The elder William and Isabella Ponton settled on a     league just north of current Hallettsville      granted to them in current Lavaca County in the Austin Colony on 27  Nov 1832, the same day     as title was passed to James Campbell on the  league between the Ponton tract and current     Hallettsville. Joel Ponton and family at     first remained behind in MO, but followed in late 1833. He purchased in fall 1835 a lot at     the bend of the San Marcos River  on the far northwest     corner of the Gonzales town tract. On 20 May  1834, a band of Comanches caught William     Ponton and John Hays away  from their guns and horses while they were cutting poles for a     crib.  Lavaca County author, Judge Paul Boethel in A History of Lavaca County  describes the     event:
"William Ponton,     a member of DeWitt’s Colony, was killed by the Indians near his home on Ponton’s Creek in 1834.  It was in spring,     good rains had fallen for some time and the  ground was covered with a luxuriant growth of     wild flowers and  grass, and game was abundant when a stray band of Comanches fell upon      this settler and his companion. Ponton and his companion, named John  Hays, left the house     as day was breaking, May 20th, and rode out to  the timber, where the Dickson or Evergreen     schoolhouse once stood,  to cut poles for a crib. They had been chopping about two hours     and  the pile of poles was steadily growing, when Ponton suddenly dropped his  axe, pointed     towards the top of the hill to the south, and said: 'John, look yonder; what do     you reckon that is?'  There, just beyond the crest of the hill, was a glimpse of     several  figures moving about. The two men turned pale as they realized their  situation.     They had brought their guns with them but had left them,  together with their horses and     lunch basket, a full half mile below  them, where they had first started in to work. They     crept in behind  some trees and watched the crest of the hill, where the moving figures  had     disappeared, but Hays felt certain he caught the glitter of a  lance before they vanished.     'Our only chance will be to get to our guns and horses,' said Ponton. 'Mebbe     they haven't seen our horses. Come on, let's run for it,'  and throwing aside his     axe, he made a run for them, closely  followed by Hays. They had hardly covered two hundred     yards,  however, before they heard a shrill cry from the hill and saw the  Indians riding     down upon them, waving their lances over their heads.  A minute or two later, Ponton and     Hays reached a shallow gully that  stretched directly across their path; the heavy rains     had made the  bottom of it a quagmire, and gathering all his strength, Hays cleared it  in a     jump but Ponton fell short. As Hays ran on, he caught a  glimpse of his comrade struggling     to free himself of the mud and  mire and the Indians were fast closing in upon him.     Reaching the  spot where they had started in to work, he saw that the horses had  become     frightened and had broken loose, and at the moment were  galloping away across the prairie     to the left. Catching up his  rifle, he ran to a dense thicket of low bushes that covered     two or  three acres of ground on the far bank. He reached it in a few minutes  and turned to     look back for Ponton. The Indians were all dismounted  and around the gully and he could     see that his comrade was a  prisoner. Working his way deep into the dense underbrush on his      hands and knees, dragging his rifle behind him, he found his cover, and  prepared to make     his stand by laying out his ammunition beside him.  In a little while, the Indians came up     and rode around and around  the thicket, sometimes venturing in a short distance, and then     out.  The underbrush was so dense he could only be guided by their voices.  About two in the     afternoon, the Indians brought Ponton up and made  him call his comrade, but getting no     response they continued their  search. Just as night came on, they brought Ponton back     again and  this time in agony. He called upon Hays to come out and maybe they would  spare     his life, stating they had cut all the skin off the bottom of  his feet. Again and again     Ponton called to him as they continued to  torture him and finally the Indians built a huge     fire before the  thicket. By and by all sounds ceased and Hays concluded his comrade had      been killed and the Indians had ridden away, but he stayed in the  thicket all night. He     crept out of his hiding the next day and  hurried to the nearest settlement where he     organized a rescue party  and returned to the scene. The party found Ponton, scalped and      horribly mutilated, near the thicket." 
In 1835, Andrew Ponton     emerged as the Alcalde of Gonzales  who guided the     government of the colony through the events leading  to separation from Mexico including     the original confrontation at  Gonzales over the Gonzales cannon. The event became known as     the Battle of Gonzales,  the "Lexington" of Texas and     the precipitation of events leading to  victory over Santa Anna at San Jacinto. Andrew     Ponton became the  agent for disposition of his parents league on the Lavaca River north of      the Hallett home near current Hallettsville, but before any of the  family could settle and     improve it they were forced to flee east on  the Runaway Scrape in front of Santa Anna's     army. In the fall of  1837, Andrew Ponton, his brother Joel Ponton and family and sisters Sarah Ann Eggleston and Mary     Jane Patrick  and families returned to the DeWitt Colony to begin life again in an      independent Texas Republic. Andrew, his widowed mother Isabella  Ponton, and the Egglestons     established homesteads on the William  Ponton league on the Lavaca River near Hallettsville     in addition to  their homes in Gonzales town proper. The Patricks remained in Houston  for a     time until daughter Sarah Jane was born in 1837 and then  returned to Gonzales. In 1838 the     Patricks and Sarah Ann Ponton  Eggleston were in San Felipe where Mary Jane Ponton Patrick     became  ill and died, probably in Apr 1839, in the presence of mother Isabella  and other     relatives. While in San Felipe, titles to tracts on their  father's league were formalized.     Andrew Ponton and his mother  returned to a homestead on the Lavaca River, Joel Ponton     acquired  and settled property on the Navidad River and the Egglestons settled in  Gonzales     town. James B. Patrick and children also apparently  returned to Gonzales town where he     continued to be active in  Gonzales town politics and public service. Andrew Ponton     apparently  made his home and spent most of the time through 1841 in Gonzales where  he     continued in public service as described below. After his  marriage to Mary H. Berry in     1841, the couple focused on  stockraising on their league on the upper Lavaca River. With     slaves  Austin, Elvira and Sam, the Pontons became prosperous. Upon statehood,  Ponton was     elected the first county judge of Lavaca County. Widowed  matriarch of the Ponton clan made     her home until her death after  1850 with daughter Sarah Ann and son-in-law Horace Eggleston in     Gonzales. 
 Andrew Ponton.      Andrew Ponton (1804-1850) was born in Amherst County, Virginia and  went to the DeWitt     Colony, Gonzales County, Texas in 1829 from  Boonville, Cooper County, Missouri with his     parents, two sisters and  others. Andrew's parents were William Ponton (1772-1834) and      Isabella Mooreland (1782-1860), a native of Pennsylvania. William was  killed by a stray     band of Indians May 20, 1834 where he and a friend  John Hays were cutting poles for a     crib. The daughters were: Polly  "Mary" Jane Patrick (1810 near Lovingston,     Nelson County,  Virginia-1837 San Felipe, Austin Colony) married May 29, 1828 James Blair Patrick in Cooper     County, Missouri; and Sarah Ann (September 16, 1820 Boonville, Cooper County, Missouri)     who married Horace Eggleston.     Andrew married July 8, 1841 Mary H. Berry in Columbus, Colorado County, Republic of Texas     with his brother Joel Ponton,  a minister     of the Disciples of Christ Church, performing the  ceremony. He died July 4, 1850 and was     buried in the Gonzales  Masonic Cemetery where the Texas Centennial Commission erected an      Historical Marker on his grave in 1936. His brother Joel (July 3, 1802  near Lovingston,     Amherst County, Virginia) married January 5, 1827  in Cooper County, Missouri Sarah Ann     Reavis (June 8, 1794 August 31,  1837), a native of Rutherford County, North Carolina, and     died in  Gonzales County. The school where Andrew received his education has not  been     found.
Andrew Ponton.      Andrew Ponton (1804-1850) was born in Amherst County, Virginia and  went to the DeWitt     Colony, Gonzales County, Texas in 1829 from  Boonville, Cooper County, Missouri with his     parents, two sisters and  others. Andrew's parents were William Ponton (1772-1834) and      Isabella Mooreland (1782-1860), a native of Pennsylvania. William was  killed by a stray     band of Indians May 20, 1834 where he and a friend  John Hays were cutting poles for a     crib. The daughters were: Polly  "Mary" Jane Patrick (1810 near Lovingston,     Nelson County,  Virginia-1837 San Felipe, Austin Colony) married May 29, 1828 James Blair Patrick in Cooper     County, Missouri; and Sarah Ann (September 16, 1820 Boonville, Cooper County, Missouri)     who married Horace Eggleston.     Andrew married July 8, 1841 Mary H. Berry in Columbus, Colorado County, Republic of Texas     with his brother Joel Ponton,  a minister     of the Disciples of Christ Church, performing the  ceremony. He died July 4, 1850 and was     buried in the Gonzales  Masonic Cemetery where the Texas Centennial Commission erected an      Historical Marker on his grave in 1936. His brother Joel (July 3, 1802  near Lovingston,     Amherst County, Virginia) married January 5, 1827  in Cooper County, Missouri Sarah Ann     Reavis (June 8, 1794 August 31,  1837), a native of Rutherford County, North Carolina, and     died in  Gonzales County. The school where Andrew received his education has not  been     found.In 1835 Andrew was elected Alcalde     of Gonzales,  and in September he was a member of the Gonzales Committee for Safety.      The Mexican government had furnished a cannon for the protection of  Gonzales' inhabitants     against Indians; in 1835 Mexico sent soldiers  to Gonzales to get the     cannon or bring Ponton to San Antonio as a hostage. He put them off, and the final     result was that he sent a very diplomatic letter  of     why he could not return the cannon. He was a farmer, stockman,  politician and judge. He     was the first chief justice of Gonzales  County, a member of the Second Congress, House of     Representatives in  Houston for the County of Gonzales 1837-1838. He was elected the first      chief justice of Lavaca County when it was formed in 1846. His land  grant was issued June     18, 1832 and was located on the Gonzales-Lavaca     County  line. Andrew Ponton and his son Thomas Jefferson were members of the  Masonic     Order A.F. & A.M. Andrew and Mary had four children:  William W. (1842) joined the     Confederate army in 1862 and was soon  released for a disability; Andrew S. (1845-1862)     joined the  Confederate army in September, 1861 and was killed in the battle at  Atlanta in     1862; Thomas Jefferson Ponton Sr. (April 6, 1847 Gonzales  County-December 9, 1889     Gonzales) after his high school education  studied law and became a prominent attorney in     Gonzales County,  married February 27, 1872 in Gonzales Martha "Mattie" Kentuckey      Brown (1849-1887) and had seven children with descendants later living  in California and     Florida; and Samuel Virgin (1849 1856). B. Elmer Spradley (From The History of     Gonzales County, Texas. Reprinted by permission of the Gonzales County Historical     Commission).
 Joel Ponton.      Joel Ponton was both medical doctor and a minister of the Disciples  of Christ Church. He     married Sara Reavis in CooperCo, MO on 5 Jan  1827 where they had children Andrew Judson     (b. 4 Aug 1829; d. 12 Jan  1908, buried Junction, KimbleCo, TX), William Lee (m. Lutilia      Ezzell 1856) and Jemima Jane (m. Thomas L. Hunt 1848). After arrival in  Gonzales, a fourth     David Barton (m. Lemelia Lay) was born 30 Apr  1834. On 31 Mar 1837, another son, Joseph     Parthenias (m. Eliza Jane  Bownds), was born in Columbus on the way back to the Gonzales     area  after their flight to East Texas. Wife and mother Sara Reavis Ponton  died 31 Aug 1837     in Gonzales. On 28 Mar 1839, Dr. Ponton married  Rhoda Delaney who adopted his children and     bore more children Joel  (b. 1842), Alexander (b. 1843), Martha and Ellen (and probably     more)  while Ponton ministered both to the physical and spiritual illnesses of  his clients.     Records indicate that he commonly applied steam and  lobelia treatment, steam to cause     sweating and lobelia (Indian  tobacco) as an emetic. As a doctor, Ponton was in large     demand and  widely respected in the community, he had a large practice kept busy by  the     hazards of pioneer life. It is unclear if Dr. & Reverend  Ponton practiced his     spiritual ministry in the colony prior to  independence. However, afterwards he was an     enthusiastic minister in  the early Church of Christ and established at least two      congregations on the Rio Navidad in 1841-1842. In early Texas days, both  of his     ministeries combined could not support the large family.  Ponton supported his family by as     a rancher and farmer and also  served the public in civil capacities. In spring 1839 after      attending the death of his sister Mary Jane Ponton Patrick in San Felipe  and the     settlement of the William Ponton estate among the children,  Ponton established his     homestead on the Navidad River. On the way  to the homestead on the Navidad, he purchased a     45 year old slave  named Squire from James Campbell near Hallettsville. Both of Dr.      Ponton's ministeries kept him on the road between homesteads and  settlements, most     frequently to Gonzales town. On 5 Aug 1840, he and Tucker     Foley  while on the way to Gonzales from their Navidad River homestead were  attacked by     a band of 27 Comanches on their way to the great raid on     the coast at Linnville.  Dr. Ponton survived, but companion Foley did not. On 5 Mar     1850,  wife Rhoda Delaney Ponton died leaving him a 48 year old widower with 11  dependent     children. On 11 Jul 1850, he married 18 year old Mary  Henderson, one of six children of     James and Lucinda Henderson from  Water Hole Branch on the Lyons League about 12 miles     south of  Hallettsville. Joel and Mary Ponton settled near Hallettsville and had  eight more     children, Sarah, James, Alice, Laura, John, Lena, Henry  and Victor Hugo.
Joel Ponton.      Joel Ponton was both medical doctor and a minister of the Disciples  of Christ Church. He     married Sara Reavis in CooperCo, MO on 5 Jan  1827 where they had children Andrew Judson     (b. 4 Aug 1829; d. 12 Jan  1908, buried Junction, KimbleCo, TX), William Lee (m. Lutilia      Ezzell 1856) and Jemima Jane (m. Thomas L. Hunt 1848). After arrival in  Gonzales, a fourth     David Barton (m. Lemelia Lay) was born 30 Apr  1834. On 31 Mar 1837, another son, Joseph     Parthenias (m. Eliza Jane  Bownds), was born in Columbus on the way back to the Gonzales     area  after their flight to East Texas. Wife and mother Sara Reavis Ponton  died 31 Aug 1837     in Gonzales. On 28 Mar 1839, Dr. Ponton married  Rhoda Delaney who adopted his children and     bore more children Joel  (b. 1842), Alexander (b. 1843), Martha and Ellen (and probably     more)  while Ponton ministered both to the physical and spiritual illnesses of  his clients.     Records indicate that he commonly applied steam and  lobelia treatment, steam to cause     sweating and lobelia (Indian  tobacco) as an emetic. As a doctor, Ponton was in large     demand and  widely respected in the community, he had a large practice kept busy by  the     hazards of pioneer life. It is unclear if Dr. & Reverend  Ponton practiced his     spiritual ministry in the colony prior to  independence. However, afterwards he was an     enthusiastic minister in  the early Church of Christ and established at least two      congregations on the Rio Navidad in 1841-1842. In early Texas days, both  of his     ministeries combined could not support the large family.  Ponton supported his family by as     a rancher and farmer and also  served the public in civil capacities. In spring 1839 after      attending the death of his sister Mary Jane Ponton Patrick in San Felipe  and the     settlement of the William Ponton estate among the children,  Ponton established his     homestead on the Navidad River. On the way  to the homestead on the Navidad, he purchased a     45 year old slave  named Squire from James Campbell near Hallettsville. Both of Dr.      Ponton's ministeries kept him on the road between homesteads and  settlements, most     frequently to Gonzales town. On 5 Aug 1840, he and Tucker     Foley  while on the way to Gonzales from their Navidad River homestead were  attacked by     a band of 27 Comanches on their way to the great raid on     the coast at Linnville.  Dr. Ponton survived, but companion Foley did not. On 5 Mar     1850,  wife Rhoda Delaney Ponton died leaving him a 48 year old widower with 11  dependent     children. On 11 Jul 1850, he married 18 year old Mary  Henderson, one of six children of     James and Lucinda Henderson from  Water Hole Branch on the Lyons League about 12 miles     south of  Hallettsville. Joel and Mary Ponton settled near Hallettsville and had  eight more     children, Sarah, James, Alice, Laura, John, Lena, Henry  and Victor Hugo.Upon the death of his brother Andrew     Ponton  in 1850, Joel Ponton became the administrator of his estate by     will  of widow Mary H. Berry Ponton. After Andrew's widow Mary H. Ponton  married Dr. Daniel     C. Bellows in Dec 1850, the couple challenged  Joel Ponton's position as administrator of     the Andrew Ponton estate  and he was removed, but after Ponton had established home tracts     and  slaves Austin and Elvira as property of the children of Andrew Ponton.  The Bellows     became owners of the Hicks Hotel and Tavern in  Hallettsville, renamed it The Mansion House     and after financial  difficulties with it, Mary H. Berry Ponton Bellows died in Dec 1856      and Bellows moved out of the area. In 1857, Joel Ponton was  re-established as guardian of     the Andrew Ponton minor hiers and  estate. He was forced to sell Austin for $157 and Elvira     for $800  and tracts of land to support his nephews. 
When  the Civil War came, Dr. Joel Ponton supported the     cause of the  south without wavering and continued to do so after Lee's surrender.  Prior to     "Yankee Rule" in Lavaca County, Ponton served as deputy  county clerk Josiah     Dowling, he tried without success to obtain  office under reconstruction and was elected     county judge in 1866  when open polls were restored. However, he was removed form office by      Federal authorities. He became again deputy county clerk under Josiah  Dowling through Mar     1869. As county clerk and local minister, Ponton  took care of both the civil and     ceremonial formalities of marriages  in the area. Wife Mary Henderson Ponton died on 17 Aug     1868 and Dr.  Ponton married for the fourth time, Mrs. M.A. Beedle, by minister James      Ballard. She died on 31 Mar 1871. In the same year Joel Ponton  married Mrs. Harriet W.     Koonce, mother of a daughter-in-law  Elizabeth Koonce Mayo Ponton. On 1 Feb 1875 five times     married  DeWitt Colony pioneer doctor, minister, rancher and farmer Dr. Joel  Ponton died     with his large family in attendance. He is said to be  buried on the Koonce tract of land     near the Kent homestead on the  Andrew Kent league in a location known as Ezzell,     established by Sam  and Ira Ezzell.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment