MARION COUNTY BIOGRAPHIES

"S"


SLAYTON, Augusta Catherine
Daughter of  Sanford Gustavous. & Mary Annabell Slayton, "Gusta" married William Jefferson FERGUSSON in Jefferson, Texas on February 3, 1867.  Gusta's father, Sanford G. Slayton, was a planter who settled in Marion County, Texas in 1839 while Texas was a Republic.  Both Sanford Gustasovous SLAYTON and his mother, Lucy SHELTON SLAYTON, received Class 3 Headright Land grants from the Republic of Texas. 

Lucy was the daughter of Thomas SHELTON, whose family settled in Virigina in the early 1600s.   Her husband, Arthur SLAYDON, and his father Daniel SLAYDON, were surveyors and planters in Pittsylvania County, VA.  Authur was a descendants of  John SLADDING, an immigrant who who arrived in Virigina in 1695.

Gusta and her siblings were the first generation of Slayton/Shelton descendants born in Texas. Two branches of Slaydon descendants migrated to Texas during the Texas Republic. Lucy Shelton Slayton, widow of Daniel Slaydon's son Arthur, came west to Texas with her grown sons, Sanford G. SLAYTON and Hickmond SLAYTON.  Her husband Arthur died in Virginia in 1811.  A cousin of Arthur's, who was also named Aurthur SLAYDON, came to Texas during the Texas Republic. He settled in South Texas near Jasper. Lucy, Sanford, and Hickmon settled in the deep piney woods region of the Red River District of East Texas. 

Lucy and her children and grandchildren lived in Marion and Morris counties. They also had landholdings in Cass, Upshur, and Collin Counties. Their children married descendants of Wm. C. Hays and Jethro Chattom of Mongtomery County, Alabama and the Lawrence and Chatham families of Coryell County, Texas and the Ormes and Goodman families of Harrison County, Texas.

Hickmond and his wife, Caroline Clark died while their children were young. Sanford became their guardian and their grandmother, Lucy Shelton Slayton, helped to raise them. Sanford and Lucy had died a few years before Gusta Fergusson's death. W.J. kept the family together. Gusta gave birth to a baby boy a few weeks before she died. The baby lived nine months.  Four years after Gusta's death, W. J. caught pneumonia and died. Gusta's sister's husband, John Dorgan placed the three youngest children in Buckner's Children's Home in Dallas. They "cared for" the family's livestock, but felt that it was too much to take on to raise their nieces and nephew. Two older children remained in the community. One sister ran away when her parents died. The brother did not live long after his parents death either.  Molly married on the day of her father's death. With both Lucy and Sanford gone, the famly had lost its matriarch and its patriarch. 

In Virginia, Lucy fought to get her sons released from the orphan's indentures after her husband's death. She was the heiress in an estate of considerable size. It was 15 years before she recieved her inheritance. Her sons knew first-hand what it meant to be from an affluent family but not to have access to or be in control of the money. There weren't many social nets to catch children on the American frontier in 1885.   Most orphans lived with relatives, or neighbors took them in to have an extra hand around the place. This was the era of the "orphan trains."  The Sisters of Charity and other groups in New York and Chicago would take orphans from the cities and head west on trains, visiting with people along the way until a family agreed to accept a chid. There wasn't an orphan's train coming through Jefferson at that time, but Rev. Buckner was in Jefferson preaching a revival. One of the women in Jefferson was helping him with publicity and he was starting a children's home in Dallas. The Dorgans heard of the Orphanage and the Chatham girls were among the first children in the home.

(Taken from Texas Legacy, courtesy of  Jimmie F Chatham).


SLAYTON, Hickmond
Hickmond left Virginia with his mother, Lucy Shelton Slayton, and brother, Sanford Gustasov Slayton. The two brothers and their mother were together in Madison Couunty, Jackson, Tennessee for about a decade. Sanford probably moved to Jackson a few years before Lucy. She was still settling up estate business in Virginia in the late 1820s. Sanford purchased land in Jackson in 1825. 

Hickmond and wife Caroline left Tennessee a few years before Sanford and Lucy moved to Texas. He and Caroline moved to Lousiana. Sanford and his wife Mary, Lucy and the Clark's arrived in Texas in December 1839. Hickmond and Caroline came a year or so later.

They purchased a brick plant in Jefferson in the late 1847s. Both Hickmond and Caroline died while their children were young. Hickmonds brother Sanford G. became the children's guardian. Hickmond's mother, Lucy SHELTON SLAYTON helped Sanford rear Caroline and Hickmond's children. The census shows that Caroline and Mary Annabell Clark's brother John L. Clark also helped with the children. The Children are:
1. Thomas Augusta SLAYTON, b. September 30, 1833, TN d. Oct. 13, 1842, TX
2. Charles Edward SLAYTON,  called Charley b.August 31, 1836 Madison, TN d. December 26, 1883, Morris
    Co. TX, Married in Morris Co. Texas on Oct. 22, 1865 to Mary Frances   (Molly) WILLIAMS. b. Oct. 17, 
    1848 Dallas, Al, d. Jan. 13, 1900 Charles Edward (called Charley) is buried in the SLATON cemetery near 
    Daingerfield.  Charles Edward named one of his son CHARLES Edwin SLAYTON. The son was called 
    Eddy, was born in 1872. Eddy married Lou Barnard and Josie Minor. Other children of Charles Edward 
    Slayton (Charley) I, included: A daughter named Augusta Caroline SLAYTON TRICE, called Gussie.
    b. 1870, who married Tom Trice. A son born November 15, 1897 in Morris Co. Texas named Henry Walter 
    SLAYTON. Henry married Susan Elizabeth TRUITT in Morris Co. Texas on February 25, 1897. He died July
   18, 1933 in Slidell (Wise Co) TX. Buried at Greenwood Cemetery in Wise County, Texas. Susan TRUITT 
   SLAYTON was born Oct. 8, 1880 at Daingerfield, TX; Died Feb. 18, 1970 Slidell, Wise Co. TX.  Daughter of
   Wingate H. TRUITT and Susan Elizabeth CLARK. A daughter named Virginia Gertrude (Jennie) SLAYTON
    b. July 3, 1876 in  Morris Co.  TX; Married James Calvin THOMAS in Morris Co. TX on May 13, 1891. 
   Died in Floydada TX  March 13, 1950. Charles Edward also was the father of an infant girl born Oct. 7, 1866
   who died  that same day.
3. Eliza Jane SLAYTON, daughter of Hickmond and Caroline Clark Slayton born 1839 and died Jan. 10, 1855.
4. Henry SLAYTON, b.1840 in St. Landry Parish, LA, never married, died near Abilente Texas.
5. Robert L. SLAYTON, b. Dec. 14, 1843, married Martha Choate 
6. Thaddeus.SLAYTON, b.   d. Feb. 18, 1849.

(Taken from Texas Legacy, courtesy of  Jimmie F Chatham).


SLAYTON, Sanford Gustasov (1802-1868) 
Sanford was the second son of Arthur SLAYDON and Lucy SHELTON SLAYTON of Pittsylvania County, Virginia.  Both of Sanford's parents were from pre-revolutionary colonial Virginia planter families.  His mother was the daughter of Thomas Shelton, whose family settled in Virginia in the mid-1600s. Arthur was the son of Daniel Slaydon, a tobacco planter and surveyor, whose great-great grandfather, John Sladding, was transported to Virginia c.1695, as an indentured servant of John Hinton.  It is proven that Sanford Slayton had two brothers and at least one sister.

Sanford Gustasov Slayton was born Nov 1, 1802 in Pittsylvania County, Va. and died Mar 6, 1868. His wife, Mary Annabell Clark Slayton, was born in Va. on Aug 16, 1806. She died in Marion County, TX on Jan 3, 1862. They were buried in the family cemetery on his plantation in Marion County, TX. In Texas, Sanford Gustasvous Slayton, had traded his Texas Republic 3rd Class Landgrant Certificate for acreage high on a hill overlooking the Cypress Bayou in the Red River District in the piney woods of East Texas. He cleared land and built a house high on the hill. He cleared enough land so that from his plantation house he had a clear view of the Cypress bottoms two miles away.    n Virginia, the Shelton's and Slaydon's were tobacco planters; in Texas, Sanford planted cotton.

Census, probate, deed and court records show at Sanford was born in Pittsylvania County, VA and was a surveyor and planter in Marion County, Texas and a businessman in Madison County, Tennessee.  Numerous sources showed that  he was born c, 1801 and died c.1868.  From census records we determined that Mary and Sanford G. Slayton married c. 1824-25. Transcripts of Lawrence Famliy Bible Records shared by Rosella Lawrence Mount, conveyed to her by  Lucy Clark SLAYTON LAWRENCE ,   (her grandmother), have provided actual birth and death dates and the full names of Sanford and his wife, Mary Annabell CLARK.  At the time of Sanford's death, his estate shows he owned land in Cass, Marion, Upshur, Morris, and and Camp Counties.

(Taken from Texas Legacy, courtesy of  Jimmie F Chatham).


Stringer, W. B.

Stringer, Hon. John B.

W. B. Stringer has been a man of some public note, a minister of the Primitive Baptist church for forty years, representative of Pike County, Alabama, in the State legislature for two terms, and commissioner of that county for a number of terms.  He was born in Darlington District of South Carolina, and reared there and in Pike county Alabama, where his parents moved when he was young.  In 1868 he moved to Texas, and, after a residence of one year in Marion County, he settled in Franklin County, where he now lives, and has been treasurer of that county since its organization.   His wife, Mrs. Margaret Ann Stringer was a daughter of Robert Williamson of Pike County, Alabama; her people came originally from Darlington District, South Carolina, where she was born.  She was reared in Pike County, Alabama, and died in Marion County, Texas in 1869.
     Hon. John B. Stringer, Mount Vernon, Franklin County, Texas, was born in Pike County, Alabama, January 23 1845, son of W. B. and Margaret Ann (Williamson) Stringer. John B. Stringer is the third of four children born to his parents, the others being Dr. James M. (deceased); Mary, now widow of Madison L. Beck; and Joseph W.  He was reared in Pike County, Alabama.  After coming to Texas in 1868 he read law with Turner & Turner of Mount Vernon, and was admitted to the bar in 1875.  His legal ability was soon recognized, and the following year he was elected county attorney, serving in that capacity two terms, from 1876 to 1881.  He was elected to the Eighteenth and Twentieth legislatures and was a useful member of that body.   With these exceptions he has devoted himself exclusively to his profession.
     Mr. Stringer served as a private in the Confederate army, first in Company B., Twenty-fifth Alabama, and afterward in Company D, Fifteenth Confederate Cavalry.  He was on the coast defense from Pensacola, Florida, to the Mississippi river in an independent command under Colonel Harry Maurey.
     In November 1876, Mr. Stringer married Miss Emma, daughter of S.Y.L. Ray of Marion County, Texas.  Mrs. Stringer is a descendant of an Alabama family and is herself a native of that State.

Source: Biographical Souvenir of Texas 1889, page 805.


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