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CHAPTER TEN

THE FAMILIES IN PINE ISLAND ANTHONY THRU FOSTER





The Texas Blue Bonnet


[ PLEASE NOTE: Name spellings are only as accurate as the person who gave the information or the person that wrote it into the records.]

INTRODUCTION

The first people to hold a legal title to the land of Pine Island were Jared E. Groce and Charles Donoho. The next group of settlers, had to buy their land from these two. Most of the Pine Island area was bought from Mr. Groce. Some of the first people of this later group were Will Cameron, Owen L. Cochran, J. D. Flewellen, Z.H. Hammond and J.M. Mathis. Just after the turn of the century, in 1910, the roughly ten square mile area was supporting over 400 people in the fifty or so families living there.

Minorities In Pine Island

There were only four black families living in Pine Island in 1910. They were the Clays, Davis, Jones and the Randalls (families listed below.) The Clays and Randalls lived in the northern edge (near the railroad) in what is now the city of Prairie View but at the time it would have been considered part of Pine Island. The Davis and Jones families lived west of Pine Island Road on Brumlow Road. There were two other black men living in the area in 1910. They were both living with white families that employed them. They were Charles Fraizer (age 19, born in Texas) living with the Francis Pennington/Harry Milam families and Terry Bousten (age 22, born in Texas) living with the Joseph Phillips family. Other black families moved into the area in 1930 and 1940, such as James Tapscott and John Scott and older ones moved out. In later years the farm land from Hwy. 290, south to about half way to Brumlow Rd. and between Cochran and Pine Island roads. has been subdivided into smaller tracts and now contains a larger number of black citizens.

THE PINE ISLAND FAMILIES