enrolled (No. 923) on the Creek tribal rolls at Sapulpa, Indian Territory,on October 9, 1899. She died January 31, 1912,
Annie Partridge Bruner - She is buried in Tiger Bone Cemetery. Counting back from her 1912 death (age 65), the year of 1847 would have been her birth year according to your information and info we have also seen. However, we have information (and she told the story to her son) of her fleeing the Confederates to Kansas with Opothyeyahola when her son, William G. "Billie" was just a baby. This was in 1861. I have another piece of information from a census that she was 40 in 1882 (being a 1842 as her birth year) which makes more sense with the Civil War account (with her being age 19 or so.) Her father was Casaharjo, who interestingly enough, at some point murdered her one time spouse, George Bruner Jr. As you show, he never went to trial for this.
http://www.fireytrails.com/Tiger_Bone_Cemetery.htm
enrolled (No. 923) on the Creek tribal rolls at Sapulpa, Indian Territory,on October 9, 1899. She died January 31, 1912,
Annie Partridge Bruner - She is buried in Tiger Bone Cemetery. Counting back from her 1912 death (age 65), the year of 1847 would have been her birth year according to your information and info we have also seen. However, we have information (and she told the story to her son) of her fleeing the Confederates to Kansas with Opothyeyahola when her son, William G. "Billie" was just a baby. This was in 1861. I have another piece of information from a census that she was 40 in 1882 (being a 1842 as her birth year) which makes more sense with the Civil War account (with her being age 19 or so.) Her father was Casaharjo, who interestingly enough, at some point murdered her one time spouse, George Bruner Jr. As you show, he never went to trial for this.
http://www.fireytrails.com/Tiger_Bone_Cemetery.htm
Family Members
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement
Explore more
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement