Hood County Texas Genealogical Society
MARY ALICE COMPTON ELLIOTT
1868 – 1952
The following article was published in 1940 in the Moran, Texas newspaper.
By Dora Williams
Mrs.
George W. Elliott, who will celebrate her 72nd birthday December 14, upsets the
traditions of typical grandmothers who retire and turn things over to their
children. She operates all her own
business, which includes the management of four sections of land, a small herd
of cattle, and other livestock and poultry.
Until
the death of her husband in 1932 Mrs. Elliott had never even written a
check. Since that time she has kept
house, hired all her employees, bought all her own machinery, and tended to her
cattle and her land, much of which is devoted to farming, insures all her
property, and pays taxes.
Mrs.
Elliott was born Mary Alice Compton Dec. 4, 1868 in Madison county,
Missouri. She was the youngest member
of a family of five children, two boys and three girls. Her father, J. Richard Compton, coal miner
and later a farmer, died after exposure in the civil war when she was three
years old.
Compton, California, was named for her father’s brother who became rich in the gold rush of 1849.
She
never knew her father’s people. All she
remembers about her father was his bitter hatred of the Yankees. He became furious at his sister and almost
quit speaking to her because she married a southerner, Mrs. Elliott
recalls. She heard her mother [Sarah L.
Iles Compton] tell how the Yankees came through their yard while she (Mrs.
Elliott) was a baby and raided their place, taking all they could use, and even
destroying the family’s yearly supply of wool which was out drying.
After
the death of her father, Mrs. Elliott often had to go to the cotton patch and
help her mother make a living. After a
few years in Arkansas, where her father died, Mary Alice Compton came with her
family to Dallas on the T. & P. railroad which was in operation at that
time. From Dallas they came to Hood
county in wagons [to Lipan]. She was 8
years old.
She
and the other children attended a “picket schoolhouse” which was made by
sticking poles in the ground. It had a
dirt floor and the students sat on split logs.
They walked three miles to school and carried their lunches in the
buckets only during the summer months.
After two years of courtship, Mary Alice Compton married George Elliott, March 26, 1885 at the age of 17. A justice of the peace married them in a big home wedding, after which they had a dance. She says she was never satisfied because she was not married by a preacher.
Their
honeymoon consisted of going over the crops the next day, and they were elated
because they had a good corn crop.
Mrs.
Elliott said young people in those days “had their fun” at all night dances,
singings, Sunday school and church.
She
kept for years an old side saddle which she rode for years with a long riding
skirt draped over her huge hoped skirt.
It was a disgrace for a girl to show her ankles in those days, she
laughs.
Mr.
and Mrs. Elliott’s six children were born in Hood county, after which they
moved to Shackelford county in 1905.
Her four surviving children are Olin Elliott, Moran; Ross Elliott,
Breckenridge; Mrs. J.M. Townsend, Moran; Mrs. E.W. Higgins, Cisco. She has 15 grandchildren and seven great
grandchildren. Mrs. Elliott thinks
education is very important – all of her children attended college, and she has
lent financial aid to many of her grandchildren and to other young people
trying to get college education.
Mrs. Elliott is very healthy and happy – as long as she is out of doors. She has quick wit and a keen sense of humor obvious in her twinkling blue eyes that belie her 71 years.
Mary
Alice Compton Elliott was born December 4, 1867 in Madison County,
Missouri. She married George
Washington Elliott on March 26, 1885 in Hood County, Texas. Mary Alice passed away on March 18, 1952
in Shackelford County, Texas and was buried in Moran Cemetery in Moran,
Shackelford County, Texas. |
~ Web Page by Virginia Hale
~