Original written: January 30th, 2003
Revised: June 8,
2008
To
the reader;
This biographical sketch was
published in 1889 in the Biographical Souvenir of Texas. I have done my best to type it exactly as
originally written.
I decided to add the 3 footnotes at
the end due to their historical significance.
It is my hope the reader will find
this brief biographical sketch to be interesting as well as informative.
I started researching this family
in 1997 and have made four trips to Missouri
reviewing courthouse and library records and have visited towns and cities that
are mentioned in their records. The
experience has been very heartfelt for me personally and now I have a
friendship with several Lee family descendants that I think of often . (The other families of Missourians that came to Texas in 1869/1870
was also noted.) The rewards that
have been found not only in Missouri
but elsewhere in Texas (other
than Cooke county) have far exceeded any expectation I
could have ever envisioned. As time goes
on I will create family pages and add much more concerning the Lee family as
well as other families will be put on the website. This particular offering is my introduction
to the readers to the Lee family. Mr. Lee
as the “Father of Valley View” has provided not only a
interesting life that is a joy to read about but is the one that set the
character of our town for us to be referred to as the, “Friendliest People in
Cooke county”. Mrs. Lee as the “Mother
of Valley View” was quite the lady. Much
of the information from previous writings can be attributed to her. The
following is just a bit of their story.
Enjoy your time UNDER THE SHADE
TREE. http://www.oocities.org/valleyview1872
Best Regards, Norman
L. Newton
L. W. Lee
(Biographical Sketch)
One of the
most prosperous and public-spirited citizens of Cooke county is Captain L. W.
Lee, of Valley View. Captain Lee is a
native of Howard county, Missouri,
and has lived in Texas since
1869. His parents were natives of Kentucky
and were among the earliest settlers of Missouri. His father, Noah G. Lee, was born in Madison
county, Kentucky, January 16, 1790, grew to manhood there, served in the War of
1812, returned to Kentucky, married and moved to Missouri, settled first in
Howard county and afterward in Cooper county, where he died September 2,
1851. He was a farmer, a man of plain
life, honest, industrious and fairly successful.
Captain
Lee’s mother bore the maiden name of Sarah Harvey, and was a daughter of
William Harvey of Madison county, Kentucky,
herself a native of that county also.
She died in Cooper county, Missouri,
in the fall of 1859, in the sixty-third year of her age.
To Noah G.
and Sarah Lee were born a family of nine children, of whom the subject of this
sketch was the seventh, the others being – William Perry, the oldest son, who
was a man of indomitable courage and perseverance and had accumulated quite an
amount of property for one of his age and was on the eve of emigrating to
Texas, when he was taken with congestive chill and died in 1845, in his
twenty-sixth year.
Andrew
Jackson, second son, went to California in the general rush to the gold mines,
returned to Missouri in 1852, and engaged in the mercantile business in Henry
county, Missouri, and was the founder of the beautiful little town of
Leesville; was very successful in business, but, like a great many high-strung
Missourians, staked his all on the Confederacy, and lost his life and property
both.
Thomas
Benton, the youngest of the family, on arriving at his majority was taken with
the California fever and spent
some time in the golden State, returning just in time to join the Confederate
army under General Price. He took the
measles in camp, from which he never recovered, but died with consumption in
1857, loved and respected by all who knew him
The girls
all married men of sterling worth and integrity except Louisa, who never
married. She died at Captain Lee’s, in Texas,
March 6, 1872.
The subject
of this brief biographical sketch was born, as stated, in Howard county, Missouri,
and first saw the light on the 27th day of October, 1831. He was reared in the counties of Howard and
Cooper in Missouri. At the age of eighteen, during the gold excitement
in California, he prevailed upon
his father to let him try his luck in the new Eldorado. After obtaining consent, he and some of his
neighbors were not long in fitting up an ox wagon and team for the occasion,
and April 29, 1850, cut
loose from civilization by crossing the western State line of Missouri
and entering into the then called great American desert. After many privations and almost starvation,
he arrived in Sacramento on the 25th
day of August, 1850, worn out, poor and penniless, while 2,000 miles of
mountains and plains, traversed by hostile Indians, lay between him and his
home. He says he could have sat down and
wept, but he had left home to be a man, and he thought that would not be manly. After striking a job of helping move a lumber
yard, and finding no other work in the city, he started to the mines with all
the worldly goods he possessed on his back with ten dollars in his pocket which
he received for moving lumber. At one
dollar per meal, the customary price at that time, one could see the necessity
of his obtaining work at the earliest possible convenience, consequently he
asked every man he met or saw for employment, and especially the teamsters,
for, having been reared on a farm at hard labor, he considered himself an expert
at that. On arriving at the Mississippi
bar on the American fork of the Sacramento river, he
obtained employment to work in the mines from J. W. Roberts, D. McBride and
George Colvin of Boone county, Missouri, at half wages, he being a mere boy,
but after working a few days they said he did a man’s work and paid him a man’s
wages. Captain Lee has never seen them
since, but is enthusiastic in their praise.
J. W. Roberts is now county judge of Boone county,
Missouri, and no doubt a just and
good one. After working for those
parties till he obtained sufficient money to buy tools and provisions for the
winter, he formed a partnership with four others, built them a cabin near Mud
springs in 1Eldorado county for winter
quarters and commenced mining on their own account. In the spring of 1851 they were able to buy
two wagons and teams, and started a little store in a large tent on the Cossumnes river with a general stock of miners’ supplies,
at which business they continued till 1852, when they sold out and organized a
company of thirty men with pack mules to re-cross the plains to Missouri. At this season of the year, owning to the
deep snow on the Sierra Nevada mountains,
no wagons could be carried across. Each
man was equipped with sixty days’ rations, just enough to carry them through
without any allowance for laying over with the sick, or for high water; every
man had to depend on good health and a clear-footed mule. To be left was to be killed by the Indians. To lay over was to
starve to death together. Unfortunately
for one Mr. Nance he did not have a clear-footed mule, which fell and broke his
collar bone and otherwise crippled him, but he was grit to the backbone and
answered promptly at roll-call. William
Lockridge, of Howard county, Missouri,
a noble gentleman, was accidently shot through the
hand with a load of buckshot, which caused him untold pain and agony, but he
too had the nerve to continue the march.
Captain Lee relates many incidents of hardships and exposure in crossing
snow mountains without any road, with a Delaware Indian employed as a pilot,
and the swimming of rivers, at which Captain Lee always took the lead, he being
an expert swimmer, but suffice to say that he arrived home safely in due time.
On
returning he entered school at once, and continued there until the summer of
1854, when there were some reports of finding gold in the Red fork of the Arkansas
river.
In less than five days after the report, Captain Lee, with twenty of his
neighbors, with five wagons and teams, were on their way to the new gold mines,
which never materialized. He returned
home and engaged in farming and trading in horses and mules till the spring of
1857, when several of the young men of the neighborhood proposed that each one
should put in all the cattle that they could buy and drive them to California,
and give Captain Lee charge of the herd, after putting in all the cattle he was
able to buy. He readily accepted, and
the summer of 1857 found him again winding his way to the Pacific slope at the
head of a herd of cattle. The Indians
were very bad that year and gave them considerable trouble, it being the year
that 2General Albert S. Johnston marched his army to Salt
Lake City, and of the 3Mountain Meadow
massacre. However, the drive paid well, and Captain Lee
returned home in 1859, by way of 4Panama,
and on November 1, of same year, was married to Mary A. Fryer, daughter of
James Fryer, of Cooper county, Missouri, and sister of Judge Fryer, of Johnson
county. He bought a farm in the western
part of Johnson county, Missouri,
and remained on it till 1863, during the Civil War, at which time it became
very unhealthy for peaceable citizens to reside there. He returned to Cooper county and engaged in
feeding beef cattle and trading in horses and mules till the close of the war –
moved back to Johnson county to find his house burned and fences destroyed, but
soon rebuilt better ones, and in 1869 sold out and removed to Texas. On coming to Texas he settled in the southern
part of Cooke county, which, at that time was almost depopulated, on account of
Indian depredations; there he bought a tract of land and began farming and
stock raising
Seeing the
great need of school facilities, in 1873 he laid off
the town of Valley View, christened
it, and gave away business and residence lots to those desiring to make a
permanent settlement. He built a
school-house and furnished it with his own funds, and in many other ways helped
to give the town a start.
Captain Lee
is a farmer and stock grower, and therein all his interests of a financial
nature lie. He has a farm enclosed of
one thousand acres, through which the beautiful stream of Spring creek flows
over a pebbled bottom, fringed on either bank with beautiful groves of
timber. He has a beautiful fish pond of
about four acres, within one hundred yards of his house, that will average
fifteen feet deep; he has over four hundred acres in a splendid state of
cultivation, and otherwise well improved and well stocked, and to this he gives
his exclusive time and attention. He is
a reading and thinking farmer, eschewing all connections with the various
agricultural organizations; he thinks and acts for himself, leaving others to
do the same. He is progressive and
public spirited, especially so in educational matters; he is the pillar of the
public-school system of his county, taking a lively interest in everything
pertaining thereto. He is the father of
three children, to each of whom he has given exceptionally good school training. His oldest daughter, Ella, is now the wife of
James M. Potter, cashier of the Red River National Bank, of Gainesville;
his two remaining children, Robert Perry and Zoe, are
yet in school.
Notes:
1 Big immigration of people to
California was brought by the
discovery of gold at Sutter's sawmill in Coloma (Indian word for beautiful
valley), El Dorado County
on January 24, 1848 by
James Marshall. To find out more go to;
http://64.127.187.225/~eldorado/
2 Albert
Sidney Johnson, Brevet brigadier general in an expedition to escort the Mormons
to Salt Lake City. To find out more go to;
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/JJ/fjo32.html
3
To find out more about the Mountain Meadow
Massacre go to;
http://www.rootsweb.com/~armarion/mmmassacre.html
4 Panama
– I just want to be sure the reader is aware this time period is many years
prior to a canal built across Panama. He would have crossed the land area which probably
was by rail and then catch another steamer on the Atlantic side. Reference Only: The Panama Canal was
built by the United States
and completed during 1914.