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James
George Thompson House |
James G. Thompson was a pioneer in
Grayson County, Texas in the 1830s, establishing a
ferry at Preston
Bend on the Red River north of Dallas. He
sold horses to the Army
during the period of the Red River War and also to
the Butterfield
State Line which passed through the area.
This book traces his
family history and includes genealogical
information on many families.
It also includes in facsimile of the 1832-33
daybook from his
trading post at Webber's Falls (near the
confluence of the Canadian and
Arkansas Rivers) in eastern Oklahoma.
Thompson House
Built by Judge James
G. Thompson in the early 1840s on the south
bank of the Red River
at Preston Road. In 1942 it was bought by
Ms. Nellie Chambers and
moved east of Denison
to save it from the advancing waters of the newly
formed Lake Texoma.
Upon her death her heirs donated the home to the
Village. It was
moved to its present location and restored in
1986.
The Denison Herald
Sunday, June 4, 1989
section C
Paw Paw Hill: A haven for area history
Nellie Chambers saved houses
by Ken Chambers, Herald staff writer
Historian credit Nellie Blankenship Chambers with
saving 2 essential
pieces of Grayson County history. But
both the James G.
Thompson home and Glen Eden were almost lost again
during a recent
battle over her estate.
In 1942 she purchased the James G. Thompson home
on Preston Bend and
dismantled it. One account has it that she
was almost caught by
the rising waters of new Lake Texoma before she
could get the last
marked load off the site.
Five years later she
rebuilt and restored the log house Paw Paw Hill.
The house
was built in 1830 by James G. Thompson, who
would later become the
first Chief Justice (County Judge) of Grayson
County. A carpenter
and cabinet maker, built the log
frame house, with the help of
his
family and
possibly slaves, using white oak
logs in the
early 1840s on the south bank of the Red
River at Preston Road.
Thompson
locked hand-hewn white oak logs together with
dowel pins to
build the durable structure. The interior
was furnished in solid
walnut. A
wide hall in the center of the house leads to
a back porch with small
rooms on each end. One room served as a
kitchen and the other, Judge
Thompson's office and post office. The hall
gives the home the
impression of a dog trot. It is noted that
perhaps transients along
the Thompson Ferry Road might have slept in
the post office room
without being taken into the family quarters.
Three
fireplaces were made out of solid limestone
which was said to have been
polished to a marble-like finish. Though
dilapidated much of the
craftsmanship in the 2-story, 1,500 square foot
structure is still
evident. It was awarded a state historical
marker in 1968, but
the marker was stolen a few months ago.
Sentiment
ran strongly in favor of moving and restoring
historic Glen Eden on
Preston Bend long before Mrs. Chambers purchased
the house.
Federal Judge Randolph Bryant of Sherman
purchased the building during
work on Lake Texoma and began dismantling it
with the help of County
Judge Jake Loy.
But they are
believed to have abandoned their plans when a
crew sent to demolish the
old Preston Bridge used wood from the house in a
bonfire at their camp.
Mrs. Chambers gathered the remains,
added new pieces, and assembled the top and
bottom stories separately on Paw Paw Hill.
In its
heyday, Glen Eden was considered a "Southern
mansion" and fitting
shelter for Sophia Porter, one of the most
colorful figures in Grayson
County history. Best known as "The Paul
Revere of Preston Bend"
for her legendary journey to warn rebel soldiers
of the approaching
Union army, Sophia's hospitality and friendship
with Sam Houston
assured her place in history.
A judge's
ruling Wednesday ends a battle over the estate
that began when Mrs.
Chambers died in 1986 and makes it possible to
preserve that
history. County Court-at-law Judge Richard
Pennell ruled to allow
the house to be donated to the Grayson County
Frontier Village at Loy
Lake Park.
"This is
wonderful," said Frontier Village Executive
Director Vickie
Hempkins. "I think that some of our homes
(at Frontier Village)
but these are 2 of our finer homes."
Hempkins
hopes that about $7,000 can be raised from
charitable trusts and
existing funds to move the homes to the 17-acre
compound.
Frontier Village currently has 7 restored homes
on its grounds.
Kelsey, Mary Wilson
and Mavis Parrott Kelsey. JAMES GEORGE
THOMPSON, 1803 -1879: CHEROKEE TRADER,
TEXIAN, SECESSIONIST. College Station TX:
Texas A & M University Press, 1988.
First Edition. ISBN: 0961330813. Quarto.
(x), 578 pages. Red cloth with gilt
lettering to front cover, black & gilt
lettering spine label; as issued without
dust jacket. Numerous black & white
illustrations; Bibliography and Index.
Hardcover. New.

Biography
Index
Susan Hawkins
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