BIOGRAPHY OF TONY HORN
by
Barbara Jefferson-Bonner
Family Historian
1995
During
slavery, Slave Master Horn traveled to and from Africa transporting slaves from
Africa to Alabama, Macon County, Georgia. On
one of his trips, Slave Master Horn brought back Tony, Caroline, Angeline and
Sandy Jinks.
The
slaves were transported to Georgia, on a ship with red flags, signifying slave
ship.
Once
the ship made its stop in Macon County, the slaves were taken to a nearby
auction block and sold.
In
1842, while still in Georgia, Tony and a young girl named Caroline had a
daughter named Lucendia.
Tony
and the other slaves who were transported from Africa were all native African.
Tony
was known to be a very dark-skinned man with snow white hair and no facial
wrinkles. His age was well
preserved. No one knew his exact
age.
In
1856, in Georgia, Angeline “Angel” and Sandy Jinks had a baby named George
Jinks.
Tony
and Angeline “Angel”, sometime after 1856,
took slave master Horn’s last name in marriage.
The couple had four children born in Alabama.
The fifth child was born in slavery in 1864 in the State of Texas (Old
Beckville, Panola County, Texas).
Slave
Master Horn transported his slaves to old Beckville, which is southeast of
Beckville, Panola County, Texas and referred to as Beason Land.
Caroline
later married Samuel Beck and had seven additional children.
Her daughter Lucendia settled in Texas, with her father and step-mother,
and raised a family of her own.
Tony
is first seen on the 1870 Panola County Census (PCC) as a 60-year-old man with
his wife Angel and four children living at home.
Angel
is first seen on the 1870 PCC as a 40-year-old woman married to Tony Horn.
Caroline
and her husband Samuel Beck are first seen on the 1870 PCC in their mid 30’s
with three small children.
Tony,
Angel and Caroline’s dates of death are unknown.
The
1900 PCC reflects that Angel was a 75-year-old widow, living in the home of her
oldest son, George Jinks, and his family.
The
1900 PCC reflects that Caroline was a 70-year-old widow, living in the home of
her youngest daughter, Martha Beck-Smith, and her family.