John Harvey Hanna was born November 30, 1836 in Lowndes County, Alabama, USA. The son of William Hanna (1799-1858) and Eliza Crook (1798-1852). J.H. fought in the Civil War on the side of the Confederacy. In Lownde's Rangers, and then in Col. Wood's Mississippi Regiment. He surrendered on May 4, 1865. J.H. married in 1866 in Lowndes, Alabama to Sabrina Jane "Sabrey" Casey They had three children. Sabrey passed away in 1873. J.H. married Emily Lucinda Palmore in 1874 in Lowndes County, Alabama. They had seven children. J.H. moved his family to Texas around 1900 settling in Martinsville, Nacogdoches County. He worked as a farmer until he passed away November 12, 1919 in Martinsville, Texas at the age of 82.
VOIGT, FREDERICK (1825–1880).Frederick Voigt, Nacogdoches civic leader, state senator, and Texas state custodian of public property, son of Frederick William and Wilhelmina Voigt, was born on September 4, 1825, in Germany. Accompanied by his brother William, he immigrated to Texas before 1849. In that year, in partnership with Thomas Rimmele, a baker, he bought land from empresario Haden Edwards on Lanana Bayou south of Nacogdoches, on which was a water-operated grist and saw mill. His sister Mary, brother Henry, and parents, all born in Germany, were also in Nacogdoches. The parents died in Jefferson, Texas. Voigt married Elizabeth Holloway on December 19, 1855; they had three children. After Elizabeth Voigt died in 1866, Voigt married Elizabeth Muirhead Howell Hancock in 1868; they had a daughter. Voigt served three times as mayor, was worshipful master of Milam Lodge No. 2 of the Masonic order, and was editor and publisher of the Nacogdoches Chronicle; he was a member of the vestry of Christ Episcopal Church and captain of Company B of the Eighth Regiment of the Nacogdoches volunteers during the Civil War. Voigt was also Nacogdoches postmaster (1854–66) and owner-operator of a general merchandise store and freight depot. He was a trustee of Nacogdoches University and superintendent of the Nacogdoches Sunday school. In 1866 he was elected by more than an 80 percent majority to the state Senate from the Third District and was introduced to Governor James W. Throckmorton by a letter of James Harper Starr. Four years later Voigt bought the Starr homestead on North Street when the Starrs moved to Marshall, Texas. He was forced out of the Senate when it was ruled that Confederate officers could not hold elective offices. By 1874 he was back in Austin serving as state librarian and in charge of all public property; he reported to the governor the condition of the Capitol and state buildings and made recommendations for their repair and maintenance. In October 1875 he completed a water well on the Capitol grounds. In an advertisement he offered himself as translator of German and his services in presenting clients' problems to the proper state agencies. On August 25, 1880, while returning to Nacogdoches from Marion, where he was electioneering, Voigt and his horse drowned as he attempted to ford the swollen Angelina River. The spot to this day is referred to as Dutchman's Crossing. He is buried in Oak Grove cemetery.
Charles K. Phillips, “Voigt, Frederick,” Handbook of Texas Online, accessed March 06, 2023, https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/voigt-frederick.
Published by the Texas State Historical Association.
BIRTH4 SEP 1825•Westfalen, Preußen, Germany
DEATH25 AUG 1880•Nacogdoches County, Texas, USA
Source Information
A New Land Beckoned: German Immigration to Texas, 1844-1847 [database on-line].
Original data: Chester W. Geue. A New Land Beckoned: German Immigration to Texas, 1844-1847. Baltimore: 1982, Genealogical Publishing Co.. New and enlarged ed.
Taken from Nacogdoches County Families printed 1985
Taken from The People of Nacogdoches County in the Civil War by: Carolyn Reeves Ericson copied at East Texas Research Center by CJ McLaughlin 2021
Capt. Arnold's Co., Infantry Riflemen, Militia; Capt. Atkins' Co., State Troops (The Galveston Coast Guard); Capt. Benton's Co., Volunteers; Brazoria County Minutemen; Capt. Watts Cameron's Co., Infantry; Carter's Co., Infantry (Austin City Light Infantry)
Name:
Frederick Voigt
State:
Texas
Year:
1866
Name
Frederick Voigt
Application Date
4 Sep 1866
Application Location
Nacogdoches, Texas
Name
Frederick Voigt
Post Office Location
Nacogdoches, Nacogdoches, Texas
Appointment Date
26 Oct 1854
Volume Number
19
Volume Year Range
1846-1855
11th session composite photo of Senate members (Dolph Briscoe Center for American History). By the Austin Photograph Co., Prints and Photographs Collection, [identifier number: di_03923, di_03924], The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin.
On August 25, 1880, while returning to Nacogdoches from Marion, where he was electioneering, Voigt and his horse drowned as he attempted to ford the swollen Angelina River. The spot to this day is referred to as Dutchman's Crossing. He is buried in Oak Grove cemetery.
BIRTH4 JUNE, 1847•Watauga County, North Carolina, USA
DEATH13 NOV 1921•Nacogdoches, Nacogdoches, Texas, USA
The Zachary Mast Family Back Row: (L-R) Eugene, Blum, Hollis, Sitting: Zachary, Mattie (Holding Adlai) Standing front (L-R) Leland, Henry.
Name:
Zachary Taylor Mast
Application Date:
6 Jan 1931
Application Place:
Nacogdoches
Spouse:
Mrs Z T Mast
Marriage Date:
31 Dec 1874
Marriage Place:
Nacogdoches, Texas
Death Date:
13 Nov 1921
Death Place:
Nacogdoches, Texas
Pension File Number:
49199
Application Type:
Widow
Post Master Melrose TX
Name:
Zachary T Mast
Post Office Location:
Melrose, Nacogdoches, Texas
Appointment Date:
14 Jul 1879
Volume #:
55
Volume Year Range:
1878-1890
Name:
Zachary T. Mast
Residence Date:
1 Jul 1899
Station or Residence Place:
Nacogdoches, Texas, USA
Year:
1899
Title:
Official Register of the United States, Containing a List of the Officers and Employees in the Civil, Military, and Naval Service Together with a List of Vessels Belonging to the United States