Wylie P. Jones
Copied below is an excerpt from the Funeral Discourse of
Wylie P. Jones, son of Milton Henry Jones and Kezia Culbertson Jones. He is Milton
Henry Jones, Jr.'s youngest brother. I copied the parts that are revalent to our
interest in family history. It has really helped me follow this family in its
travels. Jim Moody nl7c@mtaonline.net
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The one whose memory we come to honor today, Bro. Wylie P.
Jones, was born in Houston County, near Crockett, September 12, 1844. He was raised
in Rusk County and moved with his father to Johnson County in 1860. He enlisted in
the Confederate army in the company of Capt. W. G. Veal, Parson 's regiment, in 1861
and was discharged in 1862 and shortly hereafter re-enlisted in Capt. Samuel Carruthers'
company, Gurley's regiment. He embraced religion in the army in 1863 and united with
the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, at Auburn, Texas, in 1865, soon after the close of
the war. He was married to Miss Harriet Anderson Gilmore of Ellis County, Texas, on
January 28th, 1866. From this union there were three children, two of whom, our
highly esteemed and respected townsmen, J. H. P. and Will P. Jones, survive.
While living at Cleburne with his father-in-law, John P.
Gilmore, they made a trip together to dispose of some horses, taking cattle in return, and
had some very thrilling experiences in imagining that they were being attacked by Indians,
all of which proved to be "False Alarms." He gave his experiences of this
trip in a write-up under the caption "False Alarms," years later. I quote
just on paragraph from this entertaining paper: "I want to remark right here
that we had recently passed through the four year' s struggle between the states, during
which time we had often stood face to face with the enemy where every inch of the ground
was strongly contested: had often stood as a lone sentinel by the roadside where we
counted the enemy on the march when they numbered up into the thousands; had also lain i n
line of battle in fair view of the enemy as the balls and shells played their part in
keeping us interested, but during all these four years of war, we don't remember ever to
have felt so lonesome and nervous as we did at times while we were standing guard around
our stock, with the constant expectation of an attack by the Red-Skins. We, somehow,
had learned to regard them with a holy horror." From Johnson County he moved to
Acton in Hood county, and was in business there for a number years, where he lead in the
work of a Sunday School, and was also a leader in church music, using the old "Sacred
Harp," the songs of which moved with wonderful power the souls of the people and
often in his last sickness, when his mind would wander, he would whistle, when he could no
longer talk, some of these old tunes especially this,
"and as I pass along,
I'll sing a Christian song,
I hope to live forever."
He repeated the first verse of "Asleep In Jesus,"
and asked his wife to repeat for him the other verses, as he could not speak them.
He moved from Acton to Young County when it was a wild unsettled country and engaged in
the stock business. He also taught school in order that his boys might have
advantages in their young days, and organized the first Sunday school that was organized
in old Eliasville. He moved from there to Stephens County, where he remained for
only a short time, moving to Hall County in 1888 and to Childress County in 1889, which
would make him a citizen of Childress County for twenty years, save the eight years he had
made his temporary home in Matador. In Childress he was a County Judge for two
terms, was also in business - running a general merchandise and exchange business, in
which our fellow townsman, J. H. P. Jones, received his training for the banking
business. It was here that a great sorrow came into his life, the death of his first
wife, who died January 19th, 1901. He was married again to Mrs. Lou Humes on August
11th, 1901, with whom he lived most happy till the day of his death. He also
organized, and was the first Superintendent of the first Methodist Sunday school in
Childress. These are but the salient points in the history of this great life, the
details of which would make a very remarkable record. He died about 12:35 P.M.,
March 11, 1912.