MARION COUNTY BIOGRAPHIES

"T"


TAYLOR, Ward Sr.

(1791-1871, and Nancy (Mathews) Taylor (1796-1879) came to Texas from Alabama in 1845. Several Taylor and Mathews relatives and children joined them in Marion County in that year and the years following, building homes and helping to settle the area. In May 1860, four-month-old Emmett, son of E. W. and S. E Taylor, was buried in Taylor Cemetery, on land belonging to Marion DeKalb (M. D. K.) Taylor. Emmett's grave remains the earliest marked burial in the cemetery, though family history indicates that the graveyard was in use before the Civil War. According to legend, the family buried several slaves outside the original fence to the north of the main cemetery. When M. D. K. deeded the land to his father, Ward Taylor,Sr., in 1868, the family cemetery was mentioned in the deed. Ward's wife Nancy inherited the property upon his death. She left the property, according to Ward's instructions, to their son J. M. Taylor, who willed it to his wife Amanda Maleson (Craven) Taylor.


TODD, William Smith (1808-1864). William Smith Todd, lawyer and judge, the son of George T. Todd, was born on a plantation in Caroline County, Virginia, in 1808. He received his early education at home from tutors and graduated from the University of Virginia in 1832. After graduating he served two terms in the Virginia legislature and married Eliza Ann Hudgins. Around 1840 the Todds and their two small children moved to Texas. They settled in Boston, Bowie County, where Todd established a law practice. Eliza Todd opened Ringwood Female Seminary in 1844 and began a highly successful career as the director of a school for wealthy young ladies. In 1848 the couple moved to Clarksville, where Todd continued to practice law and Eliza opened the Clarksville Female Institute. In 1850 Todd was elected judge of the Eighth Judicial District. He acquired a reputation as a highly competent judge and was reelected in 1854 and 1858. He moved his family to Jefferson in 1856, and in 1861 he was elected a delegate to the Secession Convention from Marion County. Todd retired from the bench because of ill health in 1862. He died in Jefferson on May 20, 1864.


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This page was last updated: April 14, 2014

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