Showing posts with label Bentonville Cemetery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bentonville Cemetery. Show all posts

Monday, August 15, 2011

New Resident Angel

Located at Bentonville Cemetery in Bentonville, AR.
Miles Family
Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give
you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me.
For I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest.
For your souls, For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.
Mathew11:28-30

 
Alton Lee Miles
United States Army
June 28, 1943 - February 1, 2008
Loving Husband, Father and Grandfather

Married April 3, 1962

Monika Martha Miles
Born in Germany
January 28, 1946 - (Still living)
Loving Wife, Mother, Grandmother and Great Grandmother

Alton Lee Miles
SGT US Army
Jun 28, 1943 - Feb 1, 2008

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Judge Samuel Newton Elliot And Family

This is the Elliott family plot located at the Bentonville Cemetery in Bentonville, AR.
Father
Samuel N.
Elliott
Born
Dec 22, 1823
Died
Sept 29, 1911

*******

The following is from Biographical and pictorial history of Arkansas ; pgs 436 - 438.


The following is from History of Benton, Washington, Carroll, Madison, Crawford, Franklin, and Sebastian Counties; pg 832.


Obituaries for Samuel N. Elliott.

Benton County Democrat
Bentonville, AR
September 28, 1911

ELLIOTT, Samuel Newton – Died, at his home in this city Thursday morning, September 28th, 1911, Hon. Samuel N. Elliott, aged eight-seven years, nine months and six days. He was a native of Rutherford county, Tenn. And a graduate from the law department of the Transylvania University of Lexington, Ky. in 1845. In February 1862 he enlisted in Company K, Eighth Regiment, Texas Infantry, of which company he was elected lieutenant, remaining in the service until the close of the war. He was Judge Advocate of court martial at Sabine Pass for three months and surrendered at Pelican Spit in May 1865. Judge Elliott became a resident of Bentonville, Ark in May 1869 where he resumed his law practice. He was Justice of the Peace for several years and in 1876 he was elected County and Probate Judge of Benton county, which office he held for eight years. When elected as County Judge, Benton county was $18,000 in debt and at the end of his second term Judge Elliott had paid the entire debt, leaving the county on a solid financial basis when he retired from office. Judge Elliott was a man of generous impulses – one who united sound sense with strong convictions – candid, outspoken and eminently fitted to mould a higher standard of citizenship. How much this community owes him it would be impossible to estimate but we are certain his influence will long be remembered.

Benton County Democrat
Bentonville, AR
October 5, 1911

Died, Sept. 28, 1911 at his home in Bentonville, Ark., Samuel Newton Elliott, aged eighty-seven years, nine months and six days. Deceased was born near Murfeesboro, Tenn., Dec. 23, 1823. He graduated from the law department of the Transylvania University of Lexington, Ky. in 1845. In 1848 he was married to Jane K. Brackin of Kinsmon, Ohio. To this union were born six children, three sons and three daughters. Three sons and two daughters – long, familiarly and favorably known in this community – are living. One daughter, the oldest, had gone before. In 1862 he enlisted in Company K, eighth Regiment, Texas Infantry, and was elected a lieutenant in that company, continuing in the service until the close of the war. In 1866, after the close of the war, he returned to Shelbyville, Tenn. In 1867 he again returned to Bryan, Texas. In 1869 he, his wife, two sons and two daughters came to Bentonville which, with the exception of something over a year spent in California was his home until he death. In 1876 he was elected county and probate judge of Benton county. He was elected to this office for three consecutive terms – the only man up to that time who had ever been elected for a third time to the same office in Benton county. His administration gave general satisfaction, relieving the county of heavy indebtedness and zealously guarding the interests of widows and orphans who came under the jurisdiction of his courts. He was never affiliated with any church in this country. At one time in his early life he was a member of the Methodist church. Some forty years ago he had doubts as to the immortality of the soul but years ago he renounced that idea and had been a firm believer in immortality and eternal progression. He was not orthodox in his belief. As I understand him he was a Universalist. While he admitted that he was not orthodox in the general acceptation of that term, he was courteous and respectful to those who were orthodox in their faith. Some eight or ten years ago he had his coffin made of plain pine lumber, without painting or varnishing or outward trimmings, and exacted from every member of the family to see that he was buried in that coffin, to be placed in a box of walnut lumber of his own choosing. His request was carefully, tenderly and lovingly complied with. He was devoted to his family and spoke in the highest praise of his beloved children for their devotion to him in his declining years and failing strength; and especially of him who, by reason of his superior financial ability, had done so much for the family, and for his comfort in his last and languishing years. An old landmark of this city – an affectionate husband and father – a good citizen, morally, socially, and politically – an able, honest and respected jurist – a kind and generous neighbor – has gone out from us into the eternal future. And whatever may be our opinion as to his eternal future, of one thing we are assured: That is, all that infinite love and mercy, coupled with infinite justice and righteousness, could do for his well being has been done. May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the comfort of the Holy spirit rest upon the bereft and sorrowing loved ones. P. Carnahan.

**********************
The following is from Find a Grave posted by Freda, May 5, 2011.
This was posted on rootsweb message boards by SJurls:

Samuel wrote a possible suicide letter to his children. The letter is in the Taggart Family Bible (in my family) and typed below:

Good by my dear children. 'Twas but the other day your loved mother, seated the little canoe. An Angel hoisted the sail and away and across ____ of ____ the river of life, be courageous ___ the the opposite bend the curving stream and landed her on the shore beneath the the boughts that hung low and she ___, - look! but a mile or so away left his alligning stricken.

I, stricken with fears and disease must soon bid you all adieu, I first ____ little boat mooned. ___ the ___ trees to the shore. ___ by I take a seat the same little boat the angel will hoist the sail and land me where your ___ mother is ___ through the boughs ___ together with my Queen standing by.

The blanks are words I can't figure out for the life of me.
***********************
 
Mother
Jane Knox
Elliott
Born
Aug 21, 1826
Died
Nov 16, 1904

Obituaries for Jane Elliott.

Benton County Democrat
Bentonville, AR
November 17, 1904

ELLIOTT, Jane K. - Mrs. Jane K. Elliott, wife of Judge S.N. Elliott, died at her home in this city yesterday {Wednesday} November 16, aged 78 years. Mrs. Elliott had been in poor health for several months and her death was not unexpected. Funeral services will be held at the residence this afternoon {Thursday} at 3 o'clock, conducted by Rev. Peter Carnahan and interment will take place in the Odd Fellows cemetery. An obituary will appear in this paper next week.

Benton County Democrat
Bentonville, AR
November 24, 1904

When Mrs. Elliott's spirit departed from its earthly tenement the world lost a noble woman. Coming of Christian parentage her life was an exemplification of the cardinal Christian virtues. Kindly, loving and patient, her example could not but impress all with whom she came in contact and those who met her were better for the meeting. Never a frown or a harsh word; only the expressions of a true and loving wife and mother. After seventy-eight years of right living she left the world richer for having lived in it. Mrs. Elliott was born in Trumbull county, Ohio on August 26, 1826 and resided there until her marriage with Judge Elliott on August 17, 1848. Shortly after this they moved to Texas where they lived until 1869 when they came to Bentonville. They have made this city their home ever since, excepting eight months spent in California. Six children, three sons and three daughters, were born to them. One daughter died in childhood; the others grew to manhood and womanhood and were at their mother's bedside for a month prior to her death. Mrs. Elliott was a life-long member of the Presbyterian church and lived a life that was consistent with her profession. She had a host of friends in Benton county whom mourn her departure but it is on the aged husband, with whom she walked life's pathway for fifty-six years, and the sons and daughters who will miss mother's love and counsel, that the blow falls the hardest.

Brother
C. O. Eillott
Born
Aug 16, 1849
Died
Mar 26, 1912


Monday, May 16, 2011

Famous File: Samuel West Peel

Located at Bentonville Cemetery in Bentonville, AR.
Entrance to the Peel Plot.

 Sacred to the memory of
Mary E. Peel
Nee Berry
Wife of S.W. Peel
Born
Feb 14, 1835
Died
Dec 23, 1902

Samuel W. Peel
Born
Sept 13, 1831
Died
Dec 18, 1924

**************************
Photo from http://www.findagrave.com/ posted by George Seitz

Newspaper: San Antonio Express
Publication: 19 Dec 1924 - San Antonio, Texas

Samuel West Peel (1831–1924)
(http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/ by John Spurgeon, May 14, 2011)

Samuel West Peel’s diversified career in Arkansas included roles as a businessman, politician, county clerk, Confederate soldier, lawyer, prosecuting attorney, congressman, Indian agent, and banker. In Benton County and Arkansas, he is best remembered as the first native-born Arkansan to be elected to the United States Congress.

Sam Peel was born in Independence County on September 13, 1831, to John Wilson Peel, a farmer and merchant, and Elizabeth West Peel. He had two sisters. Peel was four years old when his mother died. His father left him with his grandparents and moved to Carrollton (Carroll County), making a home on Crooked Creek and remarrying. John Peel and his second wife, Malinda Wilson, had eleven children.

As a youth, Peel worked as a clerk in his father’s store, as well as serving as deputy court clerk to his father. On January 30, 1853, he married Mary Emaline Berry. They had nine children, of whom eight survived childhood.

In 1858, and again in 1860 and 1862, Peel was elected Carroll County clerk. When the Civil War erupted, Peel hid the county records in a burial vault in the cemetery to protect them from Union soldiers. After Arkansas seceded, Peel enlisted in the Confederate army as a private in Captain James M. Pittman’s company. Fellow soldiers elected him major in the Third Regiment, Arkansas Infantry (State Troops). Peel was in combat in the Battle of Wilson’s Creek and the Battle of Prairie Grove. He then joined the Fourth Arkansas Infantry, Adams Regiment. One historical entry records Peel as being in the Fourth Arkansas Cavalry; National Archives records show that Peel mustered out at the end of the war as a lieutenant colonel in Little Rock (Pulaski County).

At war’s end, Peel returned home to Carrollton, finding his home burned down. Peel retrieved the saved county records, but in 1866, when fire broke out in the new log, courthouse, the records were destroyed.

Studying law under his brother-in-law, Judge James Middleton Pittman, Peel was admitted to the bar in 1865 and moved his family to Hindsville (Madison County), where he opened his law practice. By the spring of 1867, Peel moved his law office to Bentonville (Benton County), and two years later, Peel’s brother-in-law, future governor James Henderson Berry, carried his practice to Bentonville and formed a partnership with Peel that lasted five years.

In 1873, Governor Elisha Baxter appointed Peel as prosecuting attorney for the vacant position in the Fourth Circuit. Peel performed well in the position and was rewarded for this diligence by being elected on April 26, 1873, by popular vote. He continued holding this office until 1876.

In 1875, Peel commissioned the building of his new fourteen-room family home. “The Oaks,” so named for the many surrounding oak trees, is on the National Register of Historic Places. The Peels left The Oaks in 1904, moving to 201 West Central Street.

In 1880, Peel was defeated in his first bid for Congress, but two years later, he became the first native-born Arkansan to be elected to the U.S. Congress, serving as a Fourth District representative his first term (1883–1885) and representing the Fifth District for his four succeeding terms (1885–1893). Peel dealt with wide-ranging issues: patronage and spoils of elected officials, railroads and interstate commerce, agricultural experimental stations, and the survey of Indian lands and tribes. His interest in Indian affairs led him to the House Chairmanship of the Committee on Indian Affairs, overseeing the care, education, and management of Indians and their lands as well as dealing with land right-of-way issues and payment of depredation claims. Historians record that tribal councils were often held on the front lawn of the Peel mansion, with tribal leaders camping on the grounds. It was at one such meeting that a treaty was signed with the five civilized tribes (Chickasaw, Choctaw, Cherokee, Creek, and Seminole). The final payment to the Delaware Indians was made by Peel and dubbed the “Peel payment.”

In 1892, Peel was defeated for reelection by Hugh Anderson Dinsmore of Fayetteville (Washington County). Leaving Congress, Peel returned to Arkansas and the practice of law while forming a law partnership in Washington DC specializing in Indian cases, having been appointed attorney for all the civilized tribes. By 1890, he retired from law practice and organized the first bank in Bentonville, First State Bank of Arkansas.

On December 18, 1924, Peel died at the age of ninety-three. He is interred in Bentonville Cemetery.

******************

From http://www.ancestry.com/ .

Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 1774-2005 about Samuel West Peel
Name: Samuel West Peel
Date of Birth: 13 Sep 1831
Date of Death: 18 Dec 1924
Elected Office(s): Representative
Elected Date(s): 4 Mar 1883
State: Arkansas, Washington
Country: USA
Biography: a Representative from Arkansas; born near Batesville, Independence County, Ark., September 13, 1831; attended the common schools; clerk of the circuit court of Carroll County, Ark., 1858-1860; entered the Confederate service in 1861 as a private; elected major of the Third Regiment, Arkansas Infantry, and later colonel of the Fourth Regiment, Arkansas Infantry; studied law; was admitted to the bar and commenced the practice of his profession in Carrollton, Ark., in 1865; moved to Bentonville, Benton County, in 1867 and continued the practice of law; prosecuting attorney of the fourth judicial circuit of Arkansas 1873-1876; elected as a Democrat to the Forty-eighth and to the four succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1883-March 3, 1893); chairman, Committee on Indian Affairs (Fiftieth and Fifty-second Congresses); unsuccessful candidate for renomination in 1892; resumed the practice of law in Bentonville, Ark., and before the Court of Claims at Washington, D.C., until 1915; died in Bentonville, Ark., December 18, 1924; interment in Bentonville Cemetery.

*****************
From http://www.ancestry.com/ .

U.S. Civil War Soldiers, 1861-1865 about Samuel W. Peel
Name: Samuel W. Peel
Side: Confederate
Regiment State/Origin: Arkansas
Regiment Name: Adam's Reg't., Arkansas Infantry
Regiment Name Expanded: Adams' Regiment, Arkansas Infantry
Rank In: Colonel
Rank In Expanded: Colonel
Rank Out: Lieutenant Colonel
Rank Out Expanded: Lieutenant Colonel
Film Number: M376 roll 18


Obituary for Mary E. Peel
The Springdale News - Springdale, Arkansas - January 2, 1903

Mrs. S. W. Peel died at her home in Bentonville, Arkansas after a long illness Tuesday afternoon at 2:55 o'clock, Mrs. Peel, aged 67 years, 10 months and nine days. Mrs. peel has scores of friends who will mourn her death. She was the wife of ex-Congressman Peel and sister of U. S. Senator Jas. H. Berry. The deceased has scores of friends who will sympathize with Col. Peel and Family in their bereavement. All of her children were with her at the time of her death with the exception of her daughter, Mrs. P. S. Davis, who was unable to get here. Funeral services will be held at the family residence Thursday, December 25, 1902 at 10 o'clock. Burial at Odd Fellows Cemetery.

Note: Odd Fellows Cemetery was Incorporated into what is now the Bentonville Cemetery.

The Peel Mansion
The home was built in 1875 and now houses the Peel Mansion Museum and Heritage Gardens, 400 S Walton Blvd Bentonville, AR  (photo is from http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/media-detail.aspx?mediaID=2183)

http://www.peelmansion.org/peel/history.htm

Saturday, May 14, 2011

And She Waits

This is one of my favorite local monuments.  I visit her often and she always appears to be waiting for something or someone.   She is located in a cemetery just a few blocks from where I work so when I have a little free time between appointments I wander around the Bentonville Cemetery.  She is the only statue style monument in this cemetery.

Located at Bentonville Cemetery in Bentonville, AR.
She sits in the middle of the Terry - Smart Family plot in the older section of the cemetery.   

Mary Catherine
Wife of William A. Terry
Daughter of
John & Essie C. Smart
Born Feb 21, 1850
Died May 27, 1873

Note: Mary Catherine was the first wife of William A. Terry.

Infant Sons of
William A. & Sue A. Terry

Born Oct 5, 1878
Lived 6 Hours.

Born Jan 25, 1880
Died Mar 9, 1880

****
John
Son of
William A. & Sue A. Terry
Born July 25, 1876
Died Aug 25, 1877

Note: Sue A. Terry was William's second wife and Mary Catherine's sister.

I love how her details are still very visible even after 138 years. 


Photo by  wfields55, http://www.arkansasgravestones.org/view.php?id=25095
William A Terry
1844 - 1901


Photo by  wfields55, http://www.arkansasgravestones.org/view.php?id=25094
Susan Alice Terry
Wife of William A Terry
1853 - 1934

I found the following obituary at http://www.findagrave.com/.

Benton County Record & Democrat
Bentonville, Benton County, Arkansas 
Thursday, March 15, 1934 – Page 1 Column 5 & 6

MRS. SUE A. TERRY BURIED HERE SATURDAY

Mrs. Sue A. Terry, widow of the late Wm. A. Terry, for many years identified in the business development of Bentonville, died at the family home on South Main street late Thursday night, March 15, 1934, at the age of 81 years. She had been in ill health for some months, critically so for the past few week.

Funeral services were held at the home Saturday morning, the Rev. A. W. Henderson, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church officiating. Burial was made in the family plot in the city cemetery.

Pallbearers were E.O. LeFora, E.P. Knott, Fred Berry, John Applegate, J.T. McGill and Wilburn Arthur.

Surviving are Wm. A. Terry, Mrs. Russell Dickson and Mrs. Katherine Self, all of the home. A step son Ron S. Terry, former publisher of the Benton County Democrat, died in Springfield several months ago. A sister, Mrs. W.A. Burke of Bentonville and a brother L.P. Smartt of Vinita, Okla., nine grand children, including, Mrs. Jack Wilson, Frank Terry, Dee Ruth and Madolyn Dickson of this city, and five great grandchildren, also survive her.

Mrs. Terry was born in Oxford, Ala., August 11, 1852. She was the daughter of Dr. John Smartt and Essie Smartt. The family moved to Dallas, Texas, in 1865 and in 1871 moved to Bentonville, which has since been her home.

October 5, 1875, she married W.A. Terry, Col Terry was born in Glasgow, Ky., in 1844. When the Civil War broke out he enlisted in Co. F, 6th Kentucky Infantry. He served in the war until 1865. He was made a First Lieutenant at the age of 18. In 1878 he married Miss Kate Smartt. Following her death, he married her sister Miss Susan Smartt. Mr. Terry was engaged in several Bentonville business enterprises and was the head of the largest dry goods store in Benton county for a number of years. He was president of the Bentonville Bank. He died in 1901.

Mrs. Terry was reared in the Presbyterian faith, her father Dr. John Smartt being an elder in the church for 20 years.

Her father, Dr. John Smartt was a native of McMinnville, Tenn., born in 1820, the son of George R. and Ethelia Randolph Smartt. He practiced medicine for 41 years, beginning in McMinnville in March 1847. Dr. Smartt was very prominent, being president of the Peoples' Bank of Bentonville, the Bentonville railroad, president of the Benton County Medical Examining Board, president of the Bentonville Commercial College and vice president of the Bentonville Evaporator and Canning factory He passed away in 1899.

****************************
I do have to question a few things in Susan's obit.  (I am not sure if the obituary was typed incorrectly or if the obit was written incorrectly.) The paragraph states:
 "October 5, 1875, she (Susan) married W.A. Terry" 
Then in the same paragraph it says:
"In 1878 he married Miss Kate Smartt. Following her death, he married her sister Miss Susan Smartt."
See where I am having a problem? How could Susan have married William in 1875 when she married him after the death of her sister who married William in 1878? Not to mention Mary was 5 years in the grave by 1878

*************
I found this on http://www.ancestry.com/.

Arkansas Marriages, 1851 - 1900 about Mary Kate Smart
Name: William A. Terry
Spouse: Mary Kate Smart
Marriage Date: 15 Nov 1871
County: Benton
State: AR


The above marriage information clears up a little bit of the confusion but I still have so many questions.  If you happen to have any more information please feel free to email me.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Last Freed Slave in Benton County

Located at Bentonville Cemetery in Bentonville, AR.
Mary Ann Gilbert
1860 - 1957

Married 68 Years

General C Gilbert
1870 - 1956

According to the Bentonville City web site, Mary Ann Gilbert was the last freed slave in Benton County Arkansas.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Famous File: Sam Walton- Founder of Walmart - A Local Celebrity In Our Mist GYR submission

The most famous local in my area would have to be Sam Walton. 

Samuel Moore "Sam" Walton (March 29, 1918 – April 5, 1992) was a businessman and entrepreneur born in Kingfisher, Oklahoma best known for founding the retailers Wal-Mart and Sam's Club. Sam Walton was born to Thomas Gibson Walton. Walton and Nancy "Nannie" Lee (Lawrence) near Kingfisher, Oklahoma on March 29, 1918.
Samuel Moore Walton
Mar 29, 1918
Apr 5, 1992

Helen Robson Walton
Dec 3, 1919
Apr 19, 2007
Located at Bentonville Memorial Cemetery in Bentonville, AR.

Sam's Obituarty
BENTONVILLE, Ark. -- Samuel Moore Walton's death last week ends an era for Wal-Mart during which the 74-year-old entrepreneurial merchant, one of the nation's premier executives, directly led the business he founded over three decades ago.

Wal-Mart's unique corporate culture, the business principles and methods Walton honed since he opened his first store, a Ben Franklin franchise variety store in 1945, will continue to guide the $44 billion retailer.

S. Robson Walton, Walton's oldest son and a Wal-Mart vice chairman who was named chairman to succeed his father, said that "no changes are expected in the corporate direction, control or policy." A similar assurance came from David Glass, president and chief executive officer.

Walton added that "no family sales of Wal-Mart shares will be necessitated by reason of Mr. Walton's death." The family owns about 38% of the company's stock.

Sam Walton died April 5 at approximately 8 a.m. in the University of Arkansas Medical Science Hospital in Little Rock, Ark. of multiple myeloma, a bone marrow cancer.

Walton battled two different types of cancers. He was first diagnosed in the early '80s with hairy-cell leukemia, which attacks white blood cells and weakens the immune system. Two years ago, multiple myeloma was discovered, but he remained an active participant in Wal-Mart's business until his "health significantly deteriorated over the past three to four months. He died after being hospitalized for a few days," the company told callers in a prerecorded message.

Written up in the New York Times.

Friday, April 30, 2010

My Famous File: James H. Berry


James Henderson Berry (1841–1913)
Fourteenth Governor of Arkansas (1883–1885)
United States Senator (1885-1907)