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- Mary Helen Haines notes:
There are no Cocke Co. TN records from this time period since the courthouse burned twice. However, on his tombstone, which reads "In Memory of...." it states he was born there. Not sure who erected the tombstone, or how old it is, however, it is among the very oldest in this cemetery.
From the History of Johnson County, pub. 1881, by the Kansas City Historical Company, available on-line:
540 HISTORY OF JOHNSON COUNTY. "George McFarland was born in Tennessee in 1793, and died in Chil- howee township, Johnson county, in 1862. Samuel McFarland, Sr., was a native of Tennessee, and came, with all his father's family, to Missouri territory in 1816, and settled in Cooper county, near Otterville; then in about four years thereafter removed to the Sni-a-bar creek, in Lafayette county. He came with his family to Centerview township in 1843, and settled about two miles east of the present depot at Centerview. Here he purchased about 400 acres, and resided thereon till the year 1850, when he removed to Texas. He died in the year 1861. George McFarland, the brother of Samuel, came to Centerview about the year 1843, and settled about two miles south of the present village of Centerview. He died there some time before the war. He was given to quaint, dry expressions, which were wont to produce great merriment among his friends."
Missouri records:
Lafayette County, Missouri 1830 census, p. 258 has Samuel McFarland, bet. 20 and 30, next to George McFarland, bet. 30 and 40, and near Sarah McFarland, bet. 50 and 60. In Samuel's household is one male under 5, one female under 5, and one female bet. 5 and 10, as well as wife bet/ 20 and 30. A Robert Morrow family is on the same page.
Lafayette County, Missouri 1840 census has Samuel McFarland, bet. 40 and 50, George, bet. 40 and 50, and John bet. 30 and 40. Samuel has living with him four boys and four girls. They are living in the Clay township. Image 17/40.
1843 they move to Johnson County.
Bef. 1850, the family moved to Texas, witness the census record below.
Samuel McFarland received a Mil. 3rd class Patent on Dec. 15, 1856 in Burnet Co. for 297 acres. That means he was living there for at least 3 years before the patent. Patent #780.
Samuel and Jane McFarland are buried in the Mt. Zion Cemetery, near Bertram, TX. This must be near the land grant.
To get there: Take Hwy. 29 east from Burnet, turn south on FM 303 before Bertram. When 303 runs into #243, turn west (right) at #330, follow signs to Mt. Zion, which is up a small road that runs north from #330. It crosses the South San Gabriel river at a shallow spot. It is a well-maintained cemetery, that was once named for the Jennings family (Samuel's neighbor) who donated the land. Samuel W. McFarland, his probable grandson, who died in 1758, is among the very first burials.
The notes below and the information of Samuel Arthur McFarland's descendants in Texas is the work of Donell Frazier and comes from her work and website. The connection to George and Sally Jack is still unproven speculation, but based on likely connections. We need a Y-DNA test from a male McFarland descendant to confirm this relationship.
CENSUS YR: 1850 STATE or TERRITORY: TX COUNTY: Williamson DIVISION: Milam/Williamson PAGE NO: 338a
1 109 120 McFarland Saml. 49 M . Farmer 300 Tennessee . . . .
2 109 120 McFarland Jane 46 F . . . Tennessee . . X . .
3 109 120 McFarland James G. 19 M . Farmer . Missouri . . . . .
4 109 120 McFarland Lucinda G. 15 F . . . Missouri . . . . .
5 109 120 McFarland Samuel K. 12 M . . . Missouri . . . . .
6 109 120 McFarland William B. 8 M . . . Missouri . . . . .
7 109 120 McFarland Francis M. 4 M . . . Missouri
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1860 Burnet County Census: fam. 147
147 McFarland Samuel 59 m farming Tennessee
147 McFarland Jane 55 f Tennessee
147 McFarland Wm. B. 17 m merchants clk Missouri
147 McFarland Frances M. 13 m Missouri
Living next to S.K. McFarland 21, and then with several Jennings families as neighbors.
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SOURCE:
Burnet County History - Family Histories, Vol. II; pgs 222-223
SAMUEL McFARLAND
Samuel McFarland, the original settler of that family to arrive in Burnet County, was born in 1800 in
Cocke County, Tennessee, died March 11, 1861, in Burnet County, Texas, and was buried in the Mt.
Zion Cemetery near Bertram. The names of his parents are unknown since the records of Cocke County,
Tennessee, were destroyed in 1897 when a fIre engulfed the courthouse there.
McFarland was married September 15, 1824, at New Lebanon in Cooper County, Missouri, to Jane
Pricilla Morrow, who was born in October 1805 in Madison County, Tennessee, died November 8, 1879
in Burnet County, Texas, and was buried in the Mt. Zion Cemetery .She was the daughter of James Gillis
and Mary Davis Morrow. James Gillis Morrow was born c. 1774 aboard ship in the Atlantic Ocean, and died sometime after 1805. He was married before 1797 to Mary Davis in South Carolina, and they lived in Clarksville, Tennessee.
The McFarlands were of Scotch descent, and are derived from the McFarlane clan whose residence was near famed Loch Lomond in Scotland. Family tradition says that the first McFarland in this country from which the family is descended was born aboard ship while crossing the Atlantic Ocean to America, and was born on the day that the "mid-way bottle" was drunk. The McFarlands landed in South Carolina and then moved westward into eastern Tennessee.
The tradition continues in the family that Samuel was a friend of Sam Houston in Tennessee, and that
they visited the Indian Reservation together. When Houston was Governor of Texas he visited often in
the McFarland's home.
The McFarland name was originally spelled Macfarlane or Mcfarlane. By the time members of the family had reached Missouri it was changed to Mcfarland, and by the time the family arrived in Texas they were all spelling it Mcfarland. By 1900 most of the family were spelling the name McFarland.
An 1881 History of Johnson County, Missouri, reveals that Samuel McFarland came with all his father's family to Missouri in 1816, settling in Cooper Counry near Otterville. In four years they went to Sin-a-bar Creek in Lafayette County Missouri, and Samuel came with his family to Centerview in 1843, settling about two miles east of the depot at Center view. There 400 acres were purchased and the family resided upon the property until 1850 when they moved to Texas.
Another family tradition states the Mcfarlands fought in the Black Hawk Indian War in 1831, and before
coming to Missouri had also fought in the Revolutionary War at King's Mountain. In later years several of the Mcfarlands also served in the War Between the States.
Samuel McFarland and family came to Texas around 1849 and were in Williamson County at the time of the 1850 Census. He took up land in Burnet County around 1852. On May 19, 1856, two of his neighbors, .John Jennings and Samuel M. Bingham, swore before the Burnet County Clerk that McFarland had been living on his land and cultivating it for the past three years. On December 15, 1856, Governor E. M. Pease granted him 297 acres situated about six miles south and east from Burnet (in the Mt. Zion neighborhood).
After Samuel's death, all but 40 acres of the land was sold on August 22, 1863, and the family, Jane and sons George Jackson, James Gillis, Samuel King, and Francis Marion, moved to Cow Creek farther south in the county , taking their possessions with them. However, the Indian depredations and raids became so severe that they soon left possessions and cattle behind and fled to the safety of Burnet.
Another source of information is from the Geneology of the McFarland Family
Tennessee to Missouri to Texas
Written and compiled 1974 by
Mary E. Lawes McFarland
In her work, she found written a history which says Samuel came to Missouri with his father's (unnamed) family in 1816.
COOPER COUNTY MARRIAGE RECORDS - 1819 to 1849
McFarland, Samuel Morrow, Jane A 15 Sep 1824
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