. Sixty years in Texas. daughter,Mrs. Fanny Furneaux, in May, 1894. These oldpeople left four sons and three daughters, each ofwhom raised families. So numerous has the Jack-son family and their immediate connections becomethat it occurred to Capt. William Jackson, the secondson, to hold a general reunion at the residence ofhis brother, John. Capt. Jackson has for a goodmany years lived at Waggoner, I. T. Last April hecame on a visit to his relatives and old home inDallas County, and while here suggested the pres-ent three days reunion. The idea was evidently apopular one, for the meeting was
. Sixty years in Texas. daughter,Mrs. Fanny Furneaux, in May, 1894. These oldpeople left four sons and three daughters, each ofwhom raised families. So numerous has the Jack-son family and their immediate connections becomethat it occurred to Capt. William Jackson, the secondson, to hold a general reunion at the residence ofhis brother, John. Capt. Jackson has for a goodmany years lived at Waggoner, I. T. Last April hecame on a visit to his relatives and old home inDallas County, and while here suggested the pres-ent three days reunion. The idea was evidently apopular one, for the meeting was a grand is strikingly evident that there is not the leastdanger of the Jackson family becoming extinct inthe Southwest. The Dallas News of that date gives the namesof all. I will state that there are now twentyfamilies of Jacksons of the descendants of John andMary Jackson, and thirteen families of the girls andtheir descendants that have had their nameschanged, making a total of thirty-three families
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjecttexassociallifeandcu