Schulenburg Sticker
Schulenburg,
Texas
Friday, April 3,
1925
NOTE
: In 1924, a Brownwood newspaper reporter
interviewed the 84 year old William Columbus
Anderson and erroneously
claimed that the Brown County farmer was the
notorious William T. "Bloody Bill" Anderson who
had been killed in Missouri 26 October 1864.
HISTORY
OF ANDERSON BROTHERS IN GRAYSON COUNTY
In the winter of
1863/1864, Bill and Jim Anderson, who rode
with the Quantrill guerrillas, spent the
winter in Grayson County. Bill
Anderson met, and married Miss Bush Smith
3 March 1864, and the marriage license
reads "Lieut. William T. Anderson and Miss
Bush Smith." Bill Anderson returned
to Missouri and was killed 26 October 1864
in a Union ambush. Before he left
Grayson County, there is an unconfirmed
story that Bill hired Francis M.
Richardson to build a house in Sherman for
his bride. After the death of Capt.
William T. "Bloody Bill" Anderson, James
Monroe "Jim" Anderson, brought his two
surviving sisters to Grayson County.
Mary Ellen "Mollie" Anderson
married Alexander V. Doak. Martha
Jane "Mattie" Anderson married Elbridge Geary
"Ebb" Douglas, who later represented
Grayson and Cooke County in Austin.
James
Anderson married Mary Erwin 21 October
1868. They were the parents of
Jimmie Maude Anderson. Jim was
killed in the spring of 1871. There
is an unconfirmed story that George
Shepherd slit his throat on the Grayson
County courthouse lawn, or on the Texas
State Capitol grounds. Jimmie was
born 21 August 1871 a few months after her
father's death.
Mary then married Burrell P. Smith Jr.,
and Mary's sister, Mattie Erwin Maxwell
and husband Theodore raised Jimmie.
Theodore
Maxwell was a merchant in 1870, with a
personal estate of $3,500, and
proprietor of a gin in 1880. The
Maxwell's were married 25 January
1871. Jim Anderson was killed 5
May 1871. Jimmie Maude Anderson
was born 21 August 1871. Mattie
Erwin Maxwell would have been Mary
Erwin Anderson's closest relative for
support, and Mary might have been
living with the Maxwells when Jimmie
Maude Anderson was born. That
would explain the story that Jimmie
Maude Anderson was born in an upstairs
bedroom.
They resided for many years at 1213 East
Cherry Street, and Jimmie inherited the
property, for Mattie and Theodore Maxwell
were childless. Jimmie worked for
many years in a dry goods store in Sherman
before her death in 1966.
Census records in
1900, 1910, and 1920 included street
names, house numbers, number of dwelling
visited, and number of family
visited. The Maxwells lived at
1025 E. Cherry Street in the 1900 and 1910
census. In the 1920 census, Mattie,
a widow, and Jimmie Maude Anderson lived
at 1213 E. Cherry Street. There were
9 in the Maxwell household in 1900,
indicative of a large house; 4 in the
household in 1910; and 2 in the household
in 1920. Thomas Theodore Maxwell,
born in Ohio, served in the Civil
War. According to Mattie's
Confederate pension application, Theodore
served in Col. H. Jackson's Co,
Alexander's Regiment, known as 34th Texas
Cavalry, Dismounted. In the pension
file is a document showing that Jimmie
Maude Anderson was the executor of the
estate of Mattie E. Maxwell.
It appears that
the Maxwell's, who were childless, left
their house at 1213 Cherry Street to
Jimmie Maude Anderson. It also seems
very likely that the Maxwells did not move
from 1025 E. Cherry Street to 1213 E.
Cherry Street. Renumbering
of houses might explain the change in
address.
Information
provided by Rollie Taylor
"Two Bill Andersons Time Line"
The
War of the Rebellion : A Compilation
of the Official Records of the Union
Death
of William T. "Bloody Bill" Anderson
Civil War Talk : Eye
Witness Account of the death of Capt. W.T.
"Bloody Bill" Anderson
My
Great-Great-Grandmother Was Married to an
Outlaw!

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