A trainload of Baptists
In 1901 a trainload (or two) of westward
bound families from Hall County, Georgia landed in Rusk County, Texas. These
folks, many of them relatives of my wife, added to the number of Baptists in
Rusk County. The traditional story known by the younger generations of the
families is that as recorded by Daily
News Staff writer Richard Oliver, when he wrote a story on Henderson couple
Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Holland.
“Not satisfied with the situation in Georgia, the Hollands decided to move to better country and immediately settled in Henderson in 1901. Mr. Holland, along with three other men, Jim Hickey (namesake for the Hickey Community), Newt Dickinson and Fels Shockley, struck upon the idea of selling tickets for their excursion to Texas and ‘greener pastures’. So 63 inhabitants of Georgia boarded the excursion as passengers of Holland and Company. The troupe came by train most of the way and stopped at Longview to board the Overton-Henderson train.” (Henderson Daily News, Sunday, March 13, 1938, p. 3)
This information is correct, though some of it apt to be inferred incorrectly. I always thought Jim Hickey was a farmer in the community named for him. Not so. Other sources now more readily available help fill in the details.
James Calvin “Jim” Hickey (1846-1920) was a Tennessean by birth, and had lived in Rusk County, Texas since his parents (Robert Hamilton Hickey & Elizabeth Arnwine Hickey) had settled in Pine Hill in 1850. He was a promoter of land purchasing in Rusk County, and did come from Gainesville to Henderson – not because he lived there, but because he had spent most of the summer of 1901 in Gainesville. This advertisement ran in the Gainesville Georgia Cracker newspaper (and possibly others).
The July 6, 1901 issue of the same paper reported:
“Mr. J. C. Hickey of Henderson, Texas, one of the oil-well developers, is in the city for the summer, with his wife and daughter.” (The Georgia Cracker, Saturday, July 6, 1901, p. 7)
Some of the Gainesville men traveled to Rusk County to check out the land, and some purchased there (though we might question the newspaper reporter’s reliability concerning the names).[i]
“Four gentlemen from this county, Messrs Eli Strickland, John Wilson, Lem Holland and — Roper went out there the past summer and came home delighted with what they saw. Two and probably four of them have bought in Rusk county and will soon move there.” (The Georgia Cracker, Saturday, October 12, 1901, p. 6)
By December 1901, the Hall County families were on their way.
“Gone To Texas.
“A number of Hall county citizens, accompanied by their families, left for Rusk county, Texas, Wednesday to make their homes in the Lone Star State. Among those who went were: G. N. Dickerson and family, Will Reed and family, W. D. Holland and family, Eligah Holland and family, Gravitt and family, Jerry Brown and family, Q. M. Shockley and family, J. M. Thomas and family, and several others. We wish them well in their new home, and regret they saw fit to leave Hall county. They will make Texas good citizens, and Georgia’s loss is her gain.” (The Georgia Cracker, December 14, 1901, p. 3)
An account in a Henderson, Texas paper indicates there were two trainloads of Georgians.
“The second car load of Georgians, headed by Mr. W. D. Holland, one of the four gentlemen who were here last August, reaching Henderson last Friday at noon…” (“Looking Backward, 40 Years Ago Today,” Henderson Daily News, Thursday, December 18, 1941, p. 14)
These families generally settled in the Hickey Community, roughly 7 miles southwest of the square in Henderson, Texas. Some sources suggest W. D. “Dock” Holland lived at 508 West Main Street in Henderson from the time he moved to Texas. This is incorrect.[ii] He was a member of the Mt. Enon Church, which met somewhere near Hickey, Good Springs, and Gum Springs. W. D. Holland was messenger from the Mt. Enon Church to Mt. Zion Baptist Association in 1903 and 1904. After moving to Henderson, he probably was a member of the First Baptist Church. His funeral was held January 9, 1942 at First Baptist Church in Henderson, by its pastor H. Marshall Smith.[iii]
The Holland and related families have been members of the old Mt. Enon Church, Hickey Baptist Church, First Baptist Henderson, and scattered among many other churches in Rusk County. Likely, some in this trainload of Georgians who came to Rusk County were not Baptists, but the ones we know of were. The Hollands in Georgia were members of Baptist churches around Flowery Branch in Forsyth County and Gainesville, including the New Bethany Baptist Church in the Oakwood Community. One brother of Dock who remained in Georgia, Archibald Harrison Holland, was a Baptist preacher.
The following families lived in Hall County, Georgia in 1900, and are known to (Brown, Dickinson, Holland, Reed, J. Shockley) or believed to (Gravitt, Q. Shockley, Thomas) have come to Rusk County in 1901. The list based on the 1900 census accounts for 61 people, very close to the number of 63 found in the Henderson Daily News article from March 13, 1938.
Jerry Brown 47 Head
Mary L Brown 47 Wife
Lizzie Brown 24 Daughter
Leuella Brown 18 Daughter
Franklin Brown 16 Son
Alice Brown 14 Daughter
Isabella Brown 9 Daughter
Eula Brown 7 Daughter
Geo N Dickinson 45 Head
Sarah A Dickinson 51 Wife
Berta R Dickinson 21 Daughter
Nellie E Dickinson 19 Daughter
Eddie K Dickinson 18 Son
Robert M Dickinson 16 Son
Indie A Dickinson 14 Daughter
Young O. Gravit 44 Head (Young Gravitt probably is the same as Lige Gravitt)
Elizar Gravit 30 Wife
Maggie Gravit 15 Daughter
William Gravit 13 Son
Cleavland Gravit 11 Son
Elizzie Gravit 9 Daughter
Ernist Gravit 6 Son
May Gravit 5 Daughter
Odis Gravit 2 Son
W D Holland 45 Head
Jane Holland 41 Wife
Tilmon Holland 16 Son
Claud Holland 12 Son
Willie Reed 27 Head
Nannie Reed 22 Wife
Winnie C Reed 5 Daughter
Jullia A Reed 4 Daughter
Lucy M Reed 2 Daughter
Montine S Reed 1/12 Daughter
John B Roper 41 Head
Mary J Roper 37 Wife
Charley E Roper 17 Son
Earnest F Roper 14 Son
Leila B Roper 10 Daughter
Reesie J Roper 6 Daughter
Quilla M Shockley 48 Head (Aquilla M. Shockley apparently is Fels Shockley)
Callie Shockley 37 Wife
Emory S Shockley 19 Son
Julia Shockley 16 Daughter
John Shockley 11 Son
Pearl Shockley 9 Daughter
Rada Shockley 6 Daughter
Joseph D Shockley 23 Head
Maggie V Shockley 21 Wife
Lizzie J Shockley 4 Daughter
Nancy L Shockley 3 Daughter
Laura C Shockley 6/12 Daughter
James Thomas 47 Head (James Moody Thomas may be J. M. Thomas)[iv]
Elizibeth Thomas 45 Wife
Thomas Thomas 20 Son
Beckie Thomas 18 Daughter
Caroline Thomas 14 Daughter
Randoph Thomas 12 Son
Sallie L Thomas 6 Daughter
Marie Thomas 4 Daughter
Junie Thomas 3 Daughter
[ii] The intended meaning is probably that they lived only in that one location since moving to Henderson. The 1910 Rusk County census shows them living on the Henderson & Jacksonville road (listed between N. P. Newton and Dock’s son S. T. Holland). Dock and Mary Jane lived on “West Street” in Henderson in the 1920 census.
[iii] Henderson Daily News, Thursday, January 8, 1942, p. 12.
[iv] If so, he returned to Georgia.
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