Early Texans DNA Project

James Stephen

Male Abt 1795 - Abt 1857  (62 years)


 

Casey - James Casey Jr. - Brief Bio



As one of Austin’s colonists,[1] James Stephens petitioned for a land grant from the State of Coahuila and Texas on 26 February 1831, and it was granted on 8 March 1831 by Miquel Arciniega.[2] The land was situated in Washington County, on the Caney Creek, a tributary to the west of the Brazos, just southwest of Chappell Hill.

Stephens appeared before the Washington County Land Commissioners on 2 August 1835, and proved, “...to our satisfaction that he arrived in this country in the year Eighteen Hundred and Twenty-nine, that he is a married man and head of a family, and entitled to one labor of land (he having previously obtained one league)...”[3] Thus the Stephen family’s history became intertwined with the history of Texas.

Two of James Stephen's sons John Miller Stephen & William F. Stephen were pioneers instrumental in the formation of Erath County, Texas, and in particular Stephenville. In 1856 John Miller Stephen donated the land for the townsite which was laid out by George Erath; thecity was named for Stephen. [4]

William Franklin Stephen farmed cotton and raised cattle and horses near Dublin, Erath on Resley's Creek. In 1975 the Stephen farm was granted Century Farm status by the Texas Dept. of Agriculture, as it had at that time been continuously farmed for over 138 years by the Stephen family. A portion of the original farm was still in family hands as of 2018, a legacy of over 180 ears. [5]


Sources:
1.  Texas General Land Office Register Of Families Search, entry for James Stephens, Austin  Colony, Vol. 1 , p. 51-52, 1829; database & images, Texas General Land Office (https://s3.glo.texas.gov/glo/history/archives/land-grants/registeroffamilies.cfm : accessed 14 June 2021); citing Texas GLO, Austin.

2.  "Sello Tercero: Dos Reales," (Third Stamp: Two Reales), Spanish Collection, Box 6, Folder 47,  pages 242-245, land grant petition of James Stephen; Gaylen Greaser, translator, Texas General Land Office, Austin.

3. Board of Land Commissioners, Washington, Texas, File 40, Certificate #563, James Stevens (1835);  digital image, The Texas General Land Office (https://s3.glo.texas.gov/ncu/SCANDOCS/archives_webfiles/arcmaps/webfiles/landgrants/PDFs/1/4/7/147993.pdf : accessed 31 July 2021).

4. Dan M. Young,"Stephenville, Texas," Handbook of Texas  (https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/stephenville-tx : accessed 15 June 2021), 1952; rev. 1 July 1995.

5.  "Stephen Brothers Own Century Farm," The Dublic Progress, 2 July 1986, p. 4, col. 1-6; image, The Portal to Texas History (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth778146/m1/4/: accessed 15 June 2021); citing Dublin Public Library, Dublin.

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