Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Notes Toward A Post On the Influential and Singular Families of the Somerset Area: Part Three

Notes Toward A Post On the Influential and Singular Families of the Somerset Area:  Part Three

Bernard Pyron

Stephen Thorne Edwards Family:  Stephen Thorne Edwards ((1859-1934), Lucy Edwards and Their Children Living In 1935:

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The list of Children of Stephen Thorne Edwards and Lucy Edwards are:
J. D. (Bodie) Edwards
Hazel Bailey, wife of Robert E.L. Bailey
Mary Elizabeth Byrom, wife of Charles E. Byrom
Oma Dell Byrom, wife of Fred Byrom
S. G. Edwards
Rosa Trimble, wife of Walker Timble
Varrie Cook, wife of Tyra Cook
Joann Bissett, wife of Leroy Bissett
Nora Bush, wife of Winifred Bush
Ola Tannehill, wife of Robert Yannehill
Lucile Bailey, wife of Harvey Bailey
Nellie Enck, wife of Elmer Enck

Nora Edwards was the mother of Jerry Bush, husband of Mary Pyron Bush,  but Jerry went to school at Lytle.

Hazel Edwards was the wife of Robert Bailey, and mother of several children who went to school at Somerset. I knew Jerry Bailey, son of Robert and Hazel.  He was a senior at Somerset when I was a junior, and Ted Bailey his younger brother, was a junior when I was a senior.

Lucille C. Edwards was the wife of Harvey Bailey.  Was he a relative of Robert Bailey?..  Was H. E. Bailey  a relative of Robert Bailey and/or Harvey Bailey.  H.E. Bailey was one of the Bailey brothers who owned that hardware and feed store at the south end of Somerset from sometime in the thirties or forties until 1969.
Jefferson Davis Edwards (Bodie) was associated with Somerset, though the southwest part of their land was in Atascosa county.   His son Preston was a Somerset grad and Became a medical doctor.  Truett, the youngest son, became a Southern Baptist preacher. I will show the full names of the sons of Bodie and Lucy H. Edwards on a deed later.

When I met Ted Bailey in New York City in the spring of 1963 we talked briefly about Somerset grads who got doctorate degrees, and he said "we had a couple of MDs."  I thought he meant the two older sons of Bodie Edwards, Preston and Travis.  But Louise Pyron Poppe, who was in Preston Edwards Somerset School class, says only Preston got an MD degree.  Who the other Somerset MD was I have no idea.

Then, Mary Elizabeth Edwards married Charlie Byrom, the Fire Chief of Kelley Air Force base.

Oma Dell or Omadell Edwards married  Fred Byrom.  I think Fred Byrom was long a member of the Somerset Baptist Church, and I think he was related to Charlie Byrom.

Who was Emmett T. Byrom, pastor of Somerset Baptist Church in 1914-1915?  Was he the father of Charles Byrom.  The church may have been at Old Bexar in 1914-1915.

In Bexar cemetery:

Charles F. Byrom, 1897-1976
Fred H. Byrom, 1901-1971

Deacons of the Somerset Baptist Church in the thirties:

Fred C. James.
S.B. Moore
J.D. Edwards (Bodie)
R.F. Bailey (Robert E. L Bailey, husband of Hazel)
H.W. Caruthers

Note that two of the deacons of the thirties were a son and son in law of Thorne Edwards. 
A note from Sussanne Bush Burnette, daughter of Mary Pyron Bush, my sister (1920-2012), and Jerry Bush, says her mother said that Thorne Edwards was a circuit riding preacher and had several small churches that he went to on a regular basis.  He was a cowboy, Mary said, and he claimed that he had every right to preach against sin because he was guilty  of breaking all the commandments."

Thats interesting that Thorne was a cowboy and a circuit riding preacher. Since he  preached at various small churches, how did he support such a large family?  There were twelve children living in 1935. Yet Thorne bought land as will be seen.

The idea of a cowboy preacher in late 19th and early 20th century Texas reminds me of two Southern Baptist Preachers, George Washington Truett and Robert Gaddy Baucom.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Washington_Truett

"George Washington Truett , also known as George W. Truett (May 6, 1867 – July 7, 1944), was an American clergyman who was the pastor of the First Baptist Church of Dallas , Texas , from 1897 until 1944 and the president of the Southern Baptist Convention from 1927 to 1929. He was one of the most significant Southern Baptist preachers and writers of his era."

"Truett had a special affinity with cowboys who worked the cattle drives . He was concerned that these men spent a great deal of their lives isolated from society and the availability of the church. Every year for thirty-seven years, he took several weeks from his pulpit to travel with the cattle drives in the Davis Mountains of West Texas . By the 21st century, many area had established Cowboy churches to minister to these individuals."

No doubt Truett Edwards was named for George W. Truett, who was several years older than Thorne Edwards.

This also reminds me of Robert Gaddy Baucom, pastor of the South San Antonio Baptist Church, who was a regular at the campfires of the Somerset "Wolf Hunters" back in the thirties.  Baucom even had his own dogs which he brought out on Saturday nights to join with the hounds of Blake and George Pyron, those of John McCain, sometimes Luther James and others.  I don't know if Baucom was ever a working cowboy, but he dressed as a cowboy.

Baucom was also fairly well known and was written up in Time Magazine, Monday November 30, 1936, Texas Wolf Hunt.  Baucom is called there a  "hard-preaching, hard-riding pastor of South San Antonio's First Baptist Church"

Read more: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,757026,00.html#ixzz2aL2dQuO

https://familysearch.org/search/tree/results#count=20&query=%2Bgivenname%3Athorne~%20%2Bsurname%3Aedwards~&collecti
on_id=%282%203%29

It says Thorne and Lucille married in Kinny, or Kinney county, Texas, which is the county between Del Rio and Uvalde.

https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.2.1/9ZZS-MZ6

Stephen Thorne 'Thorny' /EDWARDS/ Pedigree Resource File

Birth:28 August 1859, Bexar County, Texas, death:16 November 1934 Near Somerset, Bexar County, Texas

Wife: :Lucille Harriett SCRIER birth:  8 October 1867
Helena, Karnes, Texas death:  21 September 1932
Somerset, Bexar County, Texas

Parents of Thorne Edwards:

CHARLES GEORGE /EDWARDS/ birth:  3 March 1824
Wales, British Isles death:
CHRISTINA /VOLK/ birth:  1829
Germany.

https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MHT5-KSW

S T Edwards, "United States Census, 1920" Name: S T Edwards Titles and Terms:
Event Type: Census Event Year: 1920 Event Place: Justice Precinct 5, Bexar, Texas, United States District: 108 Gender: Male Age: 60.......Head S T Edwards M 60 Texas Wife Lucy Edwards F 52 Texas Son Obedel Edwards M 17 Texas Son Graves Edwards M 15 Texas Daughter Lucile Edwards F 13 Texas Daughter Zuenell Edwards F 10 Texas This is the 1920 Census for Justice Precinct 5, Bexar county, District 108.http://www.us-census.org/states/texas/teams/Bexar1940.htm

For the 1940 census 15-27 , Justice Pct 5 SE of US Hwy 81, SW of Medina River and W of Palo Alto Rd, Somerset, Von Ormy (Part)

So, the 1920 census says Thorne Edwards owned wherever he lived and it was in Justice Precinct 5, SW of the Medina and Somerset.
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The deed above says "The fifty seven and one quarter acre tract is situated in Bexar county, Texas and is part of survey number 183 originally granted to J. Texado......Being  a part of seventy five acres conveyed to me on September 1, 1883 by James McClosky."
The deed above mentions Survey 183 originally granted to Tejada, and that the land deeded to S.T. Edwards in 1906 by W.W. Slaughter.is from the Tejada survey.  On the deed it says that S.T. Edwards (Stephen Thorne Edwards) paid $1,500 in cash and agreed to pay four notes in addition of $375 each.
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The above is part of the January 21, 1920 deed from S.T. Edwards to his son J.D. Edwards.  The deed mentions the 57 and one quarter acres
in Survey number 186 (the hand written deed from W.W. Slaughter to S.T. Edwards of 1906 appears to say Survey number 183). It says Survey number 186 was granted to Ignacio Tejadas.  The name  Tejadas is a key to finding out where the tract is located, because Texas does not publish county plat books showing the current names of land owners of tracts above a few acres in size as many states do.

Now look where the Tejada Survey 186 is located:
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Almost in the middle of the segment of the 1879 map of Bexar county land owners is the Iginazo (Ignacio)  Tejada Survey 186.  Look at the southeast corner of the Tejada Survey and see the M. de Chaumes Survey 136, and east of it the G. Bustillo tract, which is the location that included Old Bexar.  Then look over east, or to the left, and see the John Christopher Survey 55.  The south part of it became Somerset.  Look below the John Christopher Survey and see the Geo Mudd tract, survey 273, which in 1882 became the northern tract of A.M. Pyron.

Here is a closer view of the J.D. Edwards land close to a mile east of the Bush place:
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Find the D.W. Styles Survey 190 above which is just below the E.A. Briggs Survey.  The D.W. Styles tract extends into Atascosa county.
Below is the November 4, 1975 deed from J.D. (Jefferson Davis) Edwards and May Pearl Edwards to their sons. Note that the land deeded includes the D.W. Styles Survey 190 of 84 acres and 38 acres of the north part of the Jeremiah Bush survey 79.  These online Bexar county Clerk's Office deeds do not tell the entire story.  I do not know why the 57 acres deeded by S.T. Edwards to J.D. Edwards, his son, in 1920 was out of the Ignacio Tejadas survey 186,  but the land deeded by J.D. Edwards in 1975  to his sons was the E.A. Briggs and W.D. Styles tracts right below and to the southwest of the Ignacio Jejadas larger tract - of the 1879 Bexar County Landowners map
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The deed above mentions the F.H. Hoffman (Frank H. Hoffman) tract bordering the Bodie Edwards land.  I remember
the Hoffman land as being heavily wooded back in the forties and fifties.
 George Caruthers, John Punch Grant (P.G.) Caruthers and Their Somerset Descendants

http://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth29597/m1/14/

Portal To Texas History Vol 3, Number 4, December 1963

"William Caruthers died in 1886, at the age if 77 years.  Sarah Dicey C. died a few years before William.  Their son, George Caruthers, was born March 21, 1846, and married Mary Winset.  George lived and died at Somerset, Texas.  He is buried at Old Rock Cemetery, about two miles from Somerset.  He died May 8, 1918.

George and Mary had these children:

1.  John "Punch Grant" born about 1878.
2.  Arie, born 1879
3.  Flora, born 1880
4. Iley born 1882
5. Texas born 1884
6. Wren born 1895
7. Verdo Wood born 1897

John "Punch Grant" had two children, Hansel and Ona."

I remember P.G. Caruthers in the forties.  He lived at times
in the Black Jacks and also in Somerset, and at one time
owned some lots up in the Pedro Ruiz Subdivision of Somerset.

In the 1940 Census, Bexar county Precinct 5, ED 15-27 :
P.G. Caruthers, is age 66, with wife, Fannie, age 63.

P.G. Caruthers is buried in the Cemetery at the Old Rock Baptist Church.
The Caruthers family goes back to the time of the Old Rock Old Somerset
settlement years before 1909 and the founding of New Somerset.

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7335585
Punch Grant Caruthers

Hansel W.. Caruthers owned the lots and probably the building which
became the Bailey Brothers Hardware and Feed Store in block 43..  And he may have
taken over the garage and car dealership and building of Arthur A. Kurz and Paul Kurz.
In my memory, that auto dealership, gas station and auto repair shop in the
brick building of block number 37 south of the Post Office and across Somerset
Road from the Tom Kenney Store was always the Hansel W. Caruthers place.;
August F. Ernst

August F. Ernst once owned lots in Somerset, and also owned quite a bit of land in the Somerset area of South
Bexar and Northern Atascosa counties.  But I have been unable to find his dates, when he was born and died, or
a complete list of his children.  About all ll I have on him is from Bexar County Clerk's Office Online land transactions.

August F. Ernst, according to an online Bexar County Clerk's Office file , married Katie L. Chapmann April 25, 1904 in
Bexar county, Texas.  There is a good chance August F. Ernst was born in the 1880's.

Irving Ernst, age 27, with Louise, age 27, and Frederick, age 1, are listed in the 1940 census -  Bexar county Precinct 5, ED 15-27
Irving Ernst is the son of August F. Ernest and became a hundred years old in 2013.

On October 31, 1947 August F. Ernst deeded to his son Milton A. Ernst 175 acres of the William C. Brown survey number 336.
There is a file online of the General Land Office in Austin for survey number 336, for Lucius W. Gates, based on a Republic of
Texas Certificate.  The Certificate is signed by Barnard Bee, Secretary of War on May 23, 1838, "said survey situated in the
county of Atascosa on the waters of Atascosa Creek."

A  Lucius W. Gates survey 336 is found southeast of Somerset in northern Atascosa county. See the Atascosa
county Landowners map for 1879 at:

http://www.loc.gov/item/2012592003

A segment of the  1879 Atascosa county map is shown below:

The Texas General Land Office site at

http://www.glo.texas.gov/cf/land-grant-search/index.cfm

will come up with survey 336 for Lucius W. Gates, Abstract number 1232 when Bexar county is selected
and only the survey number 336 is typed in to the slot " Survey/Blk/Tsp ."

On the General Land Office site

http://www.glo.texas.gov/cf/land-grant-search/LandGrantsWorklist.cfm

when survey number 336 for Bexar county is typed in one of the files which comes up says "Bexar Bounty," This
is the Republic of Texas Bounty grant for the services of Lusius W. Gates in the Texas Army, and the abstract
number is 1232.  All of this is in Bexar county.  But the land given to Gates, actually to his heirs, since he was killed
in the Fannin Massacre at Goliad , is in Atascosa county near the border with Bexar county.

Among the documents in the the General Land Office files for Abstract Number 1232 - the Field Notes - says the Survey
number is 335, and that this survey for William Clayton Brown was for 320 acres "situated in the county of Bexar.  In addition, the
1887 Bexar County Landowners Map shows the W.C. Brown tract as being Survey number 335.

On the 1879 Bexar County Landowners Map the William C. Brown tract is marked survey 335, while the Lucius W. Gates tract, in
Atascosa county is said to be  survey 336.   Its possible a mistake was made and the survey number for the William C Brown tract was called number 336 when it should be 335.  Or, the land given to Milton A. Ernst was not out of the William C. Brown survey but out of the Lucius W. Gates survey.

Nevertheless, the William C. Brown survey is very close to the Lucius W. Gates tract.  And the discovery of another Republic of Texas Land grant in the general Somerset area is interesting.

The Goliad Massacre at Goliad on March 27, 1836, was the execution of Texas soldiers and their commander James Fannin, ordered by Mexican Lt Colonel Jose Nicolas de la Portilla under the authority of Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna.

The  links above are not coming out live here.  I don't know why.  But if you want to get to these sites
you can highlight, copy and paste the links into your browser. I just did that and both links work.

There is in the General Land Office file for survey 336 an affidavit by  A.M. Avant and W.M. Wilson, dated
June 2, 1907, and saying they are the only surviving heirs of Luc ius W. Gates, "Who was killed at the
Fannin Massacre."  Avant and Wilson say "We are now in the peaceful possession of said 1420 acres and make
this affidavit for the purpose of having patent issue to said land."  The General Land Office lists "Lucius W. gates
heirs, Patentees."

August F. Ernst on October 31, 1947 deeded  160 acres to Henry Irving Ernst, his son, of the Levi Lewis survey number 330 and William C.
Brown survey number 336 .

  A June 17, 1920 transaction indicates   that L. S. Morrison, August F. Ernst and George N. Evans deeded lots 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 12 and 13 in Somerset Block 29 "and all the   stock or goods belonging to the Somerset Mercantile Company,"  "said partnership having been dissolved. "  The lots and stock
were deeded to the Somerset Mercantile Company by ERNST, AUG F,  EVANS, GEO N,   KENNEY, W, and   MORRISON, L S, it says
on the Document Index Detail.  And it says the instrument type is Resolution and a comment Dissolution.  The deed record is said
to be in Book 636, page 514.

Somerset Block 29 is a triangle with Fifth Street on the north, Sixth Street on the south, Touchstone Street running at an angle on the southwest
and Somerset Road also on an angle, on northeast.  One question is whether the Will Kenney first store building is included in this deed.  Another question is who the deed itself does not include the name of Will Kenney, or W. Kenney, while the Document Index Detail does list W. Kenney.  Apparently some kind of partnership was dissolved and a new partnership was deeded the lots and the stock.  The first Will Kenney grocery store built in 1915-1916 was in Somerset block 29, which is that triangle north of the railroad tracks and on the west side of Somerset Road.

A June 7, 1960 oil and gas lease by Katie L. Ernst to Vernon G. Schimmel involved 284 acres out of the John Christopher grant, survey
55,abstract 154, patented to Thomas H. Moore.  The file refers to Volume 515, page 550 where on September 21, 1917 S.S. Wildman deeded
to August F. Ernst a total  of 284 acres.  The price was $14,300.  This is the Ernst land north of Somerset and south of Elm Creek, part or all of which
includes the two story Ernst homes on the west side of Somerset Road.  The homestead of August F. Ernst in an August 30, 1913 affidavit is said to
be on 480 acres in the Senior community, which is east of Somerset.

There is more than one online deed describing the transfer of parts of lots facing Somerset Road  in Somerset block number 37 by August F. Ernst to the First State Bank of Somerset.  In addition, August F. Ernst owned lots in the Ruiz Partition or Subdivision which was north of the original 1909 Somerset plat made for Carl Kurz, President of the First Townsite Company.  On April 19, 1939 August F. Ernst deeded about five acres of the south part of tract number 3 of  the Ruiz Partition out of the John Christopher survey 55 to Kohler and Sons Pickle Manufacturing Company.  The Kohler Pickle Company building itself was in the 1909 area of Somerset.
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Above is a section of the 1879 Atascosa County Landowners map from the General Land Office in Austin.  The Lucius W,
Gates Survey 336 is the large section of land a little right of center above. Look back over to the upper left hand corner
and  find the Geo W. Mudd tract just above the border in Bexar county.  The George W. Mudd tract borders Somerset.  So
the Lusius W. Gates Republic of Texas Land Grant is some distance southeast of Somerset.
Picture
Above is a part of the Bexar County Landowners Map for 1887.  Note the W.C. Brown survey number 335 in the bottom center. Look northwest to the large Francisco Rolen Spanish Land Grant, and the John Christopher Republic of Texas land grant beside it to the west.  The south end of the John Christopher grant became Somerset, just above the Geo Mudd survey 373.

Katie L. Ernst on July 26, 1967 deeded 75.36 acres to her son Irving Ernst out of the William C. Brown survey, abstract number 74 and out of the Levi Lewis survey 330, abstract number 438.


Picture
This part of the Bexar County Landowners Map for 1879 shows the W.C. Brown survey number 335 in relation to the larger Lucius W. Gates Republic of Texas Land Grant which is across the border in Atascosa county.  The county line on this map seems to include much more of the William.C.Brown tract in Atascosa county than does the 1887 map.

Frederick I. Ernst is a son of Irving Ernst, and Frederick is shown as age one in the 1940 census, meaning he was born in about 1939.

On March 30, 1960 Clara Johnson and W. M. Johnson made a gift deed to Frederick I. Ernst and wife, Margaret J. Ernst, of one acre out of the
northwest corner of tract 5, being a part of the subdivision of 50.69 acres out of the G.W. Mudd survey number 273.  This is Clara Pyron Johnson's land which was part of the A.M. Pyron George W. Mudd tract, the northeast part, and deeded to her in 1935 by Virginia Pyron, widow of A.M. Pyron.  Margaret J. Ernst, wife of Frederick I. Ernst, is a great grand daughter of A.M. Pyron, and grand daughter of Aunt Clara. Her parents were Herbert Johnson and his wife Virgie Johnson.

The older refinery was on land that became surrounded by Aunt Clara's land, and that refinery was near the railroad tracts which ran through that part of the A.M. Pyron land.  The newer refinery, which was still in operation when I was in high school in the mid and late forties, was at the north end of the Carl Kurz land, which was owned in the forties  by his son Gus Kurz.  I have heard my older sisters talk about a famous oil tank explosion apparently at that older refinery, which blew out some windows in nearby buildings, sent black smoke into the sky, destroyed Dr. T.P. Ware's Model T or Model A, and frightened the Pyron children who were about a quarter mile to the west of the refinery.  I am not sure when this explosion happened .  It may have marked the end of that refinery.


The Dixons, Another Influential and Singular Somerset Family

There are several Dixons in the Bexar County Clerk's Ofice Online data base involving land transactions and marriage licenses.  In a March 29, 1932 certified copy of the Charter for the First Town Site
Company, J.N. Dixon is listed among the original founders and/or shareholders of the company.  Another record shows that J.N. Dixon married Mary C. Cass in Bexar county August 29, 1885.  My grandfather, A.M. Pyron, and Virginia Blackburn married in 1875.

Then the deed records show that in 1913 First Town Site Company deeded lots 13 and 14 in Block 22 to R.S. Dixon.  In July 1911 the Company deeded lot 14 in Block 29 to Hugh E. Dixon.

J.N. Dixon, who married in 1885, and who was one of the original founders and/or shareholders of the First Town Site Company. was probably the man that Dixon Road was named for, though the Dixon family shares the name of the Road.

On September 28, 1909 Carl and Auguste Kurz, for $2,000, deeded to A.M. Pyron, J. N. Dixon, George W. Caruthers, and R.B. Touchstone the western fifty acres patented to Thomas H. Moore, assignee of John Christopher.."in the following proportions, unto A.M. Pyron an undivided one fifth interest..."  And J.N. Dixon, George W. Caruthers, and R.B. Touchstone each received one fifth interest in the fifty acres.  Carl and Auguste Kurz retained one fifth interest in the tract, "...said western fifty acres.  The said fifty acres taken out of the western part of said original survey."

The original survery refers to what came to be known as Survey 55, originally a Republic of Texas Land Grant to John Christopher for his service in the Texas Army, inluding his unit being at San Jacinto. The south end of the John Christopher strip of land,which ran from its southern border with the George W. Mudd 320 acre tract to a little north of Elm Creek, became Somerset.  However, the eastern part of the south end of the John Christopher tract was divided into smaller tracts as seen in the 1897 Bexar County Landowners map.  The J. Gonzales and P. Ruiz, or Pedro Ruiz,tracts are on the southeast corner of the John Christopher tract at that time.  Remember that Somerset Road heads through the orignal 1909 Somerset at an angle in a northeast diection and comes out at about Third Street.  Somerset Road beyond Third Street has the Ruiz subdivision or partition on its right, or to the east.
Whereever that fifty acres was that Carl Kurz deeded to four individuals of the First Town Site Company in September of 1909 was likely in that southwestern corner of the John Christopher tract.  There was  a Kenney subdivision added to Somerset at some point, which joined on the west to the original southwest corner of Somerset at about Caruthers Street.  West of Caruthers Street in the Kenney Subdivision the north-south street are Oil, Morrison, Kenney, Mitchell and Clayton, and a James Street runs east-west.

But on April 15, 1909 Carl and Auguste Kurz, for $10,000 deeded 109 acres to the First Town Site Company out of the south end of the John Christopher Survey number 55.  The deed says the "SE corner of land owned by grantee which is also Pedro Ruiz SW corner, thence due north 1251 varas with Prdro Ruiz west line to point for corner.  Thence due west 492 varas to point for corner of said tract."

http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/pfv02

"The vara, a Spanish unit of distance, was used in the Spanish and Mexican surveys and land grants in Texas. One vara equals approximately thirty-three and one-third inches;... 1,900.8 varas equal one mile...5,645.4 square varas equal one acre; "

So 1251 varas, north to south, would be about .66 of a mile, and 492 varas, east to west, would be
about .26 of a mile.  492 varas multiplied by 1251 is 615,492 square  varas, and 615,491 divided by 5,645 comes out to be 109.03 acres.  Is this the original 1909 Somerset of the plat map drawn up for Carl Kurz,President then of the First Townsite Company,by surveyor A.L. Scott?

What was the fifty acres deeded on September 28, 1909 to the five men of the First Town Site Company by Carl Kurz all about?  The date of the deed for 109 acres by Carl Kurz to the First Townsite Company was on  April 15, 1909.  Was this fifty acres alongside and different from the 109 acres?  The 109 acres deeded in April of 1909 to the First Town Site Company is said to border the Pedro Ruiz tract on its east. The Ruiz land was identified as an addition to Somerset at a later date than 1909, so the 50 acres was probably no out of it.  But - on the Document Index Detail for the September 28, 1909 deed from Carl Kurz to the four members of the First Town Site Company are listed, in addition to C. Kurz, also A. Kurz, A. Ruiz and C. Ruiz.  Because the September 28, 1909 deed does not give the legal destription of the fifty acres, it is a question where it was located.  There could be a later deed in which all or part of that fifty acres was sold whichdoes provide some indication of where it was located in relation to  1909 Somerset.

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