McCandles &
Lawrence Families
by: Carl W. Mathews
Submitted Nov 1999
JOHN McCANDLESS
Born 1750 - Co. Down, North Ireland
Died 1840 Maury Co Tenn
My wife, Elaine, and I spent five weeks in Ireland in late 1995 and
discovered a reference to John

David McCandles |
McCandless, a name I had
remembered from Dawson, Texas. This John McCandless was born in County Down, an area adjacent to and south of
Belfast in 1750 and named for his paternal grandfather. The family
was said to have originated in Scotland. His family had
probably lived in North Ireland for one hundred fifty years when he
sailed June 5, 1772 for America. His voyage of
eighty-two days landed him at New Castle, Delaware on August 26,
1772. It was said that he left New Castle
immediately and traveled to Baltimore, Maryland where he remained
for a few Months.
The reference made no mention of John McCandless migrating with any
siblings, but research has given rise to speculation that he may
have had several brothers come with him. David m.
Catherine Wasson Rowan Co NC William m. Elizabeth Jordan
who had lived at Isle of Wight, Virginia, moved to Orange Co NC
m. Hannah Baldridge in Rowan Co NC Samuel m. Jennett Douglas
in NC It was said that he was drafted into military service during
the American Revolution and served with distinction for three
years, 1875-1878. He was, initially, a wagoner, but
served later as a mounted horseman and attained the rank of
sergeant. John McCandless died in 1840 in Maury Co, Tenn.
He had been living on a pension of $23.33 per annum. Three John McCandless names were listed as having served in the revolutionary
War and were provied pensions
JOHN McCANDLESS #1 Born Co Down, North Ireland
Arrived New Castle, Delaware June 5, 1772
Moved to Mecklenburg Co NC 1773
Moved to Blount Co Tenn 1799
Moved to Rhea Co Tenn 1808
Moved to Maury Co Tenn 1834
JOHN McCANDLESS #2 Born 1754 New London Co, PA
Lived Orange Co NC
Moved to Giles Co Tenn 1832
NOTE: This reference may..probably is in error.
The William McCandless living in Giles Co Tenn in 1850
was born in 1769 and this John McCandless would have been fifteen.
JOHN McCANDLESS #3 Died Hardin Co KY 1827 m. 1785
Jane (Jinney) Mason of Greenbrier VA (Now WV)
Brother: John Mason
Sister: Mary Burkes
1786 Polly
1785 Alexander
1792 William
0000 Cynthia
The name "Orange" has been given to numerous female
members of the McCandless family through the years. The
name, no doubt, came from William of Orange who was and is a hero in
the minds of loyal North Irelanders. William (1650-1702), son
of Mary, daughter of Charles I of England and husband of
Mary, daughter of James II of England, deposed his father-in-law in
1688. William of Orange and Mary were to rule
England jointly, but William did most of the ruling. He
defeated his father-in-law, James II and an army composed of French
and Irish at the Battle of the Boyne. He sailed into the
harbor of Londenderry, North Ireland when it was under siege after
some teenage "Apprentices" closed the gates to the city
and stirred the citizens to resist. "Orangemen"
(Protestants of Ulster) organizations continue to exist to this day
in North Ireland (Ulster). John McCandless
must have instilled the admiration for William of Orange to his
family.
(Note of Interest: Many of the early arrivals from North
Ireland to America settled in Pennsylvania and, in time, moved south
into the Shenandoah Valley. Their allegiance to William of
Orange prompted the nickname "Billy Boys."
Some of the Scotch-Irish settled in the mountains..the hills of the
Shenandoah Valley, and were "Billy Boys who lived in the hills,"and the term 'HILLBILLY" was born.
No record of the first marriage of John McCandless has been
discovered, but he had, at least, one child prior to his marriage to
Susannah Farmer in 1782. William McCandless was born in 1769,
three years prior to the time John left Ireland.
William McCandless was living in Giles Co Tenn when the 1850 Census
was taken, still married to Hanna Baldridge, whom he had married
in 1798. Kentucky records indicate that John and William
McCandless were living there in the period of 1787-1811. This is
John McCandless #3 who lived at Greenbrier VA. Many veterans
of the Revolutionary were being given land grants in the Kentucky
Territory in the 1780's.
William McCandless married Elizabeth Jordan of Isle of Wight
Co., Virginia in 1794. Elizabeth is dead by 1798
and William married Hannah Baldridge of Orange Co NC in 1798.
Ann Matthews, daughter of John and Margaret McKissick Matthews of
Mecklenburg Co NC married Joseph Y Baldridge c. 1820.
David McCandless was born in Mecklenburg Co. NC December 17,
1791. Logan McCandless was born there in 1808.
Susannah Farmer may have been a widow with children when she married
John McCandless. The 1850 Tennessee US Census reported that
Henry Farmer, age ten, was living with Logan and Martha McCandless.
It is quite possible that the father of Henry Farmer was a son of
Susannah Farmer by her previous marriage and Henry's parents had
died.
The Tennessee US Census of 1850 reported that William McCandless was
eighty-one and blind. Hannah, now seventy-two,
listed her birthplace as North Carolina. Mary
McCandless resides with them and it may be assumed that she is their
daughter. Mary is thirty-five, born when Hannah was
thirty-seven. The census enumerator classifies Mary as
"Idiot."
Thomas McCandless, aged
fifty-five (b. 1795) lives in Maury Co in 1850. His wife is
Mary, aged fifty-three and born in North Carolina.
Two daughters are still at home. Frances is twenty-nine and
Susan is twenty. Both were born in Tennessee.
One McCandless family in the 1850 Giles Co Tennessee census is
puzzling. Thomas McCandless is twenty-five and "Anner"
McCandless is eighty-six. They live with the family of William S
Samuel. "Anner," no doubt Anna, is only
fourteen or fifteen years older than John McCandless .
The possibility exists that one of John's first-born sons married
Anna, a girls several years older. Anna's husband
had died and a daughter had married William Samuel.
Son Thomas, unmarried, continued to live with Anna.
Many of the veterans of the Revolutionary War were given Land Grants
in Tennessee c. 1795 and many, many families living in Orange and
Mecklenburg counties in NC made the move to Tennessee immediately
before and after 1800.
John (b 1750) was said to
have moved to Blount Co, Tennessee in 1799, but settled a few years
later to Maury Co. No McCandless families are found in Blount
Co, but are found in counties surrounding Maury County: Williamson,
Marshall, Lincoln, Giles, and Coffee. John McCandless (b1750)
lived his last years in Maury Co. on a monthly pension of $23.33 and
died c.1840 at near ninety years of age. An 1825 land transaction in
Maury Co. is of interest. David and John McCandless, and
Robert Richey purchased land in Giles Co, Tenn. from Sterling Clack
Robertson. It was Robertson who became the Mexican Impresario who
located many families from the Maury Co area in what became
Robertson's Colony centered at Franklin, Texas.
McCandless and Richey families both settled in Western Navarro Co,
originally part of Robertson's grant. Richey was settled in Western
Navarro County in 1847 when Britt Dawson arrived with his cattle and
settled on Battle Creek. David McCandless did not begin
settlement until 1856. William McCandless and Gideon B McCandless
were listed among the signers of
a "Certificate of Character for Francis Slaughter" dated
November 27, 1830 in Maury Co Tennessee. Other signatures
appearing on the Slaughter Certificate were: Robert and John Mack,
early Tennessee pioneers; John and William K Hill; (John Hill
McCandless MAY be related to these families) Nathan Coffee. The
Certificate was required by the Mexican government before
permitting Americans to become citizens and becoming eligible for
the Land grants available in Robertson's Colony in Texas. Francis
Slaughter was associated with Sterling Clack Robertson. His
first wife died and in 1836 Slaughter married Minerva Catherine
Matthews, daughter of Robert and Mary Ann Stewart Matthews of Maury
Co. Tennessee. Slaughter brought his bride and his three
children to Fort Franklin, arriving there December 1, 1835.
Francis and Minerva had three children whose descendants still
reside in Western Navarro Co. Slaughter died in 1842 and
Minerva married Dr. George Washington Hill in 1847.
David McCandless, born Dec
17, 1791, probably in Mecklenburg Co. NC.. died Jan 4, 1876 at
Dawson, Texas, came to Texas, probably, in December 1835 and lived
at Franklin. A large group of settlers from the Maury Co. area
of Tennessee arrived at Franklin on December 1, 1835 and included
Francis Slaughter and his family. Robert Harve Matthews,
brother of Minerva Catherine Matthews Slaughter, , and some family
servants, were, also in the group. And..Martha Patricia
Matthews (an older sister of Minerva and Robert Harve) and her
husband, First Cousin .. James Matthews .. were, probably, in the
group.
David McCandless and his
son, John, were said to have served in the Texas Army during the
struggle for independence, but were not participants at San Jacinto.
Sterling Clack Robertson's command, mustered at Fort Franklin,
reported to General Houston at his training camp on the Brazos, but
were ordered back to the Frontier to protect the settlers from Indian
attacks. Robertson's group missed San Jacinto by ten days. A second
son, Washington McCandless, was on his way to join Sam Houston's
Army but drowned when he attemped to cross the Brazos River. A third
McCandless name was mentioned in a party of Robertson Co. men who
gave chase to indians involved in the 1838 Morgan's Massacre that
occurred near the Brazos River above present day Marlin.
His name was Joseph McCandless. Others in the group included
William Fullerton, G W Morgan, Eli Chandler, Britton Dawson, R H
Matthews. (NOTE: The above is the only reference found on
Joseph McCandless and was related many years after the incident by
an individual well into his eighties. There is a possibility
that "John" was recalled as "Joseph."
The list of settlers
arriving at Franklin on Dec 1, 1835 could well show more than two
McCandless names. That list is found in The McClean Papers at
the Corsicana and other libraries The David McCandless family
settled in Texas in a community known as old Nashville, located
located on the Brazos River a few miles west of Fort Franklin.
Tragedy lost no time in striking the family. It was April 14,
1836 when the eldest son, Wash McCandless, drowned in the Brazos
River.
Macca Orange McCandless Lawrence remembered that he was on his way
to join Sam Houston's army. His Mother, Polly Gordon McCandless, was
overcome with grief and died August 13, 1836. The family moved from
Old Nashville back to Fort Franklin after the death of Polly Gordon
McCandless. A second son, John McCandless, who had joined Sam
Houston's army with his father, drove a stage coach after San
Jacinto between Franklin and Houston, contacted pneumonia on a trip
and died June 11, 1844. Daughter Nancy Elizabeth McCandless married
A F May in 1845 and died February 8, 1847. Susan McCandless
married William Boyles and died December 8, 1848.
David
McCandless was left alone with his two remaining daughters, Mary
Minerva (Nerve) and Macca Orange. Macca Orange was the
younger, but the first to marry. Joseph Thompson Lawrence, son
of John A and Jane Thompson Lawrence, had arrived at Fort Franklin
c.1840 from Tennessee. He had gone home in 1847, probably to
receive an inheritance, and returned with a family of slaves, Henry
and Malinda Caruthers and their sons, Calvin and Jeffery. Two years
later, October 25, 1849, Macca Orange McCandless married Joseph
Thompson Lawrence. Five years later, Mary Minerva had fallen in love
and on August 16, 1854, married William M
"Bill" Walker, son of William and Elizabeth Walker
who had migrated from North Ireland c.1820. A Walker daughter,
Elizabeth, was the first wife of Brit Dawson.. Tradition states that
they began their marriage by establishing settlement in
western Navarro County in 1854-1856 on the David McCandless 4400
acre grant David McCandless had received the grant acres from the
Republic of Texas who honored the original grant from Mexico to
settlers of Robertson's Colony. David McCandless was
given two additional grants in Navarro County. One, 638 acres
on August 4, 1846, and, another 388 acres on August 5, 1846.
The Robertson Co. Census of 1850 provides a glimpse of the David
McCandless family and reports:
David McCandless 55 NC $5900
James Lawrence 25 Tenn (This was a
census name error)
Macca Lawrence 19 Tenn
John Moody 43 Blacksmith from Scotland
Tabitha Moody 34 Ill.
The 1850 Census places David McCandless exactly where he was
supposed to be, but no mention is made of Mary Minerva who did not
marry until 1854. Was
she on a visit to Tennessee? The birth dates for "Jmes"
and Macca are correct. Who were John and
Tabitha Moody? Another John Moody (c1890) married one of
the Hill daughters in Dawson and had a son, E L Moody. Several other
McCandless families ( any relationship to David is unknown) received
land grants in Navarro Co., at unknown locations.
These included:
Sam F McCandles 1476 Ac June 11, 1850
W V McCandles 1476 Ac June 11, 1850
William W McCandless settled at Tellico 1857, a community on the
Trinity
River east of present day Ennis, Texas.
J O McCandless 320 Ac Jan 28, 1870
David McCandless had chosen a site on the headwaters of Richland
Creek located approximately one hundred miles north of Fort
Franklin. The land was rich prairie soil that surrounded
stands of timber, and most importantly, there was an abundance of
water. David McCandless, eventually, deeded the grant to his two
daughters, Macca Orange and Mary Minerva. It was in 1856 that David
McCandless made a decision to begin efforts to settle the property
himself. Covered wagons were assembled and with Macca Orange and her
husband, Joseph Thompson Lawrence; and the Caruthers family, David
McCandless moved from near Wheelock, Texas to his new home. He
was near his old friend from Maury Co Tennessee, William Richey.
William Richey had preceded David McCandless to the area. He
had married the Widow Cannon in Tennessee. Her daughter,
Susanna, was said to have gathered the bones of the men who died in
the Battle Creek episode in 1838 and placed them under the old oak
where the monument now stands. She married Britt Dawson in1847
David McCandless lived almost twenty years more on the Mexican grant
that had finally become his home. He died on January 4, 1876.
1876 must have been a bad year on the headwaters of Richland Creek.
It was on November 25, 1876 that Mary Minerva McCandless Walker
died. She and William Walker had borne two girls. Both Mary Minerva
(Nerve) and William Walker are buried at the Spring Hill Cemetery
near their daughter, Mary E Walker Berry. Mary E Walker had married
George M Dallas Berry and became the mother of twin boys, Otho and
Sparton. Mary E. died in 1776 and after her death Otho and
Sparton went to live with their grandparents, William and Mary
Minerva Walker. Otho Berry died in 1882 at age ten and
was buried at Spring Hill Cemetery. The surviving twin,
Spart Berry, inherited half of the original grant to David
McCandless, and lived many years in Dawson.
Alice Orange Walker married William G. Martin Oct 18,
1866. A marker at Spring Hill Cemetery records "Homer
Martin son of WG, bd 1866."
Another son, Robert Martin, was born at Spring Hill in 1868.
Other children born to William and Alice O Walker Martin were Berta
(1870), Maud (1873, and Mary (1876). The Martin Family,
apparently, left the area at some point near 1880.
EPILOGUE
One of David's relatives settled in West Texas. An "Uncle
John" McCandless often visited the Lawrence and other families
in Dawson in the early 1930's.
"Uncle John" would show up about once each year and
his visits were filled with excitement for small boys who were
fortunate enough to listen to his tales. "He
Said" that he had been a Texas Ranger…and his might have
been. He related as how every teengage boy wanted
a revolver to carry on his hip, that the cartridges placed into the
cylinder were not always sized to fit the cylinders. He
always wore cowboy boots and a big hat and looked the part of the
tales he told. One interesting McCandless family lived at Jewett,
Texas, a community a few miles east of Franklin. James
Alexander McCandless married Mary Frances Reeder March 14,1861.
All children with the exception of John (1868) were born in Leon
County, Texas. Son John was born to "James Alexander
McKandles and Mary Francis Reader" at Celina, Clay Co. Tenn, Sept
2, 1868. Celina is approximately 50 miles northeast of Nashville.
Two sources were used to identify John (1868) and Bunk (1871).
The fact that their ages are close and that "John Bunk McCandless" was found in West Texas suggests that they MAY have
been the same person. (Point: There was a relation between the
McCandless family and Clay Co.) The family could well have returned
to Tennessee on a visit when the child was born. Children of James
Alexander and Mary Frances Reeder McCandless :
Zelda 1862 m. 1887 Wm Bethel Durant
Florence 1863
Pocahontas 1865 m. 1888 Myrabeau Eugene Coley
John Bunk 1868 (Prob. THE John who visited Dawson) m. Dora May
Couch
d. Rachael b. 1900
Clifton 1873
Webb 1876 m. Mary Emma Morrell
da.. 1902 Zelda Runnells Co
Mary 1878
Joe Johnson 1880
Stonewall Jackson 1880
Gen. General Lee 1883 See Below
Sidney Johnson 1886
Gen. General Lee McCandless Wingate, Runnells Co.
TX m. 1st Olivia Holly Date unknown
s. James Custer 1904
s. Jackson Gascal 1906
m. 2nd Lillie Mae Miller Memphis, Hall Co., TXNov 7, 1914
d. Sylvia Lee 1925 Electra, Wichita Co. TX
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Miscellaneous Co. McCandless Marriages were: Tenn County
1891 -b Ruth Joel Wheeler Marian
1818 Catherine Robert Pickle Davidson (Nashville)
1854 Marshall M Rebecca E Green Marshall
1857 Andrew Telitha E Sharp Marshall
1858 Susan Ann Martin Fields Davidson
1861 M S Sarah C Hammond Marshall
1861 Robert Malinda House Marshall
1864 Sarah J Leroy Smith Coffee
1864 Thomas Tennessee Johnson Davidson
1865 B F Mary E Clark Giles
1866 Madora A Wm C Jordan Marshall
1867 Stephen Mary N Bass Giles
1867 S H Miss L W Phillips Marshall
1868 Julia Green B Evans Lincoln
1869 M J James M Layton McNairy
1871 L J Miss Addie Griffis Lincoln
1871 James S F J Allison Lincoln
1873 Nathaniel L Margaret Carriger Hamblen
1874 Mary J W M Hamilton Maury
1875 Martha Joseph M Creecy Giles
1875 S M Ellen Britton Giles
1877 John G Leora G Nelson Maury
1880 W S Ms M A Samuel Giles
1883 S C Ms W B Helkmick Marshall
1885 Cordelia A Isaac G Hardin Maury
1877 J W Miss L E Parsons Giles
1879 J W Annie Poarch Marshall
1887 Lizzie J T Smith Marshall
*****************************************************************
McCANDLESS
FAMILIES IN ORANGE CO NC - TO 1850
c1775 David b.
1782 John m. Susanna Farmer
1794 William m. Elizabeth Jordan
1795 James M b. David Monroe & Katy Wasson McCandless
(David & Katy had son. David L b. Watauga,
Boone Co 1839
(Catherine Wasson is ALSO SHOWN to have married Joseph
McCanless, and had a son whose name was Napoleon
Bonaparte b. at Gold Hill, Rowan Co. NC 1851)
1798 William m. Hannah Baldridge
1806 Samuel m. Jennett Douglass
1856 Durell m. Jatsy Smith
WATAUGA TWP - BOONE CO NC
1833 Julia b. James M & Selina C Alexander McC
1836 James Alex. b. "
1828 David Colbert b. " Iredale,
Statesville
1839 David L b. David Monroe & Katy Wasson McCandless
1851 Emily Verdurine m. James Hartley
1854 Jas Wellington b. James Alex & Sarah Franklin McCandless
1857 Mary Jane b. "
1855 Clingman b. David Colbert & Mary Green McCandless
1858 Elizabeth b. "
1859 Juliva Victor b. "
1860 William M b. David L & Mary McCandless
DAVID MONROE & KATY WASSON McCANDLESS\
1795 James M m. Selina C Alexander
1833 Julia
1836 James Alexander
1861 m. Mary Frances Reeder (Clay Co Tenn)
1828 David Colbert
1855 Clingman
1859 Juliva Victor
1858 Elizabeth
GUILFORD CO
c1830 Robert b
1850 Ann b. Robert McCandless
McCANDLESS IN STATE OF VIRGINIA
William McCandless, listed in Orange Co. NC as having married
Elizabeth Jordan in 1794 is, also, listed as marrying her at Isle of
Wight, Virginia 7 Jan 1794. This connects the McCandless from
Virginia to Orange Co. NC. McCandless records at Greenbrier VA
now Greenbriar WV
1785 John McCandless married Jenny or Jane Mason
1786 Polly b.
1789 Alexander b.
1792 William b.
1796 John b. to John & Jane Mason McCandless
1805 Timothy Mason b. John & Jane Mason McCandless
1806 Cynthia b.
GILES CO TENN WILLS
Thomas F McCandless wit. Frank Matthews
d. Mary
s. Nathaniel
GILES CO TENN - 1850 CENSUS
Logan 1808 Martha 1821
Henry Farmer 1840
Thomas 1795 NC Mary 1897 NC
Frances 1821 TN
Susan 1830 TN
Thomas 1825 TN Anner 1764 NC
Live with William S Samuel (??Dau of Anner)
William 1769 NC (Blind) Hanna 1778 NC
Mary 1815 TN (Idiot)
John Bunk McCandless was born Maury Co 1837 to John Bunk and
Margery McCandless. John G. McCandless was married in
Maury Co. to Leora G. Nelson
Oct 24, 1877. Mary McCandless married W H Hamilton Feb 18,
1874 in Maury Co.
Williamson Co. Tenn McCandless Marriages were:
1809 William Sally Goff
1821 Sarah Allen Duffill
1823 James Nancy Pomroy
1823 Catherine Willis Pomroy
1841 William Esther Roller
1846 John Mary E Morris
1847 John Phebe Ann Walker
1865 Carroll Miss E L Coleman
1872 J S Sally H Hart
1879 Alice James Davis
1879 James Maggie Hamilton
1880 James C Mattie T Coleman
1883 Jennie M T Gray
1884 William M Betty Gentry
1885 Ardenia M Wm Henry Johnson (Ardenia b. 1868)
1885 D B Millie D Gentry
Carl W Matthew's
POB 454
Roswell GA 30077
770 587 4350
THE
LAWRENCE FAMILY
Western Navarro County, Texas
The name Lawrence has long been recognized among the pioneer
families of Western Navarro County, Texas. Joseph
Thompson Lawrence arrived in The Republic of Texas with his brother,
William, in the early 1840's and settled at Fort Franklin, seat of
the Colony established in Mexican Texas by Sterling Clack Robertson
of Tennessee. The number of inhabitants of Fort Franklin was
pitifully small, but the smallness of numbers was overshadowed by
the enthusiasm of the future. Most residents were from
Tennessee, especially from the Duck River area south of Nashville.
Some families, like the Dread Dawsons, had come from the southeast
area of Texas along the Sabine River. Other family names included
Hill, Pendergast, McMillan, Walker, Fullerton, Matthews, Pierce,
Richey, Melton, and more.
It is not known just what work Joseph and William Lawrence performed
or what prompted them to came to Texas. Family lore
remembered that Joseph had left Tennessee as a result of some family
difficulty. The family lore did not state whether the
"difficulty" was within or without the immediate family.
It was remembered that Joseph was a tall and handsome young man.
Word came in 1847 that his mother was ailing and Joseph and William
returned to Rutherford County, Tennessee. After the
death of his mother the family estate was divided.
William, apparently, decided to remain in Tennessee and married
Agnes Dement. Their daughter Lessenby was born in 1849.
Joseph's inheritance included a family of slaves, Henry Caruthers,
his wife, and two sons. Joseph returned to Texas in the fall
of 1847 and brought the Caruthers family with him.
The Caruthers name entered the Lawrence family in 1791 when James
Caruthers married Elizabeth Lawrence in Mecklenburg Co., North
Carolina. The Caruthers family was said to have settled,
originally, in Australia, and resettled in North Carolina.
Several Lawrence families were part of the Scotch-Irish who settled
in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia and were found in the 1700's in
Botetourt County. Samuel and Mary Lawrence lived on Craigs Creek.
Their son, James and his wife, Elizabeth lived nearby. Isaac
Lawrence, "Late of Kentucky," was there in 1795. Isaac may
have been one of the many veterans of the American Revolution given
land grants in Kentucky and had gone there to establish his claim.
William Lawrence, whose wife was Mary, had inherited some land from
James Lawrence. Botetourt wills record that James
Lawrence had died in 1773. His wife was Frances and he had brothers
whose names were Robert, and John.
Neighbor names included Isaac Dawson, William Dempsey,
Archibald Graham, James Hall, George and James Houston, John
Matthews, Alexander Ritchey, and William Slaughter.
John Lawrence was killed by
Indians in 1787 in Sumner Co. Tennessee. Many Botetourt
settlers had moved to Sumner Co. at that time, claiming bounty lands
for having served in the American Revolution. Maj. William
Hall and two of his sons were killed there the same year.
Interesting is the fact that Lawrence Thompson was living in Sumner
Co. Tennessee in 1787. Sam Lawrence may have had a
sister who married a Thompson and she gave the name Lawrence to her
son, a common practice. Lawrence Thompson had married Kiziah Hart,
daughter of Nathaniel Hart and sister of Simpson Hart. Their
children were: Richard Lawrence Thompson, Sarah (Fanny) Thompson,
Nathaniel Hart Thompson, China Burton Thompson, and Azaniah
Thompson.
Sally Thompson, probably a sister to Lawrence Thompson, married
George Blackmore in 1787 in Sumner Co. Tennessee.
The mother of Joseph Thompson Lawrence was born Jane Thompson in
1790 and her father was John A Thompson, born 1750. John
A. may have been a veteran of the American Revolution and, may
have taken advantage of bounty lands in Tennessee. His mother
MAY have been a Lawrence and Lawrence Thompson MAY have been his
brother.
Thomas Lawrence was found in Wilkes Co. North Carolina in 1809,
which could have been Mecklenburg Co. in 1791 when Elizabeth
Lawrence married James Caruthers. Many of the Mecklenburg area
settlers migrated to Richmond Co. Georgia in the late 1700's and
early 1800's. Dread Dawson was born there in 1790
and many names common to Western Navarro County, Texas a century
later were found in the Augusta, Georgia area.
Joseph Thompson Lawrence had observed the teenage daughter of David
McCandless. Macca Orange McCandless was not more
than twelve when Joseph came to Fort Franklin, but she was seventeen
when he returned from Tennessee in 1847. They married the
following year.
David McCandless had received Mexican land grants on the headwaters
of Richland Creek that amounted to almost 5,000 acres, but would not
be settled until 1856. Death had come often to the David McCandless
home after they arrived in Texas. One son drowned in the
Brazos River while on his way to join Sam Houston's army. His
wife died a few months later. Another son died of pneumonia
after a wagon trip to Houston. Two daughters married, both
died soon after their marriages. Mary Minerva McCandless
married William Walker whose sister had married Brit Dawson.
Macca Orange McCandless had married Joseph Thompson Lawrence.
David McCandless informed his two remaining daughters and their
husbands that they would each received half of the 5,000 acres of
his land grant and that whoever settled the land first would have
first choice of the land. Mary Minerva and her husband settled
there in 1856 and chose the "bottom land." It
appeared a great choice until heavy rains came several years later
and flooded the area.
Joseph and Macca Orange McCandless Lawrence, David McCandless, and
the Henry Caruthers family, moved there in 1858. Joseph
and Macca raised a fine family. Joseph served the
CSA Army from the beginning of hostilities until the end of the war.
After the war he shot and killed a Yankee soldier in a saloon at
Spring Hill. (See Momma, I Killed a Yankee).
Members of this pioneer family helped make Texas great and continue
to make distinct contributions to the well being of America.
They became farmers, stockmen, peace officers, school teachers,
judges, merchants, and more. Lawrence family members have proudly
worn service uniforms in every war in which this country has been
engaged. Bill R. Lawrence (1924-1998) was a Navy
Corpsman attached to the U S Marines and was in several major
battles in the Pacific Theater. He was wounded on Iwo Jima.
Below is an unproved genealogy of this family.
Corrections and/or additions to this genealogy will be appreciated.
copyright 1998
CARL W MATHEWS
POB 454
ROSWELL GA 30077
"MAMA, I KILLED A
YANKEE"
Joseph Thompson Lawrence
1825-1884
Joseph Thompson Lawrence (b. 1825) was eighteen when he arrived at
Wheelock, Texas in 1843. He had, according to one story
handed down, experienced a "Family Problem" at his home in
Tennessee and had "Gone to Texas," and probably,
accompanied by his brother, William, who was two years older.
Home, for the Lawrence boys, had been Rutherford Co., Tennessee,
located forty miles or so South of Nashville.
Samuel and Mary Lawrence lived on Craigs Creek, Augusta Co.
Virginia in 1762. Their sons were John, James, William,
and Robert Lawrence. James Lawrence had married Frances.
William married Mary and lived in Botetourt Co Virginia in
1770. John Lawrence was killed by Indians in
Tennessee in 1787, the same year that Lawrence Thompson married
Kezia Hart in Tennessee. A Thomas Lawrence had
wandered off to North Carolina, but rejoined the family in
Tennessee.
Joseph Thompson Lawrence and William Lawrence were the sons of John
A. and Jane Thompson Lawrence and the maternal grandsons of John and
Grizzelle Ellis Thompson. (Lawrence and Thompson families must
have been close for many years by virtue that they lived in the same
area and the Thompsons named a son Lawrence.) No record
has been discovered concerning William Lawrence in Texas, but a
William Lawrence married Agness Dement in Rutherford Co Tennessee
and had a daughter whose name was Lesenby.
Whatever the "Family Problem" Joseph Thompson Lawrence
returned to Rutherford Co. in 1847 and returned to Wheelock with a
family of slaves, Henry Caruthers, his wife, Aunt Malinda, and sons,
Calvin and Jeffery. The return to Tennessee may have been
prompted by the death of the parents and the distribution of
inheritances. William may have returned to Rutherford Co.
married Agness Dement, and had a daughter, Lesenby, in 1849.
Joseph Thompson Lawrence's return to Texas in 1847 may have been
influenced by his interest in the daughter of David McCandless.
Two years later, October 25, 1849 at Wheelock, Texas, Joseph
Thompson Lawrence married Macca Orange McCandless (b.1831).
The David McCandless family of Giles Co. Tennessee had arrived at
Fort Franklin in Robertson's Colony on Dec. 1, 1835. Francis
Slaughter, who had married Minerva Catherine Matthews the previous
summer, and his three children had traveled with the McCandlesses.
Minerva's brother, Robert Harve Matthews and two family servants,
were, also in the group.
David McCandless obtained a lst Class Headright Certificate from the
Mexican government (honored by the Republic of Texas) that entitled
him to one league of land (4428 acres) plus one Labor (177.l acres).
Certificate holders were permitted to select from any unclaimed land
in the Republic and David McCandless made his choice on the
headwaters of Richland Creek in what is now Western Navarro county.
He received his patents to the property on August 4 & 5, 1846.
The land was rich and water, a necessity, in abundance.
The Joseph Lawrence family moved by covered wagon to the McCandless
land in 1856 and never left. They brought with them the family
of Uncle Henry Caruthers whose members would become like a part of
the Lawrence family. Together, they worked to improve the land
and make a good life for everyone. They built cabins,
dug wells, tilled the soil, raised a few cattle. The good life
was beginning to become a reality in 1860 when cannon roared at Ft.
Sumpter in South Carolina and began a terrible conflict that would
divide the United States for almost five years and leave scars that
would never go away.
Joseph Thompson Lawrence was thirty-five when the Civil War began
and he enlisted October 28, 1861 as a Private. Capt. A F
Moss had recruited him for Company "K" of the Texas
Dragoon Volunteers. He was described as six feet four inches
tall, florid complexion, blue eyes and dark hair. His
occupation was "Farmer."
He was at Little Rock, Arkansas on May 25, 1962 when he was given a
discharge signed by Lt. Col. R B Burleson, Commander. The
discharge was according to "The provisions of the Conscription
Law." Joseph Thompson Lawrence, apparently,
re-enlisted and served until well after Appomattox. CSA Special
Order 136, dated Houston, May 16, 1865, transfers Joseph T. Lawrence
from Mann's Regiment to Co. "I" Watson's Regiment.
The Order was
signed by Robert J Samuel for Maj. General J B McGruder.
Joseph T Lawrence had served
the Confederate States of America long and well, but his cause had
lost. The bitterness of defeat never left his mind and he was
resentful of the Yankee soldiers who strutted the streets of the
nearest town, Spring Hill, Texas. Some described Joseph
Lawrence as one who, "stood for all that was right for the
progress of his country and the good of his family."
Another stated that, "He seldom expressed himself but was most
emphatic and adamant when necessary."
Bates Savage, eighty-five in 1994 and living in Hubbard, Texas with
his wife of more than fifty years, the former Jo Evelyn Berry of
Dawson, remembers well his Grandma Savage telling of an incident
that occurred at Spring Hill.
The date was sometime after the Civil War had ended, but Yankee
soldiers were still encamped near Spring Hill. Darkness had
arrived and Joseph Lawrence was the single patron in one of several
saloons located at Spring Hill. He was well acquainted with
the bartender and they were engaged in friendly conversation when
three uniformed Yankee soldiers walked into the saloon. The
three soldiers began to make fun and pick at Joseph
Lawrence tipping his hat, making remarks about the South losing
the war, and, as Bates Savage expressed "probably goosing
him."
The bartender knew Joseph Lawrence well and took one of the Yankee
soldiers aside and expressed his concern for the outcome of the
situation that appeared to be developing. He stated that
Joseph Lawrence was a good natured individual, but one who would not
long put up with the kind of treatment he was receiving at the hands
of the Yankee soldiers.
The warning by the bartender went unheeded. Joseph Lawrence
told the soldiers to "let him be." The irritating
actions and comments continued until Joseph Lawrence had his fill
and with that he whipped out his six-shooter and shot one of the
soldiers. The man fell dead on the saloon floor and his two
companions, both bearing arms, fled through the rear door of the
saloon without any attempt to draw their weapons.
Joseph Lawrence mounted his
horse and rode quickly the several miles to his home. He
dismounted and was met at the door by his wife, Macca.
"Momma, I killed a Yankee!" John Lawrence gathered a
few clothes and some food, told his wife that he was headed for the
heavy timber of the Richland bottom, and where he would be at a
later date so she could bring fresh clothes and food.
His Father-in-law, David McCandless had one of the fastest horses in
Navarro County and had loaned the horse to Joseph Lawrence during
the Civil War. Joseph Lawrence had returned the horse to David
McClandless, but now he needed the horse once more and rode that
horse into the heavy timber of the Richland Creek bottoms.
Bates Savage recalled that, "Grandpa hid out in the timber
for..like..four or five years. He knew that the Yankee
soldiers would not look for him there, but would watch to catch him
when he came to the house which he never did."
When the Yankee soldiers had long since left Spring Hill and when
there was little chance of having any witness to the killing other
than the bartender, Grandma Lawrence gathered her children in the
family wagon and headed South toward Franklin. Several days
later she noticed that a lone horsemen had begun to follow the
wagon. The horseman remained far behind the wagon and when
Grandma Lawrence stopped the horseman stopped. She
decided that the horseman was her husband, John, but he, unable to
recognize her or the children, was fearful of making contact.
She was wearing a bright red petticoat which John had given her.
She knew he would recognize the petticoat. Off came the
petticoat and she began to wave it high above her head. The
horseman came toward the wagon at a gallop.
The Lawrences hired a lawyer
in Corsicana to take the case and Grandpa Lawrence turned himself
into the authorities. The only remaining trial witness in
Texas was the bartender who told the court what had happened
and Grandpa Lawrence was adjudged "Not Guilty!"
Grandma Savage Ann Elizabeth Lawrence who married George W.
Savage was going to school at Tehuacana when her father's trial
began at the courthouse in Corsicana, but had not learned the
outcome. Two men had arrived one evening from Corsicana and
spent the night at the school which, apparently, served as a hotel
and restaurant for travelers. The following morning the
two men were seated at the long dining table when the students
arrived for breakfast. Grandma Savage related to Bates Savage
that she overheard the two men talking about a trial at the
courthouse in Corsicana. She listened intently. Finally,
one of the men asked, "What happened in the trial of 'Old Man
Lawrence?" Her heart jumped into her throat as she heard
her Father's name mentioned.
"Why, they turned him loose." said the other man.
"They didn't have any witness except for that bartender and he
told the judge how those Yankee soldiers had intimidated "Old
Man Lawrence" and that Lawrence did everything he could to
avoid conflict, and the Judge found 'Old Man' Lawrence Not
Guilty."
Joseph Thompson Lawrence had ridden David McCandless's fast horse
for more than a decade and had become attached to the animal.
When the trial was completed he approached his Father-in-law with a
proposal to trade one of his fine young horses for the old horse he
had ridden so long and David McCandless agreed.
Grandpa and Grandma Lawrence lived out their lives on their ranch.
Seven of their nine living children married. Most established
families in or near Dawson.
John D Lawrence married Anna Dawson, Daughter of Brit Dawson, and
their children were Joe, Jim, Vic, Roger, Clint, Carrie, Salley and
Susan.
Ann Elizabeth Lawrence married George Savage and their children were
John, George, Sarah, Carrie, David, William, Joseph, James, Karl,
Henry, Frank, and Thelma.
Mary Jane Lawrence married Milton Long and their only son, Leroy
Thompson Long who died in WWI.
William J (Uncle Billy) Lawrence married another of Brit Dawson's
girls, Emily, and their children were David (Mack), Fannie, Ella,
Frank, Hester, Laura, Nannie, Billy, and Brit (Coonie).
Carrie Lawrence never married
Sarah Medorah Lawrence died young.
James O Lawrence married Lenora Wright and their children were
Winnie, Othello, Rozelle, Joe, Bob, Louis, W P (Doc), and Jimmy.
Fannie Lawrence married Jim Sowell and their children were Charlie,
Beatrice, Macca, and Annie.
George Lawrence married Carrie Dempsey and their children were
Curtis, Floyd, and Edna Macca.
Joseph Thompson and Macca Orange McCandless Lawrence were buried in
the Lawrence Family Cemetery located just off Farm Road 709
Northwest of Dawson. Joseph Thompson Lawrence died in
1884, Macca Orange McCandless Lawrence in 1925. Members of the
Caruthers family lie nearby.
SOME FAMILY MEMBERS & DATES
William Lawrence b. c1802 m. 1825 Judith Edwards
Elizabeth Lawrence b. 1826
Katherine Lawrence b. c1800 m. 1821 Zadoc Bell
James Lawrence b. c 1790
m. 1st Joanna b. 1799
s. Martin Lawrence b. 1815
s. Thomas Lawrence b. 1818
m. 2nd Sarah Jane Thompson
s. William Lawrence b. 1823
m. Agness Dement
d. Lesenby Lawrence
s. Joseph Thompson Lawrence b. 1825
d. Sarah Catherine Lawrence b. c1834
m. 1864 Tom Carton
d. Nancy Tennessee Lawrence b.1839 m. 1851 John Jackson
The John (b.c1773) & Grizzelle Ellis (b.c1773) Thompson family
structure (unproven) may have been
b. 1793 Jennette m. 1814 Wm McKissick of Maury Co
b.c1796 Henry m.1816 Susan Smith
b.c1797 Jacob m.1817 Temperance Crawford
b.c1801 Sarah Jane m. c1824 James Lawrence
b.c1803 Eddie m. 1823 George Warren
b.c1808 Wm L m.1828 Martha Johnson
b.c1814 Anna m. 1834 Mr. Jones
b. 1815 Salley
b.c1817 Willie B m. 1837 Eliz Collins
b.c1819 Elizabeth m. 1839 William Lewis
m. 1842 Mr. Blivins
Notes:
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