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    As we 
    observe the 166th anniversary of Texas declaring independence from Mexico -- 
    March 2, 1836 -- one Montgomery County family is celebrating its 
    long-standing link to Texas, the Alamo and Montgomery County. 
     
    On Feb. 7, Bregan Terry became a ninth-generation Texan and the seventh 
    generation of Lindley's descendents born in Montgomery County. 
     
    Lindley's family tree is one of the many generational stories that enhance 
    the rich history of Montgomery County, birthplace of the Texas flag. 
     
    According to the Handbook of Texas, Lindley was born Feb. 21, 1814, in 
    Illinois, the son of Samuel Washington Lindley, born in 1788, and Elizabeth 
    Polly Hall Lindley. 
     
    He reportedly entered Texas in 1833 and applied for a land grant as a single 
    man in Joseph Vehlein's colony Nov. 4, 1834. 
     
    Lindley was granted land, which is now covered by Lake Livingston in Polk 
    County. However, the land grant was invalidated because that land already 
    had been awarded to someone else. According to the Handbook of Texas, 
    Lindley apparently did not know the grant was invalid and was probably still 
    living on it when the Texas Revolution broke out in fall 1835. 
     
    Lindley joined Capt. John Crane's company and participated in the siege of 
    Bexar in November 1835. In December 1835, during the storming of Bexar, 
    Crane's company served in the First Division under the command of Benjamin 
    R. Milam. 
     
    On Dec. 14, 1836, Lindley joined William R. Carey's artillery company and 
    helped garrison the Alamo under the command of Lt. Col. James C. Neill. 
    Along with approximately 186 other defenders, Lindley was killed in the 
    Battle of the Alamo. Ultimately, Lindley's death led his ancestors to settle 
    in Montgomery County. 
     
    According to a history of the Lindley family, submitted to the Montgomery 
    County Genealogical and Historical Society by Estella Burns Stewart, Samuel 
    Washington Lindley came to Texas on a recommendation to enter Texas from the 
    Illinois governor. The Lindley family is thought to have come to Montgomery 
    County in 1826. 
     
    A copy of a Spanish Land Grant shows that Samuel Washington Lindley asked to 
    be granted a league of land. This request was signed Nov. 4, 1834, and 
    proves that Samuel Washington Lindley resided in Texas. 
     
    Another copy of a statement from the General Land Office showed that in 
    1835, Samuel Washington Lindley was a resident of Montgomery County and 
    lived near the Walker County line. 
     
    Following Jonathan Lindley's death in the Alamo, his family was given land 
    in Panola County for his service to Texas. That grant was transferred to 
    Montgomery County to Samuel Washington Lindley. Jonathan Lindley's father, 
    Samuel Washington, died in 1859 and is buried in the Shepherd Hill Cemetery. 
     
    
    
    
    A historic landmark in the Shepherd Hill Cemetery 
    pays tribute to Jonathan Lindley. 
     
    Another of Samuel Washington Lindley's children, Mary, born in 1813, married 
    Hiram Little in 1832. The couple had 10 children. The first one born in 
    Montgomery County was Jonathan in 1836 
     
    Hiram Little also played a role in the Texas Revolution. 
     
    According to family legend, Little fought in the Battle of San Jacinto with 
    Gen. Sam Houston. 
     
    A marker at Hiram Little's grave gives validity to his role in the Texas 
    Revolution. The grave of his wife, Mary Little, also contains a marker 
    showing she was a citizen of the Republic of Texas following the Texas 
    Revolution. 
     
    On Nov. 18, 1840, Hiram and Mary Little had a son, William M. (Doc) Little, 
    who was born in Willis. Doc Little married Sarah Elizabeth Paulsel April 25, 
    1865, at his father Hiram's home in Walker County. 
     
    William and Sarah Little moved onto 98 acres of land along Caney Creek in 
    Montgomery County. They had eight children, including Hattie Josephine, who 
    was born Sept. 10, 1883, in Willis. Hattie married a Meador from Montgomery 
    County, and this was who Lee Murray Johnson called "Ma." 
     
    Johnson, 74, who is the oldest of four of Lindley's generations still alive 
    and living in Montgomery County, lives off of Airport Road in Conroe and was 
    raised by his grandmother Hattie. 
     
    His mother, Ruby Lillian Meador, Hattie's daughter, was born July 22, 1910, 
    in Willis. However, Johnson, whose father was Native American, was given to 
    Hattie to raise shortly after his birth May 26, 1927, in Willis. 
    According to Johnson, Hattie also had a son three weeks after he was born 
    named Ray. 
     
    "Ray and I were raised like twins," Johnson said.  
     
    However, Ray Meador was killed as a young man working in the oil industry. 
     
    Johnson has spent his life working with horses and cattle in Montgomery 
    County and now shares the excitement surrounding his great-granddaughter's 
    birth. 
     
    Johnson had a daughter, Imogene Johnson, who was born March 31, 1959, in 
    Conroe. Her daughter, Resa Ann Johnson Terry, born March 15, 1978, gave 
    birth to Bregan Channing Terry, born Feb. 7 in The Woodlands, thus making 
    for seven generations of the family born in Montgomery County and nine 
    generations who have lived in Texas. 
     
    Johnson said stories about his ancestors have been passed through the 
    generations. It was a letter from Edna Elizabeth Little, Doc Little's 
    granddaughter, that helped piece the family history together. She passed 
    along the letter explaining their family history to Johnson and his family. 
     
    Johnson now believes he is very fortunate to be able to trace his family 
    heritage back to Texas' infancy and that all of his family members remain 
    close by. 
     
    Barbara Franz, head of the Genealogy Department at the Montgomery County 
    Central Library, said there are several families whose ancestors go back 
    many generations in Montgomery County. 
     
    For example, a Stewart line also branches from Samuel Washington Lindley. A. 
    K. Stewart who came to Montgomery County in 1924, is descended from James 
    Lindley, brother of Jonathan Lindley. 
     
    Stewart was later county superintendent and county attorney for Montgomery 
    County. 
     
    Another of Montgomery County's oldest family lines go back to the Collard 
    family. According to a history of Montgomery County, Elijah and Mary Collard 
    came to the Montgomery/Walker County area in 1833.  
     
    Collard was one of the first commissioners when Montgomery County was formed 
    in 1837 and was a member of the First Council of Texas. 
     
    The Cude family also has a history that dates back to the early 1800s. 
     
    However, linking family lines together is much like putting together a 
    puzzle and there are several places for Montgomery County residents to get 
    started.  
     
    The Church of 
    Jesus Christ Latter Day Saints, 1516 Wilson Road in Conroe, 
    offers a Family History Library. 
     
    The library is open to the public and offers 95 percent of the genealogical 
    material the Latter Day Saints Church has to offer. 
     
    Library visitors first fill out a pedigree chart and then information is 
    sought from the Family History Catalog, Scottish church records, the 
    International Genealogy Index, ancestral files, war information and 
    information from the census. 
     
    At the 
    Genealogy Department in the Montgomery County Central Library 
    local records as well as more than 200 periodicals and CD-ROM databases are 
    available. 
     
    The department also has possession of some local records that are exclusive 
    to Montgomery County. 
     
    For more information on family history, contact the Church of Jesus Christ 
    Latter Day Saint's Family History Center at (936) 756-4004 or the Montgomery 
    County Central Library at (936) 788-8363. 
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