HENRY MARION JONES
HENRY MARION JONES. One of the widely known residents of Young
county, whose settlement here dates from 1877, established
himself on the waters of Fish creek upon one of the first farm to
be settled in county. It was opened by Jim Tackett who is
said to have also built the first residence in Graham and its
chief attraction to Mr. Jones was the abundance of water that the
locality possessed and, as he remarked to a friend at the time,
"I shall have plenty of water if nothing else." Here he has since
resided, reared his family and improved, substantially and
attractively, one of the desirable and productive farms of Young
county.
Prior to his location, permanently, Mr. Jones investigated many
counties in northwest Texas in search of the right place, but the
Fish creek neighborhood maintained first rank with him and he
started in with one hundred and sixty acres of land. He moved his
family into the proverbial frontiersman's shanty and occupied it
until the industry of his household had removed all obstacles to
the building of his present splendid residence--chief of its kind
on the creek--and his early efforts at farm-reduction and
improvement were directed toward the grubbing and clearing of his
rich bottom land. While he gathered about him some stock, as was
the custom of all intelligent farmers, he posed always as a
farmer and the products which he gathered and marketed from his
daily toil were chiefly responsible for his substantial condition
today.
Mr. Jones started his Texas journey from Calloway county,
Kentucky, and came by rail to Waco and overland, of course, to
Graham. His cash capital was rather insignificant and there was
just one thing left for him to do, upon choosing his future home
in a new country, and that was to work. This he had accustomed
himself to back at the old home in the east, and work brings
substantial results anywhere. He has received little or no
educational aid from the country schools of his youth and when he
arrived at his majority a strong body and a willing hand were his
capital stock. He was married in his youth and assumed the
responsibilities of a householder when little more experience as
the active head of a family for he took care of his mother and
the younger children while his father was absent in the
Confederate service, and the thought of providing for his own
family had no terrors for him.
March 23, 1855, Henry M. Jones was born in Calloway county,
Kentucky, of parents, Thomas and Rillie (McBride)
Jones. The father was born, about 1832, passed his life on
the farm and died in 1888, in Callaway county, Kentucky, where
his widow yet resides. The children born to him, are with the
exception of our subject, residents of their native county and
are: Henry M., of this review; Bryant, Raish, Irving,
Alsena, wife of Henry Carlton and Ezelle.
Henry M. Jones took in marriage Martha A., a daughter of
James Townsend, now a resident of Young county, Texas.
Mrs. Jones was born in Tennessee, in 1855, and is the mother of
Ella, wife of Lee Lane, the mother of Earnest,
Sallie, Rudy and Malcom; Nora, wife of Sam
Lane, of Graham, his children, Jesse H. and Noel;
Lula, who married Ben Malone, and Teeley, Dora,
Jesse and Henry M. Jr., still with the parental
household.
In his political affiliations Mr. Jones is a Democrat and his
interest in active politics is confined to local matters only.
B. B. Paddock, History and Biographical Record of North
and Western Texas (Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1906), Vol.
II, p. 486.
***
|