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Bertha Nell Briggs

Female 1881 - 1960  (78 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Bertha Nell Briggs was born on 10 Oct 1881 in Wisconsin; died on 05 Jan 1960 in Anahuac, Chambers Co, Texas; was buried in Jackson Cem, Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas.

    Bertha married Guy Cade Jackson in 1904 in Chambers Co, Texas. Guy (son of James Merriman Jackson and Sarah Cade White) was born on 26 Mar 1872 in Chambers Co, Texas; died on 22 Nov 1941 in San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas; was buried in Jackson Cem, Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. James Bert Jackson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 18 May 1904 in Chambers Co, Texas; died on 06 Nov 1957 in Chambers Co, Texas; was buried in Jackson Cem, Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas.
    2. 3. Guy Cade Jackson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 Jun 1905 in Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas; died in Apr 1980 in Kerrville, Kerr Co, Texas.
    3. 4. Zuill Briggs Jackson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 2 Apr 1907 in Chambers Co, Texas; died on 22 Jan 1912 in Chambers Co, Texas; was buried in Jackson Cem, Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas.
    4. 5. Ralph Semmes Jackson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 Jun 1909 in Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas; died on 01 Nov 1963 in Houston, Harris Co, Texas; was buried in Gleenwood Cem, Beeville, Bee Co, Texas.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  James Bert Jackson Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bertha1) was born on 18 May 1904 in Chambers Co, Texas; died on 06 Nov 1957 in Chambers Co, Texas; was buried in Jackson Cem, Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas.

    James married Jimmalou Louisa Carr on 08 Jun 1926 in San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas. Jimmalou was born on 18 Jul 1897 in San Saba, San Saba Co, Texas; died on 21 Aug 1892 in Anahuac, Chambers Co, Texas; was buried in Jackson Cem, Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Guy Cade Jackson Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bertha1) was born on 24 Jun 1905 in Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas; died in Apr 1980 in Kerrville, Kerr Co, Texas.

    Notes:

    The Handbook of Texas Online


    JACKSON, GUY CADE, JR. (1905-1980). Guy Cade Jackson, Jr., county judge, businessman, and conservationist, was born on June 24, 1905, at Galveston, one of seven children of Guy Cade and Berta Nell (Briggs) Jackson, and a grandson of early cattleman James Jackson. His boyhood on the J-K Ranch at Double Bayou was popularized in his brother Ralph Semmes Jackson's memoirs, Home on the Double Bayou. As a young man, Jackson briefly lived in West Texas and worked as a successful traveling salesman. He was married in 1930 to Mary Katherine Cook; they had three children. Their eldest son, Guy C. III, served as county judge in 1977-78.

    Jackson was elected county commissioner in 1928 and two years later won election as one of the youngest county judges in Texas. He held this office from 1931 to 1944. In office he was instrumental in establishing the Chambers-Liberty Counties Navigation District. He resigned in August 1944 to become one of the new district's three commissioners. He served on the CLCND board from 1944 to 1948 and 1952 to 1960. Both as county judge and as CLCND chairman he championed development of the Trinity River watershed. He helped organize the Forward Trinity Valley Association in 1940 and the Fraternity of the White Heron in 1944, two groups that worked actively to promote these same projects. He also served as a director of the Trinity Improvement Association. These activities led Jackson to take an early role in conservation activities. In 1944 he helped to found and served as the first president of the Texas Water Conservation Association. He also helped establish the Trinity Bay Conservation District and in 1952-53 chaired a statewide study commission on water use and conservation for Governor Allan Shivers.

    During the Tidelands controversy in the early 1950s, he chaired the statewide Citizens Tidelands Committee, and during the 1952 presidential campaign he was among several prominent Texas Democrats to support Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower. Jackson led an effort in 1949 to establish a Chambers County Historical Society. He and his wife moved to Kerrville in 1960, when he retired from active politics and his law practice. At the time of his death there on April 24, 1980, he was serving as a director of the Upper Guadalupe River. He also operated an antique store and real estate business. He was a Methodist. He and his wife are buried in the Garden of Memories at Kerrville.


    BIBLIOGRAPHY: Jewel Horace Harry, A History of Chambers County (M.A. thesis, University of Texas, 1940; rpt., Dallas: Taylor, 1981). Margaret S. Henson and Kevin Ladd, Chambers County: A Pictorial History (Norfolk, Virginia: Donning, 1988). Houston Post, February 13, 1955. Ralph Semmes Jackson, Home on the Double Bayou: Memories of an East Texas Ranch (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1961). Miriam Partlow, Liberty, Liberty County, and the Atascosito District (Austin: Pemberton, 1974). Who's Who in the South and Southwest, Vol. 3.

    Kevin Ladd

    Guy married Mary Katherine Cook on 22 Mar 1930. Mary was born on 10 Mar 1905 in Texas; died on 26 Apr 1976 in Kerrville, Kerr Co, Texas; was buried in Garden of Memories, Kerrville, Kerr Co, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 6. Guy Cade Jackson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 16 Aug 1931 in Bexar Co, Texas; died on 23 Feb 2009 in Chambers Co, Texas; was buried in Jackson Cem, Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas.
    2. 7. Laura Frances Jackson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 23 Aug 1942 in Jefferson Co, Texas; died on 13 Nov 2002 in Kerr Co, Texas.

  3. 4.  Zuill Briggs Jackson Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bertha1) was born on 2 Apr 1907 in Chambers Co, Texas; died on 22 Jan 1912 in Chambers Co, Texas; was buried in Jackson Cem, Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas.

  4. 5.  Ralph Semmes Jackson Descendancy chart to this point (1.Bertha1) was born on 24 Jun 1909 in Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas; died on 01 Nov 1963 in Houston, Harris Co, Texas; was buried in Gleenwood Cem, Beeville, Bee Co, Texas.

    Notes:

    Ralph was a consulting geophysicist in Beeville and the author of Home on the Double Bayou, an account of life on the JHK ranch in Chambers, TX.

    A copy of the book was given to me by my granfmother on my 18th birthday.


    RALPH S. JACKSON, 54, died in a Houston hospital Friday after a five day illiness. Had lived in Beeville since 1946. Was consulting geophysicist. Member board of directors of Commercial National Bank of Beeville. Wrote the book, "Home on the Double Bayou", which was the story of his life. Past president of the board of Trustees of the Beeville Board of trustees of the Beeville Independent School District, Member of the excutive board of the Alamo Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America. Past president of the Beeville Rotary Club. Was an elder in the First Presbyterion Church. He was a member of the committee and a driving force in the drive to secure a memorial hospital for Bee County. He was chairman of the hospital advisory committee. Survivors; wife, Mrs. Dauris Ray Jackson, Beeville; daughter, Mrs. W.D. Grandberry, Tulsa, Okla; sons, Ralph S. Jackson Jr., Beeville, James C. Jackson, Beeville; two grandchildren; brothers, Judge Guy C. Jackson Jr.; anahuac, Lt/Col Horace R. Jackson, U.S. Army in Germany; sisters, Mrs. E.C. Scott, Anahuac, Mrs. Roy Dawson, Anahuac. Funeral services 4 pm Saturday Frist Metholdist Church; Beeville, Rev. J.M. Lunsford officiating. Burial in Glenwood Cemetery under direction of the Galloway-Wilson Funeral Home, Beeville.

    - JCP
    (from Adam Edwards -
    http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=juuledwards&id=I17769)

    Ralph married Dauris Elaine Ray about 1935. Dauris was born on 13 Oct 1913 in of, Texas; died on 03 Nov 1980 in Beeville, Bee Co, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]



Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Guy Cade Jackson Descendancy chart to this point (3.Guy2, 1.Bertha1) was born on 16 Aug 1931 in Bexar Co, Texas; died on 23 Feb 2009 in Chambers Co, Texas; was buried in Jackson Cem, Double Bayou, Chambers Co, Texas.

    Notes:

    The Anahuac Progress,


    Guy C. Jackson III dies at age 77
    By Kevin Ladd, Director, Wallisville Heritage Park

    ANAHUAC - Public service was somehow ingrained in the DNA of Guy Cade ?Jack? Jackson III, 77, who passed away on Monday evening, February 23 at Bayside Community Hospital.

    His sense of public service no doubt came largely from his father, the late Judge Guy Cade Jackson, Jr., who will long be remembered as one of the most successful leaders in the history of Chambers County. Guy Cade knew how to get things done, and he was a man who always had several causes to which he was pledged at any given time. Any major project initiated in the county during the mid-Twentieth Century somehow carried Judge Jackson?s imprint.

    Jack, like his father before him, was a man who got things done or sometimes tried his best to get things done. Sometimes in pursuit of some vision, he would rub people the wrong way, but he liked the public arena and he savored causes. His obituary fills to overflowing with such projects: the Chambers County Democratic Executive Committee, the Trinity River Authority, the Chambers County Bar Association, Chambers-Liberty Counties Bar Association, Texas Water Conservation Association, the Chambers-Liberty Counties Navigation District and the Houston-Galveston Area Council. The list goes on and on, and includes the Masonic Lodge, the Shriners, the Methodist Church, and any number of organizations concerned with Galveston Bay, water rights, water conservation, and the like.

    Everywhere one might look today in Anahuac and many points in the county, there is a story begging to be told about Jackson. Any historical marker, for instance, that was erected during the ten years he served as chairman of the Chambers County Historical Commission bears his name. The Texas Historical Commission, which oversees all such markers in the state, sort of frowned on that, but he got it done. And his name will be there for decades to come.

    There is, however, a story right there in Bayside Community Hospital, where he passed away. Way back in 1984 when it seemed as if the county might close the doors on the facility, Jackson and others including Doug Cameron, Lester Martin, Rob Clapper and Sam Hill put together a working committee that created Chambers County Hospital District No. 1. Those five men became the first board of trustees for the hospital, and Jack served as board secretary for the next five years. Doug Cameron served as president. It was an organization that worked well and exceeded everyone?s expectations.

    These were, of course, over and above his professional career as an attorney, a real estate broker, and chief executive officer of the Chambers County Abstract Company.

    As Rev. John Black, his former pastor, said the other day at his funeral service, Jack was a man who never minced words or held back from offering his opinions. There was, therefore, a sort of iron-hammered frankness to him that did not allow for his words to be misinterpreted. Some successful politicians can speak out of both sides of their mouths or disguise the true meaning of their words through guile or subterfuge. But when he told you something, it was just him telling you what he thought, and there is much to be said for that. He lost some important elections along the way because of it, but he ended his days with very few regrets. And when you get right down to it, he was able to look back upon his life without finding much if any hypocrisy there, and that was important to Guy C. Jackson III.

    He was a bear about history. His obituary will tell you that he served his country during the Korean Conflict, but he was obsessed with World War II and the Civil War, the epic struggles that came before him. He loved to speculate and probe the early history of Anahuac, especially the Mexican Period when the battles of Anahuac were played out in 1832 and 1835. In the middle of the fort was the Plaza de Malinche, named for the mistress of Hernando Cortes, conqueror of the Aztecs. She was and is still a most controversial figure in Mexican history, and he loved to talk about her and that plaza as it related to the rest of the fort. He was devoted to the history of this nation and was especially partial to the Democratic Party?s role in that story.

    He was famously devoted to his own family history. He was a grandson of Berta Nell (Briggs) and Guy Cade Jackson Jr., a great-grandson of Sarah (White) and James Jackson; and a great-great-grandson of Sarah (Merriman) and Humphrey Jackson, who came to Texas with Austin?s Colony. A good dozen years ago he became enamored with the idea of tracing Humphrey?s ancestors back to whatever ancestral home they had in Ireland. He secured the services of a professional genealogist there in the Emerald Isle, who traced the family back to Ballybay in County Monaghan.

    He was born on August 16, 1931 in San Antonio, the eldest child to grace the home of Judge Guy Cade Jackson, Jr. and his wife Katherine Cook Jackson. His only brother, James Robert ?Jim Bob? Jackson and his wife Erin live in Beach City. His sister, Laura Jackson Howe, died at Kerrville several years ago.

    Survivors include his wife of 47 years, Linda Cummins Jackson and children Guy Robert of Anahuac; Linda Ann of Anahuac; Steven Lynn of San Antonio; grandson Aidan Patrick Jackson of San Antonio. He and Linda were married on November 24, 1961.

    He was a 1948 graduate of Anahuac High School and went on to earn his BBA at Texas A&M in May 1952. He graduated from the University of Texas School of Law in , January 1958.

    He was a man who was sometimes full of bluster and bravado, but he was absolutely devoted to his friends, his family, his county, his nation, his faith, his party and his causes. We were enormously lucky to have known him and much poorer without him. Our appreciation for him will only deepen as time goes by.
    (from Adam Edwards - http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=juuledwards&id=I17796)


  2. 7.  Laura Frances Jackson Descendancy chart to this point (3.Guy2, 1.Bertha1) was born on 23 Aug 1942 in Jefferson Co, Texas; died on 13 Nov 2002 in Kerr Co, Texas.

    Notes:

    Died:
    Deceased Name: LAURA JACKSON HOWE

    Services Friday

    FREDERICKSBURG - A memorial service for Laura Jackson Howe, 60, will be at 2 p.m. Friday, Nov. 15, at St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Kerrville.

    Laura passed away Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2002, in Fredericksburg after a long illness. She was born Aug. 23, 1942, in Beaumont and was the daughter of the late Katherine Cook Jackson and Guy Cade Jackson Jr. of Kerrville. Laura was the great-great-granddaughter of two of Texas' early pioneers, Humphrey Jackson of Stephen F. Austin's original 300 Texas colonists, and Alcalde of San Jacinto and James Taylor White I, earliest Anglo cattle rancher in East Texas.

    She was a graduate of Anahuac High School in 1960 and attended Stephen's College in Columbia, Mo. She was a member of St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Hill Country Cattlewomen's Association and James Taylor White I chapter, Daughters of the Republic of Texas. Laura was a past member of Anahuac Assembly of Rainbow for Girls, former Mother Advisor of Kerrville Assembly of Rainbow for Girls and 10-year member of Order of Eastern Star. She was a board member of the Kerrville Independent School District in the early 1970s.

    Laura, along with her husband, owned and operated Gallops, a popular riverside café on the Guadalupe River in Hunt, as well as a successful catering business. She was an accomplished chef and cooked with Julia Child at the Aspen Food and Wine Classic in Aspen, Colo., and the International Epicurean Society in San Antonio. In addition, she taught several cooking classes for Macy's in San Antonio.

    She is survived by her husband of 40 years, Larry Lyle Howe of Kerrville; three daughters, Laura Katherine Howe of Kerrville, Elizabeth Howe Loggie and husband, Charles Bashum Loggie Jr., of San Antonio and Laura Petsch Lewis of Kerrville; three grandchildren, Francis Mark Howe and Katherine Cade Howe of Kerrville and Olivia Briggs Loggie of San Antonio; grandniece, Sarah Cade Jackson of Kerrville; two brothers, Guy Cade Jackson III and wife, Linda, of Anahuac and James Robert Jackson and wife, Erin, of Beach City; in addition to many nieces, nephews, grandnieces, grandnephews, other relatives and friends.

    Honorary pallbearers are Guy Robert Jackson, Stephen Jackson, Art Wilson, Ridge Floyd, Brent Waldoch, David Ross and Jim Weeks.

    In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to St. Peter's Episcopal Church, 320 St. Peter St., Kerrville, Texas 78028, and Hill Country Memorial Hospital Women's Pavilion, P.O. Box 835, Fredericksburg, Texas 78624.
    Funeral arrangements are under the direction of Overby Funeral Home.

    (from Adam Edwards - http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=juuledwards&id=I17798)