Friday, March 24, 2023

52 Ancestors Week 12

 

John Foster Collins grave
St. Stephens Episcopal Church Cemetery
Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana






















MEMBERSHIP

My great great grandfather John Foster Collins was a member of the Masons. It says so in his biography in Biographical and Historical Memoirs of Louisiana (Chicago, The Goodspeed Publishing Company, 1892), Vol. 1, p355.

I wrote a little about his family last week. This biography says he was born near Dallas on 13 February 1844. I'm still looking for proof of that. On the 1850, 1860 and 1870 censuses he is listed as born in Missouri. He was the seventh child in a family of fourteen children born to Albert G. Collins and Permelia Foster, both born in Kentucky, who moved to Texas in 1844. I had Albert's middle name as Galvin but most family trees on line and several records have it as Gole. One record has it as Gale. 

The Goodspeed bio says "J. F. Collins had only slight educational advantages, and although he was somewhat mischievous as a youth,  he managed to imbibe a considerable knowledge of the world of books, and was an attendant of the commmon schools until he was about seventeen years of age." I am curious about than "mischievous" description but evidently it wasn't anything bad enough to make the local newspapers.

"Upon the opening of hostilities in 1861 he enlisted [in] the Eighteenth Texas cavalry and in 1862 was captured at Arkansas Post and for six months was kept a prisoner. Upon being exchanged he joined the infantry in Bragg's army and was a participant in the battles of Chickamauga, Missionary Ridge and other promninent engagements. He was transferred to the Western department under General Buckner, as an officer on his staff, and afterward joined his brother's company as a scout, doing duty in the country in which he is now residing [Pointe Coupee Parish], where 'Collins' scouts' became noted for their daring deeds, capturing over 300 federal soldiers."

John's older brother Walter S. Collins (1839-1865) was probably the one mentioned above. He served  in the Texas Cavalry, Company E, Waller's 13th Battalion. He died of disease 22 Mar 1865 in a Prisoner of War Camp and is buried in Woodlawn National Cemetery, Elmira, New York. I posted a photo of his gravestone and a little about him on this blog back on 30 May 2022.  I also posted about his infamous younger brother Joel W. Collins (1848-1877) just last week.

The Goodspeed bio says that after the war John returned to Texas "and farmed and traded in stock for two years, after which he returned to Pointe Coupee Parish, and here has followed planting and merchandising ever since.  He is also handling stock and furnishing supplies for the government work in the improvement of rivers and for steamboat lines that ply the Red and Atchafalaya rivers. In addition to raising and dealing in cattle he also buys and sells mules and horses, his purchasing points being Missouri and Illinois. He has found this business to be quite profitable." 

On 7 June 1865 John married Emma Louise Chalfant of Pointe Coupee, Louisiana. They no doubt met during his time there during the Civil War. They had five children: my great grandmother Anna Belle, Emma Maude, Albert Foster, Charles Foster, and Joseph. His son Charles Foster Collins evidently took after his Uncle Joel and died in a gun fight with L. L. Lemoine at Tilden  Plantation in Avoyelles Parish 8 April 1910.  The bio says that John and Emma's daughters were educated at Brookhaven, Mississippi, son Albert attended Commercial college in New Orleans, and Joseph was in school at Port Gibson, Mississippi.

John Foster owned a lot of land in Louisiana. The bio says "Mr. Collins owns 400 acres of land in Pointe Coupee parish, of which 300 acres are under cultivation, 3,200 acres in Avoyelles parish, 1,700 being under cultivation, and 3,500 acres in Concordia parish, 2,500 being under the plow. He handled last year (1891) about 3,500 bales of cotton and 13,000 bushels of corn. In Avoyelles parish he has 1,500 acres of fine timber land, mostly cypress. He began merchandising in 1872 on a limited scale and has now in operation five stores and is doing a large furnishing business. In his various stores he carries an aggregate stock of $30,000 and does an annual business of about $100,000. He owns  a cotton gin and saw mill and does a warehouse business and handles ten tons of ice weekly. All of this fine property has been acquired since the war, and as it has been obtained through honest business methods he has every reason to be proud of his success. He is of a jovial disposition and extremely hospitable."  

It sounds like he had reason to be jovial!



Friday, March 17, 2023

52 Ancestors Week 11

LUCKY

 


     Finding Joel Collins last week was pure luck. I had been researching my paternal great great grandfather John Foster Collins and his family. I was looking up all of his brothers and sisters...13 of them...on Find a Grave to figure out when the family arrived in Collin County, Texas.  

     When I came to his younger brother, Joel W. Collins, I was in for a big surprise. There was an intriguing photo of Joel with a group of cowboys.

     The basic information said Joel was born 4 December 1848 in Dallas, Dallas County, Texas, and died 26 September 1877 at age 28 in Gove, Gove County, Kansas. Burial details unknown. Specifically: Buried in an unmarked grave in Ellis, Kansas.

      It also said that "Joel Collins, co-leader of the Bass-Collins gang, was shot dead by Sheriff George Bardsley's posse and soldiers at Buffalo Station (now Gove), Kansas, a week after the Big Spring train robbery."  (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/152679484/joel-w-collins)

     Well, THAT called for more research! I soon found a site called Legends of America with a full page on Joel Collins - Cowboy Outlaw of the Black Hills.  (https://www.legendsofamerica.com/we-joelcollins/ ) There was even a book advertised for sale. Of course I ordered it and I'm waiting impatiently for it to arrive.

     What I've learned so far from the Legends of America website is Joel had made four cattle drives from Texas to Kansas. In 1876 he bought several hundred cattle to drive north and signed several promissory notes to pay after the cattle were sold. Joel, Sam Bass and Jack Davis drove the cattle to Ogallala, Nebraska and sold them for $8,000. They then headed north to Deadwood, South Dakota, to look for gold. Arriving in the fall they found mining impossible in the snow and freezing rain. Jack Davis built a brothel and Collins and Bass started a freighting outfit. They spent most of their time playing poker and drinking and soon lost all the money they had  made selling the cattle. Three more men joined them and they started robbing stagecoaches. They became known as the Black Hills Bandits. On September 18, 1877 they robbed the Union Paciifc Railroad at Big Springs, Nebraska, of $60,000 in $20 gold pieces.

     The men divided up  the money and split into three pairs, each heading in a different direction. Joel Collins and Bill Heffridge rode south to Buffalo Station, Kansas. There they were recognized and Sheriff George Bardsley and ten troopers from Fort Hays appproached them for questioning. On the way back to town, Collins pulled his pistol and shouted, "By God! Let's die game!" But their luck had run out and they were killed before they could get off a shot. Their bodies were taken to Ellis, Kansas, where they were identified and buried at the local cemetery.

     Was there another bandit involved? Author and former North Dakota State Trooper Jim Benjaminson wrote about a shootout in Pembina involving William Collins, Joel's brother, who he says participated in the Big Springs robbery.

Friday, March 3, 2023

52 Ancestors Week 9

 Gone Too Soon

As soon as I read this weeks theme I knew I would have to write about my Uncle Sidney.  He was my mother's brother, born on Valentine's Day in 1922 and died on Mother's Day in 1953. 

Sidney James Begue 1922-1953

            

John Louis Begue Sr. Family 1946
Travis, Sidney, Gonzales, John Begue Sr., John Jr., Charles
Florence, Leotha, Sara Gonzales Begue, and Vera
(They were all dressed up for Cousin Carmela's wedding.
Uncle Robert is the only one missing.)


Begue Gravestone
McDonoghville Cemetery, Gretna, Louisiana

He was my favorite uncle. My little brother was named for him. We lived around the corner from Grandma and Grandpa so I spent a lot of time at their house. 

I remember him teaching me and my cousins how to build kites and helping us fly them on the levee.  When we went to Grandma and Grandpa's house in Mississippi he would take us crabbing off the sea wall.

During the war (World War II) Uncle Sidney tried to enlist but his high blood pressure made him ineligible so he joined the Merchant Marines.

Some of my earliest memories are of Uncle Sidney coming over to visit us in his uniform. In the end it was his high blood pressure that killed him. He died of a cerebral hemorrhage on May 10, 1953.

I still miss him.    


Two of the birth dates on the stone are wrong.
Joseph M Gonzales was born in 1883 and 
Mrs. John Gonzales (Great Grandma Gonzales)
was born in 1860.