The John Martin
Brown Family by Mrs. Perry T. Brown
From A History of Coleman County
and Its People, 1985 edited by Judia and Ralph Terry, and
Vena Bob Gates - used by permission --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
John Martin Brown was born
in Cassville, Georgia, March 1, 1853.
Nancy Caroline Gipson was born in Titus
County, March 9, 1854, a sister to Mary A.
(Gipson) Meek (see James Kays Meek).
This couple married in Titus County in
1872.
Twelve children
were born to this marriage; six sons and
six daughters, of which among them were
two sets of twins.
Viola Mae lived the
longest of the family members, being past
90, died May 8, 1980, buried in
Levelland.
The first child,
Maude, lived only two days.
Nine year old
Lucy and twelve year old Dora died of
malaria fever.
Then it was
decided to move west, hopefully to a
healthier climate, productive soil and
good pasture grass for the
livestock. Also a good place to hunt
and fish. They left in one to three
wagons with nine children, the youngest of
which was Charlie, only two years old,
settling in Coleman County in 1897.
John Edward, the
third child and the oldest son was then 20
years old. He had already
established his life time profession as a
lawyer, having gotten his State of Texas
Law License at age 18. He was a
member in good standing of the State bar
for sixty-five years. Through the
years, he practiced in various towns in
Texas. In 1943, he moved to Cisco,
Texas. Besides his private practice,
he was City Attorney for the City of
Cisco, being appointed to that office July
10, 1945, and served until September
1956. He was the father of a
daughter, Nell and a son, John Edward,
Jr. He died of heart problems,
November 12, 1960, buried in Oakwood
Cemetery in Cisco.
Charlie Culberson
died with typhoid fever when he was nearly
16 years old.
William Decater
(Bill) and James Buchanan (Buck), Martin
Chester (Mart), Viola's twin, helped do
the farming and cattle raising at the old
homestead. Bill and Mart moved to
New Mexico.
Later, Bill moved
to northeastern Arkansas. He had no
children. He died of a heart attack
December 19, 1955, buried in the Odd
Fellow Cemetery at Pocahontas,
Arkansas.
Mart, the father
of three children, remained in New
Mexico. He became a large land
owner. He accidentally drowned in
Lake Fort Sumner, July 22, 1958, buried at
Hagerman, New Mexico.
Buck had two
children. He is buried at
Jacksboro.
This completes
mention of each of the sons, except my
husband, Perry Thompson. (See Perry
Thompson Brown).
Mary Alice
(Mollie), twin to Martha Frances (Mattie)
died February 1, 1919, with the influenza
during the epidemic of World War I.
She is buried in New Mexico.
Martha Frances
(Mattie) married Robert Gulley, descendant
of early Coleman County settlers.
They lived on a farm near Ballinger, had
five children. She died of cancer in
1951, buried in Ballinger.
Viola Mae (Ola)
married Edgar Smith from Coleman County,
had five children. Viola (Ola)
taught three terms of school in Coleman
County during the years 1908-10, before
she married Edgar. They had two
sons, Edgar Jr. and Oran, who was 6'6''
tall. He served our country in World
War II in the Army Air Corps, stationed in
England and France; Edgar Jr. served in
the army, stationed in Australia.
After the war, he married a lovely
Australian young lady. They lived in
Melbourne. Edgar became head of the
Motor Mechanics in a technological college
similar to Texas A & M. Edgar
died of cancer May 5, 1977, buried in
Melbourne.
(Images to be added)
Nancy Caroline [Gipson] Brown
The Browns—1900, Bill, Molly, John
Edward, J.M. [rear],
Mart, Ola, Perry, Buck, and Charlie
(front]