The following is a presentation made by Upshur
County Author Roslyn Alsobrook on May 20, 2012 to the West Mountain Cemetery
Association on the life of William Sobey buried in the West Mountain
Cemetery.
William Sobey, 1841-1925
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I want to start by pointing out the fact that all of us here today are sitting
on a little piece of Texas history.
The land you see about you was once part of a Republic of Texas land grant,
formerly occupied by Caddo and Cherokee Indians.
This cemetery was established in a time when churches and schools were scarce
and land boundaries were in question. In the 1850s, this parcel of land ended
up becoming part of a plantation owned by landowner, Alpha Phillips and later,
Ben Phillips.
The very first grave was that of Alpha?s father, William, in 1853. It was
marked, as many graves were at the time, with a pile of native stones.
The Phillips family cemetery, as it came to be known, was also soon used for
the burial of plantation workers and neighbors--and even a few transients.
In 1872, Ben F Phillips, a Church of Christ minister and a local politician,
built what was referred to as the ?Phillips Place?. Ben Phillips performed
many marriages there, and the house became a place of local gathering.
In 1920, at a time when Ben was 75 years old and having a hard time keeping up
the grounds, a volunteer association formed to maintain the graves. This
cemetery association has increased over the years, as has the acreage, and has
evolved into the group we are today.
In 1933, the Old Phillips Cemetery was finally given an official name: the
West Mountain Cemetery--but the original area is still referred to as the ?Old
Phillips section?.
In 1972, exactly 100 years after the ?Phillips Place? was built, the old house
was torn down. The cemetery, of course, still stands.
Over the years, during our annual meetings, we have enjoyed narratives about
various people buried here. In past meetings, I gave insight into the lives of
C.B. And Laura Mackey and their children. Today, I will focus on the Sobey
side of my family.
William H. Sobey is my great grandfather. I never knew him, of course, but I
heard a great deal about him all through my youth, largely because my great
grandfather William was the 'Yankee!' our family dared to bury in the West
Mountain Cemetery of Upshur County, Texas. We had some gall to want to bury
someone in that cemetery who had fought for the Union not once, but twice.
After all, Ben Phillips--whose family had started the cemetery--had fought for
the Rebel cause for three long, hard years, and he was still alive, though 80
years old at the time.
Burying someone who had fought for the other side caused such a stir that
those opposed tried to prevent this internment by rousing the emotions of
others who had southern family buried there. Despite the Civil War having
ended 56 years prior, all had not been forgiven by this 'gray'-nose southern
family. They failed to prevent William from being buried near his other
family, but took solace in having stopped a monument praising his service to
the wrong side of the Civil War from being placed at his grave. (An injustice
that was remedied 65 years later, in the 1990s).
William was born in 1840, in Cornwall Parish, England. He came to the States
in 1852 at age 12. He and his family lived in several states before ending up
in Texas, where he died in 1925.
The family has always told the story that William came to America as a
stowaway on a ship from England (as supposedly did the whole Thomas Sobey
family), but fellow Sobey genealogist, Jeannine Brown's information disproves
this possibility, as does simple logic. These ships were not large enough to
allow a very large family to stowaway undetected for the weeks to months it
took to travel overseas. Had they been discovered, they would have been
arrested and forced to pay, or be deported back on the very next ship. There
are no such criminal records at either port.
As it turns out, William's family came over from England together as common
passengers (though under an assumed name). According to William?s pension
papers, they entered the Port Of New York in April, 1852, but they disembarked
on May 3, 1852 (verified by the ship?s manifest). Perhaps the story of the
family having come over under a false name changed to the family being
stowaways in the telling and retelling. Or perhaps the fact they brought
nothing with them to verify births or marriages made being stowaways sound
more logical, and less suspicious. Apparently, Thomas Sobey did not want
anyone to wonder about the reason they came over under the name Mutton, last
name borrowed from a neighbor, so he brought no legal papers with him. Or he
didn?t want anyone from Cornwall, who might wonder where they went, to be able
to trace their departure.
This lack of personal documents later caused problems with determining
William's official birthdate. This date changed as time went along both in
censuses and legal paperwork. This Sobey family was notorious for being poor
historians when it came to their own vital information. I do think that was
largely due to there having been no legal documents brought with them, for
fear of their true last name being discovered while they traveled. William's
grave marker bears the birth date of February 9, 1840, which was the date
William himself told at times. But Jeannine L. Brown was the first to give me
the man's birth date being January 9, 1841. Her cousin, Donna Jakobsson's
information agreed, Donna having taken down the January 9, 1841 birth date
directly from Cornwall, United Kingdom records.
William's birth date was also written as being January 9, 1841 in his father's
probate records, confirming the date Donna Jakobsson found. Apparently,
William's sister, Katie, was better at keeping up with important information
than William. At some point, William became so confused about his birthdate,
he gave February 9, 1840 as the date in pension records and stuck to that
afterward. His brother, Isaac E. Sobey, was equally confused about his
birthdate when he claimed February 8, 1840 to be his birthday in his pension
records. That would put the two having been born one day apart. Oddly, neither
man was born in February of 1840. Yet, William's self-concocted birthdate made
it to his grave stone, which was not erected until decades later due to the
Yankee problem.
In 1856, the Iowa State Census lists the family as already well established in
Dubuque County. Thomas, William?s father, was listed as a farmer, married, and
having lived in in the state of Iowa for four years. He and Elizabeth are both
50 years old and have six of their children and William's uncle, John, living
with them. William is 15 years old at that time, which matches the Cornwall,
England date.
By 1860, in Dubuque County, the federal census lists William as living in the
Taylor Township in Iowa. This fits what Jeannine told me about William being
19 and working on a farm away from Thomas's farm at that time. The census
shows William was single and lived in the household of John W Shumway. He was
listed as a "Farmer". My guess is that the family could not afford one more
mouth to feed, so William went to work for wages. Either that, or there was a
rift between him and the family. William was 20 years old when, according to
Muster rolls, he enlisted in the Union Army on December 11, 1861. He was
attached to the Illinois 57th Infantry Regiment in Illinois when it was
organized on December 26, This group eventually became Company E, 57 Regiment
Illinois Infantry.
Perhaps William was living with or visiting his brother, Joseph, at the time
he enlisted because when he enlisted, he claimed Tuscola, Illinois as his
residence (although he does not appear on either the 1860 or 1870 Douglas
County Censuses).
Some of the more important battles William fought in while a part of the 57th
Regiment include:
Battle at Clifton, Tennessee on 11 March 1862
Battle at Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee on 03 April 1862
Battle at Shiloh, Tennessee on 06 & 7 April 1862
Battle at Corinth, Mississippi on 03 & 4 October 1862
It was in the Battle of Corinth that William Sobey was first wounded. The
Casualty Sheet for that battle listed: Wm Sobey, Pvt in Company E of the 57
Inf Ill with a Wounded Leg ? severe, on 3 or 4 Oct 1862. The Battle of Corinth
is said to be one of the fiercest and bloodiest of the war and, evidently,
William was wounded in the early stages. He later stated to the Pension Bureau
that he was injured October 2, but the casualty list gives Oct. 3 or 4 in 1863
as the date and those are the dates history itself gives for the battle.
William's granddaughter, Christine (Sobey) Rutledge --(known to me as Mom)
correctly recalled that William participated in the Battle of Shiloh, where he
went uninjured. That battle occurred April 6 and 7, 1862 around Pittsburg
Landing in Hardin County, Mississippi.
Mom also claimed that William was later part of the Battle of Vicksburg in
Mississippi. She recalled how, at Vicksburg, he was wounded above the knee and
almost died, but the military records prove that he was wounded at that bloody
Battle at Corinth, Mississippi in October, 1862 instead. By the time Grant?s
operations against Vicksburg began in May of 1863, William was still in the
hospital in St. Louis. William was not released from the hospital and
discharged from the army until eight months later, in June 1863. His final
statement was given January 3, 1863, enabling him to enlist again, that same
month, at St. Louis, Missouri in the Mississippi Marine Brigade, at Savannah,
Georgia. William later mustered out for the final time in Vicksburg,
Mississippi in January, 1865, which may be where the confusion stemmed about
the man having fought in the Battle at Vicksburg. His pension papers give his
release date as January 17, 1865.
After William reenlisted that January 1863, it was 11 months before he saw
active duty. Perhaps the delay was the result of his injuries. It was December
25, 1864 that he was allotted full gear again. Some Christmas present for his
family. Their William was back to being a living target. And he indeed was
injured yet again, while serving in the Marines when an explosion occurred
right next to him, and left him deaf in one ear.
William later filed for a pension because that first war injury left him with
a limp and the inability to do really strenuous labor. The pension was later
increased when it came to light that the second war injury left him deaf in
one ear as well. This money helped a lot during the time his older son, John,
struggled to make a go of it for both his own family and his parents.
William?s other son, William Henry Sobey, followed his father's example and
joined the Marines at a young age and spent his adult life serving his country
and died as a Prisoner Of War in Japan during WWII. I?ll save that story for
another day.
By August 12 in 1870, the elder William was out of the Marines and again back
in Taylor, Iowa. The federal census lists him as a resident, still single and
again a farm laborer, this time living in the household of J W. Foster.
By 1879, William had moved to Dakota Territory because of the open
homesteading there.
According to Mom. "After Christina and William married, they moved to South
Dakota, where they homesteaded."
She believed all three children were born in South Dakota. Mom?s birth
certificate, signed by John himself, has that he was born in Dakota. It was
after an extremely hard winter, in which William nearly lost his life in a
blizzard, he decided to move his family south--having come to appreciate the
climate while serving his country.
It was while still living in Brule County South Dakota, that William became a
naturalized citizen on March 30 1885. On that date, a subscription for
naturalization was signed by William Sobey to allow him to become a citizen.
In this document, William claims he landed at the port of New York in April
1852.
It wasn't until 1887 that William finally took a wife, Christiana A Burke.
Since her brother (or perhaps her father) Hugh homesteaded very near where
William homesteaded, I have always felt that William met Christina while in
South Dakota and the two were, therefore, married there, not in Ohio as Mom
believed. I have never found actual marriage records, but this theory bears
out when two affidavits were given in 1915 to prove the marriage of Christina
and William later on. Both affidavits were given by residents of Brule and
stated the two marred in nearby Coyle. Christina's widow pension papers also
state they were married in 'Coile', South Dakota, although the spelling was
wrong.
On November 27, 1899, court probate records list William's residence as Burges,
Mississippi. And yet, by the time of the 1900 Census, he was listed as living
in South Dakota still. Had they moved to Mississippi, then gone back to be
with family? I don't know.
Mississippi did not turn out to be the farming haven William had hoped. It was
shortly thereafter, the man?s adventurous nature took hold again and he headed
for Texas, landing in Indian Rock, Upshur County. There, they bought land and
started farming anew. But the land at Indian Rock must not have suited them
any more than the land in Mississippi. Soon, son John bought land here in West
Mountain, where he and his wife, Iris Mackey Sobey, lived the rest of their
lives. Eventually, William and Christina moved in with John and Iris, so
grandma and grandpa could help take care of grandpa?s aging parents.
It was once William was in Texas, that he addressed his uncertain birth date
for the first time. During April, 1910, in a neatly handwritten letter to the
"Honorable Commissionor (sic)of Pensions Washington D.C.", William Sobey
writes:
"Dear Sir
"In Reply to yours of March 29 -- in Regard to my age will Say I was born on
February 9, 1940 in the county of Cornwall England. My Parents came to the
United States when I was quite Small in the transit of goods Some was lost.
Among them Some Records of births and Deaths and other Matters, but I have
often heard my father and Mother say I was born on the 9th day of February
1840 (Note: William's brother, Isaac, seems to remember the same date minus
one day for himself. Neither is correct).
"Such being the case, I cannot furnish any Evidence only as Indicated under
Oath, and I would not Make false Oath or Perjure Myself under any condition
whatever. Could I furnish any Other Evidence of My Age I would gladly do so.
Knowing that it would be better for the government and Myself, trusting this
statement with my Oath will be Satisfactory
"Very Respectfully, William Sobey
"Gladewater, Texas
[again, having entered the country under an assumed name, I can understand why
no birth certificates were brought with them and why there is confusion on
several of the children's birthdates.]
William received his pensions until his death on August 29, 1925. This date is
found on his death records and is also on his Official Form of Transit Permit
and his Physicians or Coroner's Certificate for the Transportation of Dead
Human Bodies. The Physician's statement on this certificate indicates he died
of Chronic Myocarditis (sic) in Dallas, Texas. Apparently, when his health
started to fail him, he went to live with his daughter, Effie, in Dallas,
where there were better medical facilities. Effie had moved to Dallas with her
husband, L.L. Shipp, years earlier.
The obituary that is filed with the military reads: William Sobey, 85 years
old, died Saturday morning at 10:30 o'clock at the home of his daughter, Mrs.
L. L. Shipp, 5651 East Side Avenue. The body will be sent by the Brewer
Undertaking Company to Gladewater, Tex. for burial. Surviving are his wife, a
daughter, Mrs. Shipp of Dallas, two sons, John Sobey of Gladewater and Will
Sobey of the United States Marines in China.? [I?m still looking for military
records showing time William Henry may have spent in China.]
William Sobey was finally laid to rest, after quite a bit of turmoil mentioned
earlier, right here, in the West Mountain Cemetery, with a throng of friends
and family in attendance.
Also buried here are his wife, Christina, his son, John, and his
grandchildren: Charles, Marie, Franklin, Thomas and Anna.
He also has one great grandchild buried here. Ricky Dale Pyle.
The plus of all this is that now, whenever one of you visits the grave of
William Sobey, born 1840, you will know the man buried there. When you see the
graves of his children, grandchildren and great grandchildren, you will know
the man from which they descended.
The beauty of a cemetery is that each and every grave has just such a story.
Never look at these many headstones as markers of death. Instead, look at them
as monuments to the very lives of the people buried here. That is why it is so
important to keep the cemetery in good repair.
The lives of those who are buried here warrant it.
I thank you.
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