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Andrew Thomas Ball

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Andrew Thomas Ball

Birth
Kentucky, USA
Death
19 Jan 1926 (aged 83)
Denton County, Texas, USA
Burial
Denton, Denton County, Texas, USA GPS-Latitude: 33.208333, Longitude: -97.138056
Plot
Section T Block 11 Grave 9
Memorial ID
View Source
A. T. BALL
WASHINGTON'S RELATIVE DEAD IN CITY OF DENTON
Newspaper.
Denton, Texas, Jan. 21- Captain A. T. , 84, distant cousin of George Washington and pioneer Texan, died at his home Tuesday night of organic heart disease. He had been ill for about five weeks, but had been confined to his bed only a few days. His relationship to George Washington was through his great-grandmother, who was a cousin of the first President of the United States. Mr. Ball had lived in Texas for fifty-eight years, having moved here from Missouri after the close of the Civil War. He was born in Lexington, Ky., and when the Civil War broke out enlisted and served in Price's Escort, a cavalry regiment, during the four years of the war with the rank of Captain.

Upon reaching Texas in 1868 he settled at Lebanon, Collin County, where he was married two years later to Miss Ruth Elizabeth Crosier, who survives. Five children, Mrs. J. P. Schulz and Mrs. J. E. Burton of Handley, Mrs. J. Lee Cole of Fort Worth, C. C. Ball of Dallas and O. D. Ball of Globe, Ariz., also survive.

After his marriage Captain Ball was a merchant and cotton buyer and when he moved to Cooke county he bought cotton almost exclusively. During the early days he carried cotton by an ox wagon to Jefferson, Texas, the nearest market at that time. He had lived here for about ten years and as a cotton buyer was well known in this section.
--rec'd from Shrry T Pollan, 2 Feb 2012
A. T. BALL
WASHINGTON'S RELATIVE DEAD IN CITY OF DENTON
Newspaper.
Denton, Texas, Jan. 21- Captain A. T. , 84, distant cousin of George Washington and pioneer Texan, died at his home Tuesday night of organic heart disease. He had been ill for about five weeks, but had been confined to his bed only a few days. His relationship to George Washington was through his great-grandmother, who was a cousin of the first President of the United States. Mr. Ball had lived in Texas for fifty-eight years, having moved here from Missouri after the close of the Civil War. He was born in Lexington, Ky., and when the Civil War broke out enlisted and served in Price's Escort, a cavalry regiment, during the four years of the war with the rank of Captain.

Upon reaching Texas in 1868 he settled at Lebanon, Collin County, where he was married two years later to Miss Ruth Elizabeth Crosier, who survives. Five children, Mrs. J. P. Schulz and Mrs. J. E. Burton of Handley, Mrs. J. Lee Cole of Fort Worth, C. C. Ball of Dallas and O. D. Ball of Globe, Ariz., also survive.

After his marriage Captain Ball was a merchant and cotton buyer and when he moved to Cooke county he bought cotton almost exclusively. During the early days he carried cotton by an ox wagon to Jefferson, Texas, the nearest market at that time. He had lived here for about ten years and as a cotton buyer was well known in this section.
--rec'd from Shrry T Pollan, 2 Feb 2012

Inscription

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Gravesite Details

h/o Ruth Elizabeth Crozier; s/o Robert Ball MNU / Blue Book info - Ledger



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