Stephen Fuller Austin (1793-1836)

From RoyalWeb
Jump to: navigation, search
(Sources)
Line 4: Line 4:
 
*"Early Lawrence County, Arkansas Records 1817-1830" by Desmond Walls Allen, 1995 transcribed [[StephenFAustin2|here]]
 
*"Early Lawrence County, Arkansas Records 1817-1830" by Desmond Walls Allen, 1995 transcribed [[StephenFAustin2|here]]
  
 
+
*"The Descendants of Richard Austin of Charlestown Massachusetts 1638, unpublished manuscript,", Edith Austin Moore, LDS Film#0873972#2. Transcribed [[StephenFAustin3|here]]
 
+
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Moore, Edith Austin, The Descendants of Richard Austin of Charlestown Massachusetts 1638, unpublished manuscript, LDS Film#0873972#2. RESEARCH NOTES: attended Transylvania College at Lexington, Kentucky; had just finished school, made his way to New Orleans and entered the office of Joseph Hawkins, a former Kentucky politician, who had been Speaker of the Legislature, when word came that his father was seriously ill. Although death had overtaken his father before he arrived, he got word to "carry on" with the Colony project in Texas. Stephen hit his benefactor and friend Joseph Hawkins for a loan, and Hawkins agreed to back him in the project, whereupon he headed for Texas where he was immediately and almost prematurely recognized by the Spanish-American authorities as the logical successor to his father in the land colonization proposition. [Ref: Moore AUSTIN p61] When in 1833 the Tennessee colonists formed a constitution and sought admission to the Mexican Confederacy, Stephen Austin and other delegates went to the city of Mexico to obtain a ratification of it, but they failed because of the frequent revolutions and anarchy in Mexico. He wrote to Texas recommending the organization of a state de facto. For this he was improsoned. On his release and return, he was greated with an ovation, and when the war came on he took prominent part in the Revolution; being chosen Commander of the Texan army in Oct 1835. However, he induced Sam Houston to take the chief command, while he went as one of the three commisioners sent by the "Consultations" to the U.S. for the purpose of obtaining the recognition of Texas as an independent Government. Before his mission had successfully terminated he returned to Texas, where he died.
+
 
+
She also says he died in Peaches Point, Columbia Co and not in Austin, but that he was buried in Austin
+
 
+
Further researchers say that he died in Columbia, Texas and was FIRST buried in 1836 at Peach Point Plantation and then re-buried in 1910 in the Texas State Cemetery, in Austin Texas
+
 
+
 
+
Brought to you by Will Johnson, Professional Genealogist, Historian and Biographer
+
 
+
E-mail me at wjhonson@aol.com
+
Or snail-mail me at:
+
Fast Forward Genealogy Enterprises
+
180 Seventh Ave Suite #102, Santa Cruz, CA 95062
+
  
  

Revision as of 16:04, 30 May 2007

Personal tools
MOOCOW
Google AdSense