Genealogy Kittrell » Thomas Jewett Goree KBNrWmPqBioWikiFgmcOakwdBu 16 (1835-1905)

Persönliche Daten Thomas Jewett Goree KBNrWmPqBioWikiFgmcOakwdBu 16 

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Familie von Thomas Jewett Goree KBNrWmPqBioWikiFgmcOakwdBu 16

Er ist verheiratet mit Elisabeth Thomas Nolley.

Thomas J. Goree and Eliza T. Nolley were married on 25 June 1868 at the Methodist church at Huntsville. [26] Soon thereafter, after selling Raven Hill in January 1869, the couple moved to the nearby hamlet of Midway where he became a merchant and she opened a small school. In the fall of 1873 they returned to Huntsville where Goree resumed the practice of law in partnership with Leonard Abercrombie, former lieutenant colonel of the Fifth Texas Infantry. [27]. That same year Governor Richard Coke appointed Goree to the board of directors of the Texas State Penitentiary at Huntsville, and on 2 April 1877 Governor Richard B. Hubbard appointed him superintendent of the state penitentiary.
In 1881, when Governor Oran M. Roberts consolidated the manangement of all the state penal institutions, he appointed Goree supeintendent of prisons, a title changed to superintendent of penitentiaries in 1883.

Sie haben geheiratet am 25. Juni 1868 in Methodist Church, Huntsville, Walker County, Texas, er war 32 Jahre alt.


Kind(er):

  1. Edward F. Goree  1869-1869
  2. Sue Hayes Goree  1871-1964 
  3. Frank Goree  1872-1879
  4. Robert Edwin Goree  1877-1953


Notizen bei Thomas Jewett Goree KBNrWmPqBioWikiFgmcOakwdBu 16

Biography
Prominent Confederate staff officer in the Civil War & in charge of TX prison system after the War. Son of Dr. Langston James & Sarah Williams (Kittrell) Goree, he attended Howard College & Texas Baptist Educational School (today Baylor) where he recieved a law degree. Lawyer before the War in TX. Attached himself as volunteer aide to Longstreet at 1st Manassas & served with him until Appomattox. Never wounded, though had numerous horses shot from under him & clothing was riddled with bullet holes. His letters were published by UVA in a book called "Longstreet's Aide: The Civil War Letters of Major Thomas J. Goree." After War, Goree returned to Texas in 1865 & took over operations at Raven Hill Plantation near Huntsville; mother had purchased it from Sam Houston in 1858. He married Elizabeth Thomas Nolley, head of Andrew Female College at Huntsville on 06/25/68. They moved to Moffattville Plantation near Midway in Madison Co. In 1873, Goree returned to Huntsville to practice law. Was appointed member of the board of directors of the TX State Prisons. In 1877 Governor Richard B. Hubbard appointed Goree superintendent of the Texas State Penitentiary at Huntsville, a title that was later changed to superintendent of penitentiaries; Goree served 14 years. He survived the Galveston Hurricane of 1900. Died of pneumonia. Fathered five children; grandson, John W. Thomason, became a renowned and famous artist & author.
AnneElise609 added this on 31 Oct 2011
jwilliamward originally submitted this to johnwilliamward <http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/ViewStory.aspx?tid=15156993&oid=4e5b1249-88c0-4e50-a2a4-71c4c919386f> on 3 Apr 2011

Huntsville Genealogy Contribution
Thomas Jewett Goree, born 14 Nov 1835 in Marion, Perry, Alabama, the oldest son of five sons and one daughter born to Dr. Langston James Goree and his second wife, Sarah Williams Kittrell. Thomas came to Texas with his family, arriving in Huntsville Dec 1850.
Thomas attended Baylor College in Independence, staying part of the time in the home of Mrs. Sam Houston. He received the BA Degree at Baylor and later his law degree at Baylor in 1858. He practice law in Montgomery and Houston in partnership with Col. William P. Rogers. From 1861 to 1865, from Manassus to Appomatox, Thomas Goree fought for the south as Aide-de-Camp to General James Longstreet. He returned from the War to take up farming at Raven Hill, the land his mother had bought from Sam Houston in 1858. In Jun 1868, Thomas married Eliza Thomas Nolley, Acting Principal of Andrew Female College, following the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1867, in which the heads of the school, including Martha Ann Otey, Eliza's sister died. In 1869 they moved to Midway, where Thomas engaged in the mercantile business and Eliza "Tommie" organized a school. In 1870, their daughter was born, later to become the wife of John William Thomason, M. D. of Huntsville.
In 1873, Major Goree and his family moved to Huntsville, he as the law partner of Col. L. A. Abercrombie. From 1877 to 1891, under four governors, he was Superintendent of the Texas Prison System. In 1891, he was transferred to Rusk as general agent for the Birmingham Iron Works, upon the failure of which he was appointed in 1893 assistant manager of the Texas Land and Loan Company in Galveston, which post he held until his death in 1905. He is buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Huntsville.
His wife moved back to Huntsville to be near her daughter, grandchildren and many friends. She lived across from the old library and Sam Houston Normal Institue campus where she had great influence over the students until her death in 1929. She is buried in Oakwood Cemetery.
Thomas and Eliza Goree were the parents of 5 children, two of whom lived to adulthood: Sue Hayes Goree, who became the wife of Dr. John William Thomason and Robert Edwin Goree, a Houston attorney, who married Elise McMillan of Aberdeen, Mississippi.
Submitted by Sue Thomason Noordberg

The Handbook of Texas ONLINE

GOREE, THOMAS JEWETT (1835-1905). Thomas Jewett Goree, Confederate officer, attorney, and early prison director and reformer, the son of Dr. Langston James and Sarah Williams (Kittrell) Goree, was born on November 14, 1835, in Marion, Perry County, Alabama. He attended Howard College in Marion. The family moved to Texas in 1850 and settled in Huntsville. In 1853, after his father's death, Thomas Jewett attended Baylor College, then at Independence, where he earned both his academic and his law degree. In 1858 he formed at Montgomery a law partnership with Col. William P. Rogersqv-Rogers, Willie, and Goree; the firm later moved to Houston. In 1861 Goree left his law career and set out for Virginia to join the Confederate Army. On the boat from Galveston to New Orleans, he met Maj. James Longstreet, who had resigned his commission in the United States Army and was also traveling to Virginia to offer his services to the Confederate states. Goree, who was eventually promoted to captain, served as Longstreet's aide-de-camp throughout the war and was involved in almost every battle in which Longstreet's division took part. He was never wounded, though he had several horses shot out from under him, and his clothing was riddled with bullet holes. After Appomattox, Goree accompanied Longstreet home to Alabama. Goree returned to Texas in 1865 and took over operations at the Raven Hill Plantation near Huntsville, which his mother had purchased from Sam and Margaret M. L. Houstonqqv in 1858. He ran the plantation and continued to practice law until 1869.
On June 25, 1868, Goree married Elizabeth Thomas Nolley (see GOREE, ELIZABETH T. N.), who was head of Andrew Female Collegeqv at Huntsville. The couple spent a year at the Raven Hill Plantation and then moved to the Moffattville Plantation near Midway in Madison County. In Midway Goree operated a general mercantile business, Goree and Wakefield, while his wife organized a school. In 1873 the Gorees returned to Huntsville, where he formed a law partnership with Col. Leonard Anderson Abercrombie.qv That year Goree was appointed a member of the board of directors, later board of commissioners, of the Texas State Prisons (see PRISON SYSTEM). In 1877 Governor Richard B. Hubbardqv appointed Goree superintendent of the Texas State Penitentiary at Huntsville,qv a title that was later changed to superintendent of penitentiaries. He served in that position for the next fourteen years. In 1891 he became the general agent for the Birmingham Iron Company, New Birmingham, Texas, and in 1893 he was named assistant general manager of the Texas Land and Loan Company at Galveston. He was in Galveston at the time of the Galveston hurricane of 1900,qv which he mentioned in a letter to his wife the day before the storm struck, as "another Gulf storm, perhaps somewhat heavier than ordinary." Thomas Jewett Goree died of pneumonia in Galveston on March 5, 1905. He and Elizabeth had five children. One grandchild was the noted Texas artist and author John W. Thomason, Jr.qv Thomas J. and Elizabeth Goree are buried in Oakwood Cemetery in Huntsville, Texas. The Goree Unit of the Texas prison system, which houses the Secondary Diagnostic Center, was named in honor of Thomas J. Goree.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Biographical Souvenir of the State of Texas (Chicago: Battey, 1889; rpt., Easley, South Carolina: Southern Historical Press, 1978). D'Anne McAdams Crews, ed., Huntsville and Walker County, Texas: A Bicentennial History (Huntsville, Texas: Sam Houston State University, 1976). Thomas Jewett Goree, Longstreet's Aide: The Civil War Letters of Major Thomas J. Goree, ed. Thomas Cutrer (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1995). Thomas Jewett Goree, The Thomas Jewett Goree Letters, ed. Langston James Goree V (Bryan, Texas: Family History Foundation, 1981). Under Texas Skies, October 1954. Clarence R. Wharton, ed., Texas under Many Flags (5 vols., Chicago: American Historical Society, 1930).
Langston James Goree V and Deborah Bloys Hardin

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Vorfahren (und Nachkommen) von Thomas Jewett Goree

Bryant Kittrell
< 1776-1837
Mary Norman
1776-1870

Thomas Jewett Goree
1835-1905

1868
Frank Goree
1872-1879

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    1. Information from Wayne Clark
    2. Family Search-1880 Census, 1. Januar 2009
      1880
      Household Record 1880 United States Census
      --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Household:
      Name Relation Marital Status Gender Race Age Birthplace Occupation Father's Birthplace Mother's Birthplace
      Thomas J. GOREE Self M Male W 44 AL Supt. State Pentury SC NC
      Eliza T. GOREE Wife M Female W 34 AL Keeping House VA NC
      Sue H. GOREE Dau S Female W 7 TX AL AL
      Herbert T. GOREE Son S Male W 5 TX AL AL
      Robert E. GOREE Son S Male W 3 TX AL AL
      Mary F. NOLLY MotherL W Female W 65 NC At Home --- ---
      Lillian R. OTEY Niece S Female W 20 MS Teacher --- AL
      George OTEY Nephew S Male W 18 MS Clerk In Store --- AL
      Mollie RIVES Other W Female W 24 TX At Home AL AL
      Louisa BRANCH Other W Female W 52 VA Teacher VA VA
      Mary REYNOLDS Other W Female W 25 LA Teacher LA FRA
      Carrie REYNOLDS Other S Female W 8 LA LA LA
      Oscar H. COOPER Other S Male W 26 TX Teacher TN TN
      James HARDISON Other M Male B 50 VA Servant VA VA
      --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Source Information:
      Census Place E.D. 152, Walker, Texas
      Family History Library Film 1255331
      NA Film Number T9-1331
      Page Number 247D
      --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
      An official Web site of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
      © 2008 Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved. Conditions of Use Privacy Policy
    3. Wooodvorwerk, via http://woodvorwerk.com/wood/p2703.htm..., 4. Juli 2010
      Thomas Jewett Goree
      M, b. 14 November 1835, d. 5 March 1905

      Thomas Jewett Goree|b. 14 Nov 1835\nd. 5 Mar 1905|p2703.htm|Langston James Goree|b. 19 Sep 1793\nd. 5 Jul 1853|p2689.htm|Sarah Williams Kittrell|b. 26 Apr 1807\nd. 17 Jun 1903|p2690.htm|John Goree|b. 21 May 1727\nd. c 1807|p2696.htm|Lucy Liles|b. 20 Oct 1748\nd. 15 Feb 1832|p8501.htm|Bryant Kittrell|b. c 1779\nd. 1836|p2691.htm|Mary A. Norman|b. c 1776|p2692.htm|



      Thomas Jewett Goree, 1835-1905•Father: Langston James Goree b. 19 September 1793, d. 5 July 1853
      •Mother: Sarah Williams Kittrell b. 26 April 1807, d. 17 June 1903
      •Thomas Jewett Goree was born on 14 November 1835 in Marion, Perry County, Alabama.
      •He attended Howard College in Marion, Alabama, and after the family moved to Texas received a BA degree in 1856 at Baylor University in Independence (chartered as a Baptist univeristy by the Republic of Texas in 1845). He graduated from law school in Independence in 1858, was admitted to the bar and entered the firm of Robers, Willie and Goree. T. J. Goree was assigned to supervise the Montgomery County office of the firm, while Rogers and Willie kept offices in Houston.
      •Thomas Jewett Goree appeared in the US federal census of 1 June 1860 in Montgomery PO, Montgomery County, Texas, living in the household of Pennsylvania-born teacher J. Goble. He is also enumerated with his mother and siblings in Polk County.
      •He was a lawyer in Montgomery County, according to the 1860 census.
      •Sarah Williams Kittrell appeared in the US federal census of 1 June 1860 in Dayton PO, Polk County, Texas. Other members of the household included Thomas Jewett Goree, Robert Daniel Goree, Langston James Goree Jr., Pleasant Kittrell Goree and Susan Margaret Goree. Thomas Jewett Goree also was enumerated as a lawyer in Montgomery County.
      •On 26 June 1865, in Campbell Courthouse, Virginia, Thomas Jewett Goree wrote in his travel diary: "At the time of Genl. Lee's surrender I was quite unwell and so could not start for Texas with Pleasant and others who were going home. I thought that by the time I was well enough to travel it would be difficult to find company going south and to travel alone in the unsettled state of the country would be too dangerous. So decided to send my horse on the Texas and go to Lynchburg and remain a while and then try to get home via N. York, N. Orleans, Galveston &c. I was encouraged to this, too, by Genl. Longstreet who had decided to go to Texas and proposed this route for himself. The only difficulty in my way was the want of funds, but I thought by some means to overcome this. Col. Powell proposed to me to find his wife who he supposed was in Richmond and take charge of her to Texas. She would furnish fund[s] &c. Afterwards upon enquiry found that previous to surrender she had gone South. I started my horse home by Mr. Duncan who promised to take good care of him and use every exertion to get him there. I hope he will succeed. I did not sell my horse because he was in thin order, because he was too thin in order to bring his worth. Besides he was a fine thoroughbred and I was anxious to get him home because of his fine blood."
      •He married Eliza Thomas Nolley, daughter of Edward Dramgoole Nolley and Mary Frances Nicholas, on 25 June 1868 in Walker County, Texas.
      •Thomas Jewett Goree and Eliza Thomas Nolley appeared in the US federal census of 1 June 1870 in Midway, Madison County, Texas. Other members of the household included Edward F. Goree, Lillian Otey, Edwin King Goree and Pleasant Kittrell Goree.
      •He was a merchant, according to the 1870 census.
      •In 1873 Leonard Anderson Abercrombie entered into a law partnership in Huntsville with Thomas Jewett Goree.
      •During his tenure as superintendent of the State Penitentiary in Huntsville from 1878 to 1891, Thomas Goree Thomas Goree established weekly worship services, initiated night classes that offered the rudiments of a basic education, and set up a library of several thousand volumes.
      •Thomas Jewett Goree and Eliza Thomas Nolley appeared in the US federal census of 1 June 1880 in Walker County, Texas, and widow Mollie Rives [Reeves?], age 24, unidentified.. Other members of the household included Sue Hayes Goree, Hubert T. Goree, Robert E. Goree, Lillian Otey and George Nolley Otey.
      •He was superintendent of the State Penitentiary, according to the 1880 census.
      •Thomas Jewett Goree and Eliza Thomas Nolley appeared in the US federal census of 1 June 1900 in Galveston, Texas, at 7404 Avenue "I" Robert A. Rogers, a boarder.
      •He was assistant manager, Texas Land & Loan Company, according to the 900 census.
      •Thomas Jewett Goree died on 5 March 1905 at age 69 in Galveston, Texas.
      •The following appeared on 6 March 1905 in the Galveston Daily News: Maj. Thomas J. Goree died at 2:10 o'clock yesterday morning and the remains were shipped on the 2 p.m. International & Great Norther train to Huntsville, where the funeral services will be held tomorrow afternoon. The following from the friends of the deceased acted as pallbearers: Messers. J. P. Alvey, R. Waverley Smith, D. B. Henderson, John Sealy, Fred Pabst, E. R. Cheesborough, Manco Stewart, W. A. R Rogers, Walter Hunscom, H. M. Knight and Lewis Fisher. Many of the friends of the family followed the remains to the depot. Maj. Goree was about 70 years of age and is survived by a widow and two children, Mrs. Dr. Thompson of Huntsville and Mr. Robert Goree of Waco, Tex., and also by a large number of relatives throughout Texas. The deceased was on Longstreet's staff throughout the war between the States, and remained at his post of duty until the end of the struggle and was the very last man to leave that command after the surrender at Appamattox, and in all those long years there were no two men who were bound together with closer ties of friendship than were those old soldiers -- Longstreet and Goree. . . . Maj. Goree was born in Perry County, Alabama, Nov. 14, 1835. His parents came to Texas in 1850 and settled near Huntsville and he was rearedin Walker and contiguous counties. He was educated at Baylor University and entered upon the practice of law, which he continued until the war began in 1861, when he went to Virginia and was at once appointed to a position on the staff of Gen. Longstreet, as stated above. In 1873 he returned to the practice of his profession and continued it until his appointment in 1877 as Superintendent of State Penitentiaries, which position he filled with rare efficiency. A stern adn uncompromising Integrity, combined with grat executive ability and a spirit of humanity admirably fitted him for the position in which he won a reputation as a prison manager co-extensive with the Nation. In 1893 he was appointed assistant manager of the Texas Land and Loan Company of this city, which position he held at the time of his death. He was a man who made and held friends, and his character was so spotless and his integrity so much a proverb that he had the perfect confidence of his fellow men to a degree rarely surpassed. The death of Maj. Goree is a loss to this community and State.
      •Biog-Memo:
      •For additional biographical information, see The Texas Handbook Online.
      •And for a description of the Steamboat House at Buena Vista, The Texas Handbook Online.
      •Last Edited: 20 May 2012
      Family: Eliza Thomas Nolley b. 11 November 1845, d. 1929
      ◦Edward F. Goree b. circa 1869, d. between 1870 and 1880
      ◦Sue Hayes Goree+ b. October 1871
      ◦Hubert T. Goree b. circa 1875
      ◦Robert E. Goree b. June 1878
      Close

      Compilers: Elsa Vorwerk & Bill Wood, Georgetown, Texas
      Page created by John Cardinal's Second Site v4.2.2.
      Based on a design by growldesign
    4. Web page at:, via http://tjgoree.blogspot.com/..., 14. August 2011
      Introduction
      As a young Texan in the Confederate Army, Thomas Jewett Goree quickly climbed the ranks of Confederate brass. He was a personal aide and close friend to General James Longstreet, and he was involved in every major engagement of the Civil War that included Longstreet’s Command, from the First Battle of Bull Run to General Lee’s surrender at Appomattox. During the Civil War, Goree wrote several letters to his family members and close friends. These personal letters gave insight on the politics of the Civil War era, skirmishes and major battles, Confederate troop conditions and morale, the issue of slavery, and Goree’s personal and family affairs.

      Background
      Thomas Jewett Goree was born to Dr. Langston James Goree and Sarah Williams Kittrell Goree on November 14, 1835 in Marion, Alabama. He was the eldest of their six surviving children. When he was fifteen years old, Thomas, who was also referred to simply as T.J., moved with his family to Huntsville, Texas. [1] T.J. had only lived in Texas for three years when his father passed away. As the eldest male of his household, Thomas assumed the fatherly role of the family.

      In 1853, after his father’s death, T.J. attended Baylor College, which was then located at Independence, Texas. There he earned a baccalaureate degree, or in today’s standards, a law degree. By 1858, at the young age of twenty-three, Thomas formed a law partnership with Colonel William P. Rogers. [2]

      Before the War
      In 1861, at the beginning of the Civil War, T.J. left everything behind to join the Confederate Army. He began his military career in the summer of 1861 when he volunteered as a Texas Ranger. [3] On a ship headed from Galveston to Virginia, Thomas met James Longstreet, who had just resigned from the U.S. Army. From this point on, the two became close friends, and T.J. fought in many battles alongside the renowned Confederate general.

      Although T.J. had lived in Huntsville only ten years before the Civil War began, Texas was the place he called home. When he was away fighting the war for the Southern cause, he often pleaded to his mother and other family members to write him often and to include news of Texas. “Any letter from Texas, no matter how short, or on what subject, always affords me much pleasure and satisfaction.” [4] His love for Texas did not stagger throughout the entirety of the conflict. In a late-war letter to his sister, Thomas wrote, “Although I have been away from home nearly 3 ½ years, I have lost none of my interest in it.” [5]

      T.J. was a firm believer in the Southern states’ right to secession, and he was willing to fight for his newly-formed country. “I advocated Secession, believing that we would have to fight to sustain it. I am ready to do it, and more than willing.” [6] Even in the face of death, T.J. was firm in his belief and was willing to give his own life for his country. In a letter to his only sister, T.J. wrote, “I know that I love life & the pleasures of it as well as anyone, but I feel, or pray I feel, willing if necessary to sacrifice it for the good of my country.” [7] These sentiments did not falter even in the later stages of the war. In a late-war letter, T. J. wrote to his younger brother, “It is better to die than be subjugated, and I for one am ready and willing to fight to the bitter end.” [8] These letters showed that Thomas was ground in his beliefs and principles, and that he never wavered from them throughout the entirety of the Civil War.

      Early Battles
      Thomas often wrote his mother during the build-up to the United States’ official declaration of war against the Confederate States of America. “The U.S. government is preparing for war… a protest has been sent to the European govts. against the Confederate States.” [9] T.J. wrote this letter on April 7, 1861, five days before the Confederate siege of Fort Sumter. T.J. also wrote his mother a day before the First Battle of Bull Run, or as known in the South as First Manassas, the first major battle of the Civil War. He explained that he had only previously been engaged in a single skirmish, and that this would be the first major battle that he would participate in. A few days before this battle, General Longstreet had made Goree an official aide and promoted him the rank of Captain. T.J. wrote that he was fatigued in the face of the upcoming battle and explained to his mother that he “[had] not had a chance to wash [his] face for more than three days.” [10] He also confessed to his mother that he very well could be killed in this battle, albeit for a “glorious cause.”

      When the Civil War began, T.J. was a young man of the age of twenty-five. He was eager for battle, and quick to engage the enemy. In an early letter to his mother dated June, 15 1861, he wrote, “I think that we will get there in time to have a hand in the pie – at least I hope so.” [11] Furthermore, Thomas seemed disappointed when he did not take part in a battle. During the bloody Battle of Chicamauga, he raced to the battlefield but “only reached the field just as the battle closed.” [12] In yet another letter to his mother, he described another skirmish in which he took part. “I went on ahead with one man, & coming up very near the enemy’s rear guard, we captured two Yankees with their horses and equipments. We each took a horse.” [13]

      During the initial phases of the Civil War, the South won several major engagements against the armies of the North. These victories boosted the Confederate soldiers’ confidence and greatly elevated their morale. At this point in the war, Thomas held a condescending view of Union soldiers. “We have thought that the Yankees would always take to their heels after firing a few rounds.” [14] In 1862, however, less than a year after the war began, Thomas had a more realistic understanding of the enemy soldiers. “Our foes are not such cowards as we have heretofore taken them for, [and] our forces are not the invincible heroes which we have though them to be.” [15]

      Battlefield Conditions
      Many of the words T.J. devoted to his letters described the conditions of the Confederate soldiers on the battlefield. He wrote on how the soldiers’ morale was affected by victory and defeat. The first two months of 1962 saw several devastating defeats for the South. The most notable of these was the Battle of Fort Donelson, where an entire Confederate army surrendered to Union General Ulysses S. Grant. In another letter to his Uncle Pleas, Thomas wrote about the morale of the soldiers after hearing of the defeat. “[I] felt so low in spirit and despondent from the bad news that has been pouring in upon us.” [16] T.J. also gave details on the physical condition of his soldiers as well as other units before and during battles. “The men were all badly clad when we went into winter quarters, and many thousand were barefooted.” [17] Thomas also described how the climate and seasons greatly affected the soldiers’ performance and ability to make war. “Wet weather, several snows & sleets… makes it very severe on the men.” [18] In another letter to his mother, T.J. explained how physically difficult it was to simply write to her because of the extreme winter cold.

      In his letters, Thomas described the emotional conditions of commanding officers and generals, especially those that were closest to him. He wrote to his mother about a horrific series of events involving General Longstreet. “Three children within one week [died due to scarlet fever]. The General is very low spirited. He has only one child left.” [19] This in no doubt affected Longstreet’s ability as a commanding general. In a later letter, Thomas described how the General’s right arm had been paralyzed as a result of a being hit by a bullet. Longstreet’s condition did not allow him to serve as an active general for several months. He also wrote of a Confederate officer who longed for death after witnessing his own men being slaughtered at the hands of the Union army. “He told me that at one time when he saw how fast they were falling around him, he stopped and prayed God to send a bullet through his heart.” [20]

      Late Battles
      As the Union armies saw more and more victories, Thomas described the effects of the Union advance. In one letter, he apologized to mother if she had not been receiving letters from him regularly. “Our mail communications were interrupted by the Enemy, and we had very little intercourse with the outside world.” [21] In the same letter, he described a battle in which his soldiers were under severe battlefield conditions. “We were cut off from all communication from any direction. Could not get shoes, clothing, or provisions fro the men except what we gathered up in the surrounding country. The consequence was that the suffering was very great.” [22] The effects of continued warfare also had its toll on the Southern economy, and the Confederate soldiers suffered because of it. In the South, food and supplies had become scarce and inflation was extremely high. “I managed thus far to get along somehow or other on my pay, but it is hard work, the prices of everything to eat and wear being so enormously high. My pay, $235. per month in Confederate scrip is only about equal to $7.00 in gold.” [23]

      But not all was melancholy in Thomas’ letters. T.J. often described in detail battles in which the South had achieved victory. An example of this was a letter to his mother concerning the Battle of Dandridge. He gave detailed accounts of troop conditions, troop movements, and the outcome of the battle. “But Longstreet (instead of retreating as they expected) marched down to meet them, and after a very light skirmish he got them on the run.” [24] In an earlier letter, he mocked Union General McClellan about his battlefield position. “McClellan knows that he can never attack us successfully here, and it is very unlikely that he will attempt a flank movement.” [25]

      By the winter of 1864, Union General William T. Sherman had begun his infamous “March to the Sea” campaign. “Sherman has succeeded in marching through from Atlanta to the Atlantic coast near Savannah, and I feel in constant dread of hearing of the fall of that city.” [26] At this point, the Confederate army had been on the defensive for well over a year. But this did stop Thomas of writing with hopes for a Southern victory. “Our troops are good and our fortifications are strong, and Grant will find it an exceedingly difficult matter to overcome them.” [27] But Southern victory was never achieved. On April 9, 1865, General Lee surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant after the battle of Appomattox Courthouse village in Virginia, an engagement in which Thomas took part. Lee’s surrender effectively ended the American Civil War.

      Important Issues
      T.J. often mocked and spoke poorly of Union soldiers and generals, but he had even harsher words for lackluster Confederate generals and even Confederate President Davis himself. “Mr. Davis is undoubtedly a great man, but he has his faults, his whims, and his unbounded prejudices. I have nearly lost all the admiration I ever had for him as an honest man and a patriot.” [28] Furthermore, in a letter to his Uncle Pleasant, T.J. denounced the appointment of an unfit Southern general. “I believe Genl. C[rittenden] to be a brave and a true man, but he has not the ability such as I think requisite for a Major General.” [29] He would not do so out of spite, however, but would rather write about prominent Southern leaders in a frank yet honest manner.

      Thomas also believed that all Southern men should stand up for the Confederate cause. He scolded those who would not fight or otherwise acted as cowards. “Shame upon the men who have gone to Texas for easy service, and have deserted their brave comrades here.” [30] In addition, he felt that all the men of the South should stand up and fight against Northern oppression anyway they could. “If a man cannot get a gun, he should arm himself with a tomahawk, pike or anything with which he can kill the invader.” [31]

      Thomas’ letters shed light on more pressing matters of the day. The most important of these was the subject of slavery. There are very few references on the matters of race in T.J.’s letters, but in one letter to his sister, Thomas spoke briefly yet intensely about the use of slaves during the war. “And if needs be, I say put the negroes in the ranks and make soldiers of them – fight negro with negro.” [32] Thomas was willing to free Southern slaves in order to keep the South free from Northern oppression. “We had better even free the negroes to gain our own independence than be subjugated and lose slaves, liberty and all that makes life dear.” [33]


      T.J. (sitting at bottom right), with his younger brothers and sister
      Family Affairs
      Thomas’ brothers Edwin and Langston were enlisted in other divisions in the Confederate Army, and his youngest brothers Robert and Pleasant, also known as “Scrap,” enlisted in the later years of the war. He would often write his mother concerning the conditions of his brothers. “They are fine specimens of good soldiers. You may all fell proud of them.” [34] In a letter of acknowledgement for Lang, T.J. wrote, “The 4th Texas captured a Yankee regiment and Lang had the honor of demanding the surrender & receiving the swords from on of the field officers & a captain, also the sword & flag from the color bearer.” [35] Furthermore, as the elder sibling, T.J. showed extreme care and selflessness concerning his brothers. He often gave them supplies and money at a great deal of sacrifice of his own well-being. In a letter to his mother, Thomas wrote, “I used none of [the money you sent] myself… as we thought it better to keep it and purchase Scrap a horse.” [36] When Thomas would find leave to visit his brothers, he would often give them several pairs of socks and other small supplies, with nothing to spare for himself.

      One dramatic episode concerning Edwin transpired in the summer of 1864. Ed had been shot just under the knee, and the complications stemming from this wound put him in a critical state of health. As the eldest brother, Thomas felt that it was his duty to be the one to break the news to their mother that Ed was close to death. “It is unnecessary, my Dear Mother, to conceal from you the fact that Ed is in a very critical condition.” [37] In a letter to his Uncle Pleas, T.J. wrote that it was the surgeons’ professional opinion that Edwin had a small chance of surviving no matter what medical procedure was imposed on him. Furthermore, the decision would be left to Thomas himself to decide on amputation or another course of action. In addition, as Ed’s father figure, Thomas felt it necessary to speak with him about the probability of death. “He feels very deeply on the subject [of dying], and seems to put his trust in Christ, though his mind is not yet clear on the subject.” [38] Despair set in as T.J. wrote to his uncle about his brother’s condition, stating that “there is hardly room for hope.” [39]

      But “Providence” as T.J. referred to it, was on their side. After weeks of painful operations and months of being bed-ridden, Edwin began to show signs of recovery. “At one time the surgeons all thought there was no possible chance for his recovery, but close, careful attention and good nursing saved him.” [40] Ed made a slow but steady recovery. The bed sores which had caused him so much pain while on his hospital bed began to close up. “He had a great many abscesses on his leg, all of which he says have healed.” [41] By the end of that year, Ed’s wounds had all but healed up, and he was well on his way to a full recovery.

      Interesting Facts
      T.J.’s letters also reveal less important yet interesting facts about his personal life. One, namely, was Thomas’ fondness for his favorite horse, Bullet. He had ridden into battle with Bullet since the Second Battle of Bull Run, or Second Manassas. Sometime in the fall season of 1863, his faithful steed was stolen away from him, and T.J. was forced to ride a horse loaned to him by the Confederate government for the next eight months. But the two would soon be reunited. “[My old horse Bullet] was stolen from me about the 1st last September, and I never expected to see him again, but much to my surprise & joy, I found him on the 4th day of May last.” [42] And luckily for T.J., Bullet had not gone completely blind. More battles were yet in store for the two!

      Thomas performed his duty well as a Confederate soldier, and he often put himself in the line of fire. Little did he know that not only would he survive the war, but he would do so without being struck by a single bullet. In another letter to his mother, Thomas recalled the bloody Seven Days Battles of 1862. “I was far more exposed than I have ever been before, but neither myself nor horse was struck.” [43] Often after a battle, “his clothing was riddled with bullet holes.” [44] Those around him, however, were not so lucky. Throughout the war, several of his horses were shot while he was riding them, and even General Longstreet was injured more than his trusty aide.


      T.J.'s wife, Eliza
      After the War
      After the war, T.J. went back home to Texas, where he oversaw the Raven Hill Plantation near Huntsville. His mother had purchased the plantation in 1858 from no other than the great Sam Houston himself. On June 25, 1868, Thomas married Elizabeth Thomas Nolley, who was the acting principal of Andrew Female College at Huntsville. In 1873, T.J. formed another law partnership with Colonel Leonard A. Abercrombie. Most notably, Thomas was appointed the Superintendent of the Texas Prisons in 1877, a title that would later be called the Superintendent of Penitentiaries. [45] He held this position for fourteen years. T.J. later moved to Galveston, where he survived the devastating Hurricane of 1900. On March 5, 1905, Thomas Jewett Goree died of pneumonia at the age of 69 in Galveston, Texas. [46]


      Aftermath of the devastating Hurricane of 1900
      Conclusion
      The last known letter written by Thomas during the Civil War was dated December 18, 1864. The next available piece of writing is his travel diary, which was dated on June 26, 1865. However, this travel diary holds little relevance to the events that transpired during the war. In 1864, Thomas had only written eleven personal letters, and there is no record of any wartime letters written by him in 1865. This is in stark contrast to the dozens of letters written in the first three years of the war. Perhaps it was the Union army intercepting Confederate mail couriers more and more with each victory. Perhaps Thomas had begun to lose the will to write in the face of the Union advance. Perhaps he was constantly needed on the battlefield and did not have the time to write. The reasons for this remain unknown, but one fact is certain: the stories of the Civil War as seen through the eyes of one man, revealed to us by his personal letters, will continue to provide insight and depth on the issues and events of American Civil War.

      Notes
      [1] Langston Goree. “Goree, Thomas Jewett Family.” In Walker County, Texas: A History. (Dallas, Curtis Media Corporation, 1986), 409-10.
      [2] Ibid.
      [3] Longstreet’s Command Living History Association. “Thomas Jewett Goree,” http://www.longstreetscommand.org/Goree.html
      [4] Thomas Cutrer. Longstreet’s Aide: The Civil War Letters of Major Thomas J. Goree. (Charlottesville, Virginia: University Press of Virginia, 1995), 74.
      [5] Ibid., 138
      [6] Ibid., 15
      [7] Ibid., 76
      [8] Ibid., 141
      [9] Ibid., 15
      [10] Ibid., 23
      [11] Ibid., 16
      [12] Ibid., 112
      [13] Ibid., 124
      [14] Ibid., 73
      [15] Ibid.
      [16] Ibid., 73
      [17] Ibid., 116
      [18] Ibid., 72
      [19] Ibid.
      [20] Ibid., 95
      [21] Ibid., 114
      [22] Ibid., 116
      [23] Ibid.
      [24] Ibid., 117
      [25] Langston Goree. The Thomas Jewett Goree Letters, Vol. 1: The Civil War Correspondence (Bryan, Texas: Family History Foundation, 1981), 140.
      [26] Thomas Cutrer. Longstreet’s Aide: The Civil War Letters of Major Thomas J. Goree. (Charlottesville, Virginia: University Press of Virginia, 1995), 140
      [27] Ibid., 137
      [28] Ibid., 67
      [29] Ibid., 73
      [30] Ibid., 117
      [31] Ibid., 76
      [32] Ibid., 137
      [33] Ibid.
      [34] Ibid., 71
      [35] Ibid., 97
      [36] Ibid., 116
      [37] Ibid., 127
      [38] Ibid., 128
      [39] Ibid., 129
      [40] Ibid., 139
      [41] Ibid., 139
      [42] Ibid., 124
      [43] Ibid., 97
      [44] The Handbook of Texas Online. “Goree, Thomas Jewett.” TSHA Online,http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/GG/fgo17.html
      [45] Jerry Phillips. “Thomas Jewett Goree As a Witness to the Controversy Surrounding Pickett’s Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg.” (Huntsville, TX: Sam Houston State University,1993), 72.
      [46] The Handbook of Texas Online. “Goree, Thomas Jewett.” TSHA Online,
      http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/GG/fgo17.html.
      .html.

      Bibliography
      Primary Sources:
      Cutrer, Thomas. Longstreet’s Aide: The Civil War Letters of Major Thomas J. Goree. Charlottesville, Virginia: University Press of Virginia, 1995.
      Goree, Langston. The Thomas Jewett Goree Letters, Vol. 1: The Civil War Correspondence. Bryan, Texas: Family History Foundation, 1981.

      Secondary Sources:
      Goree, Langston. “Goree, Thomas Jewett Family.” In Walker County History, 409-410. Dallas: Curtis Media Corporation, 1986.
      The Handbook of Texas. “Goree, Thomas Jewett.” TSHA Online. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/GG/fgo17.html. (accessed November 20, 2009).
      Longstreet’s Command. “Thomas Jewett Goree.” Longstreet’s Command Living History Association. http://www.longstreetscommand.org/Goree.html. (accessed November 20, 2009).
      Phillips, Jerry K. “Thomas Jewett Goree As a Witness to the Controversy Surrounding Pickett’s Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg.” Huntsville, TX: Sam Houston State University, 1993.





      Thursday, December 10, 2009
      Posted by Pachica_HIS388 at 12:02 PM 0 comments
    5. U.S. Census, 1880, U. S. Census Bureau, 21. Juni 2011
      Introduction
      As a young Texan in the Confederate Army, Thomas Jewett Goree quickly climbed the ranks of Confederate brass. He was a personal aide and close friend to General James Longstreet, and he was involved in every major engagement of the Civil War that included Longstreet’s Command, from the First Battle of Bull Run to General Lee’s surrender at Appomattox. During the Civil War, Goree wrote several letters to his family members and close friends. These personal letters gave insight on the politics of the Civil War era, skirmishes and major battles, Confederate troop conditions and morale, the issue of slavery, and Goree’s personal and family affairs.

      Background
      Thomas Jewett Goree was born to Dr. Langston James Goree and Sarah Williams Kittrell Goree on November 14, 1835 in Marion, Alabama. He was the eldest of their six surviving children. When he was fifteen years old, Thomas, who was also referred to simply as T.J., moved with his family to Huntsville, Texas. [1] T.J. had only lived in Texas for three years when his father passed away. As the eldest male of his household, Thomas assumed the fatherly role of the family.

      In 1853, after his father’s death, T.J. attended Baylor College, which was then located at Independence, Texas. There he earned a baccalaureate degree, or in today’s standards, a law degree. By 1858, at the young age of twenty-three, Thomas formed a law partnership with Colonel William P. Rogers. [2]

      Before the War
      In 1861, at the beginning of the Civil War, T.J. left everything behind to join the Confederate Army. He began his military career in the summer of 1861 when he volunteered as a Texas Ranger. [3] On a ship headed from Galveston to Virginia, Thomas met James Longstreet, who had just resigned from the U.S. Army. From this point on, the two became close friends, and T.J. fought in many battles alongside the renowned Confederate general.

      Although T.J. had lived in Huntsville only ten years before the Civil War began, Texas was the place he called home. When he was away fighting the war for the Southern cause, he often pleaded to his mother and other family members to write him often and to include news of Texas. “Any letter from Texas, no matter how short, or on what subject, always affords me much pleasure and satisfaction.” [4] His love for Texas did not stagger throughout the entirety of the conflict. In a late-war letter to his sister, Thomas wrote, “Although I have been away from home nearly 3 ½ years, I have lost none of my interest in it.” [5]

      T.J. was a firm believer in the Southern states’ right to secession, and he was willing to fight for his newly-formed country. “I advocated Secession, believing that we would have to fight to sustain it. I am ready to do it, and more than willing.” [6] Even in the face of death, T.J. was firm in his belief and was willing to give his own life for his country. In a letter to his only sister, T.J. wrote, “I know that I love life & the pleasures of it as well as anyone, but I feel, or pray I feel, willing if necessary to sacrifice it for the good of my country.” [7] These sentiments did not falter even in the later stages of the war. In a late-war letter, T. J. wrote to his younger brother, “It is better to die than be subjugated, and I for one am ready and willing to fight to the bitter end.” [8] These letters showed that Thomas was ground in his beliefs and principles, and that he never wavered from them throughout the entirety of the Civil War.

      Early Battles
      Thomas often wrote his mother during the build-up to the United States’ official declaration of war against the Confederate States of America. “The U.S. government is preparing for war… a protest has been sent to the European govts. against the Confederate States.” [9] T.J. wrote this letter on April 7, 1861, five days before the Confederate siege of Fort Sumter. T.J. also wrote his mother a day before the First Battle of Bull Run, or as known in the South as First Manassas, the first major battle of the Civil War. He explained that he had only previously been engaged in a single skirmish, and that this would be the first major battle that he would participate in. A few days before this battle, General Longstreet had made Goree an official aide and promoted him the rank of Captain. T.J. wrote that he was fatigued in the face of the upcoming battle and explained to his mother that he “[had] not had a chance to wash [his] face for more than three days.” [10] He also confessed to his mother that he very well could be killed in this battle, albeit for a “glorious cause.”

      When the Civil War began, T.J. was a young man of the age of twenty-five. He was eager for battle, and quick to engage the enemy. In an early letter to his mother dated June, 15 1861, he wrote, “I think that we will get there in time to have a hand in the pie – at least I hope so.” [11] Furthermore, Thomas seemed disappointed when he did not take part in a battle. During the bloody Battle of Chicamauga, he raced to the battlefield but “only reached the field just as the battle closed.” [12] In yet another letter to his mother, he described another skirmish in which he took part. “I went on ahead with one man, & coming up very near the enemy’s rear guard, we captured two Yankees with their horses and equipments. We each took a horse.” [13]

      During the initial phases of the Civil War, the South won several major engagements against the armies of the North. These victories boosted the Confederate soldiers’ confidence and greatly elevated their morale. At this point in the war, Thomas held a condescending view of Union soldiers. “We have thought that the Yankees would always take to their heels after firing a few rounds.” [14] In 1862, however, less than a year after the war began, Thomas had a more realistic understanding of the enemy soldiers. “Our foes are not such cowards as we have heretofore taken them for, [and] our forces are not the invincible heroes which we have though them to be.” [15]

      Battlefield Conditions
      Many of the words T.J. devoted to his letters described the conditions of the Confederate soldiers on the battlefield. He wrote on how the soldiers’ morale was affected by victory and defeat. The first two months of 1962 saw several devastating defeats for the South. The most notable of these was the Battle of Fort Donelson, where an entire Confederate army surrendered to Union General Ulysses S. Grant. In another letter to his Uncle Pleas, Thomas wrote about the morale of the soldiers after hearing of the defeat. “[I] felt so low in spirit and despondent from the bad news that has been pouring in upon us.” [16] T.J. also gave details on the physical condition of his soldiers as well as other units before and during battles. “The men were all badly clad when we went into winter quarters, and many thousand were barefooted.” [17] Thomas also described how the climate and seasons greatly affected the soldiers’ performance and ability to make war. “Wet weather, several snows & sleets… makes it very severe on the men.” [18] In another letter to his mother, T.J. explained how physically difficult it was to simply write to her because of the extreme winter cold.

      In his letters, Thomas described the emotional conditions of commanding officers and generals, especially those that were closest to him. He wrote to his mother about a horrific series of events involving General Longstreet. “Three children within one week [died due to scarlet fever]. The General is very low spirited. He has only one child left.” [19] This in no doubt affected Longstreet’s ability as a commanding general. In a later letter, Thomas described how the General’s right arm had been paralyzed as a result of a being hit by a bullet. Longstreet’s condition did not allow him to serve as an active general for several months. He also wrote of a Confederate officer who longed for death after witnessing his own men being slaughtered at the hands of the Union army. “He told me that at one time when he saw how fast they were falling around him, he stopped and prayed God to send a bullet through his heart.” [20]

      Late Battles
      As the Union armies saw more and more victories, Thomas described the effects of the Union advance. In one letter, he apologized to mother if she had not been receiving letters from him regularly. “Our mail communications were interrupted by the Enemy, and we had very little intercourse with the outside world.” [21] In the same letter, he described a battle in which his soldiers were under severe battlefield conditions. “We were cut off from all communication from any direction. Could not get shoes, clothing, or provisions fro the men except what we gathered up in the surrounding country. The consequence was that the suffering was very great.” [22] The effects of continued warfare also had its toll on the Southern economy, and the Confederate soldiers suffered because of it. In the South, food and supplies had become scarce and inflation was extremely high. “I managed thus far to get along somehow or other on my pay, but it is hard work, the prices of everything to eat and wear being so enormously high. My pay, $235. per month in Confederate scrip is only about equal to $7.00 in gold.” [23]

      But not all was melancholy in Thomas’ letters. T.J. often described in detail battles in which the South had achieved victory. An example of this was a letter to his mother concerning the Battle of Dandridge. He gave detailed accounts of troop conditions, troop movements, and the outcome of the battle. “But Longstreet (instead of retreating as they expected) marched down to meet them, and after a very light skirmish he got them on the run.” [24] In an earlier letter, he mocked Union General McClellan about his battlefield position. “McClellan knows that he can never attack us successfully here, and it is very unlikely that he will attempt a flank movement.” [25]

      By the winter of 1864, Union General William T. Sherman had begun his infamous “March to the Sea” campaign. “Sherman has succeeded in marching through from Atlanta to the Atlantic coast near Savannah, and I feel in constant dread of hearing of the fall of that city.” [26] At this point, the Confederate army had been on the defensive for well over a year. But this did stop Thomas of writing with hopes for a Southern victory. “Our troops are good and our fortifications are strong, and Grant will find it an exceedingly difficult matter to overcome them.” [27] But Southern victory was never achieved. On April 9, 1865, General Lee surrendered to Ulysses S. Grant after the battle of Appomattox Courthouse village in Virginia, an engagement in which Thomas took part. Lee’s surrender effectively ended the American Civil War.

      Important Issues
      T.J. often mocked and spoke poorly of Union soldiers and generals, but he had even harsher words for lackluster Confederate generals and even Confederate President Davis himself. “Mr. Davis is undoubtedly a great man, but he has his faults, his whims, and his unbounded prejudices. I have nearly lost all the admiration I ever had for him as an honest man and a patriot.” [28] Furthermore, in a letter to his Uncle Pleasant, T.J. denounced the appointment of an unfit Southern general. “I believe Genl. C[rittenden] to be a brave and a true man, but he has not the ability such as I think requisite for a Major General.” [29] He would not do so out of spite, however, but would rather write about prominent Southern leaders in a frank yet honest manner.

      Thomas also believed that all Southern men should stand up for the Confederate cause. He scolded those who would not fight or otherwise acted as cowards. “Shame upon the men who have gone to Texas for easy service, and have deserted their brave comrades here.” [30] In addition, he felt that all the men of the South should stand up and fight against Northern oppression anyway they could. “If a man cannot get a gun, he should arm himself with a tomahawk, pike or anything with which he can kill the invader.” [31]

      Thomas’ letters shed light on more pressing matters of the day. The most important of these was the subject of slavery. There are very few references on the matters of race in T.J.’s letters, but in one letter to his sister, Thomas spoke briefly yet intensely about the use of slaves during the war. “And if needs be, I say put the negroes in the ranks and make soldiers of them – fight negro with negro.” [32] Thomas was willing to free Southern slaves in order to keep the South free from Northern oppression. “We had better even free the negroes to gain our own independence than be subjugated and lose slaves, liberty and all that makes life dear.” [33]


      T.J. (sitting at bottom right), with his younger brothers and sister
      Family Affairs
      Thomas’ brothers Edwin and Langston were enlisted in other divisions in the Confederate Army, and his youngest brothers Robert and Pleasant, also known as “Scrap,” enlisted in the later years of the war. He would often write his mother concerning the conditions of his brothers. “They are fine specimens of good soldiers. You may all fell proud of them.” [34] In a letter of acknowledgement for Lang, T.J. wrote, “The 4th Texas captured a Yankee regiment and Lang had the honor of demanding the surrender & receiving the swords from on of the field officers & a captain, also the sword & flag from the color bearer.” [35] Furthermore, as the elder sibling, T.J. showed extreme care and selflessness concerning his brothers. He often gave them supplies and money at a great deal of sacrifice of his own well-being. In a letter to his mother, Thomas wrote, “I used none of [the money you sent] myself… as we thought it better to keep it and purchase Scrap a horse.” [36] When Thomas would find leave to visit his brothers, he would often give them several pairs of socks and other small supplies, with nothing to spare for himself.

      One dramatic episode concerning Edwin transpired in the summer of 1864. Ed had been shot just under the knee, and the complications stemming from this wound put him in a critical state of health. As the eldest brother, Thomas felt that it was his duty to be the one to break the news to their mother that Ed was close to death. “It is unnecessary, my Dear Mother, to conceal from you the fact that Ed is in a very critical condition.” [37] In a letter to his Uncle Pleas, T.J. wrote that it was the surgeons’ professional opinion that Edwin had a small chance of surviving no matter what medical procedure was imposed on him. Furthermore, the decision would be left to Thomas himself to decide on amputation or another course of action. In addition, as Ed’s father figure, Thomas felt it necessary to speak with him about the probability of death. “He feels very deeply on the subject [of dying], and seems to put his trust in Christ, though his mind is not yet clear on the subject.” [38] Despair set in as T.J. wrote to his uncle about his brother’s condition, stating that “there is hardly room for hope.” [39]

      But “Providence” as T.J. referred to it, was on their side. After weeks of painful operations and months of being bed-ridden, Edwin began to show signs of recovery. “At one time the surgeons all thought there was no possible chance for his recovery, but close, careful attention and good nursing saved him.” [40] Ed made a slow but steady recovery. The bed sores which had caused him so much pain while on his hospital bed began to close up. “He had a great many abscesses on his leg, all of which he says have healed.” [41] By the end of that year, Ed’s wounds had all but healed up, and he was well on his way to a full recovery.

      Interesting Facts
      T.J.’s letters also reveal less important yet interesting facts about his personal life. One, namely, was Thomas’ fondness for his favorite horse, Bullet. He had ridden into battle with Bullet since the Second Battle of Bull Run, or Second Manassas. Sometime in the fall season of 1863, his faithful steed was stolen away from him, and T.J. was forced to ride a horse loaned to him by the Confederate government for the next eight months. But the two would soon be reunited. “[My old horse Bullet] was stolen from me about the 1st last September, and I never expected to see him again, but much to my surprise & joy, I found him on the 4th day of May last.” [42] And luckily for T.J., Bullet had not gone completely blind. More battles were yet in store for the two!

      Thomas performed his duty well as a Confederate soldier, and he often put himself in the line of fire. Little did he know that not only would he survive the war, but he would do so without being struck by a single bullet. In another letter to his mother, Thomas recalled the bloody Seven Days Battles of 1862. “I was far more exposed than I have ever been before, but neither myself nor horse was struck.” [43] Often after a battle, “his clothing was riddled with bullet holes.” [44] Those around him, however, were not so lucky. Throughout the war, several of his horses were shot while he was riding them, and even General Longstreet was injured more than his trusty aide.


      T.J.'s wife, Eliza
      After the War
      After the war, T.J. went back home to Texas, where he oversaw the Raven Hill Plantation near Huntsville. His mother had purchased the plantation in 1858 from no other than the great Sam Houston himself. On June 25, 1868, Thomas married Elizabeth Thomas Nolley, who was the acting principal of Andrew Female College at Huntsville. In 1873, T.J. formed another law partnership with Colonel Leonard A. Abercrombie. Most notably, Thomas was appointed the Superintendent of the Texas Prisons in 1877, a title that would later be called the Superintendent of Penitentiaries. [45] He held this position for fourteen years. T.J. later moved to Galveston, where he survived the devastating Hurricane of 1900. On March 5, 1905, Thomas Jewett Goree died of pneumonia at the age of 69 in Galveston, Texas. [46]


      Aftermath of the devastating Hurricane of 1900
      Conclusion
      The last known letter written by Thomas during the Civil War was dated December 18, 1864. The next available piece of writing is his travel diary, which was dated on June 26, 1865. However, this travel diary holds little relevance to the events that transpired during the war. In 1864, Thomas had only written eleven personal letters, and there is no record of any wartime letters written by him in 1865. This is in stark contrast to the dozens of letters written in the first three years of the war. Perhaps it was the Union army intercepting Confederate mail couriers more and more with each victory. Perhaps Thomas had begun to lose the will to write in the face of the Union advance. Perhaps he was constantly needed on the battlefield and did not have the time to write. The reasons for this remain unknown, but one fact is certain: the stories of the Civil War as seen through the eyes of one man, revealed to us by his personal letters, will continue to provide insight and depth on the issues and events of American Civil War.

      Notes
      [1] Langston Goree. “Goree, Thomas Jewett Family.” In Walker County, Texas: A History. (Dallas, Curtis Media Corporation, 1986), 409-10.
      [2] Ibid.
      [3] Longstreet’s Command Living History Association. “Thomas Jewett Goree,” http://www.longstreetscommand.org/Goree.html
      [4] Thomas Cutrer. Longstreet’s Aide: The Civil War Letters of Major Thomas J. Goree. (Charlottesville, Virginia: University Press of Virginia, 1995), 74.
      [5] Ibid., 138
      [6] Ibid., 15
      [7] Ibid., 76
      [8] Ibid., 141
      [9] Ibid., 15
      [10] Ibid., 23
      [11] Ibid., 16
      [12] Ibid., 112
      [13] Ibid., 124
      [14] Ibid., 73
      [15] Ibid.
      [16] Ibid., 73
      [17] Ibid., 116
      [18] Ibid., 72
      [19] Ibid.
      [20] Ibid., 95
      [21] Ibid., 114
      [22] Ibid., 116
      [23] Ibid.
      [24] Ibid., 117
      [25] Langston Goree. The Thomas Jewett Goree Letters, Vol. 1: The Civil War Correspondence (Bryan, Texas: Family History Foundation, 1981), 140.
      [26] Thomas Cutrer. Longstreet’s Aide: The Civil War Letters of Major Thomas J. Goree. (Charlottesville, Virginia: University Press of Virginia, 1995), 140
      [27] Ibid., 137
      [28] Ibid., 67
      [29] Ibid., 73
      [30] Ibid., 117
      [31] Ibid., 76
      [32] Ibid., 137
      [33] Ibid.
      [34] Ibid., 71
      [35] Ibid., 97
      [36] Ibid., 116
      [37] Ibid., 127
      [38] Ibid., 128
      [39] Ibid., 129
      [40] Ibid., 139
      [41] Ibid., 139
      [42] Ibid., 124
      [43] Ibid., 97
      [44] The Handbook of Texas Online. “Goree, Thomas Jewett.” TSHA Online,http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/GG/fgo17.html
      [45] Jerry Phillips. “Thomas Jewett Goree As a Witness to the Controversy Surrounding Pickett’s Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg.” (Huntsville, TX: Sam Houston State University,1993), 72.
      [46] The Handbook of Texas Online. “Goree, Thomas Jewett.” TSHA Online,
      http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/GG/fgo17.html.
      .html.

      Bibliography
      Primary Sources:
      Cutrer, Thomas. Longstreet’s Aide: The Civil War Letters of Major Thomas J. Goree. Charlottesville, Virginia: University Press of Virginia, 1995.
      Goree, Langston. The Thomas Jewett Goree Letters, Vol. 1: The Civil War Correspondence. Bryan, Texas: Family History Foundation, 1981.

      Secondary Sources:
      Goree, Langston. “Goree, Thomas Jewett Family.” In Walker County History, 409-410. Dallas: Curtis Media Corporation, 1986.
      The Handbook of Texas. “Goree, Thomas Jewett.” TSHA Online. http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/GG/fgo17.html. (accessed November 20, 2009).
      Longstreet’s Command. “Thomas Jewett Goree.” Longstreet’s Command Living History Association. http://www.longstreetscommand.org/Goree.html. (accessed November 20, 2009).
      Phillips, Jerry K. “Thomas Jewett Goree As a Witness to the Controversy Surrounding Pickett’s Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg.” Huntsville, TX: Sam Houston State University, 1993.
    6. Find A Grave, via http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi..., 24. April 2004
      Maj Thomas Jewett Goree
      Birth: Nov. 14, 1835
      Marion
      Perry County
      Alabama, USA
      Death: Mar. 4, 1905
      Galveston
      Galveston County
      Texas, USA

      Prominent Confederate staff officer in the Civil War & in charge of TX prison system after the War. Son of Dr. Langston James & Sarah Williams (Kittrell) Goree, he attended Howard College & Texas Baptist Educational School (today Baylor) where he recieved a law degree. Lawyer before the War in TX. Attached himself as volunteer aide to Longstreet at 1st Manassas & served with him until Appomattox. Never wounded, though had numerous horses shot from under him & clothing was riddled with bullet holes. His letters were published by UVA in a book called "Longstreet's Aide: The Civil War Letters of Major Thomas J. Goree." After War, Goree returned to Texas in 1865 & took over operations at Raven Hill Plantation near Huntsville; mother had purchased it from Sam Houston in 1858. He married Elizabeth Thomas Nolley, head of Andrew Female College at Huntsville on 06/25/68. They moved to Moffattville Plantation near Midway in Madison Co. In 1873, Goree returned to Huntsville to practice law. Was appointed member of the board of directors of the TX State Prisons. In 1877 Governor Richard B. Hubbard appointed Goree superintendent of the Texas State Penitentiary at Huntsville, a title that was later changed to superintendent of penitentiaries; Goree served 14 years. He survived the Galveston Hurricane of 1900. Died of pneumonia. Fathered five children; grandson, John W. Thomason, became a renowned and famous artist & author.

      Burial:
      Oakwood Cemetery
      Huntsville
      Walker County
      Texas, USA

      Created by: aphillcsa
      Record added: Apr 24, 2004
      Find A Grave Memorial# 8672270
    7. Web page at:, via http://thomasjewettgoreescvcamp.org/scv/..., 17. März 2010
      SCV THOMAS JEWETT GOREECAMP NO. 2129
      THOMAS JEWETT GOREE ESSAY
      An Essay By: Roger Knight Jr. Thomas Jewett Goree was the eldest child of Dr. Langston James and Sarah Kittrell Goree. He was born in Marion, Perry County, Alabama November 14, 1835. His mother was the matron of honor when Margaret Lea married General Sam Houston. The Goree family,the Kittrell family, and the Houston family were very close, and in fact, Thomas Jewett Goree attended Baylor when it was located at Independence and was a witness to the baptism of General Sam Houston. The Gorees and the Kittrells arrived in Huntsville, Texas, from Alabama in 1850 and originally occupied the home of the Houstons known as “Woodland House.” They stayed there while their homes were being built on the east bank of the Trinity River approximately 30 miles from Huntsville on the present location of the Eastham Farm. Thomas Jewett Goree had a degree in law but did not practice but for a short time. He left his career and set out in June of 1861 to join the Confederate Army. The route he chose was by steamboat from Galveston, Texas, and he was on his way to Virginia. It was during this trip that he met then Major James Longstreet, who ultimately served as a Lieutenant General (three stars) and the Commander of the famed First Corps of Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia. Longstreet was called by Lee “My Old War Horse.” Longstreet was so impressed by the young Goree that he invited him to become a member of his staff and was aide-de-camp for the entire war. He served in every major engagement of Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia. While every Confederate veteran served bravely and ably, the Army of Northern Virginia, commanded by General Robert E. Lee, was engaged in the bulk of the historical battles that we have come to associate with that noble cause known as the War Between the States and the Civil War. Thomas Jewett Goree’s service in that Army is historically noteworthy and more particularly so since he served on Longstreet’s personal staff and was his aide-de-camp. This means that he took and received messages and acted in some capacity as a courier for General Longstreet, and by implication, he knew of many of the major developments during the war and the battle plans for the First Corps. Robert E. Lee had reorganized the Army into three corps, one commanded by James Longstreet, one commanded by Richard Ewell, and one commanded by Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson. After Jackson’s death following the Battle of Chancellorsville and after Ewell’s injuries, the commands of the three corps changed from time to time, but Longstreet, for the most part was in command of the First Corps for the longest of any of the corps commanders. Longstreet received serious injuries at the Battle of the Wilderness and had to stand down while he recuperated. The famed Texas Brigade served under Longstreet and in the First Corps. The Army of Northern Virginia, and the First Corps in particular, was present at Manassas or the first Battle of Bull Run and was present when General Lee surrendered at Appomattox. This period covers both Robert E. Lee’s journies into Maryland first for the Battle of Antietam, and secondly, the Battle of Gettysburg. Thomas Jewett Goree married Elizabeth Thomas Nolley, the daughter of Colonel Edward Nolley. The Gorees ultimately moved to Midway, Madison County, Texas, and he was partners in a mercantile business known as Goree & Wakefield. There are two volumes of written works at the Madison County Library. One is entitled “The Kittrell Journal”, and the other is entitled “The Thomas Jewett Goree Letters Volume 1. The Civil War Corresondence.”One is about the Kittrells, and one is about the Gorees where most of this information was obtained. The Goree book is full of interesting and charming letters exchanged between Thomas Jewett Goree and his mother, Sarah Goree. The letters kept her updated on his day-to-day activities leading up to, during and after the Civil War. There is correspondence from Lieutenant General James Longstreet directed to Thomas Jewett Goree with responses from Mr. Goree. General Longstreet addressed Thomas Jewett Goree as Captain, and nearly all of the correspondence, although there is some corespondence that calls Thomas Jewett Goree a Major, I have not found his discharge records, and so I’m not exactly sure what rank he attained, but I strongly suspect he was a Captain in the Confederate Army. Captain Thomas Jewett Goree was with General Longstreet’s First Corps from Manassas to Appomattox. He brings the War Between the States to life in his correspondence with his mother and other notables. It is particularly interesting that Thomas Jewett Goree once worked and had a business in Madison County. I seriously doubt that there are any other Confederate veterans in this area who served in the Army of Northern Virginia and who were privileged to be so close to one of the principle forces and primary general officers or who shared a relationship that Goree did with General Longstreet. The Goree letters bring the war and the period exquisitely to life. I went to the Madison County Library where both of the volumes are contained, and as I read the Goree letters, it made the hair stand up on the back of my neck. For any devotee of this period of our Country’s history and for any true lover and Confederate enthusiast, this book is must reading. It is particularly interesting because the Goree family and Thomas Jewett Goree spent the bulk of his time in Texas, in Walker, Houston, and Madison counties, Texas and he served in Robert E. Lee’s Army and was there on so many historical occasions. Thomas Jewett Goree was obviously involved with Longstreet’s reluctance to attack the Union Center at Gettysburg. The attack became known as Pickett’s Charge, and it decimated Pickett’s division. There was ebb and flow between Longstreet and Lee, both in person and by courier, which Goree would, by necessity, have been involved. Our Camp is so proud to carry the standard of Thomas Jewett Goree, a man who once did business in Madison County, served in the Army of Northern Virginia, was a graduate of Baylor and a close personal friend of General Sam Houston and his wife.

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    Historische Ereignisse

    • Die Temperatur am 14. November 1835 war um die 7,0 °C. Der Wind kam überwiegend aus Süd-Süd-Westen. Charakterisierung des Wetters: half bewolkt omtrent betrokken. Quelle: KNMI
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      De Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden werd in 1794-1795 door de Fransen veroverd onder leiding van bevelhebber Charles Pichegru (geholpen door de Nederlander Herman Willem Daendels); de verovering werd vergemakkelijkt door het dichtvriezen van de Waterlinie; Willem V moest op 18 januari 1795 uitwijken naar Engeland (en van daaruit in 1801 naar Duitsland); de patriotten namen de macht over van de aristocratische regenten en proclameerden de Bataafsche Republiek; op 16 mei 1795 werd het Haags Verdrag gesloten, waarmee ons land een vazalstaat werd van Frankrijk; in 3.1796 kwam er een Nationale Vergadering; in 1798 pleegde Daendels een staatsgreep, die de unitarissen aan de macht bracht; er kwam een nieuwe grondwet, die een Vertegenwoordigend Lichaam (met een Eerste en Tweede Kamer) instelde en als regering een Directoire; in 1799 sloeg Daendels bij Castricum een Brits-Russische invasie af; in 1801 kwam er een nieuwe grondwet; bij de Vrede van Amiens (1802) kreeg ons land van Engeland zijn koloniën terug (behalve Ceylon); na de grondwetswijziging van 1805 kwam er een raadpensionaris als eenhoofdig gezag, namelijk Rutger Jan Schimmelpenninck (van 31 oktober 1761 tot 25 maart 1825).
    • Im Jahr 1835: Quelle: Wikipedia
      • Die Niederlande hatte ungefähr 2,9 Millionen Einwohner.
      • 23. Februar » In Paris erfolgt die Uraufführung der Oper La Juive (Die Jüdin) von Jacques Fromental Halévy mit dem Libretto von Eugène Scribe. Von Giuseppe Verdi ebenso geschätzt wie von Richard Wagner, wird die Oper zum Serienerfolg: Bis 1893 wird sie allein an der Pariser Oper 550 Mal aufgeführt.
      • 29. April » Bei Feldarbeiten wird bei Schifferstadt im Rhein-Pfalz-Kreis der Goldene Hut von Schifferstadt, einer von vier in Europa aufgefundenen bronzezeitlichen Goldhüten, entdeckt.
      • 6. Mai » In New York City gibt James Gordon Bennett senior die erste Ausgabe des New York Herald heraus. Der Herald gilt als das erste Massenblatt der Geschichte und kostet nur einen Cent.
      • 17. Mai » In seiner Enzyklika Commissum divinitus verurteilt Papst GregorXVI. die Badener Artikel zum Verhältnis zwischen Kirche und Staat in der Schweiz.
      • 3. Oktober » Der Zuckerbäcker Wilhelm Felsche eröffnet auf dem Augustusplatz in Leipzig das Café Français mit angeschlossenem Verkaufsraum.
      • 28. Oktober » In Waitangi unterzeichnen 31 Māori-Oberhäupter die Unabhängigkeitserklärung Neuseelands.
    • Die Temperatur am 25. Juni 1868 war um die 22,1 °C. Es gab 0.1 mm Niederschlag. Der Winddruck war 13 kgf/m2 und kam überwiegend aus West-Nord-Westen. Der Luftdruck war 77 cm. Die relative Luftfeuchtigkeit war 56%. Quelle: KNMI
    • Koning Willem III (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) war von 1849 bis 1890 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genannt)
    • Von 1. Juni 1866 bis 4. Juni 1868 regierte in den Niederlanden die Regierung Van Zuijlen van Nijevelt - Heemskerk mit als erste Minister Mr. J.P.J.A. graaf Van Zuijlen van Nijevelt (AR) und Mr. J. Heemskerk Azn. (conservatief).
    • Von 4. Juni 1868 bis 4. Januar 1871 regierte in den Niederlanden die Regierung Van Bosse - Fock mit als erste Minister Mr. P.P. van Bosse (liberaal) und Mr. C. Fock (liberaal).
    • Im Jahr 1868: Quelle: Wikipedia
      • Die Niederlande hatte ungefähr 3,6 Millionen Einwohner.
      • 16. Mai » Anlässlich der Grundsteinlegung für das Nationaltheater Prag erfolgt die Uraufführung der Oper Dalibor von Bedřich Smetana mit dem Libretto von Josef Wenzig im Prager Interimstheater.
      • 6. Oktober » Im Pariser Théâtre des Variétés wird Jacques Offenbachs Operette La Périchole mit dem Libretto von Henri Meilhac und Ludovic Halévy uraufgeführt. Offenbachs Lieblingssängerin Hortense Schneider brilliert dabei in der Titelrolle.
      • 10. Oktober » Auf Kuba beginnt mit dem Kriegsruf von Yara durch Carlos Manuel de Céspedes der Zehnjährige Krieg gegen die spanische Kolonialmacht.
      • 17. Oktober » In Roehampton in England findet das erste Hunderennen statt.
      • 14. November » Der Begriff Kaisertum Österreich wird per Handverfügung von Kaiser Franz Joseph I. durch die Bezeichnung Österreichisch-Ungarische Monarchie ersetzt.
      • 25. Dezember » US-Präsident Andrew Johnson gewährt den konföderierten Soldaten nach dem Amerikanischen Bürgerkrieg bedingungslose Vergebung.
    • Die Temperatur am 5. März 1905 lag zwischen -0.2 °C und 5,3 °C und war durchschnittlich 1,6 °C. Es gab 3,1 Stunden Sonnenschein (28%). Die durchschnittliche Windgeschwindigkeit war 3 Bft (mäßiger Wind) und kam überwiegend aus Süd-Süd-Osten. Quelle: KNMI
    • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) war von 1890 bis 1948 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genannt)
    • Von 1. August 1901 bis 16. August 1905 regierte in den Niederlanden das Kabinett Kuijper mit Dr. A. Kuijper (AR) als ersten Minister.
    • Von 17. August 1905 bis 11. Februar 1908 regierte in den Niederlanden das Kabinett De Meester mit Mr. Th. de Meester (unie-liberaal) als ersten Minister.
    • Im Jahr 1905: Quelle: Wikipedia
      • Die Niederlande hatte ungefähr 5,5 Millionen Einwohner.
      • 2. März » Auf der Baleareninsel Mallorca wird das Tropfsteinhöhlensystem Coves dels Hams entdeckt.
      • 2. Juli » Die Debeka, heute eine der zehn größten Gesellschaften der Versicherungs- und Bausparbranche in Deutschland, wird als Krankenunterstützungskasse für die Gemeindebeamten der Rheinprovinz gegründet.
      • 18. Juli » Die erste Eisenbahnlinie der deutschen Kolonie Togoland, die Bahnstrecke Lomé–Aného, wird dem Verkehr übergeben.
      • 29. August » Die Schlacht bei Mahenge in Deutsch-Ostafrika beginnt.
      • 1. September » Alberta und Saskatchewan werden nach der Abspaltung von den Nordwest-Territorien eigenständige kanadische Provinzen.
      • 27. November » In Berlin konstituiert sich der Deutsche Städtetag.
    

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    Quelle: Wikipedia

    Quelle: Wikipedia


    Über den Familiennamen Goree

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    Geben Sie beim Kopieren von Daten aus diesem Stammbaum bitte die Herkunft an:
    Wm. Samuel McAliley II aided by foundation built by Henny Carlisle in 2003, "Genealogy Kittrell", Datenbank, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogy-kittrell/I13036.php : abgerufen 30. April 2024), "Thomas Jewett Goree KBNrWmPqBioWikiFgmcOakwdBu 16 (1835-1905)".