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John Iiams

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John Iiams

Birth
Jefferson County, Ohio, USA
Death
6 Feb 1894 (aged 86)
Houston, Harris County, Texas, USA
Burial
Houston, Harris County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section OSR, Lot 203-198
Memorial ID
View Source
John Iiams, Jr., an early settler and veteran of the battle of Concepción and siege of Bexar, is the son of Mary (Haslett) and John Iiams, was born in Ohio in 1808. After a Louisiana sojourn, in 1822, John Jr. moved to Texas with his father, brother, and stepmother, Tabitha (Kincade). Until his father died, he lived at Cedar Point and recorded details of the Southeast Texas settlement. As a bachelor, he applied in 1831 for a headright in one of Stephen F. Austin's colonies. For years, Iiams lived with the Enoch Brinson family in Harris County, where he assisted with farming and helped milk thirty or forty cows. He took food by sea to Galveston.

While living in Houston in 1874, he helped C. Anson Jones, son of Anson Jones, document the years of Texas settlement. He is chiefly known to history as one of the patriots who rowed to Galveston in April 1836 to report the victory at the battle of San Jacinto to the ad interim government.

Source:
C. C. Cox, "Reminiscences of C. C. Cox," Quarterly of the Texas State Historical Association 6 (October 1902, January 1903). C. Anson Jones, "Extracts from a Historical Sketch of Harris County," in James Burke, Jr., Burke's TexasAlmanac and Immigrant's Handbook for 1879 (Houston, 1879; facsimile, Austin: Steck-Warlick, 1969). Adele B. Looscan, "Harris County, 1822-1845," Southwestern Historical Quarterly 18-19 (October 1914-July 1915).
John Iiams, Jr., an early settler and veteran of the battle of Concepción and siege of Bexar, is the son of Mary (Haslett) and John Iiams, was born in Ohio in 1808. After a Louisiana sojourn, in 1822, John Jr. moved to Texas with his father, brother, and stepmother, Tabitha (Kincade). Until his father died, he lived at Cedar Point and recorded details of the Southeast Texas settlement. As a bachelor, he applied in 1831 for a headright in one of Stephen F. Austin's colonies. For years, Iiams lived with the Enoch Brinson family in Harris County, where he assisted with farming and helped milk thirty or forty cows. He took food by sea to Galveston.

While living in Houston in 1874, he helped C. Anson Jones, son of Anson Jones, document the years of Texas settlement. He is chiefly known to history as one of the patriots who rowed to Galveston in April 1836 to report the victory at the battle of San Jacinto to the ad interim government.

Source:
C. C. Cox, "Reminiscences of C. C. Cox," Quarterly of the Texas State Historical Association 6 (October 1902, January 1903). C. Anson Jones, "Extracts from a Historical Sketch of Harris County," in James Burke, Jr., Burke's TexasAlmanac and Immigrant's Handbook for 1879 (Houston, 1879; facsimile, Austin: Steck-Warlick, 1969). Adele B. Looscan, "Harris County, 1822-1845," Southwestern Historical Quarterly 18-19 (October 1914-July 1915).

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  • Maintained by: miams
  • Originally Created by: Tulsa90
  • Added: Nov 10, 2012
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/100485971/john-iiams: accessed ), memorial page for John Iiams (11 Oct 1807–6 Feb 1894), Find a Grave Memorial ID 100485971, citing Glenwood Cemetery, Houston, Harris County, Texas, USA; Maintained by miams (contributor 48088964).