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FAMILY
STORIES
by
Barbara Bonner
Travis Johns
was born in the
State of Virginia in 1813. From his birth to 1870, there is nothing in writing,
nor is there any other mention of Travis Johns. In 1854 and 1860, before African
Americans were recorded on county census in 1870, Travis had two children born
in Texas. There is no information on the mother of these two children, other
than that she was born in Virginia.
In 1870, Travis was 57 years old, with a 24-year old
child bride. Sally, his bride, was born in 1848, in South Carolina. The marriage
took place in Texas. No previous plantation owner name or parents have been
recorded for Sally. Sally bore three healthy sons for Travis. Sometime after the
birth of the third son, it is believed that Travis died, because there is no
other mention of him.
In 1900, Sally was a 52-year old widow of the late
Jim Powell, Sr. The couple had five children. Four of these children were still
living at home.
Grandpa Travis and Grandma Sally were my ascending
grandparents through my mother.
Mary Bankam was a Cherokee
Indian born in the District of Columbia in September, 1825. She was transported
(bought) from the Indian Reservation and taken back to Maine by the slave master
to the place where her parents were born.
Mary was later transported (bought) and taken into
Georgia before finally coming to a place that would later be known as Beckville,
Panola County, Texas, by slave master Jones.
This information is recorded and has been passed down
through the years by generations. The name of the Cherokee Indian Reservation is
listed in the old family Bible, but illegible.
Mary Bankam is my ascending grandmother on my
father’s side. In 1870, Mary was living in Panola County as a 45-year old
woman married to 50-year old Thomas Bankam. Thomas was born about 1820. There
were seven children living in the home, ages 2-15 years.
By 1900 there is no listing of Thomas Bankam.
Mary’s last name was Jefferson; she lived in the home of her oldest son, Henry
Rogers. Henry was a 45-year old widower with three children ages 7 to 15 years
living in the home. The children’s mother was born in Texas. Henry’s 8-year
old grand-nephew, Tom Horn, also lived in the home.
One-hundred-seventy-one (171) years since the birth
of Grandma Mary Bankam, there is still a water spring in Beckville that
descendants remember as the Mary Bankam Spring.
Shortly before Mary’s death, she fell into a fire
and died sometime later. Mary’s daughter-in-law, Dovie Jones, made the shroud
that Grandma Mary was laid to rest in.
Grandma Mary is my ascending grandmother, through my
father.
Mary Rowlett was born May,
1825, in the State of Virginia. To begin a new life, Mary traveled through many
States. She began in Virginia. By 1843 she was in Carthage, Leake County,
Mississippi. This is where she gave birth to her first son.
In 1870, Grandma Mary was a 40-year old widow.
Slavery was a way of life. No other plantation name had been recorded for Mary,
nor a first name for her husband, although it is revealed that she was married.
Mary was the head of the house with three young
children to raise. She had given birth to six children. By the time her youngest
child, Jane, was born in 1863, her oldest child, Lewis, was already married with
a family of his own.
In 1880, Mary was a 50-year old retired widow. She,
her daughter Jane and Jane’s child, a 17-year old, lived in the home of
Mary’s fifth son, Julius, and his wife, Joanna Gray.
By 1900, Mary was 70+ living in the home of Jane.
Jane was a 37-year old single mother of one child. Jefferson, her son, was 20,
single and still living at home.
There are no known family members alive who remember
Mr. Rowlett or if any of his sons were named for him.
There are no records reflecting the death of Grandma
Mary, but it is well known that her children took very good care of her.
Grandma Mary is my ascending grandmother, through my
mother.
Bryant\Salter
Family
by
Nancy Vick
Research by Barbara
Bonner
But I am sending along an outline of the
Salter family. I will follow this with the references and sources of the
information with more details. Then I will send the Bryant Family. I just had a
delightful talk with a Charlie Hooper from Bobo. He is 84 yrs. He has a wealth
of information on this area of Shelby and surrounding counties as far as
remembering families and people. I think someone needs to get this down on tape
or something. He helped me with the Salter and Bryant families. He knew the
people I was looking for in Panola and Shelby. Louise Martin sent me his |