MONTGOMERY
COUNTY
TENNESSEE
James Mason
and Catharine Patience (Bayliss)
Buck

James Mason
and
Catharine Patience (Bayliss) Buck
In
many cases, our pioneer ancestors in Middle Tennessee were children and
grandchildren or great grandchildren of American colonists. They came with a family tradition of looking
for a better place, looking for more land and opportunity, and being
willing to
earn these with hard work and great risk.
This is true of James Mason and Catharine Patience (Bayliss)
Buck.
James
Mason and Catharine Patience (Bayliss) Buck married and established their
Montgomery County home in
1868. Fortunately, through the work of
many researchers, the family lines of both are well documented. The James Mason Buck direct ancestors,
including all maternal lines, were in the Virginia colony before the
American
Revolution. The Catharine Patience
Bayliss ancestors, including all maternal lines, were documented in the
North
Carolina colony well before the American Revolution.
For all the lines where the first emigrant is known, the
ancestral homeland was England. The
earliest of their ancestors documented as born in the Colonies is
Barbara
Brock, James Mason Buck's third great grandmother, who was born in
Virginia in
1665.
James Mason Buck's
grandfather, John
Henry Buck, played a notable role in the early mechanization of
Virginia
agriculture. Born about 1760 in
England, he worked his passage on shipboard to the Virginia colony at
the age
of eleven, landing at Norfolk. John
Henry Buck apprenticed as a millwright and became known for his skill.
Thomas Jefferson engaged John
Henry Buck
to live at Monticello and build Jefferson's first threshing machine
from a
model imported from Scotland. Jefferson
notes in his daily journal on 5 January 1796, that Mr. Buck had begun
work on
the machine. John Henry Buck built at
least two threshing machines from this model, and after Jefferson sent
him to
examine another early model elsewhere in Virginia, John Henry Buck
returned to
Monticello to build an improved threshing machine.
On 24 August 1784 in Culpeper
County,
Virginia, John Henry was married to Lucy
Colvin by noted Baptist minister William Mason, who was
instrumental in
promoting Baptist missions in Virginia and who had also served as a
Captain in
the area militia during the Revolutionary War.
To John Henry and Lucy were born four sons and five daughters,
several
of whom were born while the family lived at Monticello.
At
the time of John Henry Buck’s death in 1834, the inventory of
his estate included a "Gunter's scales," which was a forerunner to
the slide rule, the possession and use of which was a testament to his
skill.
Lucy and John Henry’s fourth
son, George Washington Buck, was born in
Louisa County, Virginia, 14 February 1801.
He married Sarah “Sallie” Estes
in Louisa County 24 August 1784. By
1840 George and Sarah had moved their family to Montgomery County,
Tennessee,
and a study of the early censuses indicates that they moved westward
with
several other families from their Virginia home county.
To this union were born eight sons and seven
daughters. George Washington Buck
farmed in Montgomery County near Clarksville, his large family
intermarrying
with other families of the tobacco planter community.
He died in 1866. Sarah
Estes Buck lived until 1894, and her death was reported on the front
page of
the Clarksville (Tennessee) Tobacco Leaf Chronicle.
George
and Sarah's first son, James Mason Buck,
was born 1 May 1830 in Louisa County, Virginia. James
Mason grew up in Montgomery County, Tennessee, and served
with two of his brothers, George Watson Buck and Benjamin F. Buck, in
Company
A, 49th Tennessee Infantry, Confederate States of America, during the
Civil War. The first battle of their
regiment was at
Fort Donelson, near their home, notable both as a major Confederate
loss and as
the point at which opposing commander Ulysses S. Grant took on the
nickname
"Unconditional Surrender Grant."
George Watson Buck and Benjamin F. Buck were taken prisoner
after that
battle, but James Mason Buck managed to escape along with 1500 other
Confederate soldiers. Benjamin died at
the age of eighteen at a Union prisoner of war camp at Rock Island,
Illinois.
James Mason Buck married Queen Victoria Chiles 20 May 1859 in
Montgomery County. Queen was born about
1844 in Montgomery County, the daughter of William and Louisa
(Fletcher) Chiles. A study of the censuses
of 1820 and 1830
indicates that the William Chiles family likely was among the Louisa
County,
Virginia, families that emigrated to Montgomery County the same time as
the
Bucks. To Queen and James Mason were
born three children: Thomas W., Elmo
Jackson, and Maud Hunter Buck. Queen
died in Tennessee 24 Oct 1866.
Then a widower with three
small children,
James Mason Buck married Catharine
Patience Bayliss 20 Feb 1868.
Catharine Bayliss was born 5 September 1844 in Montgomery
County, the
daughter of Harris and Mary P. (Fletcher) Bayliss.
Harris Bayliss's parents, John B. and Patience (Horn) Bayliss,
had been born in colonial North Carolina but had removed from Halifax
County,
North Carolina, before 1800, settling also in Montgomery County,
Tennessee. Catharine Patience Bayliss was
named for her
two grandmothers, Catharine Timberlake and Patience Horn.
As many in Middle Tennessee
turned their
eyes to the newly opened lands in Texas, a member of Catharine’s family
followed
that path and took his place in the history of early Texas. Catharine Patience Bayliss's uncle, Joseph P.
Bayliss, grew up in Montgomery County.
He followed the lure of promised Mexican land grants in Texas
and
traveled to the early Texas settlement San Augustine.
Joseph Bayliss is recorded in the San Augustine census of 1835
as
single man, age 27, with the occupation of land surveyor.
During January of 1836, David Crockett and
other men from Tennessee traveled through San Augustine on their way to
Nacogdoches,
then a center of recruitment for volunteers to aid in the establishment
of a
free Texas. Joseph Bayliss joined this
group and on 11 January 1836 stood with them before a judge in
Nacogdoches to
swear allegiance to the provisional government of Texas, joining up for
a
period of six months to fight for Texas independence from Mexico. A few weeks later, young Joseph Bayliss rode
with David Crockett and the other Tennesseans to the Alamo mission,
where all died
on 6 March 1836. For his service to the
Republic of Texas, Joseph Bayliss was granted 2976 acres of land
posthumously. His brother, Harris
Bayliss, claimed the land certificates, which were redeemed in Johnson
and Palo
Pinto Counties for Joseph's heirs, settling his own family in Johnson
County.
James Mason and Catharine's
first five
children were born in Montgomery County:
Walter Clovin, Hubert Harris, George Robert, James Bayliss, and
Ellen
Cline. By the birth of their sixth
child, May Bell, they had moved to Texas, and are recorded in the
federal
census of 1880 in Upshur County. By the
time their daughter Katie Pollard Buck was born in 1885, the family was
settled
on their cotton farm west of Royse City in Rockwall County.
Catharine Patience Bayliss
Buck died 18
January 1903 and is buried at Mt. Zion Cemetery in Rockwall County,
just a few
miles west of their farm. Her tombstone
is inscribed, "Thy trials ended, thy rest is won."
When James Mason Buck died 30 January 1919,
an additional tombstone was erected on the plot, this one shared and
inscribed
for both husband and wife. James Mason
Buck’s death was reported not only locally, but also in the
Clarksville,
Tennessee, newspaper.
The
Children of James Mason and Queen Victoria (Chiles) Buck
Thomas
W. Buck, born
24 March
1860, was the first child of James Mason and Queen Victoria (Chiles)
Buck. In the federal census of 1870,
Thomas W. is
recorded as living in his father’s household, but when his father and
Catharine
moved to Texas, Thomas remained in the household of his maternal
grandmother,
Louisa Fletcher Chiles. He married Eva
F. Hackney about 1880 in Montgomery County, Tennessee.
Eva was born June 1864 in Montgomery County,
the daughter of David W. and Martha A. (Watts) Hackney.
Thomas and Eva’s only child, Arthur St. Clair
Buck, was born 26 July 1881. In the
federal census of 1900, they are living in Montgomery County, where
Thomas is
listed as a farmer. However, by 1900
Thomas had moved to Rockwall County near his father.
In the federal census of 1910, Thomas and Eva are living in
Royse
City, Texas, and Thomas’s occupation is recorded as restaurateur. After Eva's death, Thomas married Nellie L.
Dickson, who had moved to Dallas from Ohio.
Thomas died 10 June 1921 in Greenville, Texas, where he had
owned a successful
restaurant called Buck & Son for several years, and is buried at
Royse City
Cemetery.
Elmo
Jackson "Jack" Buck
was born 27 December 1863 to James Mason and Queen Victoria Buck. Jack divided his years between his father’s
home in Texas and the Montgomery County home of his maternal
grandmother, Louisa
Fletcher Chiles. The censuses of 1870
and 1880 record him in the household of his father, but in 1890 he was
back in
Montgomery County, where he married Florence Dee Huffman.
Florence was born April 1869 in Montgomery
County, the daughter of Jack and Dee (Mason) Huffman.
Two sons were born to this union: Robert Elmo, 3 June 1897, and
Frank Forrest Buck, 21 September 1899.
Elmo Jackson Buck farmed for a number of years in Rockwall
County, but
then returned to Clarksville, Tennessee, where he is listed in 1920 as
living
in the city and working in tobacco production.
Florence died 8 January 1926, and Elmo Jackson followed her in
death 1
March 1938. Both are buried at
Greenwood Cemetery in Clarksville.
Maud
Hunter Buck,
born 10 May
1865, was the third child of James Mason and Queen Victoria Buck. Although she is recorded in her father’s
household in Tennessee in 1870, after he and Catharine moved to Texas,
Maud
remained in the household of her maternal grandmother, Louisa Fletcher
Chiles. On 2 November 1881 Maud married
Leonard W.
Hancock, son of William Alfred and Sarah Ann (Vass) Hancock of Todd
County,
Kentucky. To this union was born one
son, Elsie Hunter Buck, on 27 February 1883.
Maud Buck Hancock died in Montgomery County, Tennessee, 11 May
1883.
The
Children of James Mason and Catharine Patience (Bayliss) Buck:
Walter
Clovin Buck,
the first
child of James Mason and Catharine Buck, was born 17 February 1869 in
Montgomery County, Tennessee. He
married Settie Lougenia “Jennie” Canup
4 December 1890 in Rockwall County.
Miss Canup’s parents, John Adam and Lundy Canup, had settled in
Rockwall
County from North Carolina about 1877.
To Walter and Jennie were born one son and seven daughters: Walter Clifton, 28 February 1892; Vena P., 12
October 1894; Lela Mae, 20 December 1895; Oma Bell, 7 March 1898; Alma,
16 July
1900; Linnie L., 21 September 1902; Josie Vernall, 14 September 1904;
and
Jimmie Clovin, 4
January
1907. By 1920 the family had relocated
to Farmersville in Collin County, where Walter continued in cotton
farming
until his death on 17 November 1944. It
was a common practice for the Bucks to give family surnames as middle
names,
and this writer speculates that Walter Clovin's middle name was
actually a
representation of his great grandmother's family name, Colvin.
Hubert
Harris Buck
was born 1
July 1870. Harris married Anna (Annie)
Laura Graham 22 August 1901 in what was then called the Choctaw Nation,
Indian
Territory (later Oklahoma). Miss Graham
was born in Missouri 24 January 1881.
After the death of her father William, her mother Millie Graham,
a
native Kentuckian, moved to West Texas to be near her parents. Later Mrs. Graham married William Gunter,
and in 1900, the family is recorded in the federal census of Lehigh,
Choctaw
Nation, Indian Territory.
Harris Buck lived in Rockwall
County but
had business interests in Lehigh and nearby Coalgate, and there he met
and
married Anna Laura Graham. Harris and
Annie made their home in Texas, and within a few years had bought a
cotton farm
just a few miles east of Mt. Zion Cemetery near Fate in Rockwall
County, which
was near the home of his parents. About
1910, they built their new home around and above a smaller house, much
of which
had been constructed with square nails.
To this marriage were born
five sons and
four daughters: Hubert Clide, 21 August 1902; Ethel Mae, 7
November
1903; Dwight, 1904; Thelbert E., 28
January 1905; Iva Lea, 15
October 1906; J.M., 1909; Harris Don, 15 July 1911; Nellie Louise, 6
January
1915; and Vinita Dell, 24 November 1920.
Harris Buck died 3 April 1936. Six years later, Harris’s sister Katie
introduced
Annie to Thomas Jefferson Thompson, a boyhood friend of Kate’s husband
Sam. Tom and Annie were married 11 May
1943 and lived
on the Buck farm until Annie's death 10 Feb 1958. Mr.
Thompson returned to his boyhood home in Lee County,
Mississippi, where he died 6 Feb 1961 and is buried.
Harris and Annie Buck are
buried together
in Royse City Cemetery. Until the
spring of 2007, the farm house that Harris and Annie Buck built still
stood,
one of the last of the old farm houses in Rockwall County, Texas.
George
Robert Buck
was born 5
November 1871 in Montgomery County, Tennessee.
George married Eula Ulysses Humphreys 21 April 1893. Eula’s parents, Francis Ulysses and Minerva
(Coats) Humphreys, had moved from Tennessee and had established a farm
in the
Scyene community of Dallas County before 1860.
George and Eula Buck moved to Baylor County before 1910. To this marriage were born eight
children: Robert W., May 1894; Lena G.,
September 1899; James M., 1903; Marie, 1904; Valine, 1905; Mildred E.,
1907;
Eula Bernice, 1909; and Frances C., 1914.
(The birth years of the last six children are estimated from
federal
censuses.) George Robert Buck farmed in
Baylor County, and in the federal census of 1930, he is listed as
County
Commissioner. He died 10 January 1949.
James
Bayliss Buck was
born in
Montgomery County, Tennessee, 20 March
1875. James married Lurah Dorinda
Whitesides 27 July 1901 in Travis, Falls County, Texas.
Lurah was a schoolteacher born in Lee
County, Mississippi, the daughter of Major Calvin and Mary Bridges
(Middlebrooks)
Whitesides. Calvin and Mary Whitesides
had moved their ten children to Texas and established a farm in Falls
County in
1895. After their marriage, James and
Lurah also bought a farm in Falls County.
To this marriage were born two daughters and the youngest, a son: Reba, 10
July 1902; Vita Lona, 3 May 1905; and Avon, 11 February 1911. In 1918 James is listed as an official of
the county Falls County draft board, which had been established for
World War I
draft registrations. By 1930 James and
Lurah Buck had moved to Denton County, where James is listed in the
census as a
carpenter. James died 16 June 1959 and
Lurah died 3 March 1959; they are buried in Denton at Roselawn Memorial
Cemetery.
Ellen
Cline Buck was born 15
February 1877, the first daughter of James Mason and Catharine Buck. Ellen died 4 August 1879 in Upshur County,
Texas, at the age of two years six months.
May
Bell Buck was
born 4 August
1881, the first of her family to be born in Rockwall County. May married John Allie Middlebrooks 5 August
1900 in Rockwall County. Mr.
Middlebrooks was born 7 March 1879 in Lee County, Mississippi, the son
of Isaac
Richard and Mary Mildred “Mollie” Middlebrooks. Isaac
and Mildred Middlebrooks were in Texas by 1877,
establishing a farm in Collin County and then by 1910 living in Royse
City. They are buried at Mt. Zion
Cemetery. Allie and May were farming in
Collin County at the time of the federal census of 1910, but shortly
thereafter
moved to Royse City, where they established a cotton farm just west of
town. To this marriage were born four
children: Roy R., 25 June 1901; Glen Ray, 9
November 1902;
Lorraine K., 24 February 1906; and Richard Mason, 8 November 1907. John Allie died 1 October 1939 and May died
15 May 1973. They are buried together in
Royse City Cemetery.
Katie
Pollard “Kate” Buck was
born 4 Aug 1885 in Rockwall County.
Kate married Samuel A. Matthews, Jr., 24 Dec 1905, in Rockwall
County. Samuel was born 8 Aug 1880 in Lee
County,
Mississippi, the son of Samuel A. and Frances (Smith) Matthews. Samuel Jr. is first found in Rockwall County
in the census of 1900 living with cousin Rosa Rains Patterson and
assisting her
husband Anson Patterson on their farm.
By 1918 he had established his own farming operation near Royse
City. Sam
and Kate had one son, James Delyal, born in 1918. Samuel
died 30 Oct 1960, and Kate died 26 Jan 1977. They are
buried at Royse City Cemetery.
The Buck, Bayliss, and Chiles
families
are so very typical of the many Middle Tennesseans whose families were
rooted
in the old colonies of the eastern seaboard.
As lands opened in the west, they followed the trails to
Tennessee, and
then in a generation or two perhaps moved on south or west to continue
the
traditional search for new life, land, and opportunity that their
ancestors had
established.
Donna McCreary Rodriguez
donna316@tx.rr.com

Pictures of James Mason Buck
and children
are included in this publication.
For any questions, please
contact:
Donna McCreary Rodriguez
1101 Brook Hill Road
McKinney, Texas 75070