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Mattie Bates Eastland

Mattie Bates Eastland

Female 1874 - 1951  (76 years)

Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Mattie Bates Eastland was born on 21 Nov 1874 in Watterson Community County, TX (daughter of William Mosby Eastland and Mattie McDonald); died on 25 Jan 1951 in Lohn County, TX.

    Mattie married John Stubblefield Hemphill on 9 Jan 1894 in Bastrop County, TX, and was divorced. John was born on 15 Mar 1872 in Red Rock County, TX; died on 8 Mar 1948 in Lohn County, TX. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. Robbie Klebon Hemphill
    2. Alva Elton Hemphill
    3. William Leonidas Hemphill was born on 20 Apr 1900 in Red Rock County, TX; died on 25 Apr 1949 in Lohn County, TX.
    4. Allen David Hemphill
    5. Carey Woods Hemphill
    6. Annie Belle Hemphill
    7. John W. Hemphill, Jr.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  William Mosby Eastland was born on 15 Mar 1843 in La Grange County, TX (son of Nicholas Washington Eastland and Fannie Bates Moore); died on 13 Sep 1933 in Watterson Community County, TX.

    William married Mattie McDonald on 24 Apr 1864, and was divorced. Mattie was born on 29 Nov 1850 in Little Rock, AR; died on 20 Feb 1904 in Watterson Community County, TX. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mattie McDonald was born on 29 Nov 1850 in Little Rock, AR; died on 20 Feb 1904 in Watterson Community County, TX.
    Children:
    1. Ida Eastland
    2. William Eastland was born on 6 Mar 1872; died in 1873/1962.
    3. Nicholas Eastland was born on 16 May 1872; died in 1873/1962.
    4. 1. Mattie Bates Eastland was born on 21 Nov 1874 in Watterson Community County, TX; died on 25 Jan 1951 in Lohn County, TX.
    5. Cid Eastland was born in 1865/1892; died in 1871/1972.
    6. Franklin Beverette Eastland was born on 4 Aug 1881; died in 1882/1971.
    7. Banks D. Eastland was born in 1865/1892; died in 1871/1972.
    8. Libbie Eastland


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Nicholas Washington Eastland was born on 3 Apr 1803 in Woodford County, KY (son of Thomas Butler Eastland and Nancy Mosby); died on 5 Aug 1891 in Watterson Community County, TX.

    Notes:

    [Broderbund WFT Vol. 8, Ed. 1, Tree #2491]

    Nicholas Washington Eastland, after his marriage to Frances Bates Moore,
    made Sparta, Tennessee their home. In the meantime, John H. Moore, who
    would in time become a colonel in the Texas military forces, migrated to
    Texas in 1827. So impressed was he by the opportunities in the newly
    opened lands that he wrote back to Sparta and Eastland describing the
    possibilities in Texas and firing the imagination and adventurous spirits
    of the Eastland men.

    It was William Mosby Eastland, Nicholas's brother, who first decided to
    follow Moore to Texas. In 1833 he settled at La Grange, erected a
    sawmill, and engaged in the lumber business. the following year, Nicholas
    Washington Eastland and Nicholas Dawson, a cousin, with their families
    also established themselves nearby; and they were soon followed by others
    Eastland family, all eager to make their marks in the La Grange area.

    John H. Moore, Nicholas Dawson, Nicholas W. Eastland, William Mosby
    Eastland, and a nephew, Robert Moore Eastland, were destine to play
    courageous and spectacular roles in the History of Texas. Three of them,
    Nicholas Dawson, William Mosby Eastland and Robert Moore Eastland, were
    to suffer tragic deaths at the hands of the Mexicans. And one, William
    Mosby Eastland, was to be honored when the legislature of Texas named
    Eastland County for him. The rest were public figures in Texas for years,
    occupying themselves as office holders, farmers, teachers, and
    businessmen.

    William Mosby Eastland engaged in the sawmill business. The La Grange
    area was covered with ash, cypress, hickory, pecan, and other trees; and
    all the milled lumber he could turn out. A large number entering Texas
    were well educated with special training in legal and clerical matters,
    and, while they were not versed in Spanish law, their talents led them to
    participate in local governments. Nicholas W. Eastland, for instance,
    combined legal and clerical work with farming.

    Among the colonists there soon evolved two distinct parties. a
    conservative "Peace Party" favoring tranquil, peaceful relations with the
    Mexicans was led by Stephen F. Austin and was concentrated around San
    Felipe de Austin and Washington-on -the-Brazos. the "War Party" had its
    strength in the newer settlements and was led by William H. Wharton of
    the municipality of Columbia. the War Party was soon demanding separation
    from Coahuilla and a few of its adherents spoke privately of outright
    independence from Mexico. The imprisonment of Stephen F. Austin in Mexico
    in 1834 helped to unite the two parties and convinced even Austin that
    the time for some sort of aggressive action had arrived.

    The Eastland families for the moment were busy building their home and
    earning a living. The Indians raid , loot, and kill all along the western
    frontier. Texans living on the Brazos, Colorado, and Guadalupe rivers
    were disturbed because they had no adequate means of defense. On May 8,
    1935 the first committee of Safety and Correspondence was formed to deal
    with the Indians, and discussed dissension between Mexicans and Texans.
    Nine days later, a similar committee was organized at Gonzales.

    It is not know who suggested the formation of a Committee of Safety and
    Correspondence. It is generally believed that it was an attempt to
    organize committees patterned after those of the same name that had
    functioned so well during the American Revolution. Neither has it been
    determined whether the committee was meant to solve the Indian problem or
    to cope with a potential invasion. Either way they were guarding
    vigilantly against the approach of any enemy.

    Even as the various committees of safety were formed, events approached a
    crisis. General Cos, with instructions to disarm the Texans, arrived in
    September of 1835. He at once sent Lieutenant Francisco Castonado to
    Gonzales to take possession of a four-pounder cannon used by the
    colonists to defend themselves against the Indians. The Gonales men
    refused to release the cannon, and, while eighteen of them held the
    Mexicans at bay, hurried appeals for help to the committees of safety in
    Mina, Victoria, and elsewhere. Colonel John H. Moore at La Grange
    immediately gathered some 160 volunteers and rushed to the relief of the
    besieged eighteen. In his force were men from all sections of the Mina
    municipality, including several of the Eastland family. On October 2,
    1835, Moore with his men attacked and routed the Mexicans, who fled to
    San Antonio.

    Nine days later, the Texans elected Stephen F. Austin to command them and
    bean a march to San Antonio. Upon approaching the city, defended by
    General Cos, Austin delegated to James Bowie, James Fannin, and ninety
    men the duty of locating a suitable campsite. Moving well ahead of the
    main force, the Bowie men camped on the evening of October 27, 1835, near
    the old mission Conception. The following morning several hundred
    Mexicans surprised the Texans who took refuge along the river banks. The
    ensuing battle lasted three hours, and the Mexicans were decisively
    defeated with a loss of about sixty men. Among the Texans there was only
    one death. Oddly, historians state categorically, without citing sources,
    that no Texans was wounded; yet according to his military service record
    in the Texas State Archives, Thomas Osborn was transferred from Captain
    Fannin's Company to Captains Parrett's Battery because of a wound he
    suffered in the Battle of Concepcion.

    With Thomas Osborn in the campaign around San Antonio from October to
    December 1835 were Samuel Wolfenberger and William Mosby Eastland.
    Wolfenberger served as a private soldier in the Mina Volunteers, joining
    the Texas forces on November 17, 1835, and serving exactly thirty days.
    Two years later, he was to draw pay of $231.07 for a year and three
    months of service, including the month spent in the Bexar Campaign.
    During the siege, William Mosby Eastland lost a fine, black horse for
    which he asked compensation. Captain Thomas Alley had the value of the
    horse determined by N. B. Breeding and James Curtis who appraised it at
    sixty dollars, a sum which satisfied Eastland.

    Colonels J. C. Neill and James Bowie undertook the defense of San
    Antonio...Fannin, given the rank of colonel, brought together a force of
    about 450 volunteers (destined to be the principal characters of a major
    tragedy) and established his headquarters at Goliad.

    Events moved to a crescendo, and in the latter part of February Mexican
    forces appeared at both San Antonio and San Patricio. On March 6, 1836,
    Santa Anna succeeded in breaching the walls of the Alamo and annihilating
    the defenders.

    General Jose Urrea Began an advance on Fannin, who, unable to obey
    earlier orders to relieve the Alamo, remained a Goliad. With the fall of
    the Alamo he was again ordered to retreat.

    In the meantime, Captain Albert C. Horton and fifty-two mounted men from
    towns along the Colorado joined with Fannin. Among the fifty-two were
    Thomas Osborn and Nicholas W. Eastland.

    When Fannin did begin his retreat on March 19, 1836, knowing that General
    Urrea was near with a strong force, he ordered Captain Horton and
    Nicholas Eastland , to reconnoiter the rear and flanks of the Texans and
    report the first appearance of the Mexicans; Horton was, moreover, to
    locate a suitable spot at which to cross Coleto Creek.

    After Horton led his men away, Fannin moved slowly, and when one of his
    wagons broke down halted his force of less than three hundred men on the
    open prairie a short distance from the Coleto. General Urrea immediately
    recognized his opportunity and took advantage of it to surround the
    Texans. When the battle began, Captain Horton, hearing the firing,
    hastened to rejoin the main force only to find his return effectively
    prevented by hundreds of Mexicans who had taken position between him and
    Fannin. Apparently, Horton wanted to fight his way through Urrea's
    cavalry, but some of his men refused to follow his lead and thus they
    could do no more than to observe the battle from a distance.

    Momentarily expecting the return of Horton and his men, Fannin stood off
    the Mexicans throughout the afternoon and night but surrendered on March
    20, 1836. A few days later Santa Anna ordered the execution of Fannin and
    all his
    command, and the orders were faithfully carried out on the twenty-fifth.
    Nicholas Eastland and Thomas Osborn, along with the remainder of Horton's
    small company, were by then safely in Victoria.

    Frightened by the successive Mexican victories and the hasty retreat by
    Houston, thousands of the Texas colonists packed what little belongings
    they could and fled toward Louisiana. Most of the Watterson folk then
    living along the Colorado and Brazos rivers also took flight while others
    of the Watterson fold helped to protect the refugees.

    His victories and the flight of the colonists coupled with Houston's
    precipitate retreat convinced Santa Anna that the revolution was ended,
    and the therefore divided his army into smaller units which he sent on a
    variety of missions. The division of the Mexican forces furnished Houston
    with the opportunity he sought, for with each errand on which Santa Anna
    dispatched his men size of the Mexican army had decreased to about nine
    hundred men, while the Texas army had increased to nearly a thousand. The
    disparity of the two armies was not so whittled down the Houston could
    afford to risk an all-out battle. On the 21st however, Santa Anna,
    reinforced by General Cos, had an army or some fourteen hundred, while
    Houston's numbered somewhere between nine hundred and a thousand. Houston
    determined to attack, moved forward, and surprised the Mexicans during
    their afternoon siesta.

    Lasting only eighteen minutes, the action at San Jacinto is one of the
    astounding battles of military history. Of the Mexicans, 630 were killed
    and 730 were taken prisoner. Only a few escaped. Nine Texans were slain
    and thirty-four were wounded. The ferocity of the fighting can best be
    judged by one account of William Mosby Eastland actions in the battle as
    quoted in ANSON JONES, by Dr. Herbert Gambrell:
    "General Houston gave orders not to kill any more but to take prisoners.
    Captain Eastland said Boys take prisoners, you know how to take
    prisoners, take them with the butt of you guns, club, and said remember
    the Alamo remember Laberde, and club guns, right and left, and knock
    their brains out. The Mexicans would fall down on their knees and say me
    no Alamo me no Laberde."

    In view of all that had gone on before it was no wonder that the Texans
    were bloodthirsty. The marvel was that Houston was able to halt the
    slaughter in only eighteen minutes. Eastland's reversal of Houston's
    order is evidence of the unwillingness of the Texas soldier at San
    Jacinto to desist from killing as long as the enemy seemed to resist.
    Only William Mosby Eastland and Nicholas Dawson actually fought in the
    battle of San Jacinto. Eastland family tradition, however is that
    Nicholas W. Eastland was left in Harrisburg as a part of the camp guard,
    and since he was enrolled in the Texas army at the time and drew pay for
    that service it seems logical that he should have been somewhere near the
    main force.

    "THE YEARS OF THE REPUBLIC"

    Bastrop County in 1836 suffered more Indian attacks than in any previous
    years; a militia was formed to guard the rim of settlement, called the
    Ranging Service. During the Republic, the Ranging Service was enlarged
    and used to patrol the frontier and to punish Indians raiders. One
    company, commanded by Robert Coleman, headquartered at Coleman's Fort on
    the Colorado River; William Mosby Eastland served in the Coleman Company
    as a First Lieutenant , and engaged in several Indians skirmishes.

    Once, in 1837, while Eastland was acting as Captain of the company of the
    company at Coleman's fort, he made an excursion in the vicinity of Pecan
    Bayou in Mills County. He was under orders to make no hostile
    demonstrations that would stir up the Indians. When he had completed his
    inspection of the area, he ordered a return to the fort. Some twenty of
    the rangers, however, refused to obey his orders and compelled a further
    exploration of Pecan Bayou. Some distance up the Bayou they encountered
    a small camp of friendly Delawares who, in the past, had sometimes served
    as guides for the whites. While visiting with the Delawares a lone
    warrior of another tribe approached and in spite of protests by the
    Delawares one of the rangers, something of a bully, rode out to drive him
    away. And, although the lone warrior gave the proper signs of friendship,
    the white man killed, scalped, and robbed him of his tobacco, and upon
    returning to the Delawares bragged that he would kill any Indian for as
    much. The Delawares, warning that revenge would be exacted by the other
    tribe, took their departure hurriedly. Hardly were they out of sight when
    the whites were attacked by a force of a hundred Indians who demanded
    custody of the murderer. Eastland and the remainder of the rangers,
    although sickened by the action of their comrade, refused to give him up
    and entrenched themselves in a ravine for defense. To drive the rangers
    out of the ravine, the Indians set the surrounding grass on fire and as
    the whites tried to fight their ways to safety all but five were killed.
    Eastland, one of the survivors, was wounded. it seems always to have been
    his fate to suffer for the miscalculations and actions of others.

    In the meantime, because the Comanches and Kiowas were increasing the
    intensity of their raids, William Mosby Eastland and Noah Smithwich
    formed a company of Bastrop men, and with Eastland in command, joined two
    La Grange companies led by John H. Moore. The three companies included
    only sixty-three whites and sixteen Lipans and Tonkawas. At the mouth of
    the San Saba River, they surprised a small Comanche camp and in an
    attempt save Matilda Lockhart and four Putnam children from captivity
    attacked and defeated it but were unsuccessful in their rescue attempt.
    In the fighting William Mosby Eastland was again wounded. During the
    battle, Nicholas W. Eastland ( ( Kay's GGG Granddaddy) killed the chief,
    who, in addition to silver rings in his ears and on his fingers, wore a
    beautiful six-foot-long beaded belt that was long treasured as a souvenir
    by the Eastland family. The fight was followed by an anticlimax, for on
    their way home they stopped overnight in the new capital, Austin, and
    were entertained with a dance. During the celebration, Indians succeeded
    in stealing all of their horses and mules except for three belonging to
    Nicholas Eastland.

    In the following autumn, John H. Moore organized another expedition into
    Indian country, this time to retaliate for the earlier Linnville raid by
    the Comanches. With about ninety men from Bastrop and La Grange, he led
    the way far up the Colorado where an unsuspecting Comanche camp was
    discovered. In the ensuing battle, forty-eight Indians were slain and
    eighty were drowned. Only two Texans were wounded. The surprise raid into
    Indian territory had been earlier planned, for, on September 1, 1840,
    Nickolas W. Eastland wrote President Lamar requesting a leave of absence
    from his duties on the Fayette County Board of Land Commissioners so he
    could serve under the command of Colonel John H. Moore in an expedition
    against the Comanche Indians. This last campaign by Moore and his men
    practically ended the major wars with the Indians, in small parties,
    continued harassing the white man in more isolated areas.

    Although the major fighting had ended, there were still many interesting
    contacts with the Indians. In one instance, about 1840, Nicholas W.
    Eastland captured a small Comanche boy whom he took home to rear, naming
    the child Sam Houston. The youngster was extremely frightened, for the
    elders of his tribe had told the Comanche children that should the be
    captured the white men would murder them and make soap of their bodies.
    For a time, therefore, Sam Houston cowered whenever he was approached by
    a white man. But the Eastlands gave him such kind treatment, good food,
    and good clothing that soon the apprehension disappeared. For at least
    two years he remained with the family, working with the others, going on
    hunting and camping trips, and attending church. He might have remained
    with the Eastland family until he was a grown man, but two years after
    his capture the Texas government ordered that all Comanche children
    living with white families would be exchanged as ransom for white
    children with the Indians. At San Marcos Sam Houston was exchanged. He
    left the family promising that when he was older he would return to live
    with them. Several years later, when he was only eighteen, he was killed
    during a Comanche raid near Lockhart.

    Then came the Mexican invasion of September, 1842, when 1500 soldiers
    commanded by General Adrain Woll marched into Texas and recaptured San
    Antonio...Erasmus "Deaf Smith" escaped and carried news of the invasion
    to Seguin and Gonzales, whence it spread to the rest of Texas. Under the
    command of Matthew Caldwell, 250 volunteers advanced toward San Antonio
    and camped on the Salado, a small steam thirty to forty feet wide with
    twelve-foot banks, beyond which was a mesquite flat. Even as Caldwell's
    forces took position, companies were being formed at La Grange and
    Bastrop intending to join his command.

    After a delay of a day and a night, General Woll attacked the Texans in
    mid-morning. Although he utilized artillery, cavalry, and infantry, he
    could not dislodge the Texans, and in late afternoon he ordered a
    withdrawal. But as the Mexicans retired the observed a small detachment
    of Texans, from La Grange and under the command of Nicholas Mosby Dawson,
    attempting to join Caldwell. Woll directed that they be intercepted.
    Dawson's men at once took position in mesquite thicket, well protected
    from small arms fire but exposed to artillery. Carefully staying out of
    rifle range, Woll's artillery blasted the Texans with field pieces, which
    soon compelled Dawson to surrender. Raising a white flag on his rifle
    barrel, he tried to approach the Mexicans but was shot down even as the
    remainder of his command discarded their weapons. After a day of
    frustration, the Mexicans were in no mood to accept surrender from so
    small a detachment; and as quickly as the Texans threw down their arms
    they were slain, twenty were taken captive, and two escaped. Among those
    who died with Dawson was his Seventeen-year-old cousin, Nicholas W.
    Eastland's son, Robert Moore Eastland. He was the first of three Nicholas
    Eastland's sons to die for Texas.

    Following the massacre, the clothing was stripped from the dead and the
    bodies left on the mesquite flat where Caldwell's found them the
    following day. General Woll on being informed that Colonel John H. Moore
    was approaching with a goodly sized body of reinforcements ordered a
    hasty retreat from San Antonio.

    The Woll Invasion and the atrocity of the Dawson Massacre led to the Mier
    Expedition. A call went out for volunteers to invade Mexico.

    Among the companies that gathered near San Antonio were one from Bastrop
    led by Bartlett Simms and one from La Grange commanded by William Mosby
    Eastland. Many of those in Eastland's company had had relatives in
    Dawson's company, and Dawson was Williams Eastland's Cousin and Robert
    Eastland was his nephew. The Eastland company therefore was eager for the
    expedition to be organized and to get on its way. Houston named General
    Alexander Somervell commander.

    In spite of procrastination by Somervell, on November 22, 1842, the
    regiment began a march to Laredo, expecting there to encounter the enemy.
    The route normally required a week to cover, but rains caused the
    expedition to take seventeen days. The deluges turned the usually
    semi-arid region into a boggy mass of mud, described by the soldiers as
    "The Devil's Eight Leagues, " "The Devil's Bog," or the "Bogs of
    Atascosa." Upon reaching Laredo, they found that Woll's army had already
    departed and they were greeted instead by a sprinkling of laughing,
    grinning children and aged men and women. After a few days, Somervell,
    under instructions not to cross the Rio Grande, gave orders to return to
    San Antonio.

    Angered, some three hundred refused to obey the command, drew off,
    elected Colonel William S. Fisher to lead them, and proceeded to organize
    into companies. William Mosby Eastland was one of the captains.

    Since they were now well below Laredo, the three hundred continued on
    down the Rio Grande, some of them traveling in flat boats and some
    marching down the river on the Texas side. Finally, they came opposite
    the little town of Mier, noted only for its manufacture of fine, woolen
    blankets.

    The Texans sent out scouts and, finding no opposition, marched into the
    village, the mayor surrendering upon assurance that there would be no
    looting. He also promised supplies, but he dallied in providing them. As
    the men waited, disgruntled, news came of the approach of General Ampudia
    with a large force. Upon conferring, the Texans decided against retreat,
    and a general battle ensued. Although the Texans held off the enemy, the
    disparity of the two armies led Colonel Fisher to agree to terms of
    honorable surrender; terms that were not carried out, for the Texans were
    at once shackled together and began a forced march of eighteen to twenty
    miles a day to Monterey, Saltillo, San Luis Potosi, and the hacienda of
    Salado.

    The hardships of the march led the Mier men to contemplate escape;
    moreover, a number, including Ewen Cameron, Dr. Richard Brenham, and
    Thomas Jefferson Green, had been on the ill-fated Santa Fe Expedition and
    feared that reason their lives were forfeit. For most, escape seemed the
    only road to comfort; for others, it was the only path to life.

    At he hacienda of Salado shortly before Valentine's Day a number,
    including William Mosby Eastland, made the attempt. The arid nature of
    the country, the mountainous terrain, and the cold combined with their
    thin clothing and weakened conditions made it extremely chancy. After a
    week, the Texans began to return to their captors, suffering from cold
    and hunger, their tongues swollen from thirst, and near to death. Some,
    including Brenham, did not return at all, having lost their lives in the
    attempt.

    Angered, Santa Anna decreed as punishment that one out ten should be
    executed, those to die being chosen by lottery. 170 beans, seventeen
    black and the remainder white, were placed in a jar, the mouth of which
    was covered by a handkerchief. The prisoners were assembled, the sentence
    was read to them, and each prisoner, as his name was called, thrust his
    hand into the jar and withdrew a bean. The white bean meant life; the
    black bean meant death. Each man made his draw with composure; but one, a
    private soldier from Brazonia County, James C. Wilson, realizing that the
    jar had not been thoroughly shaken and that therefore the black beans
    were near the top, advised each officer as he drew: "Dip deep, Captain,
    dip deep." This was sheer heroism, for Wilson's name was near the last
    alphabetically, and each black bean that was drawn increased his own
    chance of surviving, while that was drawn decreased them.

    Shortly, it was William Mosby Eastland's turn. To the rhythm of Wilson's
    chant, Eastland reached into the jar, and when he withdrew his hand he
    held the first black bean. In turn, the rest drew until sixteen more had
    found death.

    Each was allowed to say good by to his comrades and to send a last word
    home. William Mosby Eastland, in two statements attributed to him, told
    those who were to live: "Say to my friends that I addressed you an hour
    previous to my arraignment before my God. For my country I have offered
    all my earthly aspirations and for it I now lay down my life. I have
    never feared death, nor do I now. For my unjustifiable execution I wish
    no revenge, but die in full confidence of the Christian faith.." And he
    also said: "Let no Texan lay down his arms until peace has been
    permanently established. It has been said that I am a timid man, but as
    God is my witness I am not afraid to die for Texas."

    The latter remark may have been directed at Thomas Jefferson Green; for,
    after Eastland was dead, Green was to make such an implication in account
    of the Mier Expedition. William Mosby Eastland's record in Texas history,
    however, reveals no act of cowardice; and no man who died as bravely as
    did he before the firing squad could be described as "timid."

    Under the preaching of the Reverend M. Shanks, William Mosby Eastland had
    professed religion not quite three years before, September 19, 1840, at
    Starkville, Mississippi, while on a journey to Tennessee to visit his
    family. His faith now supported him in the face of death; for, within the
    hour, March 25, 1843, the seventeen were shot; but the tragedy was not
    yet played out; for, although he had not drawn a black bean, exactly one
    month later Ewen Cameron was executed because of his part in the escape.
    The survivors of the expedition were confined in Perote Castle until the
    last of them were released in September, 1844.

    Thus did the second Eastland die for the land he loved. For five years,
    his body remained in Mexico with those of his companions. In 1848,
    however, Major Walter P. Lane, on a scouting expedition to San Luis
    Potosi, detoured to Salado, exhumed the bodies and had them taken under
    the escort of Captain John E. Dusenberry to La Grange.

    Arrangements were made to bury the victims of the Dawson Massacre and the
    Salado Massacre on a hill outside La Grange and overlooking the Colorado
    River. On September 18, 1848, a large crowd assembled for the rituals.
    Sam Houston was the special guest of Nicholas W. Eastland. After
    appropriate services and speeches, the bodies, in a home-made,
    black-walnut casket, were interred in a single vault. William Mosby
    Eastland's namesake, five-year-old Will Eastland, [ Kay's Hemphill
    Swafford, GG Grandfather} witnessed the ceremonies just as he was to
    another, fifty-six years later.

    Years past and the Sepulcher, which was unmarked, had been desecrated by
    youngsters who had actually used the bones for game ball.

    Plans to mark the tomb suitably and thus correct the people's
    forgetfulness were formulated at once. J.F. Wolters was invited to make
    the Memorial Day address at the La Grange Opera house on April 21, 1904.
    The observances were well publicized, and visitors traveled to La Grange
    from all over the state. Among them was Will Eastland Sr. A plea for a
    marker to commemorate the heroes of the Dawson and Meir Massacre was made.
    And in 1933 the state erected a beautiful and enduring monument to those
    who slept within properly inscribed on the outside. Will Eastland Sr.
    missed being a part of the third ceremony only because of illness which
    caused his death just one day after the new and permanent monument was
    unveiled to the public, September 18, 1933.

    Nicholas Washington Eastland was to lose one more of his family in wars
    with the Mexicans. Two of his sons, Thomas Butler Eastland and Charles
    Cooper Eastland served with the Texas Rangers unit during the Mexican
    War. Their departure from their father's home had more than the usual
    touch of sadness, for it was to cause their little brother, Will
    Eastland, to remember their going away with guilt for the rest of his
    life. At that time it was the custom to hang weapons over the door so
    that they could reach it easily during an emergency. When the two young
    soldiers were ready to leave and as they reached for their rifles above
    the door, one of them stepped on Will's foot causing him to cry. Although
    they attempted to console him, he refused to tell them good bye, and they
    departed with no word of farewell from him. He never saw Charles Cooper
    Eastland again; for, on December 20, 1847, Charles Eastland died of
    disease in Monterey, Mexico. The older brother, Thomas Butler Eastland
    came back.

    Nicholas married Fannie Bates Moore on 23 Oct 1823. Fannie was born on 20 Jun 1804 in Smith County, TX; died in 1859 in Bastrop County, TX. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Fannie Bates Moore was born on 20 Jun 1804 in Smith County, TX; died in 1859 in Bastrop County, TX.
    Children:
    1. Charles Cooper Eastland was born in 1823/1849; died in 1828/1929.
    2. Thomas Butler Eastland was born in 1823/1849; died in 1828/1929.
    3. Eliza Ann Ware Eastland was born in 1823/1849; died in 1828/1932.
    4. Mary Elizabeth Eastland was born in 1823/1849; died in 1828/1932.
    5. 2. William Mosby Eastland was born on 15 Mar 1843 in La Grange County, TX; died on 13 Sep 1933 in Watterson Community County, TX.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Thomas Butler Eastland was born on 23 Dec 1777 in Virginia, USA; died on 10 Jan 1860 in Bon Air, White County, TN.

    Notes:

    [Broderbund WFT Vol. 8, Ed. 1, Tree #2491]

    The Eastlands came to America sometime during the early part of the
    eighteenth century, and, like so many of yeomen stock, during several
    generations they drifted westward. By 1800, Thomas Butler Eastland, from
    whom descends the Texas line, had reached Kentucky, acquired a plantation
    called Woodlands, married Nancy Mosby, and was Quartermaster-General of
    the Kentucky Militia.

    When the War of 1812 began, he volunteered and spent most of it fighting
    under the command of General William Harrison. In recognition of his
    military services, particularly in the Battle of New Orleans, the
    government awarded him several grants of land in Tennessee, the last of
    which was made in 1838.

    After the War of 1812, he moved with his children (Nicholas Washington,
    William Mosby, Thomas, James, Robert, and an unidentified daughter) to
    Tennessee. In his new home, following the death of Nancy Mosby, he
    married again, this time to a Miss Swan. Four more children were born to
    his second marriage: Edward, George, Cumberland, and another unidentified
    daughter.

    A man of some wealth acquired though military service and the
    accumulation of land, Thomas Butler Eastland was able to provide a
    substantial education for his children. His eldest son Nicholas
    Washington (who was to live most of his life in Watterson), was enrolled
    in 1818 in the United States Military Academy at West Point, holding his
    appointment from Tennessee. The other children were given as fine an
    education as was available for the time and place. William Mosby was also
    afforded at least a smattering of the military education which was to
    stand him in such good stead on the frontier and the Mexican border.

    Thomas Butler Eastland soon attained an enviable position in the
    Tennessee community of Sparta in White County, and as his wealth
    increased founded the little town of Eastland, only a short distance away.

    Thomas married Nancy Mosby in 1792/1824. Nancy (daughter of Nicholas Mosby and Susannah Hobson) was born about 1776; died in 1777/1870. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Nancy Mosby was born about 1776 (daughter of Nicholas Mosby and Susannah Hobson); died in 1777/1870.

    Notes:

    [Broderbund WFT Vol. 2, Ed. 1, Tree #4013]

    Mosby Family History, by James H. Mosby

    Children:
    1. 4. Nicholas Washington Eastland was born on 3 Apr 1803 in Woodford County, KY; died on 5 Aug 1891 in Watterson Community County, TX.
    2. William Mosby Eastland was born in 1795/1824; died in 1801/1903.
    3. Thomas Eastland was born in 1795/1824; died in 1801/1903.
    4. Robert Eastland was born in 1795/1824; died in 1801/1903.
    5. James Eastland was born in 1795/1824; died in 1801/1903.