.

  3. 6.  John Cartwright was born on 10 Mar 1787 in Pitt County, North Carolina; died on 18 Jul 1841 in San Augustine, San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Cartwright Cemetery, San Augustine County, Texas.

    Notes:

    John was the only son of Matthew (1754-1812) and Mary "Polly" Grimmer Cartwright (1761-1824), although he had five sisters. He was a grandson of John Cartwright (1728-1780) and Sarah Miller.

    Harry Noble wrote a twenty page biography of him in his book, TEXAS TRAILBLAZERS (pages 70 - 90). He noted that much additional material can be found in the first five chapters of Margaret Swett Henson and Deolece Parmelee's volume THE CARTWRIGHTS OF SAN AUGUSTINE (Texas State Historical Association, Austin, 1993).

    Margaret Henson, in her preface of her book about the Cartwright Family, writes that Emily Griffith Roberts, the wife a John Cartwright's great-grandson, privately published a two-volume genealogy about the family in 1939 and 1948. The volumes included research and many documents concerning the Roberts, Griffiths, Cartwrights and other interrelated families. A committee of descendants later employed Mrs. Deolece Parmelee to explore the collections of papers scattered in private hands, along with some archived at the Eugene C. Barker Texas History Center, and to prepare a more complete history. Parmelee made photocopies and typescripts, arranged them in a usable order, and eventually compiled a 450 page typescript. This was largely the basis for Henson's 1993 book.

    Noble wrote that when John Cartwright was five years old his parents sold their farm in North Carolina and moved westward across the mountains into Tennessee. There they purchased two hundred acres on Drake's Lick Creek in Sumner County. John spent his childhood in Tennessee. He would continue a pilgrimage that would cover approximately 800 miles and involve at least five moves, but when completed thirty-three years later, he would be in Texas--his home for the remainder of his life. Texas would also be the home for several generations of his descendants.

    While in Wilson County, Tennessee, John was a merchant, an occupation he would continue for the rest of his life. By 1818 he was having trouble collecting certain debts. His attorney, a new resident in Lebanon, Tennessee, was Sam Houston....the two men were detstined to meet again--the next time in San Augustine, Texas. (Noble, page 71)

    John later moved his family to Mississippi, and "caught 'Texas fever' when the new Mexican government...stabilized...with a constitution resembling that of the United States." He began the last leg of his pilgrimage in early 1825...(taking) his family down the Mississippi River to New Orleans by steamboat and then across the Gulf and up the Red River. Leaving the river at Natchitoches, the family traveled by wagons overland past Fort Jessup to James Gaines ferry. John picked his homesite about five miles east of the Ayish Bayou close to the banks of springs near Palo Gacho Creek. The area was vacant, not a settler anywhere near, "...although the house of a previous owner remained in the vicinity." John's thirty-three year odyssey was over, ending on the banks of the Palo Gacho Creek in Texas and Coahuila, Mexico. What a mosiac of people John found in the Ayish Bayou region when he arrived. Most were hard working farmers or businessmen of modest means, but some were unscruplous drifters, already at odds with the law. (Noble, page 72)

    John and his family can be found on the 1835 Sabine District census. Their were 11 slaves in their home, from ages 12 to 39. There were also 4 children born to their slaves.

    On August 21, 1840, with the assistance of San Augustine attorney William W. Frizell, Cartwright made his will. In it he gave the 885 acre homesite on Palo Gacho to his two minor sons, Clinton and Richard. He also gave his wife an interest in the homesite and placed the restriction that it couldn't be sold until after her death. Additionally, he gave her all monies due him by debt. He then distributed the remaining assets to various family members. (Noble, 89) John Cartwright died on July 18, 1841, and (his son-in-law William) Garrett, along with Mary, Cartwright's widow, were appointed executors of Cartwright's estate. Their selections was confirmed the following month. With assistance from Matthew Cartwright, Garrett then compiled an inventory of the estate. It was valued at $72,800. (Noble)

    In the book, The Cartwrights of San Augustine, it was noted that elder sons, Matthew and Robert, challenged the will, likely on the grounds that the document was not in keeping with the community property laws adopted by the Republic of Texas in January 1840, and because John had exceeded his testamentary powers in the distribution of his property to his children. Mary Cartwright immediately renounced her executorship in order to contest John's will so as to "receive in common with my children such portions of said estate as we are by law entitled to." The family reached a settlement in January 1842. (Henson and Parmelee, pp. 119-120).

    John married Mary E. "Polly" Crutchfield on 21 Jan 1807 in Wilson County, Tennessee. Mary was born on 26 Oct 1787 in Virginia; died on 17 Jun 1848 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Cartwright Cemetery, San Augustine County, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Mary E. "Polly" Crutchfield was born on 26 Oct 1787 in Virginia; died on 17 Jun 1848 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Cartwright Cemetery, San Augustine County, Texas.

    Notes:

    The daughter of George and Dicey Hoskins Crutchfield. George Crutchfield, her father, was a veteran of the revolutionary war. (Noble, page 71). Her family moved from Virginia into Kentucky, and later moved south into Tennessee. (Henson & Parmelee, page 4). On the 1880 census, son George indicates his mother was born in Virginia. "The Cartwrights of San Augustine" indicated that she grew up in Smith County, Tennessee, and that her four sisters and three brothers mostly remained in Smith County for the rest of their lifes.

    Mary suffered from recurring malaria since at least 1847, and died ten days after son Clinton succumbed to the same disease. In twenty-two months, the three surviving Cartwright brothers has lost two sisters, a brother and their mother. (Hemson and Parmelee, pp. 153-154).

    Children:
    1. Matthew Cartwright was born on 11 Nov 1807 in Wilson County, Tennessee; died on 1 Apr 1870 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Oakland Memorial Park Cemetery, Terrell, Kaufman County, Texas.
    2. Robert Grimmer Cartwright was born on 25 Mar 1809 in Wilson County, Tennessee; died on 1 Mar 1853 in Shelby County, Texas.
    3. Dicey Hoskins Cartwright was born on 21 Jan 1811 in Wilson County, Tennessee; died in Jun 1820 in Wilkinson County, Mississippi.
    4. George Washington Cartwright was born on 2 Aug 1812 in Wilson County, Tennessee; died on 26 Jun 1881 in Sabine County, Texas.
    5. Mary "Polly" Grimmer Cartwright was born on 1 May 1814 in Lebanon, Wilson County, Tennessee; died on 30 Sep 1846 in San Augustine County, Texas.
    6. 3. Clementine G. "Mentie" Cartwright was born on 14 Apr 1819 in Wilson County, Tennessee; died on 10 Mar 1847 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Holman Cemetery, Sabine County, Texas.
    7. Martha E. Cartwright was born on 7 Aug 1822 in Pike County, Mississippi; died in Aug 1822 in Pike County, Mississippi; was buried in Cartwright Cemetery, San Augustine County, Texas.
    8. John Clinton Cartwright was born on 10 Sep 1823 in Pike County, Mississippi; died on 10 May 1848 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Cartwright Cemetery, San Augustine County, Texas.
    9. Richard Hankins Cartwright was born on 25 Apr 1828 in Ayish Bayou, Texas And Coahuila, Mexico; died in Apr 1856 in San Augustine County, Texas; was buried in Cartwright Cemetery, San Augustine County, Texas.