JOEL EARLY MATHEWS

Joel Early Mathews Sr
1809–1874
Birth 20 OCT 1809 • Goose Pond, Oglethorpe, Georgia, USA
Death 11 MAY 1874 • Cahaba, Dallas County, Alabama, USAMarried: 04 Oct 1830 • Albermarle, County, Virginia, USA
Elizabeth Woods Poague
1818–1869
Birth 31 AUG 1818 • Pocahontas County, West Virginia, USA
Death 06 NOV 1869 • Cahaba, Dallas, Alabama, USADaughter of William Thomas Poage and Nancy Vance Warwick
Children:
1. Charles L Mathews Died Young
2. Mary Mathews Died Young
3. Anna Eliza Mathews
4. Virginia Mathews Died Young
5. Lucy Early Mathews
6. Thomas Merriweather Mathews Died Young
7. Rebecca Marks Mathews Died Young
8. Joel Early Mathews Jr. Died unmarried

A cousin of Confederado George Green Mathews
Source: CLYX.com
To present the merited claims of a typical southern planter of the olden days is the purpose of this sketch. Than these princely planters of the old South in the golden age of cotton, no more honorable, cultured, dignified, or hospitable class ever existed. None is more worthy to represent the great planting class of the South, and especially of Alabama, than Joel Early Matthews, who died at Selma, May 11, 1874.
Mr. Matthews sprang from Revolutionary sires. His grandfather, General George Matthews, was a distinguished soldier in Washington’s army. After the close of the Revolution, General Matthews removed from Virginia to Georgia, and became one of the three representatives sent by the state of Georgia to congress. In addition to this honor, he was made governor of Georgia for two terms. The father of the subject of the present sketch was Colonel C. L. Matthews, who found great pride in the education of his son in the leading colleges of the South, he having taken a course at the University of Georgia, supplemented by another at the University of Virginia. His first ambition was the bar, but he eventually abandoned that and adopted planting. In those early days planting and the bar were regarded the two most eminent vocations in the South.
Purchasing a plantation in the heart of the black belt, near Cahaba, on the Alabama River, Mr. Matthews spent his life there. His broad acres of fabulous fertility were his constant pride and care, and his palatial home was one of the most splendid in the South. Nothing like the sumptuous hospitality of the old-time southern planter was ever before equaled, and the conditions which entered into these superb abodes of elegance, ease and courtliness will never be again. Immensely wealthy, the elegant mansion of Mr. Matthews rivaled in all its appointments the palace of an English lord. There was nothing lacking to contribute to ease, comfort, pleasure, and culture.
Like others of his great class in the South, Mr. Matthews did not content himself with the mere enjoyment of that afforded by the wealth of his vast estate.
He was an exceedingly busy man, not only in the successful direction of his own interests and in dispensing rare hospitality, but he directed his energies as well to the promotion of the well-being of society, and the enhancement and development of the resources of the state. To him the advancement of education and religion were matters of as serious concern as were his own private affairs. His plethoric purse was always available to the demands of needs, and nothing was of light esteem to this generous patriot and planter.
The leisure afforded by his wealth was devoted to reading and study. His library was stocked with the choicest standard works of ancient and modern learning, and his library table was always laden with the leading periodicals of the time. In these rural mansions of the old South were often met some of the most profound and thoughtful of men, of whom Mr. Matthews was a type. He had a passion for the study of the science of government, but his studies were not confined to that particular branch of thought. His fund of information was comprehensive, and his learning versatile. He found peculiar delight in the study of Shakespeare, the histories of Gibbon and Hume, the works of Bacon, Addison, Macaulay, and others. With the study of these came a passion for the study of the Scriptures, and the science of government as expounded by Jefferson and Calhoun, the interpretations of the limitations and powers of the federal constitution of whom he accepted.
Mr. Matthews had crossed the boundary of a half century of his life when hostilities between the North and the South began. Though deeply interested in the principle of secession and thrilled by the patriotism which swayed the country during the exciting days of the early sixties, he felt that he was too old to share in the actual fray, but pledged his fealty and fortune to Alabama in the pending crisis. In token of this he sent his check for fifteen thousand dollars in gold to Governor Moore, to be used by him at his discretion for the defense of the state, which was acknowledged in the following letter:
“Executive Department,
“Montgomery, Ala.,
“January 28, 1861.
“Mr. Joel E. Matthews, Cahaba, Ala.
“Dear Sir:—Your munificence for the protection of the state is accepted and the evidence of it placed upon record in this office. The praise of one man, although he speaks as one having authority, is but a small part of the reward which your patriotism deserves and will receive. When the present time shall have become historic, this donation will be an heirloom to your posterity and the example which you have set will be a source of power to your state compared to both of which the liberal sum of money which you have given will be as nothing. As chief executive of the state, and acting under a deep sense of responsibility, I have been compelled to do all in my power to strengthen the sense of resistance in the southern mind and to deepen the current flowing toward the independence of the state in defense of her constitutional rights. What I have been compelled to do by conviction of duty, you have done voluntarily, and to that extent deserve more freely of the gratitude of your fellow citizens. Trusting that an approving conscience and the gratitude of your state may be your ample reward, and commending you and the state to the protecting goodness of Providence, I remain, very respectfully your obedient servant,
“A. B. MOORE,
“Governor of Alabama.”
The patriotic sentiments of Mr. Matthews did not cease with this donation, for he uniformed and equipped several military companies at his own expense and was generous in the relief of the widows and orphans of those killed in battle. Sharing in the gloom occasioned by the result of the war, he was tempted to remove to Brazil in order to produce cotton in that empire. On visiting the country he was cordially greeted by the emperor and urged to become a subject, but he gave up the idea. When Emperor Dom Pedro visited America in 1876 he made diligent inquiry of Mr. Matthews, with whom he was greatly impressed.
The life and career of Joel Early Matthews was a distinct contribution to the weal of Alabama. Though wealthy, he was modest and devoid of arrogance; though unusually well informed, he had respect unto the lowliest. He was an ornament to the citizenship of the state, and when he passed away his loss was universally mourned.
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Mathews, Joel Early, planter, was born October 21, 1809, at Goose Pond, Oglethorpe County, Georgia, and died May 11, 1874, at Selma, son of Col. Charles Lewis and Lucy (Early) Matthews of Georgia, the latter a sister of Gov. Peter Early of Georgia, grandson of George and Ann (Paul) Matthews, who lived at Staunton, Virginia, the former an officer in the French and Indian War. Col. in the Ninth Virginia Regiment in the Revolutionary War who moved to Georgia after the Revolution; was elected governor of that state in 1786 and again in 1793, and was one of the first three members of Congress from Georgia; great grandson of John Matthews, who married a Miss Archer and emigrated from Ireland to America, settling near Staunton, Virginia, and of John Paul, the son of Hugh Paul, Bishop of Nottingham, England.
Mr. Matthews was educated at the University of Georgia and the University of Virginia, and was graduated in both law and medicine at the latter institution. He never engaged in the practice of either profession, and in 1831, soon after his graduation, moved to Alabama and settled on a plantation on the Alabama River near Cahaba in Dallas County. He spent forty years of his life in the management of his large estate at that place.
Because of his age, he took no active course during the War of Secession, but contributed largely to the Confederate government. Soon after Alabama seceded, he sent his check for $15,000 in gold to Gov. Moore to be used at his discretion for the defense of the state. He equipped several military companies at his own expense, supplied the needs of the army liberally from his plantation all through the war, and cared for the families of a number of men at the front. He was a Jeffersonian Democrat of the order of John C. Calhoun, but never held any public office. He was a pioneer in the manufacturing life of the state, building, one of the first, if not the first, cotton mill in Alabama at Cahaba before the war. After that mill was burned, he built again in Selma, where his last years were spent.
Married October 5, 1830, to Elizabeth Woods Poague of Albemarle County, Virginia, who died November 5, 1869, daughter of Major William Poague and his wife, before her marriage, a Miss Warrick who lived in Bath County, Virginia. The Poague family was prominent in Augusta, Rockbridge, and Botetourt Counties, Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. Mathews survived all their children, but one, Joel Early, Jr., who died a few years after their death without children. Two daughters, Anne Eliza and Lucy Early married respectively Col. N. H. R. Dawson of Dallas and Col. Daniel S. Troy of Montgomery. Both died young, the latter childless, and the former leaving an only daughter who later married DR. John P. Furness of Selma. Last residence Selma.
The Montgomery Advertiser, Montgomery, Alabama, Tuesday, September 3, 1935. Page 4
Excerpted:
The Joel E. Mathews Plantation, two miles south of Cahaba, was one of the show places of the Black Belt and one of the most beautifully improved places of the South. The house was constructed of brick and built in the Old English style, with an open court in front and a broad porch entirely across the southern end. It was situated in a grove of large trees, a part of the original forest which extended to the banks of the river. On the east and west, in front of the mansion were extensive grounds, with broad walks and circular carriage drives bordered with hedges, beyond whose pleasant green barriers were flower gardens containing every flower and shrub which flourishes in this climate.
South of the mansion was the plantation, with its intensively cultivated acres, its church, its immense bath house with concrete pool, its ballroom and the comfortable log slave quarters occupied by hundreds of slaves who were devoted to the master and his family. So much did the Mathews family love this lovely and luxurious home that young Joel Mattews when the plantation, was invaded by the soldiers of Wilson's Brigade, filled a large stove pipe hat with gold pieces to induce them not to burn it, and when they still remained, he filled it half full again. They left, but the lovely, mellowed old structure was destroyed by fire after the war. Joe Matthews, Sr. was an ardent advocate of the South and States rights, and when Alabama seceded from the Union, he forwarded $15,000 in gold to the Confederate government, then located at Montgomery.
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Selma Morning Times. Selma, Alabama, Sunday, November 7, 1869, Page 2.
Death of Mrs. Joel E. Mathews.
It is with no feelings of ordinary sorrow that we receive the announcement of the death of Mrs. Joel E. Matthews, which took place at her residence near Cahaba on Friday night. Mrs. Mathews was one of the oldest citizens of Dallas County, and spent more than thirty years of her life at the residence where she died. She was beloved and respected by all who knew her, and her death will create a vacancy that will be felt in more than one family circle in Dallas County.
It was with fortune of the writer of this to have known her from childhood, and to have been honored with her friendship and in her death, he mourns the loss of an early and lifetime friend. Her kindness of heart and her warmth sympathizing, charitable disposition endeared her to a host of friends who shared her friendship and truly, it be said that in her death, one of the purest and best has gone from earth to her bright home beyond the skies. She was a sincere Christian and was for long years a consistent member of the Presbyterian Church. To her bereaved family, we tender our heartfelt sympathy and hour of their deep affliction.
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The Weekly Advertiser, Montgomery, Alabama, Tuesday, September 4, 1866. Page 6.
Mr. Joel E Mathews of Dallas has written a long letter from Sao Paulo, Brazil.The Selma Times published it entire and says Mr. Mathews is one of our oldest and most respectable citizens, has been a successful planter in Dallas for forty years and is widely known in this section as a man of profound and quaint learning, of the broadest benevolence, a most influential though, unaspiring member of society, and thoroughly Southern in every instinct of his nature. We speak advisedly when we say his opinions will decide for many of our good people "whether it is better to bear the ills they have, than fly to others they know not of." We deduce as follows; that what with the flies and mosquitoes, negro equality, the ant hills in the open lands, the lack of public highways, the flummery in religion and the absence of fireplaces. -- he is so far not so much delighted with the prospects of immigration.
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Clark County Democrat Grove Hill Alabama, Thursday, September 20, 1866, Page 1
Brazil. Forever.
Mr. Joel E Mathews, a prominent citizen of Dallas County, this state has gone to Brazil. From a letter to a member of his family, we make the following extract, which we commend to the attention of those wishing to remove to that land of the sun. The land about the town. (San Paulo) has been cleared years and years ago, and been so long abandoned that no one can tell how long ago it was done. They say it was abandoned because it was poor; this I do not believe; for it appeared much like the prairie on Bogue Chitto. I think that they have been driven away by ants. All the cleared lands I had seen uncultivated are covered ever with ant hills. They are usually about 2 and a half ft in diameter at the bottom, and rise about 2 and a half ft. high.
With a rounding top, and the piled earth has become as hard as unburnt brick. This is the usual size, but I have seen them of all sizes, up to seven feet high, and ten feet in diameter at the base. They are all filled literally with ants, which, when disturbed, make quite an angry display; The ants are of all sizes and colors up to one half an inch long. The larger ones are eaten by some of the people. I feel sure that these ants will destroy any tender vegetation which might be grown on the land; the grass on the land is hard and dry at this time, though they eat that, and I saw beaten paths which the ants had made going to some bushes from which they stripped the foliage.
I cannot think it possible to make a crop where these ants are in such numbers. Mr. Mathews adds in a postscript: There are flies and mosquitoes here which bite and hurt very badly; in the summer they must be dreadful. There Is also negro equality.".
We would like to hear from Colonel Norris on some of the above points. We hope that some of these big ants, flies and mosquitoes may get after him about the time he commences his next letter for publication.
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The Montgomery Advertiser, Montgomery, Alabama, Saturday, August 31, 1867, Page 2.
Brazil.
Messieurs. Editors -
Some time since in noticing the return of several persons from Brazil you stated that they said there was no regular government there, and that the people did not know what the word "kindness" is. More recently, in referring to the contributions of an "intelligent young gentleman" of this city who lately went to Brazil and came back again, you spoke of Brazil as a Godf-forsaken country".
That some people should go to Brazil, stay a few days, get homesick and come back and be ready to tell us all about the government, the people and productions of a country whose extent of territory is greater than that of the United States
is something one might expect. That sober, intelligent editors should endorse and publish such statements as facts is something one would scarcely expect.
That an intelligent young gentleman, unacquainted with the language or habits of a country and unprepared to wield anything for a livelihood heavier than a gold pen, should be dissatisfied and return, is something to be expected, but that he should come back after the lapse of a few weeks and declare the entire judiciary corrupt and represent the whole country utterly unfit for genteel, honest people from the South is something we had not expected. To believe him, We must disbelieve such men as Joel Matthews of Dallas, Dr. Gaston, Mr. Hall and many other older, and you will pardon us for believing, wiser men.
If it be such a "God-forsaken" country, certainly it is unfit for our people; but we might ask, why is it that John C Judkins, John Shackleford, Col. Porter, Dr. Keyes, Gr. McDade, and others who went out about the same time could not, as did this intelligent young gentleman, discover these abominable things at a glance. There is, it would seem but one answer to the question. These men are not so intelligent, not so quick of perception, nor so competent to judge of a country, and its characteristics. They are old fogies and can't see such things like a flash.
Here is a contrast which may very well be commended to the attention of young men who may seek a home in Brazil, or in any other country. Some time ago and intelligent young gentlemen from Wetumpka went to Brazil. Some few months afterward, he was heard from. He had selected a home in the woods upon the banks of a beautiful lake. Had taken off his coat, gone bravely to work. had his "shantee" erected, lLand cleared, and was greatly pleased with the country and with the prospect before him. Another intelligent young man from this city went not long since to Brazil. After the expiration of a few weeks we hear from him, but he is not in Brazil. He is back just where he started, abusing the country he had visited, and declaring emphatically that he knows the judiciary is corrupt! During a sojourn of a few days, this intelligent young gentleman, unacquainted with the language, found out more about the country than did Mr. Matthews and others who traveled for months through the country associating with the people visiting the schools and using diligently the facilities which the generosity of the government and of the people offered them for acquiring a knowledge of the country.
Mr. Judkins and other gentlemen well known in the community, went out with your intelligent young correspondent for the purpose of seeing for themselves if a country is really adapted to our people. But before these gentlemen have had time to form an opinion, here he is back among us, and with your help, Messrs. editors, decrying the entire country as a "God-forsaken", corrupt, miserable concern.
There is an old adage which it is, well sometimes to call to mind. It is':this: those who live in glass houses should not throw stones."
And here is a thought in this connection, which it might be well to consider if we choose to stand still, and not only bravely submit, but even encourage the radical stones to beat and batter our house. ("The best government for world ever saw.")
until scarcely a vestige of its glory remains, is it becoming in us, just for spite, to pick up any sort of foul stones and cast them at a house which has done us no harm, but which, on the contrary, has opened wide its doors, and is receiving our people with a hospitality and kindness that should challenge the admiration and gratitude of every candid and intelligent Southerner.
But my I object was not to criticise what has been said by you and your correspondent, but ask as a matter of justice, space enough to make the following statement.Some time since, in a letter published in the Mail, Mr. Judkins stated that he knew that the government of Brazil did not build a house for immigrants, nor clear any land, nor furnish any provisions.
Knowing Mr. J to be a reliable man, I enclosed that paragraph of his letter to General Goiconria, the Brazilian agent at New Orleans, and called his attention to the fact that his circulars did promise such things. In reply, he sent me a pamphlet containing the law of the Empire, making such provisions;.but his letter and the pamphlet explains that such aid applies only to those who locate in the government colonies.-- The names of which and there locations are given. This accounts for the discrepancy between Mr. Jenkins' statement and the circulars of the Brazilian agent. He enclosed to me a copy of a letter from an emigrant who had located in one of these colonies, situated in the province of Santa Catharina. It shows that the emigrant
gets all he is promised and is in a different strain from the letters of your young correspondent. I had thought to have asked you to print it, but shall not now trespass upon your kindness, further than to say this; if we choose still to cling to what is left of our once glorious union, and if we choose to persuade others to remain with us, let us at least retain enough of justice and self-respect not to abuse those who are welcoming our people to their country with a kindness and a hospitality that has rarely been equalled.
Conservative.

Mathews home # 2 - replacing the one that burned
(Source: Facebook) Here's a picture of the Joel E. Matthews Mansion. It once stood on the first plantation south of Cahawba. The Furniss family (his descendants) shared this picture with us. The current owners have fenced and gated the road into the plan-tation, but prior to that, many people were able visit the grand Matthew's cemetery and see remnants of the old bath house nearby.

CHILDREN SURVIVING TO ADULTHOOD
3.
Anne Eliza Mathews
1833–1854
Birth 14 MAY 1833 • Cahaba, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Death 07 OCT 1854 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Married: 22 Jan 1852 • Dallas County, Alabama, USA
Nathaniel Henry Rhodes Dawson
1829–1895
Birth 14 FEB 1829 • Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina, USA
Death 1 FEB 1895 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Son of Lawrence Edwin Dawson Sr and Mary Wilkinson Rhodes



The Cahaba Gazette, Cahawba, Alabama, Friday, October 13th, 1854. Page 3
Obituary.
Died near this place after a painful illness of fifteen days, which she bore with Christian resignation in fortitude at the residence of her father on Saturday, the 7th of October, 1854. Mrs. Ann Eliza Dawson, wife of N.H. Dawson, Esq. and daughter of Joel E and Elizabeth W. Matthews, in the, 22nd year of her age. The death of this estimable lady has created a blank which cannot soon be filled. Born and reared in this community, she was known and loved by all. Her gentle and winning ways, her quiet and unobtrusive purity of heart and singleness of purpose endeared her to all, and her loss will be deeply felt by a wide circle of sorrowing friends. It may.
With truth be said of her, none knew her, but to love.
"None named her,
but to praise".
But it was in her own family, and upon her own kindred that she centered her warmest affections. It was there she garnered up her love, and upon them she lavished the choicest feelings of her heart. A devoted husband, a fond father, and affectionate recipients of her bounteous love, and upon them her loss has fallen like an untimely frost and left them desolate. but little more than two short years since fresh in her innocence and truth, she became a wife and commenced the life with all that could make it pleasant or desirable. "But man proposes,- God disposes". She whom friends and kindred love so well., upon whom fortune smilesd and lavished its richest treasures to whom happiness secured is suddenly called away in the fullness of life and health, and we are left to mourn,
"Ah well may we hope, when this short life is gone
To meet in some world of more permanent bliss,
For a smile or a grasp of the hand hastening on
And all we enjoy of each other in this"
In this afflicting dispensation of Providence we cannot administer comfort or consolation to her bereaved husband and afflicted relatives that were an idle task, but we may speak of her virtues and point to the bright and beautiful example. She has left. The lights which shone upon her way through life still lingers behind to point, the path she trod, and teach others how they should walk. True it is she now sleeps in death amid the scene of her early youth and all her that is mortal now moulders in the tomb and is fast hastening to decay. But though the silver cord of life is loosed, though the vase lies broken and buried, the memory of her virtues still remains fresh and green in the hearts of her friends, and is an.incense of sweet fragrance to cheer and soothe them in their sorrow.
"Early, bright, transient and chaste as morning dew.
She sparkled, was exhaled and went to heaven".
In all those more intimate and tender relations which bound her to her friends and kindred, she was all that friendship could ask or affection claim, while in that higher and more solemn relation which she bore to the Author of us all, she was exact and serupulous in the discharge of all those duties enjoined by a regard for the sacred behest of religion, and in the closing scene of life's last fleeting hour, she leaned with humble trust upon the merits of her Savior.- calm and serene, she bade her friends farewell in the presence of the icy monster, Death, and rendered back her soul unto God as pure and spotless as when He gave it to her keeping:
"In death her eyelids closed
Calmly as to a night's repose.
Like flowers at set of sun."
Cahawba. October 10th.
"Memorial Record of Alabama", Vol. I, p. 858-865Published by Brant & Fuller (1893) Madison, WI
N.H.R Dawson was the son of Lawrence E. Dawson and Mary Wilkinson Rhodes. He was married (Third wife) to Elodie Breck Todd, half sister of Mary Todd Lincoln, wife of President Abraham Lincoln. N.H.R. Dawson, a Confederate, was half brother-in-law of President Lincoln.
"N. H. R. DAWSON.-This gentleman is the eldest son of Lawrence E. and Mary Wilkinson (Rhodes) Dawson, and was born in Charleston, S. C., February 14, 1829, and now resides at Selma, Ala. His father was born in Charleston, December 9, 1799, and was the son of John Dawson, Jr., and Mary Huger. John Dawson, Jr., was the eldest son of John Dawson and Joanna Broughton Monck. John Dawson was a
native of Westmoreland, England, and was born April 14, 1735, and emigrated to the colony of South Carolina when quite a young man, and settled in Charleston, where he became a successful and wealthy merchant. He was a member of the South Carolina convention of May, 1788, which adopted the Federal constitution of the United States. His sons-in-law, Col. John Glaze and Capt. William Postell, were delegates to the same convention. He married October 9, 1760, Joanna Broughton Monck, the only daughter of Col. Thomas Monck, and granddaughter of Col. Thomas Broughton, who was governor of the colony of South Carolina from May, 1735, to his death in 1738. His wife was Anne Johnson, the only daughter of Gen. Nathaniel Johnson, who was a distinguished soldier and a member of the British house of commons; governor of the Leeward Islands in 1689, and afterward governor of South Carolina from 1703 to 1709. He died in 1713, leaving one son, Robert Johnson, who was the last governor of the colony under the proprietary government. John Dawson and his wife, Joanna Monck, lived to old age, and died in Charleston, he on May 7, 1812, and she on October 9, 1819, leaving three sons and one daughter surviving them. Their descendants are found in South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama and Arkansas. John Dawson, Jr., was born in Charleston, July 8, 1765, and was a prominent merchant and citizen of his native city. He was intendant of Charleston for three successive years, from September, 1806, to September, 1809. His wife, Mary Huger, was a daughter of John Huger and Charlotte Motte, who were descended from Daniel Huger and Jacob Motte, who were among the Huguenot immigrants who came to South Carolina from France, after the revocation of the edict of Nantes, in 1786. John Huger filled many positions of honor in society, was a member of the council of safety during the Revolution, and intendent of Charleston in 1792, and a member of the state convention which adopted the Federal constitution. His brothers, Isaac, Francis and Benjamin, were prominent in the Revolutionary war. The latter was killed at the siege of Charleston in May, 1779. Jacob Motte was treasurer of the province for over thirty years prior to the Revolutionary war, and had two sons, Isaac and Charles, who were distinguished soldiers in that contest. One of them, Maj. Charles Motte, was killed at Savannah, October, 1779. Lawrence E. Dawson married Mary Wilkinson Rhodes, a daughter of Dr. Nathaniel H. Rhodes and Mary Hamilton, of Beaufort. Her grandfather, John Rhodes, came to South Carolina from England in 1760, and married Mary Talbird of Beaufort. He was an influential citizen, and took an active part in the Revolutionary war. Mary Hamilton was a daughter of Paul Hamilton and Mary Wilkinson. Though very young when the Revolutionary war commenced, he volunteered as a soldier, and served during the entire struggle. He was a member of the state convention which adopted the Federal constitution; was comptroller-general of the state from 1800 to 1804, and was governor from 1804 to 1808; and was secertary of the United States navy during the first term of Mr. Madison's administration. It will thus be seen that Lawrence E. Dawson and his wife were descended from, and connected by intermarriage with, many families that were distinguished for several generations in the history of South Carolina from its earliest settlement.
Lawrence E. Dawson was liberally educated and studied law with his kinsman, Col. William Drayton Of Charleston, S. C., and was admitted to the bar January 12, 1821. He was also a graduate of the law school of Judge Gould, of Litchfield, Conn. He resided in Charleston until 1829, when he removed to Beaufort district, and practiced his profession there until 1834, when he was forced by ill health to retire from a large and lucrative business. He was several times a member of the legislature of his native state, and took an active part in the exciting political contest which resulted in nullification, giving the weight of his influence and talents, as a state rights man, to what he believed to be true doctrine of the consti-tution. He came to Alabama in 1842, and settled at Carlowville, Dallas county, where he died February 8, 1848. Soon after his removal to Alabama, he resumed the practice of his profession, but survived only
a few years. He died in the prime of his manhood and usefulness, universally respected and lamented, having won a leading position at the bar of his adopted state. Judge O'Neall, in an extended notice of him, in his Bench and Bar of South Carolina, says: "He was gifted with a fine manly person. He was tall and well formed, and possessed features exceedingly striking and attractive. His manners were at once so graceful, and his general appearance so dignified, that no one could see him without feeling that he was In the presence of a finished gentleman, in the true sense of the term. When he first appeared before the supreme court of Alabama, the bench and bar were struck forcibly by his person and address, and the remark was general: `There stands a perfect model of a high-toned, elevated, and accomplished advocate of South Carolina, upon whom seems to have fallen the mantle of Hale and Mansfield.' The language of Mr. Dawson at the bar was energetic and lofty; his voice sonorous and manly; his action appropriate and full of authority. He had the rare gift of combining the eloquence of diction and a flow of melodious and well considered periods, the ornaments of speech, with convincing, clear and perspicuous reasoning."
He was a consistent and devout member of the Protestant Episcopal church and died in its communion. His wife survived him but a few years and died in June, 1851. She was a woman of rare intellectual gifts, a devoted wife and mother, and a sincere Christian. They left four children; the subject of this sketch; Mary Huger, who married C. M. Lide and died at Talladega, Ala., in August, 1887; Lawrence E., who is a farmer and resides near Camden, Ark., and Col. Reginald H. Dawson, of Camden, Ala., who is a lawyer by profession, and was solicitor of the eleventh circuit from 1860 to 1864. He was lieutenant-colonel of the Thirteenth Alabama regiment, in the Confederate service, and was specially mentioned, in general orders, for gallantry in the battle of Seven Pines, where he was wounded and had his horse killed under him. He has been for several terms president of the state board of inspectors of convicts, and of the penitentiary, and has administered his duties with marked success and credit. He is in the prime of life and is highly respected as a man and public officer. The village of Carlowville, Where Mr. Lawrence E. Dawson resided, was settled by a colony of South Carolinians, and was noted for the culture, refinement, and generous hospitality of its citizens.
In this community the boyhood of the subject of this sketch was passed, surrounded by all the social and educational advantages that southern youth then enjoyed. After pursuing his studies at the local schools, he was matriculated at St. Joseph's college, Mobile, Ala., and left that excellent institution of learning well equipped for his future battle in life, which finally placed him among the leading representatives of the legal profession in Alabama. He at once commenced the study of law in the office of his father. The town of Cahaba was, at this period, the capital of the great and wealthy county of Dallas, and was justly considered one of the centers of wealth, intelligence and refinement in Alabama. It had at one time been the capital of the state, and many names, famous in Alabama, were associated with its history; among these may be mentioned those of such gentlemen as William L. Yancey, Edmund W. Pettus, Joel Early Mathews, John T. Morgan, George R. Evans, George W. Gayle, Daniel S. Troy, C. C. Pegues, William Hunter, Charles G. Edwards, and others, who, in their day and generation, took a conspicuous part in shaping the history of Alabama.
It was here that Col. Dawson, after the death of his father, located, and amid such surroundings grew up to vigorous manhood. He entered the office of Hon. George R. Evans, and in 1851 was admitted to practice. From this time he was prominent in all the public affairs of the town and county in which he resided, and pursued his profession with energy and success. In 1852 he was married to Miss Anne E. Mathews, a lady of rare mental and personal traits of character. She was a daughter of Joel Early Mathews, a gentleman of broad philanthropy, comprehensive intellect, and a firm believer in the possibilities of southern development, demonstrated by his large investments in home enterprises, one of which, the Mathews cotton mill, of Selma, which he founded, and which is named in his honor, stands as a lasting monument to his intelligent foresight and public spirit. By the marriage of Col. Dawson with his first wife, one child was the issue, Elizabeth Mathews, now the wife of Dr. John P. Furniss, of Selma, who stands in the front rank of his profession. Mrs. Dawson died in October, 1854, loved and lamented by all who knew her. Her sun set while it was yet day.
In June, 1857, Col. Dawson was married to Miss Mary E. Tarver, daughter of Benjamin J. Tarver, of Dallas county. This estimable lady died in May, 1860, leaving one child, Mary Tarver, who married Jefferson D. Jordan, now a citizen of Chattanooga, Tenn. Immediately after his second marriage, Col. Dawson moved to Selma, where he continued the practice of his profession, in partnership with Messrs. E. W. Pettus and C. C. Pegues of Cahaba.
In May, 1862, Col. Dawson was united in marriage to Miss Elodie Breck Todd, a daughter of Robert S. Todd and Elizabeth S. Humphreys, of Lexington, Ky., and a half-sister of Mrs. Abraham Lincoln. She was a granddaughter of Rev. John Brown and Margaret Preston, of Staunton, Va. This lady, a lovely type of southern womanhood, had her whole heart enlisted in the southern cause. Two of her brothers were gallant officers in the Confederate service, and laid down their lives for the cause of the south. Capt. Samuel Todd was killed at the battle of Shiloh, where Albert Sidney Johnston fell, and Capt. Alexander Todd at the, battle of Baton Rouge, while serving on the staff of his brother-in-law, Gen. Ben. Hardin Helm, of Kentucky. To the efforts of Mrs. Dawson was largely due the erection of the Confederate monument, in Live Oak cemetery, in the city of Selma, in memory of the gallant Alabamians who gave their lives for their country. She was president of the Ladies' Memorial association, of Selma, and untiring in her efforts to secure the means necessary to erect the monument. During her last illness, she requested that she should be buried in sight of this tribute to southern valor. She died in November, 1877, and today her beautiful monument stands close by the one she aided to build, and the two are closely associated together. Her personal charms were only equaled by the lovely graces which adorned her character, which won the affection and admiration of all who knew her.
In 1855, know-nothing-ism was rampant in Alabama, and swept Dallas county like the waves of such political vagaries from time to time are apt to do. Mr. Dawson was one of the democratic candidates for the legislature, and made a splendid race, coming within a few votes of election. In 1860, he was a delegate to the Charleston convention, which ended in the breach between the Breckinridge and Douglas wings of the democratic party, and withdrew from the convention with the Alabama delegation.
He was also a delegate, in June, 1860, to the Baltimore convention, which nominated Breckinridge and Lane, and took an active part in the campaign which followed. Upon the secession of Alabama, Col. Dawson was chosen captain of the "Cadets" and left for Virginia. This fine company formed part of the Fourth Alabama infantry, which gained for itself such renown during the war. Subsequently, during the years 1863-1864, and until the close of the war, he commanded a battalion of cavalry. During this period he was elected to the legislature, and returned to his command at the close of his legislative services.
After the war, Col. Dawson resumed the practice of his profession, in the city of Selma, with his partner, Gen. Edmund W. Pettus, and no law firm in Alabama ever gained a higher reputation. Under the new regime, Col. Dawson took an active part in southern politics, and, through the dark days of reconstruction, was ever in the front, battling for the cause of local self-government and the success of his party. In 1872, he was an elector on the presidential ticket, and made an able canvass. For ten years he was a member of the state democratic executive committee. From 1884 to 1886, he was chairman of that committee, and rendered important service in the canvass of 1884, which resulted in an over-whelming victory for Cleveland and Hendricks.
In 1880, Col. Dawson, without opposition, was elected to the state legislature, and was chosen speaker of the house of representatives. He filled this position with ability and dignity, attaching to himself friends all over the state by his uniform courtesy and impartiality. Col. Dawson was supported by a large following, in the democratic state convention of 1882, as a candidate for governor, but the choice of the convention finally centered on that gallant patriot and soldier, Gen. E. A. O'Neal. But it was in 1886 that the most interesting contest for the gubernatorial nomination, in the history of Alabama up to that time, took place, in which Col. Dawson figured honorably and conspicuously. There were four candidates: Dawson of Dallas, Henry D. Clayton, and John M. McKluat of Barbour, and Thomas Seay of Hale, all distinguished citizens of the state. Dawson led in the convention from the start, with Seay the hindmost man, and each of the other candidates with a large following. Ballot after ballot was taken, and it looked for a while as if there would be a deadlock; but the break at last came in this memorable race, ending on the second day, in the nomination of Mr. Seay. It was an exciting contest, but was conducted in admirable spirit, Col. Dawson coming out of it with great credit and without the slightest loss of popularity. As indicative of the spirit with which he accepted defeat, and in keeping with the character of the man, the following letter was addressed to each of his supporters in the convention:
Dear Sir: - The result of the convention was a disappointment; but I accept its decision as the verdict of the highest party tribunal, and will work earnestly and zealously, as I have always done, for the success of the nominees. I would be ungrateful, did I not feel proud of the unflagging support given me by my friends in this protracted and heated struggle. Their fidelity and loyalty have robbed my defeat of any sting, and I am deeply grateful to them all. To you, personally, I beg to return my thanks, and to assure you of my sincere gratitude and esteem.
Yours truly,
N. H. R. DAWSON.
The Bar association of Alabama is distinguished for ability in the south, numbering among its members many who have become eminent in the legal profession. Col. Dawson was chosen its president in 1884-85, and discharged his duties to the entire satisfaction of his professional brethren. Col. Dawson has ever been a warm supporter of the common school system of Alabama, and an especial friend of the State university. In 1876, he was appointed, by Gov. George H. Houston, one of the trustees of this institution, which position he still holds. He has aided in bringing it to its present standard of excellence
among American colleges. In August, 1886, President Cleveland appointed Col. Dawson, without his solicitation, to the office of United Slates commissioner of education. On assuming charge of this bureau, he immediately set to work to make it of that practical use to educational interests for which the office was created. The affairs of the bureau were ably administered, and drew forth strong
and favorable comments from the leading educators of the country. One of the most useful pieces of work, during his administration, was the history of education in all the states of the Union. These monographs were prepared separately for each state, and were illustrated with engravings of their leading colleges and educational buildings, with accurate sketches of their history. They are not filled with the dry details of the ordinary official document, but form a series of interesting volumes and are an invaluable contribution to the educational history and literature of the country. The state of North Carolina, in appreciation of this excellent work, as it related to that commonwealth, presented the commissioner with a complete set of the colonial records of that state, by resolution of the general assembly. Columbia college, that old and honored institution of learning, in New York, in token of his efficient services to the cause of education, at the celebration of its centennial anniversary, on the 13th of April, 1887, conferred upon him the honorary degree of doctor of letters. After the inauguration of President Harrison, Col. Dawson, in March, 1889, tendered his resignation as commissioner of education, which was accepted in August of that year. Since that time he has actively pursued the practice of his profession, looking after his large property interests, remaining out of active partici-pation in politics, until the general election in August, 1892, when he was elected to the house of representatives, and has taken his seat in the general assembly for the third time as one of the members from Dallas county. Col. Dawson is a member of the Protestant Episcopal church, and for a number of years has been one of the wardens of St. Paul's church, Selma, and has several times represented the diocese in the general conventions. He is still in the prime of a vigorous manhood, of tall, commanding figure, well built and erect, and is a typical southerner in appearance. He is an able lawyer, an earnst and eloquent speaker, of engaging manners, and fine conversational powers, and dispenses, in his beautiful home, the elegant hospitalities of a refined and educated gentleman. He is very popular with young men, for the kindness and consideration he has always shown them. He is literary in his tastes, has a large and well selected library, and devotes much of his leisure to reading and study. Col. Dawson is also a public-spirited citizen and a man of sterling integrity, taking a deep interest in all public concerns. His popularity remains unabated among his fellow-citizens, who know and appreciate his worth. Few men have been more blessed with the favors of fortune, and few of his contemporaries have made better use of them. His friends hope that long years of health are in stove for him, and that his future is still to be crowned with the happiness and usefulness which have attended his past career."
Children By Anne:
1.
Elizabeth Mathews Dawson
1853–1902
Birth 1853 • Cahaba, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Death 24 JAN 1902 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Married: 21 Dec 1876 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Dr. John Perkins Furniss
1841–1909
Birth 24 SEP 1841 • Columbus, Johnson, Missouri, USA
Death 10 DEC 1909 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Son of John Perkins Furniss Sr and Anne Frazier Neilson
The Birmingham News, Birmingham, Alabama, Friday, January 24th, 1902, Page 1.
Well Known Lady Gead
Mrs. Elizabeth Matthews Furniss passes away at Selma. (Special to the Birmingham News), Selma, Alabama, January 24. Mrs. Elizabeth Matthews Furness, wife of doctor J. P. Furniss, died at her home in this city this morning a few minutes before 6 o'clock, after a few days illness with pneumonia. Mrs. Furniss was the eldest daughter of the late Colonel N. H. R. Dawson, of of this city. She was a lovable Christian lady, and her many friends throughout the state will be pained to hear of her sad death. She leaves a husband and two sons, Dawson and John, to mourn her loss. The eldest son, Dawson, is at present in Berlin, where he is taking a course at Bellevue Hospital in New York, but he will reach Selma tonight to attend the funeral.


Children:
1.
Dr. Henry Dawson Furniss
1878–1942
Birth 25 MAR 1878 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Death 25 JAN 1942 • Manhattan, New York, USA
Married: 18 Nov 1912 • Rennselaer, New York, USA
Ruth Kellogg Pine
1893–1957
Birth 2 MAR 1893 • Lansingburgh, New York, USA
Death 15 DEC 1957 • New York, New York, USA
Daughter of Charles LeRoy Pine and Grace Eddy Kellogg
Furniss, John Perkins, Physician, was born September 26, 1841, near Columbus, Miss-issippi, and died December 3, 1909, at Selma; son of John Perkins and Ann Frazier (Wilson) Furniss who lived at Columbus, Mississippi. He attended the State University of Mississippi at Oxford and was graduated in June, 1860 in his nineteenth year. He enlisted in the C. S. Army as a private, Co. K, Fourteenth Mississippi Regiment which was later consolidated with the Forty-third Regiment and was transferred nine months later to the medical department as assistant surgeon.. After the war was ended, he attended the New Orleans School of Medicine and was graduated, M.D. in 1866, and attended Jefferson Medical College , Philadelphia. He located to Selma and engaged in geneal practice of medicine and surgery from 1866 until his death in 1909. He was a member of the Selma Medical Society, serving as secretary of the organization from 1869 until 1875, and as vice-president in 1876 and 1877, was a member of the State Medical Association of Alabama. He contributed a number of articles to the different medical journals of the day, one of the most important of which was an essay on the "Anotonial and Physiological Peculiarities of the Negro", a large portion of which was published in the New Orlean "Medical and Surgical Journal", in 1874. For many years was a member of the Census and Medical Examiners; and in 1886 became senior life councellor of the Alabama State Medical Association. He was a Democrat and a Presbyterian. Married December 21, 1876, in Selma, Elizabeth Mathews Dawson, daughter of Col. Nathaniel Henry Rhodes and Ann E. (Mathews) Dawson. Children: 1. Dr. Henry Dawson, married Rut Kellogg Pine, resided in New York. 2. Dr. John Neilson (q.v.) , last residence , Selma

The Selma Times-Journal. Selma, Alabama, Monday, January 26, 1942. Page 6.
Death Claims Noted. Doctor.
Native of Selma, Passes in New York After Heart Attack.
New York, January 26 (AP) Dr. Henry Dawson Furniss, 63, professor of gynecology at the New York Medical College, died yesterday of heart disease. A native of Selma, Alabama, he was consulting gynecologist at a number of New York and New Jersey. Hospitals. He attended the University of Alabama and the University of Virginia, and was chief surgeon at Fort Hancock, New Jersey. In 1918. Relatives here learned Sunday of the sudden death of Dr. Furniss, who was born in Selma on March 25, 1878, and was educated in this city at the public schools and at the private school taught by professor D. M. Calloway.

He held honorary degrees from both the University of Alabama and from the University of Virginia, which had confirmed l.l.D. and Phi Beta Kappa. He spent two years in study at Berlin, Germany, and during the World War gave up a lucrative practice to volunteer for service. He was stationed at Augusta, Georgia.
The period of his professional career covered a forty year span, during which he became an outstanding urologist and gynecologist. He was the inventor of many medical instruments, the best known probably with being the Furniss clamp. His writings were valued by members of his profession and his techniques were closely followed. As a consultant on the staff of some of the most important hospitals in the East, he was recognized as at the top of his field.
Dr. Furniss is survived by his wife, Mrs. Ruth Pine Furniss, to whom he was married in 1914, and by their three sons, Henry Dawson Furniss Jr., James Pine Furniss, now in the United States Army, and Warren Todd Furniss, a student at Yale. Although no definite announcement has been received here as to funeral plans, it was stated that interment probably will be in Troy, New York, former home of Mrs. Furniss. Services will be attended there by Mrs. Paul Wolfe Furniss, a niece formerly of Selma, and Mr. Wolfe, of Rome, New York.
Ruth Kellogg Pine Furniss was born on March 2, 1893, to Charles LeRoy and Grace Eddy Kellogg Pine in Lansingburg, New York. She attended the Emma Willard School (Troy, New York) and Miss Porter's School (Farmington, Connecticut). She studied short story writing with Blanche Colton Williams at Columbia University and went on to publish a number of short stories and novels. In 1937, with the poet Weldon Kees, Furniss adapted her short story "Obsession" into a one-act play with the same title.
It is believed Furniss suffered from bipolar disorder, which was treated with periods of institutionalization, shock-therapy, a topectomy, and ultimately, a lobotomy. Furniss's writings drew on her struggle with illness and her exposure to various medical treatments, as can be seen in her novels Gay (1928), Snow: A Love Story (1929), and The Dreamland Tree (an unpublished novel completed in 1952 after Furniss received a topectomy and shock therapy). Furniss published The Layman Looks at Doctors (1929) under the pseudonyms S.W. and J.T. Pierce, who were a fictional couple.
In 1912, Furniss married Henry Dawson Furniss (d. 1942), with whom she had five children, three of whom survived childhood (Henry Dawson, James P., and W. Todd).The Furniss family lived in Pelham, New York, and in New York City. During World War II Furniss served as a Gray Lady with the Red Cross. Furniss was hospitalized at several points during her life, including periods at Pilgrim Psychiatric Center and Central Islip Psychiatric Center (Long Island).[8] Furniss died of a heart attack in December 1957, at the age of 64.
2.
Dr. John Nielson "JN" Furniss
1879–1928
Birth 02 NOV 1879 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Death 10 APR 1928 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Married: 5 Nov 1906 • Selma, Dallas Alabama, USA
May Hooper
1881–1969
Birth 9 APRIL 1881 • Alabama, USA
Death 19 OCT 1969 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Daughter of Charles Word Hooper and Caroline Louise "Callie" McKee
3.
Anne Mathews Furniss
1880–1881
Birth 27 DEC 1880 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Death 1881
DIED YOUNG
4.
Joel Mathews Furniss
1883–1884
Birth 11 MAY 1883 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Death 14 APR 1884 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
DIED YOUNG
5.
Anne Frazier Furniss
1886–1887
Birth 19 FEB 1886 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
Death 30 JUN 1887 • Selma, Dallas, Alabama, USA
DIED YOUNG
Dr. John Neilson Furness was born in Selma, Alabama, November 2, 1879, the son of Dr. John Perkins and Elizabeth Matthews (Dawson) Furness. After a general education in the Dallas Academy and the school conducted by Dr. Calloway, he matriculated at the University of Alabama, remaining there from 1895 to 1898. From there he went to the University of the South, Suwanee, and then to the University of Virginia to secure training in the medical profession. After graduation, he became a student in the Bellevue Medical School, from which he received a degree, finally serving an internship of two years at the Post-Graduate hospital, New York City. In 1903, he returned to Selma and embarked upon a medical career, which, for its distinctive service, can only be compared with that of his father.
From the outset of professional life, the young doctor won the esteem and recognition of his colleagues and the whole-hearted confidence of the public at large. When the Union Hospital was organized, he became Chief of staff of that institution, and 11 years later was chosen to act in a similar capacity for the then New Baptist Hospital. He also served on the staff of the Good Samaritan Hospital. He was a member of, and at one-time president of the Dallas County Medical Society, belonged to the Alabama State Medical Society, the Southern Surgical and Gynaecological Society, the Alabama Power Company Medical Association, the American Medical Association, and held the highly coveted distinction of being a fellow in the American College of Surgeons, of which he was a very active member and an officer. He was also a member of the Volunteer Medical Corps and the Dallas County Advisory Board. Coupled with his service as an outstanding surgeon and diagnostician, he became widely known for the deep interest he may affected in other departments of community life.
As a native and lifelong citizen of this city, he was acquainted with its problems and its people. From 1926 until the time of his death, he served as a member of the city school board. He loved the cause of education and found his greatest enjoyment in aiding young men to secure an education or embark upon a career. He was a member of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, where for many years he served as vestryman and in a business capacity.
He was a member of the Board of directors of the Selma National Bank and the Selma Trust and Savings Bank.
In 1906, Doctor Furness married Mary Hooper, daughter of General C.W. Hooper and Caroline McKee Hooper, and to them were born four children, Elizabeth Dawson (Mrs. Louis Terry), John Perkins, Caroline McKee (Mrs. Paul Wolfe), and Jane Hooper. Dr. Furniss' sudden and untimely death occurred in Selma, April 10, 1928. People in all walks of life knew and respected him for his genial and magnetic personality, his ability, and his understanding nature. Nothing could better reveal the esteem in which he was held in the community than the editorial tribute paid to his memory, which reads as follows:
"The death of Dr. John Neilson Furniss is more than a loss to the medical and professional interests of this community, for the same qualities which made him one of the strong figures in the professional life of this section and the state made him a high type citizen who represented fine public values. He was a worthy son of a worthy father, and the sterling traits of the latter reproduced in him. It was not only an honored name which he inherited, but the character and ability which made it distinguished."
The Selma Times-journal Selma, Alabama, Monday, October 20, 1969, Page 2
Furniss Service Slated Tuesday.
Mrs.. May Hooper Furniss, 88, who was actively identified for many years with the city's cultural and civic affairs, died Sunday afternoon in a local hospital after a period of failing health. Rev. T. Frank Mathews will officiate at funeral services to be held from St. Paul's Episcopal Church at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday. Burial will be in Live Oak Cemetery with Lawrence Funeral Home directing. Mrs. Furniss, the widow of John Nielsen Furnace, was an honorary vice president of the Colonial Dames at the time of her death. She had held active membership in the DAR, UDC and Selma Study Club, and over the years had held many offices with the women of the Church. The survivors include one son, John P. Furniss, Selma; three daughters, Mrs. Lewis N. Terry, Selma; Mrs. Paul H. Wolfe, Atlanta; Mrs. O. Delk Simpson, Washington, D.C.; seven grandchildren, five great grand-children, and numerous nieces and nephews.
Pallbearers for the services will be M. Austin Keith, Sr. Marshall. J. Hooper, Rev. Letcher Mitchell, Col. Joseph Bibb, Horace Spottswood, Roger Ap C. Jones. Honorary pallbearers will be Cranford Johnson, III, Dr. Josiah Smith, W. H.. Slaughter. J. Graham Melvin, Edgar, A Stewart, William B. Craig, Charles M. Hohenbourg, Lester M Yates, Henry A. Vaughn, Julian. Smith, Dr. Eugene Callaway and Roswell Faulken-berry. The family requests that flowers be omitted.
5.
Lucy Early Mathews
1838–1856
Birth 1838 • Cahaba, Dallas , Alabama, USA
Death 7 MAR 1856 • Dallas County, Alabama, USA
Married: 31 May 1855 • Dallas County Alabama, USA
Sen. Daniel Shipman Troy Esq.
1832–1895
Birth 9 OCT 1832 • Oxmoor, Columbus, North Carolina, USA
Death 27 SEP 1895 • Montgomery, Montgomery, Alabama, USA
Son of Alexander Michael Troy and Frances Eleanor Shipman
The Birmingham News, Birmingham, Alabama, Friday,
January 24th, 1902, Page on1
Obituary.
Died, at the residence of her husband in Cahawba after a short and painful illness on the 7th Inst.Mrs. Lucy Troy, wife of Daniel S. Troy and eldest surviving daughter of Mr. Joel Matthews, in the 18th year of her age. It is a sad task to record the death of one so young, so esteemed and loved, endowed with the richest gifts of mind and intellectual development beyond her years. She showed rarer qualities of heart by so using them that instead of envy, she won the admiration and friendship of all who knew her. It seemed that the happiness of those around her made her own, for uniformly her rare gifts to please were exercised in promoting the pleasure of others, and all felt in the enjoyment of her society, that there were blended in her qualities of heart and mind, which make up the character of the true woman
Light-hearted and happy, her lot was cast in the early springtime of life amidst the joys of a home, witch no effort was spared to make the realization of her brightest dreams. Alas, how suddenly was it made desolate. Yet, thus surrounded by all that makes life desirable and death feared, she was not afraid to die, but with unimpaired faculties and a full consciousness of approaching death, she met it with a firmness and humanity seldom knows, of its noblest attributes, alone can give - finding it in it no sting, but the grief she left to others. In the same confiding trust with which, three short weeks before, she left her father's house, for the home, she had chosen to make the happiness of, she left this too, for another Father and another home.
God grant her resignation and the memory of her virtues may in time bring soothing to him who now sorrows homeless and give that consolation which a friend may not offer.
Geneva County Citizen. Geneva, Alabama, Saturday, October 5, 1895, page1.
Daniel Shipman Troy -
Col. Troy died at his residence in Montgomery Friday. The news of Col. Troy's death Friday afternoon spread very rapidly over the city and came as a thunderclap from a clear sky, as there were very few who knew of his illness, which was only of a few days duration. Daniel Shipman Troy was born October 2, 1832, in Columbus County, North Carolina. He attended the old Field school in the neighborhood and came out to Alabama when he was 17 years of age. He read law with his brother-in-law, William Hunter of Cahaba. And in 1851, at the age of 19 years, was admitted to the bar. He was admitted to the practice in the Supreme Court and 1854. He lived at Cahawba until 1859, and from there came to Montgomery in January 1861. He joined the Montgomery True Blues as a private in an expedition against Fort Barren Cay, Pensacola. After this he recruited a company known as the Gilmer Greys and went out as its captain. The Greys were mustered into and became a part of the Hilliard Legion early in 1862, and the fall of 1862, Captain Troy was promoted to Major, and in 1863 the infantry of the Legion was reorganized into the 59th and 60th Alabama Regiments, and he was made Lieutenant Colonel of the 60th. He took part in Longstreet's attack upon Knoxville, siege of Cumberland Gap, Battle at Bean's Station, Drewry's Bluff and Bermuda Hundred. He was wounded at Drewry's Bluff on the 25th of March, 1865, near Petersburg. He was shot entirely through the left lung and left upon the battlefield for dead. He fell into the hands of the enemy where he remained until the close of the war.
Some time after the cessation of hostilities, He resumed the practice of law, at which he had been remarkably successful, both as a lawyer and in the accumulation of wealth. He was at the head of the law firm of Troy Tompkins, and London for a number of years, and was a member of the state Senate from Montgomery County for two terms, from 1883 to 1886. He was an active Democratic worker during the reconstruction period and until quite recently he was president of the Alabama Fertilizer Company and a director in the Elyton Land Company, besides being interested in other businesses. He was converted to the Roman Catholic faith while being nursed in a Catholic Hospital for his wounds and was a consistent member of that church. His grandfather Shipman and his uncle were officers in the Revolutionary War.

DS Troy was one of many owners of this house. It is one of a very few structures remaining at the deserted town of Cahaba. After his 2nd marriage in 1859 to Florence Watts, his first born son was born here in 1860 shortly before the family left for Montgomery where he went into a law practice with his father-in-law, Gov. Thomas Hill Watts

Daniel Troy home - 908 Adams Ave., Montgomery, Alabama
Description presumably written by Robert Edward Troy Sr., son of Daniel and his 2nd wife, Florence Watts



Florence Lascelles Alice Watts
1843–1921
Birth 14 NOV 1843 • Alabama
Death 16 OCT 1921 • Montgomery, Montgomery, Alabama, USA
Daughter of Thomas Hill Watts and
Eliza Brown Allen
Thomas Hill Watts Sr. (January 3, 1819 – September 16, 1892) was the 18th Governor of the U.S. in the State of Alabama from 1863 to 1865, during the Civil War.
Watts was born at Pine Flat in the Alabama Territory on January 3, 1819, the oldest of twelve children born to John Hughes Watts and Catherine Prudence Hill, who had moved from Georgia to find the better lands of the frontier. He was of English and Welsh ancestry. Prepared for college at the Airy Mount Academy in Dallas County, Watts grad-uated with honors from the University of Virginia in 1840. The next year, he passed the bar examination and began practicing law in Greenville. In 1848 he moved his lucrative law practice to Montgomery. He also became a successful planter, enslaving 179 people in 1860.
Thomas Hill Watts Sr. (January 3, 1819 – September 16, 1892) was the 18th Governor of the U.S. State of Alabama from 1863 to 1865, during the Civil War.
Watts was born at Pine Flat in the Alabama Territory on January 3, 1819, the oldest of twelve children born to John Hughes Watts and Catherine Prudence Hill, who had moved from Georgia to find the better lands of the frontier. He was of English and Welsh ancestry. Prepared for college at the Airy Mount Academy in Dallas County, Watts graduated with honors from the University of Virginia in 1840. The next year, he passed the bar examination and began practicing law in Greenville. In 1848 he moved his lucrative law practice to Montgomery. He also became a successful planter, enslaving 179 people in 1860.
Politically, Watts adopted a pro-Union stance during the 1850s. Still, on the eve of the Civil War, he played an important role in the declared secession of Alabama and was one of the signers of the secession ordinance. Defeated by John Gill Shorter in an 1861 bid for governor, Watts organized the 17th Regiment Alabama Infantry and led it at Pensacola and Corinth, but resigned as its colonel to become the Confederacy's attorney general in Pres-ident Jefferson Davis' cabinet.

Gov. Thomas Hill Watts
Watts home, Montgomery, Alabama

Politically, Watts adopted a pro-Union stance during the 1850s. Still, on the eve of the Civil War, he played an important role in the declared secession of Alabama and was one of the signers of the secession ordinance. Defeated by John Gill Shorter in an 1861 bid for governor, Watts organized the 17th Regiment Alabama Infantry and led it at Pensacola and Corinth,[4] but resigned as its colonel to become the Confederacy's attorney general in President Jefferson Davis' cabinet.
n 1863 Watts was elected Governor of Alabama. Assuming office on December 1, he began an eighteen-month governorship that included impressment, tax-in-kind, and other severe wartime economic measures. Worthless Confederate money, lack of credit possibilities, irregular supplies of goods, impressment efforts that often amounted to pillage and plunder, and harsh (and unevenly applied) taxes-in-kind levied on agriculture convinced many people that they preferred the "Old Union" to the "new despotism".
The desire to raise troops for the Confederate States Army became more urgent. There was insurmountable resistance to appeals to the male population to form volunteer companies and appeals to the state legislature to reorganize the awkward two-class militia. Some critics of Watts thought he should concentrate on forcing deserters back into military service. The legislature's failure to act meant that the state, and the Confederacy, would not have an effective militia in the final critical months of the war. Furthermore, the Confederate Conscription Act of February 17, 1864, inaugurated a policy of conscription that inevitably led to conflict between the state and the Confederacy.
By September 1864, another turbulent issue confronted Governor Watts: the opening negotiations for peace. A faction in the Alabama House of Representatives introduced resolutions in favor of the negotiations. Governor Watts was also faced with rising desertion rates, states' rights issues, including the controversy over the conscription of the cadets at the University of Alabama, the issue of which state civil officials were exempt from conscription, the defense of Mobile, blockade-running, and cotton trading with Europe.
During the winter of 1864–65, Governor Watts had to deal with the increasing number of sacrifices demanded of his state, the breakdown of authority, the drain on war power, and an evaporating hope of victory, all of which contributed to the state's war-weariness. Governor Watts was aware of his ineffectiveness and unpopularity by this time and made no effort toward re-election, although he continued to talk optimistically about the military situation. Watts was arrested for treason to the union in Union Springs, Alabama, on May 1, 1865. He was released a few weeks later and returned to resume his law practice in Montgomery. Watts served in the Alabama House of Representatives, (1880-81) and was president of the Alabama Bar Association, (1889-90). He died twenty-seven years later, on September 16, 1892, in Montgomery, Alabama.
On January 10, 1842, he wed Eliza Brown Allen, and they had ten children.
8.
Joel Early Mathews Jr.
1850–
Birth ABT 1850 • Alabama
Death Unknown (After 1874)
No further information