|
Biographies Anderson County - South
Carolina Genealogy Trails
A History of Texas and Texans by Francis White
Johnson, Ernest William Winkler – 1920, pg.
1391
JUDGE JAMES W. MCDAVID - It was in
the year 1846, about the time Texas entered the Union, that the
McDavid family was established in Lone Star commonwealth.
Three active generations of
citizens have since increased the honor and distinction of the name
in this state, and in many ways have proved themselves capable and
valuable factors in social and business affairs.
Judge McDavid is now serving
as county judge of Rusk county, and is the grandson of the pioneer
who
introduced this numerous family into Rusk county.
The first settler of this
name in South Carolina was an Irishman who came from his native
isle, and identified himself with the agrarian class in South
Carolina.
His posterity adopted the
customs of thrifty people of the south in the acquirement of slave
labor for their plantations. His remains long since mingled with the
soil of his adopted state, and he left descendants to perpetuate his
name as an American pioneer. John McDavid, a son of this emigrant,
also lived and died in the Palmetto state. He married a Miss
Davenport, and their children were: James, who spent his life in his
native state; William J., the Texas pioneer already mentioned;
Richard, who was killed in the battle of Mansfield during the Civil
war; Robert, who died in Rusk county as a farmer; John W., who
passed away in Van Zandt county, Texas; Andrew who died in
Greenville, South Carolina, after a service of thirty- two years as
tax collector; George and Benjamin F.. who died in Anderson county,
South Carolina; Rosanna, who married John Williams, and died in
Anderson county, South Carolina; Nancy, who died in Georgia was the
wife of A. W. Graham; Polly, who became the wife of Ben Arnold and
died in South Carolina; and Adeline, who married William Roberts and
died in Coleman county, Texas. His grandfather, William J. McDavid
brought the family from Abbeville district, South Carolina, and
settled nine miles northwest of Henderson. He spent his life as a
slave-holding planter, and was one of the men who assisted in the
development of the frontier district then comprising Rusk county.
His death occurred in 1895, and he was born in Abbeville, South
Carolina, March 3, 1815.
Grandfather William J.
McDavid married Agnes Gilkerson, a daughter of John Gilkerson. Her
death occurred in Rusk county, in 1886. Their children were:
John, father of Judge
McDavid; James E., of Abilene, Texas; William P., who owns the old
homestead in Rusk county; Susan, who married J. M. Smith and died in
Rusk county; Mary E., the wife of C. D. Williams of Rusk county; and
Elliott, who became the wife of A. C. Coursey and died in Coleman
county.
John McDavid, a son of
William J., was born in Abbeville district, South Carolina, and came
to Texas with his father in 1846, grew up in the country with only
limited educational advantages. Although a southerner he never owned
any slaves, and spent thirty- nine years of his life in Rusk county,
Texas. He assumed his share of responsibility during the war, and
joined a company of the Fourteenth Texas Infantry. His regiment was
a part of Extor's Brigade in the Army of Tennessee, and it
participated in many battles which contributed to the history of the
war. At the battle of Chickamauga he was taken prisoner, but escaped
and finished his service to the end of the struggle without wounds.
His brother James performed a like service for the Confederacy and
both returned home to do the part of a civilian in the restoration
of industry in the war-burdened country. When the war was over and
he had returned home from the southern army, he started in life-
without respectable clothing, and it is said that neighbor girls
gathered at his father's house and wove jeans for cloth out of which
his "society" suit was made, and which he no doubt wore a few months
later when he eloped with a neighbor's daughter and was married. He
established himself in the community where he had grown up from
childhood and thereafter lived an uneventful career. He was without
political aspirations or ambition, voted as a Democrat, belonged to
the Methodist church, and affiliated with the Knights of Honor. John
McDavid in 1868 married Miss Susan Christie. Her father, Sampson
Christie came from Taladega county, Alabama, some years before the
Civil war. He was a rough-and-ready man of the primitive school of
citizenship, loved horses and horse raising, and took his enjoyment
chiefly in that way. Late in life he moved to Collin county, Texas,
was successful in the accumulation of property and left a family of
children. Mrs. John McDavid died in 1882 and her husband in 1885.
Their family of children were: William, who died in 1895; James W.,
judge of Rusk county; John E., a farmer of Rusk county, who was born
December, 1874; Daisy, who was born in 1880, and is now Mrs. Daisy
Williams of Westville, Oklahoma; A. Milton, who was born in April,
1881, and lives in Collins county, Texas. Judge James W. McDavid was
reared upon the farm he now owns, and where he was born June 15,
1873. A man of excellent education and a lawyer with a wide range of
experience, Judge McDavid was at one time a country school boy, and
promoted himself to the higher ranges of learning largely through
his own ambition to equip himself better than his neighbor in the
race of life. Three years were spent in study in the effective
school conducted by Professor Orr at Summer Hill, and he also spent
two years at Baylor University. During the few months following his
college career at Baylor, he reviewed his common branches while
teaching, and then began preparation for law as a student with Judge
W. C. Buford at Henderson. At Carthage when only nineteen years of
age, he was admitted to the bar before Judge W. J. Graham, his
examining committee embracing Frank B. Sexton, Judge W. H. Pope, R.
C. Deraffnired, J. H. Long, and A. D. Sparkman. With his admission
to the bar began his active career as a lawyer. He admitted to
the bar before Judge W. J. Graham, his examining committee embracing
Frank B. Sexton, Judge W. H. Pope, R. C. Deraffnired, J. H. Long,
and A. D. Sparkman. With his admission to the bar began his active
career as a lawyer. He located at Henderson and earned his first
fees there. He soon became a partner with his old preceptor, and was
associated with him for ten years. All phases of the law have
received some attention from Judge McDavid, and he has practiced not
only during his residence in town, but also while living on his farm
nine miles north in the country. His first six years at the bar were
spent in Henderson and from 1898 to 1907 he kept his family upon his
plantation where his own infancy and childhood were spent. As a
farmer Judge McDavid is one of the leaders in this section of Texas.
At the present time his ownership embraces some eight hundred acres,
and about half of this is cultivated to cotton and other staple
crops. Eight tenant families are employed in operating this large
acreage.
Judge McDavid first entered
the political arena in 1894, when he offered his services to the
county for the office of county judge. The successful candidate in
that election was the same man whom eighteen years later Judge
McDavid succeeded by appointment. He first assumed the duties of
county judge when appointed in February, 1912, and in November
following he was elected his own successor. Judge McDavid is a
working Democrat, is affiliated with the Masonic Order
and the Knights of Pythias,
and is a man always quick and ready to lend his support to community
affairs. then drove it into the earth, exclaiming as he did so: ''
There is one corner of this schoolhouse, and you can locate the
other three corners where you please!'' The building was erected
right there.
On October 31, 1893, in Rusk
county, Judge McDavid married Miss Annie H. Wood. Her father, J. W.
Wood, was an old Texas settler at Pirtle, where he combined the
occupations of farming and merchandising.
He came from Tennessee. J.
W. Wood married Mrs. Ann Kelly, a daughter of John Chapman of
Spartanburg, South Carolina. Mrs. MeDavid is one of seven children.
The children of Judge McDavid and wife are: John W.; Sue Blanche;
Margaret Ann; Leaureme; Vernon W.; and Daisy Nelwyn. Mr. Milner was
a man of more than ordinary stature, wore a heavy sandy beard and
impressed strangers as a man of mold and worth. During the latter
part of the war between the South and the North he served in the
Confederate army with a company of cavalry in protecting the coast
near Galveston. He was a Democrat, was concerned with public
questions as they arose for solution and never failed to vote, save,
perhaps, when he might have been disfranchised for his participation
in the Civil War with the southern army.
As a business man
he was ambitious only for a competency, and proved himself an
excellent farmer. Mr. Milner died in the faith of the Cumberland
Presbyterian church, in 1883, and was laid to rest in the Pine Grove
cemetery. The mother died in 1878. The children born to Arnold
Milner and his wife were as follows: Williamson, a resident of
Dallas, Texas; Henry B., who lives at McAlester, Oklahoma Robert
Teague, of this review; and three who died before reaching their
maturity.
BACK © all rights
reserved to the original submitter
|