Odd names intrique me. In the sea of John and James and Mary's, it's a tickle and a comfort to see a Zephinah Cucumber or a Northwinn Polycarp. Why couldn't Tennesee Berrymaster or Euphrasia Coppledick have been my ancestors?
Recently, while researching a family of Solomons who had migrated to Texas, I came across this family grouping:
Looking a little closer, I noticed that William Solomon had a 19 year old young man from Tennesee, employed by him, "working on farm", name Fountain Piece. What kind of a name was Fountain Piece?
Couriousity killed the cat. Needing a break from the Solomons, I just had to know, who was Fountain Piece and what was his connection to the Solomons.
The first thing I discovered was that his name was not Fountain "Piece", but Fountain "Price". Fountain Becom Price to be exact, and just a young man with an interesting name. His family's story is typically American and typical of the populating of the country from east to west.
It begins in West Virginia with a very 'frontiersman'looking charactor named Jacob W. Price. The "Preis" family were Germans out of New Holland, Lancaster, Pennsylvania who would first migrated into Frederick County, Virginia. The first, Peter, would marry a "Frey" or "Freyin". His son, George Peter, would Anglicize his name to "Price" and marry another ethnically German girl named Catharina Krebs.
George Peter and Catharina would have a son named just George, born around 1786, and moved into Maryland. George would grow up in Hagerstown, Maryland and in 1815, would marry a lady there named Catherine, daughter of George Michael Hout and Christiana Strider. She was the widow of a John Humeldorf, so therefore, Catherine Hout Humeldorg.
Now, I've been looking for the surname of 'Foutain' and there were some, particularly in Virginia. Instead, we're encountering all these "Pennsylvania Dutch".
George and Catherine H. H. Price would remove to Berkeley County, West Virginia, and they were the parents of the rustic looking Jacob, shown above, born in 1823.
On July 19, 1845, Jacob would marry Emeline Huntsburg in Berkeley County, which at the time, was just Virginia.
Now the father of Evaline Emaline Etta Huntsburg is unknown.
However, in the 1850 census, we see Jacob and Evaline living next to his parents, George and Catherine Price and siblings, Michael and Christena. The young couple has a 4 year old son with the impressive name of George Isaac Newton Price and a 7 month old son named Jacob H., for Henry. Also living with them is a 72 year old woman named Barbara. She is probably the mother, or even grandmother, of Evaline, as she is not related to Jacob, and I would bet there might be a surname of Fountain, somewhere in her family tree, as she was born in Virginia.
Evalina would have been pregnant at the time of this record, despite having a 7 month old son. Cue Harpers Ferry.
Harper's Ferry, West Virginia is a beautiful place with a significant history. It is also the place where Fountain B. Price was born on May 30, 1850. It was an event that would lead to the death of his mother, Evalina Emaline Huntsburg Price.
Harpers Ferry was a very progressive and eventful place in the 1850's when the Price's lived there. Manufacturing innovations and operations were expanding there. The first successful American Railroad had been established in Harpers Ferry. It was also a volutable time, and the home of reknowned abolutionist John Brown.
Name | Jacob Price |
---|---|
Age | 37 |
Birth Year | abt 1823 |
Gender | Male |
Race | White |
Birth Place | Virginia |
Home in 1860 | Meramec, Crawford, Missouri |
Post Office | Steelville |
Dwelling Number | 137 |
Family Number | 137 |
Occupation | Carpenter |
Personal Estate Value | 165 |
Inferred Spouse | Winney Price |
Name | Age |
---|---|
Jacob Price | 37 |
Winney Price | 29 |
G I A R Price | 14 |
J H Price | 11 |
F B Price | 9 |
S L Price | 2 |
Jacob Price would not remain in Harper's Ferry with his young sons. He would find a second wife, named Winny, to help his raise his children and would remove, as many would, to Missouri.
The 1860 census would find the young family in Merramic, Steeleville Township, Crawford County, Missouri and his first daughter and first child with Winny, had been born, Sarah. Jacob was working as a Carpenter in that tumultous state. Missouri was a hotbed of destruction and turmoil during the 1860's and Jacob Price wisely led his family out of there as soon as possible and made it across the Mississippi and south to Texas.
Name | Jacob Price |
---|---|
Birthplace | Virginia |
Registry Date | 4 Sep 1867 |
County | Brazoria |
Line Number | 1196 |
Archive Collection Title | 1867 Voter Registration Lists |
Archive Reel Number | 2 |
He was in Brazoria, Texas by 1867. Jacob seemed to be a man just made for Texas.
Name | Jacob Price |
---|---|
Age in 1870 | 47 |
Birth Date | abt 1823 |
Birthplace | Virginia |
Dwelling Number | 392 |
Home in 1870 | Etna Beat 3, Smith, Texas |
Race | White |
Gender | Male |
Post Office | Etna |
Occupation | Farmer |
Male Citizen Over 21 | Yes |
Personal Estate Value | 100 |
Real Estate Value | 240 |
Inferred Spouse | Winnie Price |
Name | Age |
---|---|
Jacob Price | 47 |
Winnie Price | 35 |
Sarah Price | 12 |
Henrietta Price | 10 |
James Price | 5 |
Catherine Price | 2 |
Jacob Price |
1870 finds the family in Etna, Smith County, Texas. Etna is now considered a ghost town.
Jacob Henry was the only one of Jacob Sr.'s three sons by his first marriage still living with him. Oldest son, George Isaac Newton Price had served in the Civil War and survived with agrivating, ut not debilitating injuries. He started a family and had the wanderllust, like hisfather, and moved them all over Texas before he passed away in 1932 in Austin, Texas.
And this was the year Fountain is found working as a farm hand for Mr. William Solomon. Two years after he is seen working for the Solomons, Fountain falls in loved. On August 14, 1872, at the age of 22, he marries Miss Nannie Talley.
Name | Nancy Sally |
---|---|
Age | 7 |
Birth Year | abt 1853 |
Gender | Female |
Race | White |
Birth Place | Alabama |
Home in 1860 | Tyler, Smith, Texas |
Post Office | Tyler |
Dwelling Number | 1314 |
Family Number | 1314 |
Attended School | Y |
Name | Age |
---|---|
David A Nelson | 27 |
Jane Nelson | 21 |
Mary Sally | 13 |
Nancy Sally | 7 |
James Nelson | 2 |
Josephus Nelson | 1/12 |
The Talley's were an Alabama family. Nancy Ann "Nannie" Talley's father died when she was very small, leaving her mother, Josephine, a young widow with two little daughters, Nannie and her sister, Mary. Josephine remarried a man named David A. Nelson and they had moved to Tyler, Texas by 1860.
The home may not have been a pleasant one. Nancy's older sister, Mary, married a man named Henry Hinson (shown as Hynson) and Nancy went to live with them as a teenager, as is seen in 1870, still in Tyler,Texas.
Name | Nancy Tally |
---|---|
Age in 1870 | 16 |
Birth Date | abt 1854 |
Birthplace | Texas |
Dwelling Number | 279 |
Home in 1870 | Tyler, Smith, Texas |
Race | White |
Gender | Female |
Post Office | Tyler |
Occupation | At Home |
Name | Age |
---|---|
Henry Hynson | 74 |
Mary Hynson | 30 |
Nancy Tally | 16 |
Mary Hynson | 5 |
Florence Hynson | 2 |
This is probably where Fountan met Nannie. The couple move to Williamson County, Texas, which is still essentially East Texas, but most definately moving into the center. The topography changes in Williamson County from the rich black soil of Eastern Texas to the limestone hills of West Texas. It has a typical old Wild West History and Fountain found work there as a Drayman.
In 1880, two of their five little girls had been born and Fountains younger half-sister, Sarah, had come to live with them. Their father had died in 1877. Three years later, Sarah Lovina Price would marry a man called Jack Dunham.
Name | F. B. Price |
---|---|
Age | 29 |
Birth Date | Abt 1851 |
Birthplace | Virginia |
Home in 1880 | Precinct 6, Williamson, Texas, USA |
House Number | 27 |
Dwelling Number | 14 |
Race | White |
Gender | Male |
Relation to Head of House | Self (Head) |
Marital Status | Married |
Spouse's Name | Nancy Price |
Father's Birthplace | Virginia |
Mother's Birthplace | Virginia |
Occupation | Drayman |
Neighbors | View others on page |
Name | Age |
---|---|
F. B. Price | 29 |
Nancy Price | 24 |
Sarah Price | 21 |
Lizzie Price | 6 |
Ida Lee Price | 10/12 |
Williamson was not where the Price family wanted to settle down for good. By becoming a drayman, Fountian became a quick study of the merchant class and wanted to become a businessman he decided to start a Bakery.
Name | Fountain B Price |
---|---|
Age | 49 |
Birth Date | May 1851 |
Birthplace | Virginia, USA |
Home in 1900 | Whitesboro, Grayson, Texas |
Sheet Number | 11 |
Number of Dwelling in Order of Visitation | 226 |
Family Number | 233 |
Race | White |
Gender | Male |
Relation to Head of House | Head |
Marital Status | Married |
Spouse's Name | Nancy A Price |
Marriage Year | 1872 |
Years Married | 28 |
Father's Birthplace | Virginia, USA |
Mother's Birthplace | Virginia, USA |
Occupation | Bakery Merch |
Months Not Employed | 0 |
Can Read | Y |
Can Write | Y |
Can Speak English | Y |
House Owned or Rented | Rent |
Farm or House | H |
Neighbors | View others on page |
Name | Age |
---|---|
Fountain B Price | 49 |
Nancy A Price | 46 |
Mary R Price | 17 |
Fannie Price | 15 |
Pearl C Price | 11 |
Fountain was now almost 50 years old. He'shad 5 daughters and two were married. He settled in Whitesboro, Grayson County, near Dallas. Grayson County is where he lost his beloved Nannie. She passed away ther on June 29, 1908, at just 54 years old.
In 1910, Fountain is still operating his Bakery and living with his youngest daughter, Pearlie and her family. Unmarried daughter, Fanny, is living with them as well.
Name | Fountain B Price |
---|---|
Age in 1910 | 59 |
Birth Date | 1851 |
Birthplace | Virginia |
Home in 1910 | Whitesboro, Grayson, Texas, USA |
Sheet Number | 11a |
Street | West Main Street |
Race | White |
Gender | Male |
Relation to Head of House | Head |
Marital Status | Widowed |
Father's Birthplace | Virginia |
Mother's Birthplace | Virginia |
Native Tongue | English |
Occupation | Proprietor |
Industry | Bakery |
Employer, Employee or Other | Employer |
Home Owned or Rented | Own |
Home Free or Mortgaged | Free |
Farm or House | House |
Able to read | Y |
Able to Write | Y |
Enumeration District Number | 0103 |
Enumerated Year | 1910 |
Neighbors | View others on page |
Name | Age |
---|---|
Fountain B Price | 59 |
Fannie Price | 24 |
Porter Cooley | 24 |
Pearl Cooley | 21 |
Elizabeth Cooley | 3 |
Soon afterwards, Porter and Pearl would move thier family to Oklahoma and Fountain was on the move agian. He moved with his daughter , Fannie, to the little town of Brady in McCulloch County, deep in the heart of Texas.
Brady is exactly what comes to mind when most folks think of Texas, ranches, scrubbrush and and wide, flat rivers.
Here is where he would lose his daughter , Fannie of pnuemonia in 1918. Fountain would remain in McCulloch for a time in the 1920's, but by 1930, he would retire and and move to Fort Worth, where his oldest daughter, Kurgie lived.
Fountain B. Price would spend his last few retirement years in Fort Worth. He passed away thereon December 8, 1933, of Heart Failure. He was returned to Whitesboro, in Grayson County, Texas, to be buried beside his wife, Nannie.
Fountain and Nannie Price were the parents of 5 daughters.
A) Elizabeth LuKurgia Price ( 1873-1936) married Clarence Jackson and raised 4 children in Fort Worth.
B) B) Ida Lee Price (1879 - Unknown).
C) Mary Rebecca Price (1883-1952) Married Evander Irl Donaldson and raised 4 children in Houston, Texas.
D) Fannie Price ( (1885-1918) Helped her father in the Bakery and Never Married.
E) Pearlie Cecile Price (1888 - 1973) Married Porter Alvin Cooley and raised 2 children in Ardmore, Oklahoma.
Fountain Boon Price, a man with an unusual name, and typical of a Founding Texas family.