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	<title>iGenealogy.org &#187; Tinnin</title>
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		<title>Hugh Tinnin (1800-1869) – Family Group Record</title>
		<link>http://igenealogy.org/2010/05/23/hugh-tinnin-1800-1869-%e2%80%93-family-group-record/</link>
		<comments>http://igenealogy.org/2010/05/23/hugh-tinnin-1800-1869-%e2%80%93-family-group-record/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 May 2010 00:48:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brad McCall</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Family Group Records]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tinnin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arkansas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barron]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Billingsley]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crawford]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GGGG-Grandparents]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Grigsby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kirkpatrick]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Littlepage]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Moore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Neal]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Rutherford]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://igenealogy.org/?p=978</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Hugh Tinnin is my 4th Great Grandfather. My family line continues through his daughter Lucille &#8220;Lucy&#8221; Tinnin Neal from his second wife. Hugh Tinnin Birth &#8211; 1800, Tennessee Death &#8211; 13 Dec 1869, Burleson Co., Texas Father &#8211; John Tinnin (1770-1835) Mother &#8211; Elizabeth &#8220;Betsy&#8221; Moore (1775-1840) Married (1): Betsy Rutherford Birth &#8211; Mississippi Death [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hugh Tinnin is my 4th Great Grandfather. My family line continues through his daughter Lucille &#8220;Lucy&#8221; Tinnin Neal from his second wife.</p>
<p><strong>Hugh Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 1800, Tennessee<br />
Death &#8211; 13 Dec 1869, Burleson Co., Texas</p>
<p>Father &#8211; John Tinnin (1770-1835)<br />
Mother &#8211; Elizabeth &#8220;Betsy&#8221; Moore (1775-1840)</p>
<p>Married (1):</p>
<p><strong>Betsy Rutherford</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; Mississippi<br />
Death &#8211; bef 1836, Mississippi</p>
<p>Father &#8211; John &#8220;Jack&#8221; Rutherford (~1780-~1858)<br />
Mother &#8211; Winnifred &#8220;Winnie&#8221; Grigsby (~1785-~1865)</p>
<hr />
<p>Their Children:</p>
<p>1 F &#8211; <strong>Rachel Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 15 Jan 1826, Mississippi<br />
Death &#8211; ABT 1903/1904<br />
Spouse &#8211; Andrew Alexander Crawford</p>
<p>2 F &#8211; <strong>Elizabeth Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 17 Aug 1827, Mississippi<br />
Death &#8211; aft 1850</p>
<p>3 F &#8211; <strong>Lucille Jane Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 12 Aug 1828, Clinton, Mississippi<br />
Death &#8211; 9 Aug 1893, Prairie Grove, Washington Co., Arkansas<br />
Spouse (1) &#8211; William Thomas Neal Col./Col.<br />
Marriage	19 Nov 1846, Prairie Grove, Washington, Arkansas<br />
Spouse (2) &#8211; James Preston Neal Col./Col.<br />
Marriage	Jan 1869, Prairie Grove, Washington, Arkansas</p>
<p>4 M &#8211; <strong>Granville Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 19 Sep 1829, Hinds, Mississippi<br />
Death &#8211; 1840</p>
<hr />
<p>Married (2):</p>
<p><strong>Fanny Rutherford</strong><br />
Marriage &#8211; aft 1829<br />
Birth &#8211; abt 1808, Tennessee<br />
Death &#8211; 1846, Washington Co., Arkansas</p>
<p>Father &#8211; John &#8220;Jack&#8221; Rutherford (~1780-~1858)<br />
Mother &#8211; Winnifred &#8220;Winnie&#8221; Grigsby (~1785-~1865)</p>
<hr />
<p>Their Children:</p>
<p>1 M &#8211; <strong>John Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 7 Jul 1836, Arkansas</p>
<p>2 F &#8211; <strong>Harriet Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 22 Jul 1839, Arkansas<br />
Spouse &#8211; Richard S. Barron<br />
Marriage &#8211; 16 Aug 1869, Washington Co., Arkansas</p>
<p>3 M &#8211; <strong>William Hugh Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 13 Aug 1840, Arkansas</p>
<p>4 F &#8211; <strong>Emiline Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 1842, Arkansas<br />
Spouse &#8211; John Ray Billingsley<br />
Marriage &#8211; 7 Jul 1864, Travis Co., Texas</p>
<p>5 M &#8211; <strong>Hugh Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 12 Dec 1843<br />
Death &#8211; 21 Feb 1846</p>
<p>Married (3):</p>
<p><strong>Helen Mary Kirkpatrick</strong><br />
Marriage &#8211; aft 1843<br />
Birth &#8211; abt 1825, Kentucky<br />
Death &#8211; 24 Jun 1893, Austin, Travis Co., Texas<br />
Burial &#8211; Oakwood Cem. Austin, Travis Co., Texas</p>
<hr />
<p>Their Children:</p>
<p>1 M &#8211; <strong>Albert Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 8 May 1849, Arkansas<br />
Death &#8211; 1875</p>
<p>2 F &#8211; <strong>Mary Melvina Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 15 Aug 1850<br />
Death &#8211; 25 May 1851</p>
<p>3 F &#8211; <strong>Cleopatra &#8220;Miss Clippy&#8221; Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 24 May 1852<br />
Spouse &#8211; Henry Roberts</p>
<p>4 M &#8211; <strong>Pinckney Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 12 Mar 1854<br />
Death &#8211; 30 Aug 1916<br />
Spouse &#8211; Effie Littlepage</p>
<p>5 F &#8211; <strong>Susanella Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth	25 Aug 1855</p>
<p>6 M &#8211; <strong>Matison Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 1 Feb 1857, Austin<br />
Death &#8211; 14 Feb 1931<br />
Spouse &#8211; Elizabeth Angeline Willoughby<br />
Marriage &#8211; 13 Jan 1884</p>
<p>7 M &#8211; <strong>Eddie Tinnin</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 25 Aug 1860<br />
Death &#8211; 29 May 1861</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Andrew Alexander Crawford (1812-1862) &#8211; Published Biography</title>
		<link>http://igenealogy.org/2010/05/15/andrew-alexander-crawford-1812-1862-published-biography/</link>
		<comments>http://igenealogy.org/2010/05/15/andrew-alexander-crawford-1812-1862-published-biography/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 May 2010 01:35:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brad McCall</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Biographies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tinnin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arkansas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baird]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Biography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Booth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buchanan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[California]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Civil War]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Covey]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Mississippi]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://igenealogy.org/?p=532</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I was reviewing the 1850 census today, and noticed how closely Hugh Tinnin was living to his daughter Lucy Jane Tinnin Neal. I started to go through the pages of the census and noticed Andrew and Sinai Neal Buchanan nearby. The Buchanans and Neals both had a Tinnin kid staying with them, so I kept [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I was reviewing the 1850 census today, and noticed how closely Hugh Tinnin was living to his daughter Lucy Jane Tinnin Neal. I started to go through the pages of the census and noticed Andrew and Sinai Neal Buchanan nearby. The Buchanans and Neals both had a Tinnin kid staying with them, so I kept looking. After noticing Lucy eldest sister Rachel living nearby with her husband Andrew Alexander Crawford, I checked my genealogy software and found the following history written of him that I thought I&#8217;d share.</p>
<p>Andrew Alexander Crawford would have been the husband of my 3rd Great Grandmother&#8217;s older sister Rachel. </p>
<hr />
<p>Andrew Alexander Crawford was born November 11, 1812 in Lincoln County, Tennessee. He was the son of John Crawford and his first wife, Margaret Buchanan. See decendants of Alexander and Mary McPheeters Crawford by Forbes and Sammis and Decendants of the Buchanan Families of Washington County by Allan S. Humphries. Both his grandfathers were Revolutionary War patriots. His paternal grandfather William Crawford served as Private and patriot manufacturing and supplying arms to the Continental Army, Augusta County, Virginia. His maternal grandfather, Andrew Buchanan, also from Augusta County, Virginia served in the Continental Army and attained the rank of Captain. </p>
<p>Andrew first married Minerva Buchanan. It&#8217;s thought she was the daughter of Moses Buchanan. They had one child, Robert who later became a lawyer in Spearfish, South Dakota. Minerva was murdered by a negro slave named Caroline. Robert was just a small child. See an account of this murder and trial written by Mrs. Maurice Cruse in Flashback, Vol VII, #4 Jul 1957. </p>
<p>Andrew then married Rachel Tinnin, the daughter of Hugh and Betsy (Rutherford) Tinnin. In April of 1849, Andrew, in the company of 85 men from Washington and surrounding counties left for the gold fields of California. Lewis Evans was captain of this group of &#8220;Fourty Niners&#8221;. Andrew suffered from scurvy on the trip. Some men were never heard from, but Andrew made the trip home safely. He managed to bring each child a gold nuggett. In the year of 1859, he was serving as Justice of the Peace in Washington County, performing marriages, etc. Then in the first part of the Civil War, he was serving as County Judge. He then enlisted in the Confederate Army and fought in the battle of Pea Ridge and other western battles. He died at Rienzi, near Corinth, Mississippi from heat exposure during the Battle of Shiloh, May 23, 1862. </p>
<p>In the memoirs of Col., J.P. Neal, who was married to Lucy Tinnin, Rachel&#8217;s sister, Col. Neal mentions a house raising in the Prairie Grove valley in 1839. The house was on the east side of Cane Hill and belonged to Andy Crawford. He also mentions that the morning after the battle of Prairie Grove he was climbing a hill and met 200 Federal prisoners under guard on Andy Crawford&#8217;s farm. It was later the Mike Nail place. We don&#8217;t know how Rachel managed after the war, but she had lost her husband and oldest son, Hugh when it was over. She may have been homeless after it&#8217;s destruction. It was with the aid of the Catholic Sisters that she was given a milk cow to help provide for her children. Later in the 1870 Federal Census, she was living with her children in the home of William D. Crawford, Andrew&#8217;s brother and his family. </p>
<p>The only child of Andrew and Minerva was Robert, born about 1838. Rachel Tinnin was born in Mississippi January 15, 1826 and died 1903 or 1904 according to her widow&#8217;s pension records. The children of Andrew and Rachel were: Hugh, born about 1845 and died unmarried in the Civil War. Margaret, born about 1847 and married John &#8220;Lum&#8221; Henson. Susan &#8220;Sug&#8221; born about 1853 and married first: Isham House and second: H. Covey. Martha Halbert (Mattie) Crawford, born Feburary 11, 1854 &#8211; died January 16, 1899 in Floyd County, Texas, married John Washington Smith November 11, 1877 in Washington County, Arkansas (See J.W. Smith Family). Andrew Neal Crawford, born March 13, 1856 &#8211; died in Florida, married Laura Baird, children: Mrs. C.M. Garrett, Mrs. P.W. Wybrecht, Mrs. S.K. Booth and Alvin A. Crawford from his obituary. Lucy Crawford, born August 30, 1856 &#8211; died December 10, 1938, married Alexander Cruse, January 13, 1878 see To Kimberly, with Love by Lillian Cruse Woods and Buell Beverly Woods. Emily (Emma) Crawford, married first: George McKinzie on September 9, 1880, second: Huff, this family moved to Belton, in Bell County, Texas. Alice Crawford married Frank Parkhurst on January 25, 1880, she died leaving at least one daughter.</p>
<p>Source: Ruth Lee, History of Washington County Arkansas, Shiloh Museum, Springdale, Arkansas, 1989 &#8211; Family History Library &#8211; US/CAN 976.714 D3n</p>
<hr />
<p>If you’re related to this family or have more information about them including stories, pictures and dates and family member names, I’d love to hear from you. Please leave a comment below or email me directly from the <a href="http://igenealogy.org/about/">About Us</a> page.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>An Interview with the Granddaughter of Hugh Tinnin</title>
		<link>http://igenealogy.org/2010/05/09/an-interview-with-the-granddaughter-of-hugh-tinnin/</link>
		<comments>http://igenealogy.org/2010/05/09/an-interview-with-the-granddaughter-of-hugh-tinnin/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 May 2010 14:53:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brad McCall</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tinnin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arkansas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Indians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Interview]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Louisiana]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mississippi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Moore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Neal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rutherford]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Stone]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Texas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Willoughby]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://igenealogy.org/?p=483</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[After my posting on Hugh Tinnin and his connection to Austin and Tinnin Ford Road, I got a lot of response from other Tinnin relations. Since he had a rather large family with 3 wives and a history that spread across many states, he was bound to have a lot of decendents. One of the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After my posting on Hugh Tinnin and his connection to Austin and Tinnin Ford Road, I got a lot of response from other Tinnin relations. Since he had a rather large family with 3 wives and a history that spread across many states, he was bound to have a lot of decendents. </p>
<p>One of the people who commented on my post was Rich Weigand who said that while doing some property research at the Austin History Center he had discovered the transcript of an interview of Miss Helen Tinnin of Austin from 1973. He mailed it to me, and I decided to add it on igenealogy.org. She talks about her life, her parents and grandparents, and what life was like in early Austin, Texas.</p>
<p>Helen Tinnin is the daughter of Matison Tinnin (1857-1931) who married Elizabeth Angeline Willoughby in 1884. Her father Matison was the son of Hugh Tinnin (1800-1869) and his third wife Helen Mary Kirkpatrick (1825-1893). The interview was conducted by Ellen Moore (&#8220;EM&#8221;) in June of 1973 and is a part of the Austin Public Library / Austin History Center&#8217;s collection. I have only the first part of the interview.</p>
<p>Helen&#8217;s grandfather &#8211; Hugh Tinnin &#8211; would be my 4th Great Grandfather. His daughter, Lucy Tinnin who married William Thomas Neal would have been the half-sister to Helen&#8217;s father Matison.</p>
<hr />
<p>EM: This is Ellen Moore interviewing Miss Helen Tinnin in her apartment in Austin, Texas.</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> (talking about her family&#8217;s migration to Texas) &#8220;They started in Mississippi.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Do you know anything about what they did in Mississippi?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;They had slaves. My grandfather had almost a hundred slaves with them when they started, but he himself was not with them. They had to go from fort to fort because the Indians were so bad and they were afraid of being killed. As they went along he would buy things from the farmers, like food and food for the oxen. They used oxen to push the carts along. Shortly after they left Mississippi they became ill and went over to&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Someplace in&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Someplace to get a load of corn they needed at the fort. While he was away the family became ill. His wife had a small child, Hugh, Hugh Tinnin, and she wrote my grandfather a letter and asked him to hurry back to them because everybody was sick, even the slaves were sick and there was no medicine. She was just very much discouraged about the prospect of the trip. They had no medicine except that which they pounded up and castor oil. The child got worse and worse and finally died. They buried it there at the fort where they were staying. His wife&#8217;s maiden name was Rutherford.&#8221;<br />
[<em>igenealogy note: This was Hugh Tinnin's second wife Fanny Rutherford (b. abt 1808, d. 1846) and their son Hugh Tinnin (b. 12 Dec 1843, d. 21 Feb 1846, age 2)</em>]</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Was this your grandmother?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, and they buried the child on a farm that belonged to some of her relatives.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;In Mississippi?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;No, in Arkansas, they had to go from fort to fort.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;They were on their way here?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, they were on their way to Texas. Shortly after the child died she died, so that left him stranded. I don&#8217;t know whether he knew my real grandmother before or not, but her maiden name was Kirkpatrick, and she was from Kentucky.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;What was your grandfather&#8217;s name?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Hugh, Hugh Tinnin.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Hugh? So his second wife was your grandmother?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;No, his third wife was my grandmother. He had been married before the Rutherford grandmother, but I know nothing about her. My father was born here in Austin in Travis Heights. His name was Madison Tinnin and he was born in 1857, all this other happened before 1850.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Do you know when they got to Austin approximately?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;In the letters he said that it took them three years on the way. They were so happy when they reached the little village of Waco that they began feeling better. I don&#8217;t know when he married my grandmother.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Well what in the world caused him to leave where they were? It sounds like he must have had considerable property if he had fifty slaves. Why do you think he left Mississippi to come to Texas?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;I don&#8217;t know, other than he had been to Texas before and had seen the situation. The old timers said that they tried to find soil that was like that in Mississippi.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Black, waxy soil?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;No, reddish, sandy soil. He had invested in a farm&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Someplace in Texas?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, Burleson County, and he made trips down to see about the farm. While he was down there he became violently ill. My grandmother began to cry, asking what she would do because there were no banks in those days, there were no railroads, no stores, and she felt like she couldn&#8217;t take it. He told her that it was alright, that he had made arrangements and that if anything happened to him she would be protected and not to worry about it. She said, &#8220;Yes, but you have been married before. What am I going to do about that?&#8221; But he told her not to worry, that he had taken care of everything financially. So as time went on, when I was about ten years old, a man who had been in business here in Austin, a general store, came to my father and asked him if he had ever heard anything about where my grandfather had deposited his money. He said that the night before he left for Burleson County my grandfather came into his store late one evening and asked him if he could hide his gold. He had money, and he had two niggers carrying buckets of gold. The buckets were made of wood in those days. They put the gold among the shelves with the other articles to protect it. The next morning at daybreak he was there and took the money off and said that the person who was supposed to get the money and keep it for grandmother just failed to show up. She had a hard time living.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Was it your father or your grandfather that had Tinnin&#8217;s Ford?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;My grandfather. When they first came to Austin they had been here before so he knew about the ford. He acquired the land, all of it around the ford. It was the only ford they could use to cross the river without getting into quicksand. Just below the ford, about three or four blocks, there was an area where there was no bottom to the river. The children would save all the cords they could get ahold of, ropes, wires, and things like that and drop them down and try to find the bottom of it.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Do you know where that area is now?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, it&#8217;s still there by the river.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;About what area?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Oh, they still call it Tinnin Ford but you can&#8217;t cross the river there because they&#8217;ve put a dam down below it.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM:  &#8220;The Longhorn Dam?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, the Longhorn Dam.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Is it east of the Longhorn Dam or west?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;West I believe.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;And you lived down on the river; is that where you were born?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;That&#8217;s right. My father was a youngster and they had some cattle. There were no fences so they just let the cattle roam. He was there tending to the cattle about ten miles out, somewhere near a creek. I don&#8217;t know the name of the creek and I never saw the place, be he said that he got sleepy on day and he got off of his horse, tied it, and leaned up against a tree and went to sleep. When he awoke a bit ol&#8217; alligator was right at him!&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: My gosh, alligators!&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Now my family was Scottish, and there were some other families here that had come from Scotland at about the same time. They invited my father to come and have buttermilk with them or they would invite him to lunch. Then to help them out he would milk the cows and they would make butter and put it in big containers. Then they would put something across their shoulders and walked to town carrying it on their shoulders.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;What did your grandfather do?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;He was a farmer.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;When you were born who were your neighbors and what was Austin like?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Well, the Stone family&#8230;  Sam Stone was our neighbor, and they had boys.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;They ran the ferry?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, and they raised cotton. In those days there were no gins, so they had to pick the cotton off the seeds by hand. They all got sick with malaria, but they didn&#8217;t know it was malaria. My grandfather bought the property where Travis Heights is now. They had no lumber to build homes with so he took the slaves up in to the mountains west of Austin. They cut down long logs and made rafts of them. Then they tied the rafts to the bank. We had a great deal of rain then, and when the river came up they would float the rafts down the river and use long poles to divert them to the right place. They landed just about where Steak Island restaurant is now. Then the slaves would drag them up on the bank and they built log cabins all along the banks of the river. My grandfather had a log cabin on Travis Boulevard, right on the hill. That&#8217;s where my father was born.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;It must have been a spectacular view!&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, it was, I&#8217;m sure. The house had two rock chimneys, one at each end, and a breezeway between. They planted a garden and the little niggers saw the potatoes and onions and vegetables growin&#8217; there. My grandfather came down one day and one of the neighbor&#8217;s slave&#8217;s children had gone in and pulled up everything and had made dolls out of the vegetables! He got them all in a line and said, &#8220;Now I&#8217;m going to use this little hick&#8217;ry on you if you ever bother any vegetables again! Vegetables are to be eaten and not played with. I want to know who started this!&#8221; Well, the biggest one at the end of the line blamed it on somebody down the line and they kept on blamin&#8217; down the line until they got to the baby one. When they asked him who pulled up all the vegetables he said, &#8220;Kippy.&#8221; Well, Kippy was the baby on the palate in the breezeway! So he said, &#8220;I know Kippy didn&#8217;t do it, but if I find you playin&#8217; in the garden with the vegetables again, I&#8217;m gonna us this hick&#8217;ry on you!&#8221; That really tickled us.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;What do you first remember? What are some of your first remembrances?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;The first think I remember, besides the farmhouse, was making a trip to the Capital.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;How did you get to the Capital?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;My father took us and told us what it was. He held us while we peered over and looked at the people below. They looked so small to us. They had mule cars too. They used mule cars instead of street cars.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Did you ever ride on them?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, daddy took us even before I was old enough to know anything. I was born in Austin, but daddy had a ranch leased in Brady, Texas and we lived up there. I was the only child they had at the time. They were way off from the stores.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;When did you come back to Austin? Were you grown?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;No, I was about five years old when my father brought me back to Austin to live.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Where did you live?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;On the old farm.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Did you go to school in Austin?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, first my mother taught us at the farm. We could read and write and she taught us the alphabet. We went to South Austin Public School next, and we could out spell anybody in the school. My sister and I rode a pony to school. My sister rode behind and I rode in front.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;What&#8217;s your sister&#8217;s name?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Elmira, and my mother&#8217;s name was Elizabeth.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Was she from Austin?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;No, she was from Fort Worth. My grandmother always had visitors because she had gotten kidney poisoning and go so that she couldn&#8217;t work. She would have us sit on little boxes around her and she&#8217;d read to us. When mama was churning with the old dasher churn she would have us spell. When we went to school we were already in the second grade. I went to school for a year and a half and then came down with the measles. There were three children in my family: me, my sister Elmira, and my brother Hugh who was the baby one. The next school we went to was the private school and we went through the eighth grade there. Then we went to another private school and then to the university. I was out for a while because I was sick and then I had to stay with my mother when she got sick. I had courses so that I could teach though.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM:  &#8220;Is that what you did?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, so then I was a teacher and after that I took training to be a teacher for the deaf.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;So you taught at the deaf school for how long?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Well, I taught for two years in other schools before I taught at the deaf school. I taught at the deaf school for thirty-six years.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Who was the first governor you remember?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;I remember them talkin&#8217; about governor Hogg, but I never saw him. My grandfather was buried in Burleson County and they thought they would move him to the Oakwood Cemetery, but they couldn&#8217;t find him. Maybe a prairie fire wiped out everything. My grandmother&#8217;s oldest son was named Albert Tinnin. He and a nigger slave decided they would kill an ant bed and he put a coal of fire in the ant hold and was pourin&#8217; gun powder down it. Well, it exploded and blew all his clothes off and all the clothing but the collar off the new nigger. The nigger woman was washing, that&#8217;s why there was a fire close by, and she made a grab for both of &#8216;em, but my uncle was bigger and older and he got away and jumped in the water. It just cooked him though. He was so burned he had to live wrapped up in a sheet of castor oil for a year. He never did get well and he was always frail. He is buried out at Oakwood. We have a family plot out there where all the family is buried.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Now in this garden you said you had, you grew spinach? And you said that you made an arrangement with an ice factory. How did that work? Did they have refrigerated cars?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, and a packing shed was right across the street from the ice factory. They would break up the ice and pack it in these baskets and ship the spinach. It was sent from Austin, great carloads of it, to Kansas City. Then at Kansas City they would divert it to Chicago, New York, Boston, every place in the United States.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Tinnin Spinach?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, and they said that it was the best. They&#8217;d just yell for it. They said that Austin spinach was better than any other spinach. We found out that it was because Austin spinach, because my brother and father wouldn&#8217;t allow it, didn&#8217;t have any commercial fertilizers in the soil it was grown in. They would plow up the soil and turn that under so that it would furnish its own fertilizer. For example, they planted the spinach in the fall, about October, and by January they were shipping it. Then when the land was soft they plowed all those plants under and planted corn. They planted the corn about April and by July they could sell the corn for roasting ears. The corn stalks were good fertilizer so they got a machine that would cut the corn stalks into small pieces. They could cut it up and plow it under and the corn stalks would deteriorate and fertilize the soil. It was green so that it made good fertilizer. They did the cotton stalks the same way.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;How many acres was it, do you know?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Well, we had about four hundred and fifty.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;How much was he farming? Most of it?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;The bigger part of it. Then they raised cattle and sold them. They&#8217;d sell peaches too. There was something to sell all of the time and there was something to eat all of the time too.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;It sounds like a very good life. Tell me what you mean by Malaria?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Well, they had malaria down by the river. It was so bad and they didn&#8217;t know what it was or what caused it. The mosquitoes just ate &#8216;em up. That was the cause of it. Later the people got to the point where they&#8217;d have chills and rigors and the only thing the doctor would give &#8216;em was quinine. That&#8217;s the reason my grandfather bought Travis Heights. They thought that if they got to higher altitudes that maybe they wouldn&#8217;t be sick as much. But of course the mosquitoes just followed &#8216;em right along. Their niggers had malaria too. Everybody had it. Well, as time went on they found out what cause it and killed the mosquitoes. That&#8217;s how somebody found oil in this area. They needed it to kill the mosquitoes and they would put it in barrels and let it drip around the low places where the mosquitoes propagated and killed them out. About that time pellagra set it, but none of us ever had it because we ate tomatoes and got enough vitamins. The niggers worked for us and we gave them vegetables. None of them ever got pellagra while they worked on our farm. You could can tomatoes, but some of the other vegetables you can&#8217;t can. We had cabbage and&#8230; oh, all kinds of vegetables. Sometimes it would snow and freeze them but some of them could be put in the barn. My nephews came from Tyler, Texas to go to the University and one of the loved the farm better than anything. He stayed on the farm with mother and me the greater part of the time. He would drive up to the street car at South Congress Avenue and ride out to the University. He wanted to be an M.D. Well, they let him take everything to be an M.D. and he got his degree so that he would be sure to be well  fixed for work. Well, lo and behold when he got down to Galveston they said, &#8220;Did you know you have a relative that was a doctor?&#8221; Well, he had one but he didn&#8217;t know it so he said, &#8216;No.&#8221; So they told him, &#8220;Just get your traps and get on outta here. We don&#8217;t want you.&#8221; It just doesn&#8217;t seem right to me that if a fella isn&#8217;t a doctor his sons can&#8217;t be. Well, he said that if he couldn&#8217;t be an M.D. he&#8217;d be a petroleum engineer. So he went back to school and got another degree in that and he lives in Midland now.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;Do you have any family left in Austin now?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Well&#8230; not my immediate family, no. I didn&#8217;t know I had any relatives. I thought I only had three. When my grandfather came to Austin, tow brothers and a sister came with him. One was John Tinnin, who settled at Lampassas. One was Grandall Tinnin who settles at Georgetown and Elgin. And my grandfather who settled here in Austin. Now this sister, a Mrs. Carr and her family settled at Elgin, near Austin.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;So when you were growing up you had uncles and aunts and cousins around?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;No, I didn&#8217;t. I grew up not even knowing them. But the ones who lived in Elgin, I knew them and occasionally they would come up to see us. There were three of them, two girls and a boy. They eventually moved to Austin and were the ones who started the Butler Brickyard. They were Tinnins. We would beg daddy to find us some cousins to play with. He&#8217;d say &#8220;I do not know any.&#8221; And every time I&#8217;d ask questions he&#8217;d say, &#8220;You go out and play, we&#8217;ll talk to you later.&#8221; Cousin Bob Tinnin and his two girls and a boy were the only ones I knew about. About a year ago I found some&#8230; when I had nearly died of old age. I learned about the family tree. My mother died when we lived on the farm and my brother lived about a block from her and I was left all alone. My brother thought that that was too dangerous. Well, I&#8217;d have somebody stay with me and first thing you know they&#8217;d be up over the hill and I&#8217;d be alone again. I got a letter from San Antonio and a Mrs. Lorena Carr said that she had a degree from U.T. and that she knew there was some Tinnins in Austin. I invited her to come up and see me. She said she wanted to work on her family tree and that her tree was mixed up  with mine. I said I didn&#8217;t know anything about it but she said that it  was alright and that we would learn something. Her husband was a traveling salesman for a shoe company and he makes trips all around. I told her I&#8217;d help her all I could. He told her he was going to make a trip to Shreveport, Louisiana. My niece lived there and Lorena said that there was a Baptist minister there who was a Tinnin. Well we went to Shreveport with Mrs. Carr and there was a family of Tinnins down the street who had worked for a Tennesse company. I called one of them and told her our name was Tinnin too and we ought to get together and confer with her. She said, &#8220;We don&#8217;t spell our name like that&#8230; and besides, I have a child to take care of.&#8221; She asked if there was a man with us and we told her he was downtown on business, so she let us come. Her people lived outside Nashville Tennessee and had come to Tennessee form Mississippi and Alabama.&#8221;</p>
<p>EM: &#8220;So it was your family?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Helen:</strong> &#8220;Yes, she also said that they had had their name misspelled for so long they just let it go. But it was Tinnin and they were related to us. I found some of my grandfather&#8217;s letters and they kept telling about her releatives. Anyway, we met this minister in Shreveport, Rogers Hill. And we said, &#8220;Rogers Cemetery?&#8221; Some of the most important people in Austin are buried there in Rogers Cemetery. He said, &#8220;I never heard of it.&#8221; Well, I went to the bank one day and saw a woman I knew who was the grandaughter of daddy&#8217;s half brother, who had been dead for many many years&#8230; I never even saw  him. Anyway, she is a retired nurse, and her name is Beatrice. I told her that I&#8217;d do anything if she&#8217;d take me to the Roger&#8217;s Cemetery. She did, and I never saw so many Burlesons in my life! They&#8217;re just like pins in a pincushion! I said I&#8217;ve got to write all this down and told her about this man. Meanwhile I got this letter. It must have been Philadephia that the Tinnin family started out from. It started out with Hugh Tinnin, and he married Isabel Thompson&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<hr />
<p>That&#8217;s where the record I have ends.  There&#8217;s a hand written note that says there was one more question where she names some more relatives.</p>
<hr />
<p>Are you related to the Tinnin family? Do you have more information about them including stories, pictures and dates and family member names, that you&#8217;d be willing to share with me, or on igenealogy.org? Please leave a comment below or email me directly from the <a href="http://igenealogy.org/about/">About Us</a> page.</p>
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		<title>William Thomas Neal, Col. (1822-1864) &#8211; Family Group Record</title>
		<link>http://igenealogy.org/2010/04/29/col-william-thomas-neal-1822-1864-family-group-record/</link>
		<comments>http://igenealogy.org/2010/04/29/col-william-thomas-neal-1822-1864-family-group-record/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Apr 2010 14:00:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brad McCall</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Family Group Records]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Neal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tinnin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arkansas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Civil War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crawford]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GGG-Grandparents]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Harreld]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kentucky]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mississippi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nees]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rogers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rutherford]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://igenealogy.org/?p=242</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The following is the family group record for Col. William Thomas Neal. Shortly before he left for the Civil war, he fathered my Great-Great-Grandmother Anna Eliza Neal who married Steven Guthrie Nees. After William was killed in the Civil War, his brother James Preston Neal &#8211; who was also a widower &#8211; married is widow [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The following is the family group record for Col. William Thomas Neal. Shortly before he left for the Civil war, he fathered my Great-Great-Grandmother Anna Eliza Neal who married Steven Guthrie Nees. After William was killed in the Civil War, his brother James Preston Neal &#8211; who was also a widower &#8211; married is widow Lucy Jane (Tinnin) Neal. My Great-Grandmother was raised from the age of 6 by her uncle.</p>
<p>This is the record of his family, as complete as it was the date of this post:</p>
<p><strong>William Thomas Neal, Col.</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 23 Feb 1822, Kentucky<br />
Death &#8211; 1 Apr 1864, Clarksville, Johnson, Arkansas<br />
Burial &#8211; Prairie Grove Cem., Prairie Grove, Washington, Arkansas</p>
<p>Father &#8211; William Neal (~1797-1821)<br />
Mother &#8211; Sinai Harreld (1797-1883)</p>
<p>Married:</p>
<p><strong>Lucille Jane Tinnin</strong><br />
Marriage &#8211; 19 Nov 1846, Prairie Grove, Washington, Arkansas<br />
Birth &#8211; 12 Aug 1828, Clinton, Mississippi<br />
Death &#8211; 9 Aug 1893, Prairie Grove, Washington Co., Arkansas<br />
Burial &#8211; Prairie Grove Cem., Prairie Grove, Washington, Arkansas</p>
<p>Father &#8211; Hugh Tinnin (1800-1869)<br />
Mother &#8211; Betsy Rutherford (-<1836)<br />
Other spouses	James Preston Neal, Col.</p>
<hr />
<p>Their Children:</p>
<p>1 M &#8211; <strong>James Neal</strong><br />
Birth	1848, Arkansas<br />
Death &#8211; ?<br />
Spouse &#8211; ?<br />
Marriage	 &#8211; ?</p>
<p>2 F	<strong>Mary Neal</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 1849, Arkansas<br />
Death &#8211; ?<br />
Spouse &#8211; ?<br />
Marriage &#8211; ?	</p>
<p>3 M &#8211; <strong>Andrew Buchanan Neal</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; abt 1851, Arkansas<br />
Death &#8211; ?<br />
Spouse &#8211; Callie (Sawyers or Crawford?)<br />
Marriage &#8211; ?</p>
<p>4 M &#8211; <strong>William Thomas &#8220;Tom&#8221; Neal</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 22 Sep 1852, Arkansas<br />
Death &#8211; 22 Aug 1933, Arkansas<br />
Spouse &#8211; M. Annie Rogers<br />
Marriage &#8211; 3 Oct 1882, Prairie Grove, Washington, Arkansas</p>
<p>5 M &#8211; <strong>Hugh Tinnin Neal</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 1856, Prairie Grove, Washington, Arkansas<br />
Death &#8211; 6 Dec 1882, Arkansas River<br />
Spouse &#8211; ?<br />
Marriage &#8211; ?</p>
<p>6 M &#8211; <strong>Joseph or Joel Perry Neal</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 1860, Arkansas<br />
Death &#8211; ?<br />
Spouse &#8211; ?<br />
Marriage &#8211; ?</p>
<p>7 F &#8211; <strong>Anna Eliza Neal</strong><br />
Birth &#8211; 28 Jun 1863, Prairie Grove, Washington Co., Arkansas<br />
Death &#8211; 17 Jun 1935, Inola, Rogers Co., Oklahoma<br />
Spouse &#8211; Steven Guthrie Nees<br />
Marriage &#8211; 8 Jul 1881, Washington, Arkansas</p>
<hr />
<p>If you’re related to this family or have more information about them including stories, pictures and dates and family member names, I’d love to hear from you. Please leave a comment below or email me directly from the <a href="http://igenealogy.org/about/">About Us</a> page.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>James Preston Neal (1820-1896) &#8211; Published Biographies</title>
		<link>http://igenealogy.org/2010/04/22/james-preston-neal-1820-1896-published-biographies/</link>
		<comments>http://igenealogy.org/2010/04/22/james-preston-neal-1820-1896-published-biographies/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Apr 2010 02:39:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brad McCall</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Biographies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Neal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tinnin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arkansas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Baggett]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bean]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Biography]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blunt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brown]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buchanan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cark]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Civil War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Confederate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Crowell]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cummings]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Davis]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dorman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ewing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[France]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Garrison]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Harreld]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Harrold]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hindman]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Humple]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hutchinson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hyde]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Indians]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ireland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kentucky]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kidd]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lake]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maryland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[McFetridge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[McMillan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mehand]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mexican War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mexico]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mock]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Moddy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Neel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nounce]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ohio]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Oklahoma]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pennsylvania]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Porter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rich]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rogers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Slops]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Texas]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Thompson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Virginia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Walker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Welch]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wrightsman]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://igenealogy.org/?p=42</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Recently I got an email in response to my post on Hugh Tinnin asking about his son-in-law James Preston Neal. I was very excited to connect with someone from this line, and we&#8217;ve been sharing some information the past couple months. It made me realize that I haven&#8217;t done a blog post on this amazing [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Recently I got an email in response to <a href="http://igenealogy.org/2006/11/25/hugh-tinnin-austin-texas-tinnin-ford-road/">my post on Hugh Tinnin</a> asking about his son-in-law James Preston Neal. I was very excited to connect with someone from this line, and we&#8217;ve been sharing some information the past couple months. It made me realize that I haven&#8217;t done a blog post on this amazing man, and so I thought I&#8217;d start this one of many to come.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m always trying to collect tid-bits of history, those morsels of stories that give meaning to the names and dates that public records make available. James Preston Neal was a historian and a well-known figure in his day. Not only was much written about him, but much history was written by his hand.</p>
<p>In an effort to connect with more of his decedents, I&#8217;m posting some histories written of him below. I am unsure of copy-write &#8211; other than the sources I list along with the histories &#8211; and share with the intent to learn more about this great individual. Feel free to leave a comment following the histories.</p>
<p><span id="more-42"></span></p>
<p><strong>JAMES P. NEAL, THE FOUNDER OF PRAIRIE GROVE</strong></p>
<p>(Editor’s note: Among the documents loaned to our Society by the late James P. Neal Jr., are two manuscripts giving the history of the Neal (Neel) family. These manuscripts – No. 1 in ink and No. 2 in pencil – were evidently written by members of the family. We are publishing them exactly as written, although we are unable to identify the author. – WJL)</p>
<p><strong>No. 1</strong></p>
<p>	Thomas and Mary Neel were born in Northern Ireland in 1760 and 1762. They were married there and one or more of their children were born there. They came to America about 1780 and probably landed somewhere on the Virginia coast.</p>
<p>	Many of their relatives and neighbors had preceded them to America and had settled in Chester and Lancaster counties, Pennsylvania, eastern Maryland, and Virginia. The first of these had come over about 1730. John Neel came about 1730 and settled in Lancaster County, PA. One or more brothers came with John. These were probably the uncles of Thomas Neel, in whom we are interested.</p>
<p>	Thomas Neel, having purchased a Virginia land warrant, found a site to his satisfaction, surveyed the land, and obtained title under his soldier’s land warrant. This land was on the Gasper River in Logan County, Kentucky, now Butler County. Here Thomas and Mary Neel found a haven of rest. Their Huguenot ancestors had been driven from France by religious persecution to Northern Ireland and thence to America. Far away from kings and religious intolerance, to a virgin land never before trampled by white men, they erected their log cabin and began clearing their land. Their hardships from travel, sickness and Indians were amply repaid by this final haven of rest and home.</p>
<p>	Thomas and Mary Neel reared a family of three boys and seven girls. The boys were: William, James, and John; the girls were Ann (Neel) Moody, Mariah (Neel) Garrison, Sarah W. (Neel) Nounce, Susanna (Neel) Mehand, Mary (Neel) Hutchison, Jean (Neel) Slops, and Rachel (Neel) Porter.</p>
<p>	Thomas Neel died in Butler County, Kentucky on December 8, 1843. Mary Neel, his widow, died in Butler County, February 1, 1846. They are buried side-by-side in the Richelieu cemetery, near their homestead. When I visited their graves in July 1937, the marble slabs were black and crumbling. That of Thomas had fallen down and part of the inscription crumbled away. The inscriptions were as follows:</p>
<p>	“In memory of Thomas Neel who was born in Ireland &#8212;&#8211; 10th, 1760 and died &#8212;&#8211; 8th, 1843, aged 83 years. He lived a consistent life and died the death of a Christian.”<br />
	“In memory of Mary Neel, consort of T. Neel, who was born in Ireland Dec. 22nd, 1762 and died Feb. 14th, 1846, aged 83y. 1m. and 22d. She lived a consistent life and died the death of a Christian.”</p>
<p>	William Neel, son of Thomas and Mary Neel, married Sinai Harrold at Bowling Green, Kentucky, January 27, 1817. From this union two sons were born; William Thomas Neel and James Preston Neal.</p>
<p>	William Neal died in Butler County, Kentucky, November 27, 1821. His widow, Sinai Neel (born Harrold), married the Rev. Andrew Buchanan at Bowling Green, Kentucky in 1828, and with her two sons, William Thomas Neel and James Preston Neel, moved to Washington County, Arkansas, in 1829. Here husband, Rev. Andrew Buchanan, pre-empted the land on which the town of Prairie Grove, Arkansas, is now located.</p>
<p>	James Preston Neal married Adaline Bean, daughter of Mark Bean of Cane Hill, Arkansas. They moved to Austin, Texas, where he practiced law. Four children were born to them at Austin; Eleanora, Mark B., Samuel B., and Beauregard. Adaline Bean Neal died at Austin in 186&#8211;. Their daughter Eleanora married Richard H. Hyde of Lovelady, Texas; Samuel B. Neal married Maggie Mock at Prairie Grove, Arkansas; mark and Beaure died without issue.</p>
<p>	William Thomas Neel, brother of James Preston Neal, married Lucy J. Tinnin at Prairie Grove, Arkansas. Their children were Andrew Buchanan, William Thomas, Hugh Tinnin, Joel Perry, and Annie. William Thomas Neel was a Captain in the 6th Arkansas Confederate Volunteers and was killed in 1865.</p>
<p>	James Preston Neal married his brother’s widow, Lucy J., at Prairie Grove, Arkansas, January 1869. They had three children; James Preston II, Sinai B., and Jay Dudley.</p>
<p>	James Preston Neal II married M. Etta Wrightsman at Pawnee, Oklahoma, December 10, 1895. Four children were born to them: Barbara, Eugen Preston, Jessie, and James Preston III. Barbara Neal died August 1923. Eugene Preston Neal married Martha Brown at Tulsa, Oklahoma, February 193&#8211;. They have two children: Jame Stanley and Eugene Wrightsman. Jessie Neal married Alexander Humple at Tulsa, Oklahoma, April 1937. James Preston Neal III married Desha Thompson at Cincinnati, Ohio, October 1932. They have one child: James Preston Neal IV.</p>
<p><strong>No. 2</strong></p>
<p>Col. (James P.) Neal was 9 years old when he came to Washington County. He studied law in the office of Judge David Walker at Fayetteville and after being admitted to the bar became the law partner of Judge Walker. In 1847 he volunteered in the Mexican War and was elected First Lieutenant in Captain Enyart’s company of Arkansas Mounted Volunteers and served throughout the war. He was mustered out of service with his company at Comargo, Mexico. He returned to Fayetteville and resumed the practice of law. He married Adaline Bean, the daughter of Mark Bean of Cane Hill, and with his wife moved to Austin, Texas, where he practiced law at the outbreak of the Civil War. His wife Adaline died at Austin in 1861. After the war he moved to Huntsville, Texas, and practiced law. There he married, but his wife and children from this marriage were lost in the yellow fever epidemic, which swept the South after the war.</p>
<p>His brother, Captain William T. Neel of the 6th Arkansas Volunteer Regiment, was killed during the Civil War. In 1868, Colonel Neal returned to Washington County, Arkansas, and married his brother’s widow Lucy J. Neel, nee Tinnin, and engaged in farming and merchandising. He platted the town of Prairie Grove and erected the first store building, win which he conducted a general merchandising business. He secured a flower mill by donating four acres of land for its location. He donated the land for the Methodist Church. His stepfather, Andrew Buchanan, organized the Cumberland Presbyterian Church here and donated the land on which the church and cemetery are now located.</p>
<p>Col. James P. Neal had an unusual knowledge of the early history of the county. He wrote many articles for the county and state papers, depicting incidents and history of those early times.</p>
<p>… The state was under “carpet bag rule” for several years after the war until free elections were re-established. The southern part of the Prairie Grove valley was attached to the Hogeye voting precinct. As that town has saloons, election day was always a nightmare to the men of the Valley. In 1871 Colonel Neal, John Mock, Dr. Rogers, Col, M.F. Lake and other leading men of the Valley succeeded in getting the Prairie Grove voting precinct established.</p>
<p>William Rogers built a blacksmith shop across the road and a few hundred feet southeast of the school house. This shop housed the first post office and voting place. In 1872 Colonel Neal conceived the idea of founding the town of Prairie Grove. He erected a stone building on what afterwards became the northwest corner of Buchanan and Mock streets and opened a general merchandise store. A little later he secured the location of a flour and grist mill, by donating four acres of land for its site and other inducements such as the use of water from the spring. This four acres was at the southwest corner of Buchanan and Mock streets. The company that built the mill was composed of McFetridge, Baggett and Rogers. After the mill was in operation, Baggett and Rogers sold their interest to McFetridge.</p>
<p>In 1875 the plat of the town was made and placed on record. The first lot sold was to Neal Kidd. This lot is on the northeast corner of Buchanan and Mock streets. Neal Kidd erected a stone building on this lot and opened a general supply store for farm needs. He had harness, saddles, farm implements and such. This was the second business house built.</p>
<p>The third was built by McFetridge and his son-in-law, John Ewing, on the southeast corner of Buchanan and Mock streets. Ewing opened with a stock of general merchandise. The building of the mill established Prairie Grove as the business center of the valley. H.C. and G.W. Crowell purchased the store and stock of goods from Colonel Neal. Other businesses that opened within the next few years were: B.A. Carl &#038; Son’s store; D.F. McMillan’s general store; A.B. Rich &#038; Son, general store; Robert Crowell, drugs; Dixon &#038; Cummings, harness and saddles; Nees &#038; Son, general store; Dorman &#038; Welch, tombstones; Wm. Gillis; and Dr. W.B. Blanton. G.H. Crowell opened a hotel and livery stable.  Dr. C.G. Garrison began the manufacture and sale of his own patent medicines and erected a building for this purpose at the north end of Mock street on Garrison avenue.</p>
<p><strong>Source</strong>: Flashback published by Washington County Historical Society, Fayetteville Arkansas<br />
Vol. IX, No. 3, July 1959. Page 7-9</p>
<hr />
<p><strong>Col. James P. Neal</strong></p>
<p>Col. James P. Neal, one of the old residents of Washington County, Ark., who is now retired from active business life, was born in Butler County, Ky., March 24, 1820, and is a son of William Neal, and a grandson of Thomas Neal. The latter was a Virginian, whose ancestors were Irish, and one of the early settlers of Kentucky, in which State William Neal was born, reared and married. His wife &#8216;s maiden name was Sinai Harreld, whose parents were also Virginians, of English ancestry. After Mr. Neal&#8217;s death, which occurred when James P. was a child, she married again, and in 1829 moved to Arkansas with her husband, Rev. Andrew Buchanan, a minister of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, locating on the land on which the Colonel now resides. Here Col. Neal was reared on the farm, and in 1847 volunteered in the Mexican War, marching through Texas into Mexico. He arose to the rank of first lieutenant, and served in this capacity until the close of the war, being mustered out at Comargo in 1848. Previous to his entering the army he had read law, been admitted to the bar, and had practiced his profession in Fayetteville, and after returning home he resumed his profession, which he continued until 1851, when he was elected mayor of Fayetteville, and held the office until 1854. In 1849 he was married to Miss Adaline Bean, daughter of Capt. Mark Bean, and cousin of the late Col. Tom Bean, the Bonham, Tex., millionaire. In 1854 he moved to Austin, Tex., owing to his wife&#8217;s failing health , where she died in 1863. During the war Mr. Neal was actively engaged in furnishing the Confederate army with supplies. He was a presidential elector, and voted for Jeff Davis for his second term. In 1868 he returned to Prairie Grove, Ark., then made historic by the battle of December 7, 1862, between the Federal and Confederate forces, commanded respectively by Gens. Blunt and Hindman. In 1869 he was married to the widow of his brother, Col. William T. Neal, who was killed by the Federals in a skirmish near Clarksville, Ark., in 1864. In 1871 he established the town of Prairie Grove, built the first store and engaged in merchandising, being also appointed postmaster of the town. He held this position until 1887, when he was obliged to resign on account of failing health, and is now living at his beautiful suburban residence, free from the cares of business life, surrounded by the lovely groves and grand old trees made memorable by the incidents of the battle, where that famous old spring comes bubbling forth with its crystal water, where both Federals and Confederates slaked their thirst and bathed their bleeding wounds. Col. Neal has held many positions of trust, and has done muc h to build up the town. His donations of real estate to public and charitable buildings have been munificent. He is a member of the Masonic fraternity, and is a worthy and consistent member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. His first union resulted in the birth of six children, only two of whom (Nora and Sam Bell) grew to mature years. To his present union three children have been born: James Preston, Sinai Belle and Jay Dudley. Mr. Neal has written and published many interesting sketches of the early times in Arkansas.  </p>
<p><strong>Source:</strong> WASHINGTON COUNTY_page 995 (Accessed from an online link that is no longer active)</p>
<hr />
<p><strong>James Preston Neal</strong></p>
<p>James Preston Neal (1820-aft 1889) husband of Adaline Bean (daughter of Mark Bean and Nancy Sparks) was a veteran of the Mexican War. He volunteered in 1857 and marched through Texas into Mexico. He arose to the rank of first lieutenant, and served in this capacity until the close of the war, being mustered out at Comargo in 1848. In 1851 he was elected Mayor of Fayetteville, Washington County, Arkansas and held that office until 1854. During the Civil War he was actively engaged in furnishing the Confederate army with supplies. His brother, Col. William T. Neal, who was killed by the Federals in a skirmish near Clarksville, Johnson County. Arkansas in 1864. In 1871 he established the town of Prairie Grove in Washington County, built the first store and engaged in merchandising, being also appointed postmaster of the town. He held this position until 1887, when he was obliged to resign on account of failing health. He authored and published many interesting sketches of the early times in Arkansas.  </p>
<p><strong>Source:</strong> History: Col James P Neal: Washington Co., Arkansas Biography By Kristin Hawkins &#8211; May 3, 2000 Source: History of Benton, Washington, Carroll, Madison, Crawford, Franklin, and Sebastian Co unties, Arkansas. Chicago: The Goodspeed Publishing Co., 1889 &#8211;</p>
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		<title>Hugh Tinnin (1800-1869) – Published Biography</title>
		<link>http://igenealogy.org/2010/03/25/hugh-tinnin-1800-1869-%e2%80%93-published-biography/</link>
		<comments>http://igenealogy.org/2010/03/25/hugh-tinnin-1800-1869-%e2%80%93-published-biography/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Mar 2010 23:37:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brad McCall</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Hugh Tinnin was my 4th great grandfather through his daughter Lucille who married William T. Neal. The following is a history I found of him included in the History of Washington County, Arkansas. 1989. pgs 1416-1417. Most of this history I referenced in my post about Tinnin Road, but here&#8217;s the entire copy. Hugh Tinnin [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hugh Tinnin was my 4th great grandfather through his daughter Lucille who married William T. Neal. The following is a history I found of him included in the History of Washington County, Arkansas. 1989. pgs 1416-1417. Most of this history I referenced in my post about Tinnin Road, but here&#8217;s the entire copy.</p>
<p><strong>Hugh Tinnin</strong><br />
James Tinnin of Scotland, born 1758, died 1844, married Hannah. James is listed in D. A. R. Patriot Idex as pensioned and PVT. of North Carolina. He had one son, possibly others of Orange County, North Carolina, Hugh Tinnin, married Isabella Thompson, who was a sister of Laurence Thompson of Scotland. Hugh and Isabella has the following children: 1. Azaria, 2. Hugh, 3. Laurence, 4. Thomas, 5. John 1770-1835; married to Elizabeth Moore, 6. Lemuel, 7. Mary Jane married Richard Harrison, 8. Sarah married Andrew Allen.</p>
<p>John Tinnin married Elizabeth Moore in Nashville, Tennessee. Her mother was from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. They had the following children: 1. Rachel, born 1798, 2. Hugh, born 1800/died December 13, 1869 in Burleson County, Texas, 3. Graville moved to Austin, Texas, 4. Asa was living in Hinds County, Mississippi in 1830 census, 5. John moved to Lampasas, Texas, 6. Brown, born 1805, married Susan Fletcher, stayed in Mississippi, 7. Martha, married John E. Shephard in 1843, 8.  Jane married John Carr and moved to Austin, Texas.</p>
<p>Hugh Tinnin, born in 1800, died in Burleson County, Texas. Hugh first married Betsy Rutherford. Their children were: 1. Rachal, born January 15, 1826, died in 1903 or 1904, she married Andrew Alexander Crawford of Washington County, Arkansas (see A. A. Crawford_. 2. Elizabeth, born August 17, 1827, 3. Lucy Jane, born August 12, 1828 in Clinton, Mississippi. Lucy married first to Col. William T. Neal, second to Col J.P. Neal. Her tombstone inscription says she came to Arkansas in 1836. Both William and James Preston Neal were prominent figures in Washington County, Arkansas having come to that county with their mother and stepfather Reverend and Mrs. Andrew Buchanan in 1829. James P. Neal was a noted lawyer. 4. Granville, born 1829. </p>
<p>Betsy (Rutherford) Tinnin died and Hugh married her sister, Fanny Rutherford. Fanny died in 1846. Their children were 1. John, born July 7, 1836, 2. Harriet, born July 22, 1839 in Arkansas. She married Richard Barron August 16, 1869 in Washington County, Arkasas. See &#8220;Joseph Barron And His Decendants&#8221; by Jack L. Barron. 3. William born August 13, 1840, 4. Emaline, born 1842, 5. Hugh, born December 12, 1843, died February 21, 1846. </p>
<p>Hugh Tinnin married third to Helen Mary Kirkpatrick. Helen was born in 1825 in Kentucky. She died June 24, 1893, buried in Oak Wood Cemetery in Austin, Texas. Their children were 1. Albert, b. May 8, 1849, d. 1875 2. Mary Melvina, born August 15, 1850, died May 25, 1851, 3. Cleopatra (Miss Clippy), born May 24, 1852, married Henry Roberts, 4. Pinckney, born March 12 , 1854, died August 30, 1916, married Effie Littlepage, 5. Susanella, born August 25, 1855, 6. Matison, born February 1, 1857, died February 14, 1931, 7. Eddie, born August 25, 1860, died May 29, 1861. </p>
<p>Matison Tinnin who was born February 1, 1857 married Elizabeth Angeline Willoughby, January 13, 1884. Their children were: 1. Helen Mary, born October 23, 1885, died March 24, 1979, 2. Elmira, born October 28, 1887, died September 2, 1877 married William Lawrence Ilfrey, born December 29, 1897, died May 8, 1977, both are buried in Baytown, Texas. Their children are William Tinnin Ilfrey and Allen Ilfrey BA BS University of Texas. 3. Hugh, born March 30, 1889, died april 12, 1962, married first to Ruth Dawson, their children were: Elizabeth, Mary Jane and Dawson. He married a second time to Mattie Mae Carter, born December 7, 1896, their children were Helen Lou and Dorthy Jean, Ph. D., married Troy L. Joyner.</p>
<p>Hugh Tinnin moved with his family from Mississippi to Washington County, Arkansas in about 1836. His first wife was Betsy Rutherford and when she died he married her sister, Fanny Rutherford. Betsy probably died while the family still lived in Mississippi. Fanny died in Washington County where he found his third wife, Helen Mary Kirkpatrick, whose family had moved from Kentucky to Fayetteville, Arkansas. Letters addressed to him were addressed to Mr. Hugh Tinnin, Esquire, Boonsboro, Arkansas. Federal Census shows his residence in Mountain Township.</p>
<p>John Carr, Tinnin&#8217;s brother-in-law, persuaded Tinnin to try his lot in Texas. The Tinnins took a route that would avoide the swollen streams and evade Indian attacks as much as possible. In order to finance the trip they stopped off along the way to buy supplies for soldiers quartered at various camps. The family and many of the slaves they brought with them fell ill with malaria fever. This delayed their progress and it took the greater part of 2 years to make the trip. </p>
<p>The Tinnins arrived in Texas in 1850. Hugh bought about 500 acres of fine bottom land south of the Colorado River &#8211; land that is completely within the boundaries of Austin. He had about two miles of river frontage. The old crossing where cattle were driven up the Chishold Trail was on Tinnin land. It was called the Tinnin Ford. </p>
<p>Hugh and Helen Mary made a trip to Burleson County to look after some property they had there. Hugh fell ill, died, and had to be buried there. Helen returned to Austin. Later,  a son by his first wife, came to Texas to claim his portion of the estate. A general division was made to all the surviving children: thus a very large plantation was broken into many parts. See &#8220;Women In Early Texas&#8221; Edited by Evelyn M. Carrington, PhD. </p>
<p>This information was developed from boxes of old letters and papers belonging to Hugh Tinnin&#8217;s family of Austin, Texas. The greatest contributor was Miss Helen Tinnin (Matison&#8217;s daughter), Dorothy Jean Joyner and Allan Ilfrey. Mattie Mae Tinnin, age 90, of Austin made it possible for me to collect it all.<br />
- By: Ruth Lee </p>
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		<title>Hugh Tinnin, Austin Texas: Tinnin Ford Road</title>
		<link>http://igenealogy.org/2006/11/25/hugh-tinnin-austin-texas-tinnin-ford-road/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 25 Nov 2006 07:15:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brad McCall</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[I think it&#8217;s always interesting when I discover a relative that leaves his mark on the landscape. Since I don&#8217;t have many &#8220;famous&#8221; ancestors to speak of (except my one connection to Abraham Lincoln &#8211; my relative was his mother&#8217;s step-father), it&#8217;s always nice to find visible remnants of my relatives. While looking on Google [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I think it&#8217;s always interesting when I discover a relative that leaves his mark on the landscape. Since I don&#8217;t have many &#8220;famous&#8221; ancestors to speak of (except my one connection to Abraham Lincoln &#8211; my relative was his mother&#8217;s step-father), it&#8217;s always nice to find visible remnants of my relatives.</p>
<p>While looking on Google Maps I found a road <a href="http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&amp;hl=en&amp;q=tinnin+ford+road,+austin+texas&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;z=16&amp;ll=30.243794,-97.724676&amp;spn=0.013291,0.021844&amp;t=h&amp;om=1">called &#8220;Tinnin Ford Road&#8221;</a>. This road is named after my relative Hugh Tinnin who purchased 500 acres of Colorado River frontage land (land now that would be included almost entirely in <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austin%2C_tx">Austin</a> City limits) in the 1850&#8242;s. His daughter &#8211; Lucy Jane Tinnin &#8211; from his first wife Betsy Rutherford was my third great grandmother.</p>
<p><a href="http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&amp;hl=en&amp;q=tinnin+ford+road,+austin+texas&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;z=16&amp;ll=30.243794,-97.724676&amp;spn=0.013291,0.021844&amp;t=h&amp;om=1"><img src="http://www.igenealogy.org/blogimages/tinnin_ford_austin_texas.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>Here&#8217;s a small history on him:</p>
<p><strong>Hugh Tinnin</strong><br />
Born in 1800, died in Burleson County, Texas 13 December 1869.</p>
<p><strong>HISTORY:</strong> Hugh Tinnin moved with his family from Mississippi to Washington County, Arkansas in about 1836. When his first wife Betsy Rutherford died, he married her sister Fanny Rutherford. Betsy probably died while the family still lived in Mississippi. Fanny died in Washington County where he met his third wife, Helen Mary Kirkpatrick, whose family had moved from Kentucky to Fayetteville, Arkansas. Letters addressed to him were addressed to Mr. Hugh Tinnin, Esquire, Boonsboro, Arkansas. Federal Census shows his residence in Mountain Township.</p>
<p><span id="more-16"></span></p>
<p>John Carr, Tinnin&#8217;s brother-in-law, persuaded Tinnin to try his lot in Texas. The Tinnins took a route that would avoid the swollen streams and evade Indian attacks as much as possible. In order to finance the trip they stopped off along the way to buy supplies for soldiers quartered at various camps. The family and many of the slaves they brought with them fell ill with malaria fever. This delayed their progress and it took the greater part of 2 years to make the trip.</p>
<p>The Tinnins arrived in Texas in 1850. Hugh bought about 500 acres of fine bottom land south of the Colorado River &#8211; land that is completely within the boundaries of Austin. He had about two miles of river frontage. The old crossing where cattle were driven up the Chishold Trail was on Tinnin land. It was called the Tinnin Ford.</p>
<p>Hugh and Helen Mary made a trip to Burleson County to look after some property they had there . Hugh fell ill, died, and had to be buried there. Helen returned to Austin. Later, a son by his first wife, came to Texas to claim his portion of the estate. A general division was made to all the surviving children: thus a very large plantation was broken into many parts.</p>
<p><strong>MORE DETAILS:</strong> (I have many more dates and family that what is included here) Hugh first married Betsy Rutherford daughter of John &#8220;Jack&#8221; Rutherford and Winnifred &#8220;Winnie&#8221; Grigsby.<br />
Their children were:<br />
1. Rachal, born January 15, 1826, died in 1903 or 1904, she married Andrew Alexander Crawford of Washington County, Arkansas<br />
2. Elizabeth, born August 17, 1827,<br />
3. Lucy Jane, born August 12, 1828 in Clinton, Mississippi. Lucy married first to Col. William T. Neal, second to Col J.P. Neal. Her tombstone inscription says she came to Arkansas in 1836. Both William and James Preston Neal were prominent figures in Washington County, Arkansas having come to that county with their mother and stepfather Reverend and Mrs. Andrew Buchanan in 1829. James P. Neal was a noted lawyer.<br />
4. Granville, born 1829.</p>
<p>Betsy (Rutherford) Tinnin died and Hugh married her sister, Fanny Rutherford. Fanny died in 1 846.<br />
Their children were<br />
1. John, born July 7, 1836,<br />
2. Harriet, born July 22, 1839 in Arkansas. She married Richard Barron August 16, 1869 in Washington County, Arkasas. See &#8220;Joseph Barron And His Decendants&#8221; by Jack L. Barron.<br />
3. William born August 13, 1840,<br />
4. Emaline, born 1842,<br />
5. Hugh, born December 12, 1843, died February 21, 1846.</p>
<p>Hugh Tinnin married third to Helen Mary Kirkpatrick. Helen was born in 1825 in Kentucky. She died June 24, 1893, buried in Oak Wood Cemetery in Austin, Texas.<br />
Their children were<br />
1. Albert, b. May 8, 1849, d. 1875<br />
2. Mary Melvina, born August 15, 1850, died May 25, 1851,<br />
3. Cleopatra (Miss Clippy), born May 24, 1852, married Henry Roberts,<br />
4. Pinckney, born March 12 , 1854, died August 30, 1916, married Effie Littlepage,<br />
5. Susanella, born August 25, 1855,<br />
6. Matison, born February 1, 1857, died February 14, 1931,<br />
7. Eddie, born August 25, 1860, died May 29, 1861.<br />
Matison Tinnin who was born February 1, 1857 married Elizabeth Angeline Willoughby, January 13, 1884.</p>
<p><strong>SOURCE:</strong> See &#8220;Women In Early Texas&#8221; Edited by Evelyn M. Carrington, PhD. This information was developed from boxes of old letters and papers belonging to Hugh Tinnin&#8217; s family of Austin, Texas. The greatest contributor was Miss Helen Tinnin (Matison&#8217;s daughter ), Dorothy Jean Joyner and Allan Illfrey. Mattie Mae Tinnin, age 90, of Austin made it possible for me to collect it all. &#8211; By Ruth Lee &#8211; Included in the History of Washington County, Arkansas. 1989. pgs 1416-1417</p>
<p>There&#8217;s a mention of Hugh Tinnin that says he purchased the first sewing machine in Austin in the <a href="http://www.ci.austin.tx.us/library/ahc/begin/lei_amus.htm">Austin History Center&#8217;s Exibit of Austin Firsts</a>.</p>
<p>If anyone knows more about Tinnin Ford, or this family, I&#8217;d love to hear about it. I wish there was more information included online about it in the history of Austin, Texas that would list this family&#8217;s contributions to the area.</p>
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