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Jasper Newton Clary

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Jasper Newton Clary

Birth
Washington County, Arkansas, USA
Death
1914 (aged 70–71)
Brazos County, Texas, USA
Burial
Buried or Lost at Sea. Specifically: he had died on his farm in Brazos and was buried there along with William Price Clary. Rural deaths weren't reported unless there was a doctor attending or some statistician for the Mortality Schd.. Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
brief bio is copied from the book-United Daughters of the Confederacy.
Jasper Newton and Mary Jane(Holbrook)Clary were married on 18 September 1862 in Smith County, Texas.
Jasper appeared on the census of 1870 in Brazos County, Texas.
Jasper and Mary(Ford)Clary were married about 1877.
Jasper Newton Clary disappeared one day and his wife never saw him again in 1877.
Sarah Clary Greer(a sister of Jasper))wrote a letter to another family member dated Mar 15 1914. In this letter she stated she and Jasper Newton Clary were the only surviving members of her family. She was 76 years old at the time and Jasper was 71 and in poor health when she wrote the letter.

Apparently,there is no death record,or death cert.for Jasper in the state of Texas yrs.1904-1940.I contacted the Texas dept.of state health services Vital statistics .They could find no record of Jaspers death in Texas.
he had died on the farm in Brazos and was buried there along with William Price Clary. He's not in the Old Primitive Baptist Cemetery in Lipan.
You won't find the farm burials in Vital Statistics. Rural deaths weren't reported unless there was a doctor attending or some statistician for the Mortality Schedule came around. You might find Jasper in the Mortality Schedules; I think most of them are online.
brief bio is copied from the book-United Daughters of the Confederacy.
Jasper Newton and Mary Jane(Holbrook)Clary were married on 18 September 1862 in Smith County, Texas.
Jasper appeared on the census of 1870 in Brazos County, Texas.
Jasper and Mary(Ford)Clary were married about 1877.
Jasper Newton Clary disappeared one day and his wife never saw him again in 1877.
Sarah Clary Greer(a sister of Jasper))wrote a letter to another family member dated Mar 15 1914. In this letter she stated she and Jasper Newton Clary were the only surviving members of her family. She was 76 years old at the time and Jasper was 71 and in poor health when she wrote the letter.

Apparently,there is no death record,or death cert.for Jasper in the state of Texas yrs.1904-1940.I contacted the Texas dept.of state health services Vital statistics .They could find no record of Jaspers death in Texas.
he had died on the farm in Brazos and was buried there along with William Price Clary. He's not in the Old Primitive Baptist Cemetery in Lipan.
You won't find the farm burials in Vital Statistics. Rural deaths weren't reported unless there was a doctor attending or some statistician for the Mortality Schedule came around. You might find Jasper in the Mortality Schedules; I think most of them are online.


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