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Col. Daniel S. Bonham

Male 1806 - 1869  (63 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Col. Daniel S. Bonham was born in 1806 in Frederick Co, Virginia; died in 1869 in of, Clarke Co, Virginia.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Military: Civil War, Clarke Co, Virginia
    • Census: 1830, Frederick Co (Eastern District), Virginia
    • Property: 15 Nov 1837, Clarke Co, Virginia
    • Census: 1840, Clarke Co, Virginia
    • Census: 13 Aug 1850, Clarke Co (District 12), Virginia

    Notes:

    Military:
    His daughter, Emma Virginia Bonham is a very interesting person because of the famous fight that took place at Colonel Daniel Bonham's home in 1865 between a Yankee officer and five of Mosby's men. I researched this fight in depth and published an article about it in the magazine, "America's Civil War" in 2001.

    Capt. Eugene Ferris of the 30th Massachusetts Infantry, which was camped nearby at the railroad bridge over Opequon Creek, came to pay a social call upon Miss Emma Virginia. While sitting in the parlor with her and her father, Col. Daniel S. Bonham, Ferris's visit was interrupted by the arrival of Lt. Charlie Wiltshire and four other members of Mosby's command. Capt. Ferris ran to get his horse, and then, a pistol in each hand, shot his way out of the Bonham stable yard, killing two of the Confederates and wounding two others. Ferris made his escape back to camp with his orderly, and was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor about 30 years after the War for this feat of arms due to the efforts of someone who read about this fight in John Scott's 1867 book "Partisan Life of Col. John S. Mosby". Your ancestor, Emma Virginia Bonham, wrote a letter to the War Dept. in support of the award in the 1890's attesting that "no braver soldier ever wore the uniform" or words to that effect.

    http://genforum.genealogy.com/bonham/messages/1159.html

    (Thanks to Bob Brawley for sharing this story with me in an email on Apr 14, 2012.)

    ----


    PARTISAN LIFE WITH COL. JOHN S. MOSBY,
    by John Scott
    Harper & Brothers 1867

    (pgs 459-462)
    CHAPTER LV.

    GALLANT ACTION OF A YANKEE LIEUTENANT. CHAPMAN'S

    VISIT TO THE NORTHERN NECK.

    Upper Fauquier, April 18th, 1865.


    Dear Percy, Richmond has fallen, the cause is lost, and Mosby, in the hour of victory, is negotiating for the disbandment of the Partisan Battalion. The sun which rose in such brightness, rode in such splendor through the sky, is, in the inscrutable providence of God, destined, like the transient meteor, to be extinguished forever.

    "Those golden palaces, those golden halls
    With furniture superfluously fair;
    Those stately courts, those high encountering walls,
    Evanish all like vapors in the air."

    In the midst of my preparations for departure, and with a sorrowful heart, I will complete my account of the military operations of the command with which I have been connected, some of which occurred after the evacuation of Richmond, but before that event was known in the Upper Piedmont. The people of other portions of the Southern Confederacy may have been prepared for the catastrophe by the gradual stages of decline which they witnessed, but here, amid a continual round of successes, they saw the Confederated banner waving triumphantly. Hope was in every eye, confidence was on every lip, and when the catastrophe was announced it came with the suddenness and violence of an earthquake. Now all is doubt and dismay. Every countenance reflects the calamity which has befallen the country.

    As Charles B. Wiltshire about the first of April was returning from Leesburg, he was met by Colonel Mosby, who apprised him of his intention of making him a lieutenant in Company " H," and at the same time ordered him to take a party and make a scout to Stevenson's Depot, on the Winchester and Potomac Railroad. With a few men, Wiltshire was approaching through a lane which leads from Berryville, the residence of Colonel Daniel Bonham, as a Federal officer, who proved to be Lieutenant Eugene Ferris, of the 30th Massachusetts Infantry, was seen to pass rapidly from the house to the stable, which was situated in a corner of the yard. Wiltshire and Gill, who were riding fifty paces in advance of their comrades, passing through the gate which admitted them to the yard, dashed up to the stable-door in which Ferris was standing. Without drawing his pistol from the holster, Wiltshire demanded a surrender. "Never with life," replied Ferris; and, as his adversary was attempting to disengage his pistol, he inflicted on him a mortal wound in the neck. A little after, Gill, who was somewhat to Wiltshire's left, fired, but Ferris, being protected by the doorpost, was not struck, and at once fired on Gill, and inflicted upon him a disabling wound. By this time the rest of the party had arrived on the scene of combat, and opened a rapid fire on the Federal officer, who, disdaining to fight from a cover, stepped into the open space in front of the stable, and engaged in what appeared to be a hopeless contest. But it was hopeless only in appearance, for, begirt with pistols, he was a skillful shot, and had the additional advantage of being on foot, so that almost all his balls took effect. Soon the gallant officer was master of the field. It was death to stand before that unerring pistol. Orrick and Bartlett Bolling had both been wounded, and Orrick, in addition, had been thrown from his horse. Seizing Wiltshire's horse, which he found at the gate, Ferris directed his orderly, who, cjrouched in the stable, had taken no part in the. conflict, to mount and follow him, but, before taking his departure, he advanced some paces toward his adversaries, who had retreated back to the lane, and fired at them two parting shots. He then sprang into his saddle, and turned his face toward his camp. Two of the Rangers, one wounded, who were waiting until he mounted his horse, started in pursuit. A running fight was kept up until Lieutenant Ferris (for his orderly was captured in the pursuit) passed the Federal picket-post, but not until he had received a slight wound. When the facts of this encounter were related to Grogan, he remarked that the lieutenant ought to be invited to join the battalion. When they were related to Mosby, he said," Why, he is as brave as Grogan."*

    After the encounter was over, Gill attempted, notwithstanding his wound, to return to his friends at Middleburg, but was compelled to stop at the house of a citizen in the Blue Eidge, where in a few days he died. He received the announcement of his approaching end with calmness, and said,

    "I die at least in a good cause."

    George Murray Gill was from Baltimore, and son of the distinguished gentleman of that name, and at the time of his death had just entered his twenty-fourth year. He was graduated at Princeton College, where he exhibited unusual talent for public speaking, a fine omen of success in the profession of law, to which he had devoted his talents and energy. Moved by the spirit of chivalry which animated so many of the young gentlemen of Maryland, he crossed the Potomac, and at an early period of the war enlisted in the Southern army, and served first in the infantry, then in the cavalry arm of the service. He participated in many of the great battles, and was every where conspicuous for the highest qualities of a soldier. The day after the second battle of Manassas, he received in a skirmish on the Little River Turnpike a severe wound, which compelled him to absent himself from the army until the middle of November. From that time till after the disaster at Gettysburg he was constantly with Stuart's cavalry, but was taken prisoner at Hagerstown on the retreat of Lee's army. He spent five dreary months in prison, first at Fort Delaware, then at Point Lookout. At the end of this time he was sent to Richmond, and soon after rejoined his regiment, from which he was transferred to the Partisan Battalion. The elements in him were finely blended, for manly courage was united to intelligence, a high morality, and great gentleness of disposition.


    * There are many different accounts of this fight, and I have taken great pains to ascertain the truth. Colonel Bbnham is a witness of unimpeachable veracity, besides being a gentleman of decided Southern principles. He witnessed the whole affair, and his account I have adopted.

    http://books.google.com/books?id=E24FAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA460&lpg=PA460&ots=NqfX7-Ew2B&dq=eugene+ferris,+bonham&output=text


    Census:
    - 1830 Samuel in Eastern District of Frederick Co.
    wife and 2 sons still at home; 21 slaves
    Daniel Bonham, his wife, a male 15-19; 2 girls under 5 and 1 boy 5-9. 5 slaves


    Property:
    Letter Jno. Milton to Treadwell Smith re money to be paid out. Includes 1837 receipt from Martha P. Castleman receiving $140 on account of deed 11/15/1837.
    Letter from Wm. Castleman to Treadwell Smith calculating Daniel S. Bonham?s land bought by Smith from John B. Taylor, 1837
    Part of a description of a tract of 143+ acres, 1837 (corner of church yard, and running with church yard)
    Collection Land Records Collection

    http://clarkecounty.pastperfect-online.com/31579cgi/mweb.exe?request=record;id=50AEDA4E-14D5-40C6-9819-183121861759;type=301


    Census:
    1840 census - Clarke Co; Amos had 12 slaves, 7 employed in Agriculture. Seems to be next door to Daniel (9 slaves; no listing of agriculture) and apparently a relative of his wife (a Thomas McCormick) on the other side of Daniel.
    next page is Samuel Bonham (the father); 19 slaves, 7 in agriculture.
    John Clinton, a brother to Amos and Daniel, also there in 1840, different page, (7 slaves, 3 in agriculture)


    Census:
    residence 429
    Daniel S. Bonham 43 1807 VA farmer
    Nancy 42 1808 VA
    Mary F. 21 1829 VA
    Lucy C. 19 1832 VA
    Samuel 18 1832 VA attended school within the year
    Ann M.W. 15 1835 VA
    John A. 12 1838 VA attended school
    Edward B. 10 1840 VA attended school
    Anna V. 6 1844 VA attended school
    Aurelius 2 1848 VA

    residence 430
    Samuel Bonham 69 1781 VA farmer $21,816
    Mary A Bonham 65 1875 VA
    Amos A Bonham 39 39 1811 VA manager of farm 250
    Ann E Bonham 37 37 1813 VA
    George S Bonham 16 1834 VA attended school
    Albert M Bonham 14 1836 VA attended school
    Anna Bonham 12 1838 VA attended school
    William Bonham 10 1840 VA attended school
    Mary Bonham 8 1842 VA attended school
    Frances Bonham 6 1844 VA
    Isaac Bonham 4 1846 VA

    Daniel married Ann C Eaty in 1827 in Frederick Co, Virginia. Ann was born about 1811; died after 1858 in Sherman, Grayson Co, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Mary Frances Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1828 in Virginia; died in 1856 in Clarke Co, Virginia.
    2. 3. Lucy Cornelia Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1831 in Clarke Co, Virginia; died in 1867 in Clarke Co, Virginia.
    3. 4. Samuel Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 08 Feb 1832 in Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 29 Jan 1928 in Sherman, Grayson Co, Texas.
    4. 5. Ann Marie Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 5 Jul 1835 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 20 Oct 1914 in Virginia.
    5. 6. John Ackley Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 Mar 1836 in Virginia; died on 01 Mar 1860 in Sherman, Grayson Co, Texas.
    6. 7. Sebastian E. Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1840 in Virginia; died on 10 May 1863 in battle of Chancellorsville, Virginia.
    7. 8. Rosela Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1842; died on 15 Mar 1856 in Berryville, Clarke Co, Virginia.
    8. 9. Emma Virginia Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 30 May 1845 in Berryville, Clarke Co, Virginia; died on 18 May 1918 in New York.
    9. 10. James Edward Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 Dec 1846 in Berryville, Clarke Co, Virginia; died on 4 Dec 1907 in Lamar Co, Texas.
    10. 11. Robert A Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1850; died in Mar 1853 in Berryville, Clarke Co, Virginia.
    11. 12. Charles Franklin Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1852 in Berryville, Clarke Co, Virginia; died in Jun 1922 in Seneca Co, Ohio.
    12. 13. Rose E. Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1855; died in 1928 in Exira, Iowa.
    13. 14. Alice Lee Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Feb 1857; died on 3 Apr 1944 in San Benito, Cameron Co, Texas.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Mary Frances Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born about 1828 in Virginia; died in 1856 in Clarke Co, Virginia.

    Mary married George S Bonham about 1848 in Virginia. George was born about 1828 in Virginia; died after 1850. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Mary married George Samuel Bonham about 1853. George (son of Amos Ackley Bonham and Eliza Ann McCormick) was born on 19 Sep 1833 in Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 4 Dec 1882 in Jefferson Co, West Virginia. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 15. Archer Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1856 in Virginia; died after 1870 in of, Grant, Jefferson Co, West Virginia.

  2. 3.  Lucy Cornelia Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born in 1831 in Clarke Co, Virginia; died in 1867 in Clarke Co, Virginia.

    Lucy married William Brodus Crawford Sowers on 16 Sep 1850 in Clarke Co, Virginia. William (son of William Sowers and Catherine Jenkins) was born in 1828 in Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 20 Aug 1884 in Clarke Co,. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 16. Clayton C. Sowers  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1852 in Clarke Co, Virginia; died after 1920 in Pacific, King Co, Washington.
    2. 17. Elizabeth Sowers  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1858 in Clarke Co, Virginia; died after 1880 in of, Battletown, Clarke Co, Virginia.
    3. 18. Robert Gailey Sowers  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Mar 1860 in Clarke Co, Virginia; died on 20 May 1939 in Palouse, Whitman Co, Washington.
    4. 19. George H. Sowers  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1863 in Clarke Co, Virginia; died on 4 Sep 1942 in Weston, Umatilla Co, Oregon.

  3. 4.  Samuel Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born on 08 Feb 1832 in Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 29 Jan 1928 in Sherman, Grayson Co, Texas.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Military: Civil War, Baylor's Regiment, Texas; confederate
    • Residence: 1859, Sherman, Grayson Co, Texas

    Notes:

    According to his obituary in the Confederate Veteran magazine, vol. XXX (1922), p. 310, my great-great grandfather, Samuel Bonham (1832-1922), left Virginia at age 22 for Missouri, then Kansas, where he engaged in surveying and was captured by Pawnee Indians while surveying for the state of Kansas. After surveying for 3 years in Nebraska, he settled in Sherman, Texas in 1859. Apparently he was accompanied to Sherman by his brother, John Bonham, who died in 1860. Samuel Bonham's father, Daniel S. Bonham (1806-1869) was the County Surveyor of Clarke County, Virginia, surveying the line with Frederick County when Clarke County was created in 1838. Samuel Bonham was the County Surveyor of Grayson County, Texas.
    http://genforum.genealogy.com/bonham/messages/1159.html

    Died:
    Bonham, Samuel - Obituary in Confederate Veteran
    Obituary of Samuel Bonham (1832-1922) who was born in Clarke County, Served as County surveyor and moved West in 1854. Once an Indian prisoner, later a CSA soldier in Baylor?s Regiment out of Texas. Died in Grayson Co, TX. Vol 29, 1922

    Samuel married Martha Ann Melton on 11 Feb 1862 in Knoxville, Tennessee. Martha was born about 1832; died after 1863. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 5.  Ann Marie Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born on 5 Jul 1835 in Winchester, Frederick Co, Virginia; died on 20 Oct 1914 in Virginia.

    Ann married Henry J (Messmer) Mesmer on 13 Aug 1857. Henry was born about 1835; died after 1863. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  5. 6.  John Ackley Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born on 17 Mar 1836 in Virginia; died on 01 Mar 1860 in Sherman, Grayson Co, Texas.

    John married Alice Bonham about 1850 in Virginia. Alice was born about 1830; died after 1860. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 7.  Sebastian E. Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born in 1840 in Virginia; died on 10 May 1863 in battle of Chancellorsville, Virginia.

    Notes:

    Sebastian E. Bonham, nicknamed "Bass", was 1st Seargent of Co. I, the "Clarke Rifles" of the 2nd Virginia Infantry Regiment, Stonewall Brigade. Bass Bonham was mortally wounded on May 3, 1863, at the battle of Chancellorsville, Virginia, and died on May 10, 1863.
    http://genforum.genealogy.com/bonham/messages/1159.html


  7. 8.  Rosela Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born about 1842; died on 15 Mar 1856 in Berryville, Clarke Co, Virginia.

  8. 9.  Emma Virginia Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born on 30 May 1845 in Berryville, Clarke Co, Virginia; died on 18 May 1918 in New York.

    Notes:

    Emma Virginia Bonham is a very interesting person because of the famous fight that took place at Colonel Daniel Bonham's home in 1865 between a Yankee officer and five of Mosby's men. I researched this fight in depth and published an article about it in the magazine, "America's Civil War" in 2001.

    Capt. Eugene Ferris of the 30th Massachusetts Infantry, which was camped nearby at the railroad bridge over Opequon Creek, came to pay a social call upon Miss Emma Virginia. While sitting in the parlor with her and her father, Col. Daniel S. Bonham, Ferris's visit was interrupted by the arrival of Lt. Charlie Wiltshire and four other members of Mosby's command. Capt. Ferris ran to get his horse, and then, a pistol in each hand, shot his way out of the Bonham stable yard, killing two of the Confederates and wounding two others. Ferris made his escape back to camp with his orderly, and was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor about 30 years after the War for this feat of arms due to the efforts of someone who read about this fight in John Scott's 1867 book "Partisan Life of Col. John S. Mosby". Your ancestor, Emma Virginia Bonham, wrote a letter to the War Dept. in support of the award in the 1890's attesting that "no braver soldier ever wore the uniform" or words to that effect.

    http://genforum.genealogy.com/bonham/messages/1159.html

    (Thanks to Bob Brawley for sharing this story with me in an email on Apr 14, 2012.)

    ----

    Emma married William S Perry on 06 Nov 1866 in Berryville, Clarke Co, Virginia. William was born about 1845 in of, Virginia; died after 1866 in of, New York. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  9. 10.  James Edward Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born on 24 Dec 1846 in Berryville, Clarke Co, Virginia; died on 4 Dec 1907 in Lamar Co, Texas.

    James married Anne Jane Davis on 23 Dec 1875 in Lamar Co, Texas. Anne was born about 1846; died after 1875. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 20. Edward Palmer Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Nov 1875 in Texas; died on 10 Mar 1945 in Paris, Lamar Co, Texas.

    James married Mary Jane Hamilton in Nov 1877 in Lamar Co, Texas. Mary was born about 1846; died after 1878. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  10. 11.  Robert A Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born about 1850; died in Mar 1853 in Berryville, Clarke Co, Virginia.

  11. 12.  Charles Franklin Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born in 1852 in Berryville, Clarke Co, Virginia; died in Jun 1922 in Seneca Co, Ohio.

    Family/Spouse: Harriet (Hattie Mae) M Ziegler. Harriet was born about 1852; died after 1873. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 21. Charles Floyd Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1885; died after 1910.

  12. 13.  Rose E. Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born in 1855; died in 1928 in Exira, Iowa.

    Rose married Edmund B Perry on 04 Sep 1884. Edmund was born about 1855 in of, Iowa; died after 1885. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  13. 14.  Alice Lee Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (1.Daniel1) was born on 20 Feb 1857; died on 3 Apr 1944 in San Benito, Cameron Co, Texas.

    Notes:

    9 Oct 2006 8:31 p.m.
    Dear Sherry,

    I am related to Samuel Bonham and Mary Ann Sowers. I would love to know anything about Catherine Ackley! I am a descendant of their son, Daniel... who had a daughter named Alice... she is my great great grandmother.

    Renae
    http://boards.ancestry.com/surnames.ackley/374.1/mb.ashx
    Ancestry.com/surnames.ackley

    ----------------


    Posted by: Kathryn Cooper (ID *****9643) Date: November 07, 2003 at 05:59:41
    In Reply to: Daniel S. Bonham (1806-1869) and Ann C. Eaty (born 1827) by Michael Taylor of 2032


    Alice Bonham, daughter of Daniel and Ann Eaty Bonham, who married John Walker was the great grandmother of my children. I can't tell you the year, but I know that she died at the home of her daughter in San Benito, Cameron County Texas.

    She had two daughters. Nellie Campbell Walker: Feb. 03, 1895 in TX and died nov. 14, 1989 in San Benito, TX.

    #1 Nellie Walker married Fred Hudson Christiansen in San Antonio, TX before Oct. 18 1916. There first son was born and died on Oct. 18, 19??. Their second child, Fred H. Christiansen, Jr was born March 1918.

    #2 Vera Walker no know dates. Vera visited my home in the late 1960's, sometime before 1972.
    http://genforum.genealogy.com/bonham/messages/1239.html

    Alice married John Walker about 1890 in Texas. John was born about 1855; died after 1910 in of, Cameron Co, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 22. Nellie Campbell Walker  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 3 Feb 1895 in Texas; died on 14 Nov 1989 in San Benito, Cameron Co, Texas.
    2. 23. Vera Walker  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1898 in Texas; died after 1970 in Texas.


Generation: 3

  1. 15.  Archer Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (2.Mary2, 1.Daniel1) was born in 1856 in Virginia; died after 1870 in of, Grant, Jefferson Co, West Virginia.

  2. 16.  Clayton C. Sowers Descendancy chart to this point (3.Lucy2, 1.Daniel1) was born in 1852 in Clarke Co, Virginia; died after 1920 in Pacific, King Co, Washington.

  3. 17.  Elizabeth Sowers Descendancy chart to this point (3.Lucy2, 1.Daniel1) was born in 1858 in Clarke Co, Virginia; died after 1880 in of, Battletown, Clarke Co, Virginia.

  4. 18.  Robert Gailey Sowers Descendancy chart to this point (3.Lucy2, 1.Daniel1) was born on 1 Mar 1860 in Clarke Co, Virginia; died on 20 May 1939 in Palouse, Whitman Co, Washington.

  5. 19.  George H. Sowers Descendancy chart to this point (3.Lucy2, 1.Daniel1) was born in 1863 in Clarke Co, Virginia; died on 4 Sep 1942 in Weston, Umatilla Co, Oregon.

  6. 20.  Edward Palmer Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (10.James2, 1.Daniel1) was born on 20 Nov 1875 in Texas; died on 10 Mar 1945 in Paris, Lamar Co, Texas.

    Edward married Mary Frances Patterson on 4 Mar 1894 in Paris, Lamar Co, Texas. Mary was born on 22 Sep 1876 in Texas; died on 21 Mar 1912 in Paris, Lamar Co, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  7. 21.  Charles Floyd Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (12.Charles2, 1.Daniel1) was born in 1885; died after 1910.

    Charles married about 1915. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 24. John Sherwood Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1916; died after 1941.

  8. 22.  Nellie Campbell Walker Descendancy chart to this point (14.Alice2, 1.Daniel1) was born on 3 Feb 1895 in Texas; died on 14 Nov 1989 in San Benito, Cameron Co, Texas.

    Nellie married Fred Hudson Christiansen about 1914 in San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas. Fred was born about 1895; died after 1930 in of, San Benito, Cameron Co, Texas. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 25. (infant son) Christiansen  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 18 Oct 1916 in San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas (maybe); died about 18 Oct 1916 in San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas (maybe).
    2. 26. Fred H. Christiansen, Jr.  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Mar 1918 in San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas (maybe); died after 1940.

  9. 23.  Vera Walker Descendancy chart to this point (14.Alice2, 1.Daniel1) was born about 1898 in Texas; died after 1970 in Texas.


Generation: 4

  1. 24.  John Sherwood Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (21.Charles3, 12.Charles2, 1.Daniel1) was born in 1916; died after 1941.

    John married about 1940. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 27. John Walter Bonham  Descendancy chart to this point

  2. 25.  (infant son) Christiansen Descendancy chart to this point (22.Nellie3, 14.Alice2, 1.Daniel1) was born about 18 Oct 1916 in San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas (maybe); died about 18 Oct 1916 in San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas (maybe).

  3. 26.  Fred H. Christiansen, Jr. Descendancy chart to this point (22.Nellie3, 14.Alice2, 1.Daniel1) was born in Mar 1918 in San Antonio, Bexar Co, Texas (maybe); died after 1940.


Generation: 5

  1. 27.  John Walter Bonham Descendancy chart to this point (24.John4, 21.Charles3, 12.Charles2, 1.Daniel1)

    John married Carol Ann Heinsen in 1966. Carol was born about 1941. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 28. John David Bonham Heinsen  Descendancy chart to this point


Generation: 6

  1. 28.  John David Bonham Heinsen Descendancy chart to this point (27.John5, 24.John4, 21.Charles3, 12.Charles2, 1.Daniel1)

    John married about 2001. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 29. Wulf Walter Heinsen  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 30. Annika Lucille Heinsen  Descendancy chart to this point


Generation: 7

  1. 29.  Wulf Walter Heinsen Descendancy chart to this point (28.John6, 27.John5, 24.John4, 21.Charles3, 12.Charles2, 1.Daniel1)

  2. 30.  Annika Lucille Heinsen Descendancy chart to this point (28.John6, 27.John5, 24.John4, 21.Charles3, 12.Charles2, 1.Daniel1)