Collin Chronicles, Volume 30, Number 1 & 2, 2009/2010 Page: 49
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Vol 30 No 2:2009-2010
Lovell to Texas
James Wesley Lovell was a hard working farmer. He died of tuberculosis on July 22, 1859,
after an illness of 56 days. He was buried in a private cemetery plot on his farm. A document of
settlement for James W. Lovell appears in Giles County records 16 August 1859.
In the fall of 1869, around ten years after the death of her husband, Mary Hannah Wilcoxson
Lovell and ten of her children, two daughters-in-law and three grandchildren set out from Giles
County in covered wagons toward Collin County, Texas. They traveled with other residents of Giles
and Maury Counties for the purpose of buying and settling on land that was selling for a very
attractive price. From more than one source we had heard of the long journey of six weeks in the
wagon caravan. Mary Hannah was a very devout and strict Methodist and would not permit her
family to travel on Sundays. The wagons came to a halt by noon on Saturdays and the preparation
of food for Sunday and some of the days that followed began. The men folks greased the wagons
and took care of the stock. Then on Monday mornings they continued their journey. By the middle of
each week they caught up with the other travelers who journeyed seven days a week. Some of the
descendants tell the story that Mary Hannah and her family were the first to arrive at their common
destination.
It was perhaps in the month of October, 1869, that the journey to Texas was made because
Roll No. 49, Giles County, Vol. 2, page 205, states that on September 25, 1869, the following
transaction took place: 'This day came Mary H. Lovell, guardian of Jefferson F., Thomas R., George
W., John W.B., William H.C. and Mary H. Lovell, renewed her guardian bond in sum of $2000.00
with James P. Lovell and James L. Montgomery as her securities which by the court was
approved." Page 217 states: 'The clerk reports partial settlement with Mary H. Lovell, guardian of
Sina Spencer, Sarah Montgomery, J. Fr., Thos. R., George W., Jno w., W.H.C., Mary H. Lovell,
Margaret A. Hickman, children of Jas. W. Lovell, dead, which was by the court examined and
approved and ordered to be recorded. Oct. 11, 1869." James L. Montgomery was her son-in-law
whose wife was Sarah Minerva Lovell and James P. was her son, James Polk Lovell.
They were not without funds on hand when they arrived in Texas. They settled about a mile
and a half west of Farmersville, which is some 45 miles north of Dallas. Mary Hannah Lovell, soon
after their arrival, bought 125 acres of land for $3000.00.
In 1882, Mary Hannah (called Aunt Polly) contracted typhoid fever while nursing one of her
sons. She died in her sixty-first year on 3 March, 1882. She was buried in the family cemetery near
Farmersville. Some years later, her son, Jefferson Franklin, had her mortal remains exhumed and
interred in the IOOF Cemetery in Farmersville.
We take great pride and rejoice in the Christian heritage that has been transmitted to us
through our ancestors who were deeply devoted Christian men and women and who showed great
courage and faith in moving from one place to another convinced that God had something better for
them. We pray that we may be humble enough and sufficiently dedicated to walk in their footsteps.
Submitted by: Alice Montgomery to
http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~-tngiles/mig ration/lovell.htm
Submitted by Nathan WhiteExcerpts taken from a book written by Marshall W. Lovell
COLLIN CHRONICLES
PAGE 49
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Collin County Genealogical Society. Collin Chronicles, Volume 30, Number 1 & 2, 2009/2010, periodical, 2009; Plano, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth185157/m1/49/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Collin County Genealogical Society.