Genealogy Kittrell » Elisabeth Thomas Nolley Goree sKsPqWikiFgmcOakwdBu 4 "Tommie" +Fg (1845-1929)

Données personnelles Elisabeth Thomas Nolley Goree sKsPqWikiFgmcOakwdBu 4 "Tommie" +Fg 

  • Elle est née le 11 novembre 1845 dans Montgomery Hill Plantation, Baldwin County, Alabama.Les sources 1, 2
  • Elle est décédée le 5 septembre 1929 dans Huntsville, Walker County, Texas, elle avait 83 ans.Source 3
  • Elle est enterrée dans Oakwood Cemetery, Huntsville, Walker County, Texas.Source 2
  • Cette information a été mise à jour pour la dernière fois le 17 décembre 2012.

Famille de Elisabeth Thomas Nolley Goree sKsPqWikiFgmcOakwdBu 4 "Tommie" +Fg

Elle est mariée avec Thomas Jewett Goree.

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.

Ils se sont mariés le 25 juin 1868 à Methodist Church, Huntsville, Walker County, Texas, elle avait 22 ans.


Enfant(s):

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


Notes par Elisabeth Thomas Nolley Goree sKsPqWikiFgmcOakwdBu 4 "Tommie" +Fg

Handbook of Texas ONLINE
GOREE, ELIZABETH THOMAS NOLLEY (1845-1929). Elizabeth Thomas (Tommie) Nolley Goree, early Texas teacher and school administrator, the daughter of Edward Dromgoole and Mary Frances (Nicholas) Nolley, was born on November 11, 1845, at Montgomery Hill Plantation, Baldwin County, Alabama. She taught at Tuscaloosa Female College in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, before joining her sister, Martha Ann Otey, at Andrew Female College, Huntsville, Texas, in 1866. After Martha died in the yellow fever epidemic of 1867, Tommie took over as head of the school and remained so until her marriage to Confederate veteran Capt. Thomas Jewett Goreeqv on June 25, 1868. The couple lived for a year at Raven Hill Plantation, which Goree's mother, Sarah Williams Kittrell Goree, had purchased from Sam Houstonqv before the Civil War.qv In 1869 they moved to Moffatville Plantation in Madison County, where Goree operated a general store, Goree and Wakefield, in Midway, and Tommie opened a school that she operated from 1869 until 1873. In the latter year the family returned to Huntsville, and Captain Goree joined Col. Leonard A. Abercrombieqv in a law practice there. Tommie remained active in the community and with her growing family.
In 1877 Governor Richard B. Hubbardqv appointed Goree superintendent of the Texas State Penitentiary at Huntsville,qv at which post he served for the next fourteen years. Mrs. Goree worked with the prisoners in many capacities. She ran the prison Sunday school and learned Spanish so that she could teach the Mexican-American prisoners. According to one obituary, she also attended every funeral at the prison, often as the only mourner. In 1879 Sam Houston Normal Institute was established in Huntsville, replacing Andrew Female College. Tommie, a lifelong advocate of higher education, had promoted the new college. On the day of the formal opening, the Gorees entertained the school officials and the visiting dignitaries in their home. It was then, and at Tommie's arranging, that Oscar Henry Cooperqv and Governor Oran M. Robertsqv met and began finalizing plans for the University of Texas.
After her husband died in March 1905, Tommie moved to the Huntsville home of her daughter, Sue Hayes Thomason, and son-in-law, Dr. John W. Thomason. Until her death on September 5, 1929, she lived with her children and their families, remained active in the community, and served as a staunch advocate of education. The Gorees had five children, of whom only two lived to adulthood. John and Sue Thomason had nine children, the eldest of whom was artist and author John W. Thomason, Jr.qv Tom and Tommie Goree are buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Huntsville.
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, 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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Ancêtres (et descendants) de Elisabeth Thomas Nolley

Elisabeth Thomas Nolley
1845-1929

1868
Frank Goree
1872-1879

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Les sources

  1. The Handbook of Texas Online, via http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/onlin..., 19 juillet 2011
    GOREE, ELIZABETH THOMAS NOLLEY
    GOREE, ELIZABETH THOMAS NOLLEY (1845–1929). Elizabeth Thomas (Tommie) Nolley Goree, early Texas teacher and school administrator, the daughter of Edward Dromgoole and Mary Frances (Nicholas) Nolley, was born on November 11, 1845, at Montgomery Hill Plantation, Baldwin County, Alabama. She taught at Tuscaloosa Female College in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, before joining her sister, Martha Ann Otey, at Andrew Female College, Huntsville, Texas, in 1866. After Martha died in the yellow fever epidemic of 1867, Tommie took over as head of the school and remained so until her marriage to Confederate veteran Capt. Thomas Jewett Goree on June 25, 1868. The couple lived for a year at Raven Hill Plantation, which Goree's mother, Sarah Williams Kittrell Goree, had purchased from Sam Houston before the Civil War. In 1869 they moved to Moffatville Plantation in Madison County, where Goree operated a general store, Goree and Wakefield, in Midway, and Tommie opened a school that she operated from 1869 until 1873. In the latter year the family returned to Huntsville, and Captain Goree joined Col. Leonard A. Abercrombie in a law practice there. Tommie remained active in the community and with her growing family.

    In 1877 Governor Richard B. Hubbard appointed Goree superintendent of the Texas State Penitentiary at Huntsville, at which post he served for the next fourteen years. Mrs. Goree worked with the prisoners in many capacities. She ran the prison Sunday school and learned Spanish so that she could teach the Mexican-American prisoners. According to one obituary, she also attended every funeral at the prison, often as the only mourner. In 1879 Sam Houston Normal Institute was established in Huntsville, replacing Andrew Female College. Tommie, a lifelong advocate of higher education, had promoted the new college. On the day of the formal opening, the Gorees entertained the school officials and the visiting dignitaries in their home. It was then, and at Tommie's arranging, that Oscar Henry Cooper and Governor Oran M. Roberts met and began finalizing plans for the University of Texas.

    After her husband died in March 1905, Tommie moved to the Huntsville home of her daughter, Sue Hayes Thomason, and son-in-law, Dr. John W. Thomason. Until her death on September 5, 1929, she lived with her children and their families, remained active in the community, and served as a staunch advocate of education. The Gorees had five children, of whom only two lived to adulthood. John and Sue Thomason had nine children, the eldest of whom was artist and author John W. Thomason, Jr. Tom and Tommie Goree are buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Huntsville.

    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, 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
    ============
    GOREE, ELIZABETH THOMAS NOLLEY
    GOREE, ELIZABETH THOMAS NOLLEY (1845–1929). Elizabeth Thomas (Tommie) Nolley Goree, early Texas teacher and school administrator, the daughter of Edward Dromgoole and Mary Frances (Nicholas) Nolley, was born on November 11, 1845, at Montgomery Hill Plantation, Baldwin County, Alabama. She taught at Tuscaloosa Female College in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, before joining her sister, Martha Ann Otey, at Andrew Female College, Huntsville, Texas, in 1866. After Martha died in the yellow fever epidemic of 1867, Tommie took over as head of the school and remained so until her marriage to Confederate veteran Capt. Thomas Jewett Goree on June 25, 1868. The couple lived for a year at Raven Hill Plantation, which Goree's mother, Sarah Williams Kittrell Goree, had purchased from Sam Houston before the Civil War . In 1869 they moved to Moffatville Plantation in Madison County, where Goree operated a general store, Goree and Wakefield, in Midway, and Tommie opened a school that she operated from 1869 until 1873. In the latter year the family returned to Huntsville, and Captain Goree joined Col. Leonard A. Abercrombie in a law practice there. Tommie remained active in the community and with her growing family.
    In 1877 Governor Richard B. Hubbard appointed Goree superintendent of the Texas State Penitentiary at Huntsville , at which post he served for the next fourteen years. Mrs. Goree worked with the prisoners in many capacities. She ran the prison Sunday school and learned Spanish so that she could teach the Mexican-American prisoners. According to one obituary, she also attended every funeral at the prison, often as the only mourner. In 1879 Sam Houston Normal Institute was established in Huntsville, replacing Andrew Female College. Tommie, a lifelong advocate of higher education, had promoted the new college. On the day of the formal opening, the Gorees entertained the school officials and the visiting dignitaries in their home. It was then, and at Tommie's arranging, that Oscar Henry Cooper and Governor Oran M. Roberts met and began finalizing plans for the University of Texas.
    After her husband died in March 1905, Tommie moved to the Huntsville home of her daughter, Sue Hayes Thomason, and son-in-law, Dr. John W. Thomason. Until her death on September 5, 1929, she lived with her children and their families, remained active in the community, and served as a staunch advocate of education. The Gorees had five children, of whom only two lived to adulthood. John and Sue Thomason had nine children, the eldest of whom was artist and author John W. Thomason, Jr. Tom and Tommie Goree are buried in Oakwood Cemetery, Huntsville.
    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, 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
  2. Wooodvorwerk, via http://woodvorwerk.com/wood/p2752.htm..., 4 juillet 2010
    Wood & Torbert Families
    Ancestors, collaterals and their associates, of William Boyd Wood Jr.
    Eliza Thomas Nolley
    Back to WoodVorwerk.com <http://www.woodvorwerk.com/index.htm>
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    Eliza Thomas Nolley
    F, b. 11 November 1845, d. 1929
    Eliza Thomas Nolley|b. 11 Nov 1845\nd. 1929|p2752.htm|Edward Dramgoole Nolley|b. c 1802|p4567.htm|Mary Frances Nicholas|b. c 1811\nd. bt 1860 - 1870|p4566.htm|||||||||||||
    Father: Edward Dramgoole Nolley b. c 1802
    Mother: Mary Frances Nicholas b. c 1811, d. bt 1860 - 1870
    Eliza Thomas Nolley was born on 11 November 1845 in Montgomery Hill plantation, Baldwin County, Alabama, or more likely about 1842.
    She was the daughter of Edward Dramgoole Nolley and Mary Frances Nicholas .
    She was known as Tommie.
    She and Martha Ann Nolley , J. Nolley , G. W. Nolley , J. Alexander Nolley and Edward Dramgoole Nolley Jr. were enumerated in the census of 1 June 1850 in the household of Edward Dramgoole Nolley and Mary Frances Nicholas in Leake County, Mississippi.
    She and Lillian Otey , Walter P. Otey and Henry T. Otey were enumerated in the census of 1 June 1860 in the household of Armistead G. Otey and Martha Ann Nolley in Dark Corner, Holmes County, Mississippi; and also merchant W. T. Farr. Interesting that Martha's younger sister Eliza was in the household when their parents were in nearby Leake County.
    She married Thomas Jewett Goree , son of Langston James Goree and Sarah Williams Kittrell , on 25 June 1868 in Walker County, Texas.
    Eliza Thomas Nolley and Thomas Jewett Goree appeared in the 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 K. Goree .
    She was a teacher, according to the 1870 census.
    Eliza Thomas Nolley and Thomas Jewett Goree appeared in the 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 .
    Eliza Thomas Nolley and Thomas Jewett Goree appeared in the census of 1 June 1900 in Galveston, Galveston County, Texas, at 7404 Avenue "I" Robert A. Rogers, a boarder.
    Eliza Thomas Nolley died in 1929 in Huntsville, Walker County, Texas.
    For additional biographical information, see The Texas Handbook Online <http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/GG/fgo73.html>.
    Last Edited: 29 Nov 2008
    Family: Thomas Jewett Goree b. 14 Nov 1835, d. 5 Mar 1905
    Edward F. Goree b. c 1869, d. bt 1870 - 1880
    Sue Hayes Goree + b. Oct 1871
    Hubert T. Goree b. c 1875
    Robert E. Goree b. Jun 1878
    Close
    Compilers: Elsa Vorwerk & Bill Wood , Georgetown, Texas
    Page created by John Cardinal's <http://www.JohnCardinal.com/> Second Site <http://ss.johncardinal.com/> v3.2.2. | Based on a design by growldesign <http://www.growldesign.co.uk>
  3. W. D. Floyd's cemetery listings (see notes); Marsha GLENN STAFFORD; Don GLENN, via http://woodvorwerk.com/wood/p2752.htm..., 4 juillet 2010

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Événements historiques



Même jour de naissance/décès

Source: Wikipedia

Source: Wikipedia

  • 1902 » Rudolf Virchow, médecin et homme politique prussien (° 13 octobre 1821).
  • 1914 » Charles Péguy, écrivain français (° 7 janvier 1873).
  • 1942 » François de Labouchère, militaire français (° 18 septembre 1917).
  • 1977 » Marcel Thiry, écrivain belge et militant wallon (° 13 mars 1897).
  • 1978 » Armillita Chico (Fermín Espinosa Saucedo, dit), matador mexicain (° 3 mai 1911).
  • 1988 » Gert Fröbe, acteur allemand (° 25 février 1913).

Sur le nom de famille Nolley

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Lors de la copie des données de cet arbre généalogique, veuillez inclure une référence à l'origine:
Wm. Samuel McAliley II aided by foundation built by Henny Carlisle in 2003, "Genealogy Kittrell", base de données, Généalogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogy-kittrell/I5487.php : consultée 14 juin 2024), "Elisabeth Thomas Nolley Goree sKsPqWikiFgmcOakwdBu 4 "Tommie" +Fg (1845-1929)".