Post by benotforgot on Aug 2, 2009 14:58:52 GMT -6
:: Author: Brown, John Henry
:: Place: Austin, Texas
:: Date: 1896
:: Publisher: L. E. Daniell
Pages 437-438, there is an article on Felix Grundy Roberts. (continued from Elisha Roberts)
. . . Felix Grundy Roberts, the youngest but one & now the only survivor of the above family, was born in Washington Parish, La., 23 Aug 1818. He was just five years old when his parents moved to Texas; remembers riding behind an elder sister on horseback when the family crossed the Sabine, & many other incidents of the journey. He was chiefly reared at San Augustine. Attended school in Kentucky & completed his education at the University, at Lexington, in the State, where he took a full law course, graduating in the class of 1842, of which the late Judge Thomas J. Devine was also a member. While at Lexington, Mr. Roberts met & married Miss Elizabeth K. Layton, a native of Kentucky, the marriage occurring 02 Aug 1842. Returning to Texas he abandoned the idea of practicing law & devoted his attention to his plantation, near San Augustine, until 1859, when he moved to Washington County, where he had purchased a farm, & there lived engaged in agricultural pursuits, until his recent removal to Navasota in Grimes County, where he now resides. 05 Aug 1894, Mr. Roberts lost his wife, after a happy married life of fifty-two years. They raised to maturity four sons: John Harrison, Patrick Henry, Charles Morgan, & Jefferson Davis, all of whom are married & either planters or stockmen. Mr. Roberts has resided in Texas for seventy-two years & has never seriously thought of leaving the State but once, that being in 1849, when he went to California. After a residence of more than a year there, during which he endured many hardships, he returned to Texas, fully satisfied to make his home here for the rest of his days. He was personally acquainted with Ellis P. Bean (who stopped at his father's house near San Augustine), Gen. Piedras, Col. Almonte, Gen. Sam Houston, Thomas J. Rusk, J. Pickney Henderson, David S. Kauffman, William B Ochiltree, & many other men who figure prominently on the pages of Texas history. Mr. Roberts has passed through many changing scenes & trying vicissitudes, through all of which he moved as a brave & true-hearted gentleman and from which he emerged with untarnished honor. He lived to see Texas transformed from a well-nigh uninhabited wilderness to a well-settled & prosperous State of the Union & now, in his old age, he enjoys the confidence & esteem of all who knew him.
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