Family Tree
 Before I went to Terlingua Ole Ben of "An Older Texan Remembers" and I  were  talking about our ancestors. I e-mailed him a few things about my   ancestors. One was the dairy truck I us on my blog. My Grand Father had  a  big dairy here in Austin.
 This blog is about the ancestors on  my Grand Mothers side of the  family. Her last name was Ponton. So  instead of e-mailing back and  forth to Ben thought I would just blog  about it. So here is the first  of many.
PONTON, ANDREW (1804–1850). Andrew Ponton, pioneer  farmer,  stockman, politician, and judge, was born in 1804 in Nelson,  Amherst  County, Virginia, one of four children of William and Isabell   (Moreland) Ponton. With his father and brother-in-law, James Blair Patrick,   he arrived in Texas on December 17, 1829. He received his land title  on  June 18, 1832, and was married on July 8, 1841, to Mary H. Berry in   Gonzales County, Republic of Texas.   Of the couple's four sons, Andrew S. was killed in the battle of   Atlanta, and Thomas Jefferson was an attorney in Gonzales County.
Ponton was the last alcalde of Gonzales, elected to that position in 1835. In May 1835 he was a member of the Gonzales Committee of Safety (see COMMITTEES OF SAFETY AND CORRESPONDENCE). In September 1835, when Domingo de Ugartechea demanded that the Gonzales "come and take it" cannon   be surrendered to Mexican soldiers or that Ponton be brought to San   Antonio as a hostage, Ponton put off the Mexicans with excuses; he sent   calls for help to the settlements and was a defender in the battle of Gonzales on October 2, 1835. On February 23, 1836, William B. Travis sent Ponton an appeal asking for men and provisions for the relief of the Alamo, and men from Gonzales answered his request.
Ponton was the first judge of the Municipality of Gonzales and a  member  from Gonzales County of the Second Congress of the republic in   1837–38. He was the first chief justice of Lavaca County, elected on   July 13, 1846. Ponton was a Mason. He died on July 4, 1850, and is   buried in the Old Gonzales Masonic Cemetery, where the Texas Centennial Commission erected a marker on his grave in 1936.
Here is the letter Travis wrote to Andrew Ponton.

 
 
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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