Whitewright
Sun
published 1930
TEN GRANDPARENTS OF
WHITEWRIGHT BABY ARE STILL LIVING
(Editor's note: The following article was
printed in the Sherman Democrat last
week, and while it has been read by some
of The
Sun's readers, there are hundreds
of others who have not read it, and we
take the liberty of reproducing it.)
WHITEWRIGHT -- Most
future presidents of the United States
have ten little fingers and ten little
toes, but Orbia
Burl Stephens of
Whitewright, aged six months, has in
addition, ten living grandparents--and
he's the only grandbaby in the whole
connection. As timber for
president (probably Independent party) the
grandfathers and grandmothers speak for
him as to what he thinks of present
business conditions. Picking up
fast, he is quoted, and if you doubt him,
look at that smile. Prosperity is
coming back in a hurry, his actions infer,
although he is not ready to announce his
platform as yet, he will soon be able to
make a few suggestions for speeding things
up.
Orbia Burl is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude
Stephens of Whitewright.
His grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. C.S. Blanton of
Whitewright and Mr. and Mrs. John Stephens of
Tom Bean. His great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. B.F.
Blanton, Whitewright;
H.M. Cowan, Shamrock; H.M. Davis, Tom
Bean, and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stephens, Tom
Bean.
TELLS GOOD STORY
Orbia Burl's backers say he has as strong
a constituency as any candidate has ever
had, and his grandparents form a strong
party that will back him to the
limit. One of his favorite stories
will concern his great grandfather, B.F. Blanton,
and how Mr.
Blanton fell in love with a Miss Blanton
who became Mrs. Blanton. It
goes like this. Mr. Blanton, not Mr.
Stephens, speaking: "One day when I was
just a kid back in North Carolina, my
father and I were going to town. On
the way we met a neighbor, who by the way,
had the same name, though not related to
us.
"Father and the neighbor
got out of the wagon and began
talking. In the meantime, I observed
that our neighbor had a daughter. I
had (torn) ... seen her before, but I
liked (torn)... looks, and decided I would
see her again. When I was not
looking at her I could see out of the
corner of my eye that she was looking at
(torn)... We did not say a word, but
it was love at first sight.
"We did not meet again for
some time, but neither of us had
forgotten. Some time later, a county
commissioner offered me a job on his farm
across the river at $10 a month
(torn)... was near father's
place. A few days later I suggested
to the daughter of the house that she
invite Julia
Ann'sJulia Ann over to spend the
evening. She did and with that our
courtship began.
WAR HINDERED WEDDING
"A few months later we were engaged to be
married. Then the war came and I
left to fight for the South. We were
not married until three years of war had
passed, but she waited for me. That
was nearly 65 years ago. "So far as
I know, Mr.
Blanton finishes his story, "we
never have had a fuss. Fusses never
pay, so why have them. We've never
owned an automobile so there's never been
any back seat driving. I think that
helped." This pair of
Orbia Burl's great grandparents left North
Carolina in the fall of 1870 for Texas,
making the trip in a two-horse
wagon. They were eleven weeks on the
road arriving in Whitewright in January
1871. When they left there were
three wagons in the train and when they
arrived there were ten.
BLANTON HOMESTEAD
Mr. Blanton
rented 22 acres on the Routh farm east of
Whitewright near where Ely community is
located. Then after six years he
moved to a farm which became the Blanton
homestead, taking a prairie strip that had
been turned back to the government, and
driving to Sherman to arrange for
homesteading it. He bought it
outright somewhat later and farmed it
successfully until recently when he and Mrs. Blanton
moved into Whitewright.
At the time he took the
land, the north side of what is now
Whitewright was owned by George Blanton, a
cousin of Mrs. B.F. Blanton, and
the eastern side was owned by Henry Sears and George
Gowdy. The
first public building was there, a store
owned by Jim Reeves and Jim Batsell and
was moved from Kentuckytown to a
location where Lilley's dry goods store
now stands.
The Blanton family then are
pioneers in North Texas, and when Orbia
Burl gets ready to make his first
political speech, he can truthfully say
that his sturdy American ancestry goes way
back, and has its roots in the rich soil
of historic Texas, or whatever the beat
presidential candidates will be saying by
1970.