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Capt Matthew Jackson Brinson

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Capt Matthew Jackson Brinson Veteran

Birth
Alabama, USA
Death
8 Oct 1901 (aged 75)
Tarrant County, Texas, USA
Burial
Arlington, Tarrant County, Texas, USA GPS-Latitude: 32.7286001, Longitude: -97.100569
Plot
H 44
Memorial ID
View Source
M J Brinson was the son of Matthew Brinson and Elizabeth Carrigan Brinson. He married first to Louisa H Johnson; they had five children. He married second to Sarah M Burford; they had four children. M J Brinson's third wife was named Octavia.

The Arlington Journal, Arlington, Texas, Thursday October 10, 1901:
Gone To His Reward. Death of Capt. M. J. Brinson, an Old Pioneer of This County. One by one the old landmarks are passing away—passing to that great beyond from whence no traveler ever returneth. This week we are called upon to chronicle the death of one of Tarrant county's oldest and most respected citizens, Capt. M. J. Brinson, aged 75 years, who laid down the habiliments of life and passed peacefully away last Tuesday night, death resulting from heart disease. Captain Brinson, as he was known, was one of the oldest settlers in this section of the state and was living in Tarrant county while Birdville was the county site. He built the first business house in Fort Worth and has been closely identified with the county's progress and advancement. The funeral services were conducted at the Cumberland Presbyterian church this morning at 10 o'clock, the same being conducted under the auspices of the local Masonic order, of which he had long been a member, and, we are informed, was next to the oldest Mason in Tarrant county. Besides a wife, several grown children survive to whom The Journal extends sincere sympathy and condolence.

Shiner Gazette, Shiner, Texas, 23 October 1901:
Capt. M. J. Brinson, a Mexican war veteran, died suddenly at Arlington, Tarrant county. He raised, organized and carried to the front the first company from Tarrant county that followed the fortunes of the stars and bars.
(submitted by Patty McGinty)
M J Brinson was the son of Matthew Brinson and Elizabeth Carrigan Brinson. He married first to Louisa H Johnson; they had five children. He married second to Sarah M Burford; they had four children. M J Brinson's third wife was named Octavia.

The Arlington Journal, Arlington, Texas, Thursday October 10, 1901:
Gone To His Reward. Death of Capt. M. J. Brinson, an Old Pioneer of This County. One by one the old landmarks are passing away—passing to that great beyond from whence no traveler ever returneth. This week we are called upon to chronicle the death of one of Tarrant county's oldest and most respected citizens, Capt. M. J. Brinson, aged 75 years, who laid down the habiliments of life and passed peacefully away last Tuesday night, death resulting from heart disease. Captain Brinson, as he was known, was one of the oldest settlers in this section of the state and was living in Tarrant county while Birdville was the county site. He built the first business house in Fort Worth and has been closely identified with the county's progress and advancement. The funeral services were conducted at the Cumberland Presbyterian church this morning at 10 o'clock, the same being conducted under the auspices of the local Masonic order, of which he had long been a member, and, we are informed, was next to the oldest Mason in Tarrant county. Besides a wife, several grown children survive to whom The Journal extends sincere sympathy and condolence.

Shiner Gazette, Shiner, Texas, 23 October 1901:
Capt. M. J. Brinson, a Mexican war veteran, died suddenly at Arlington, Tarrant county. He raised, organized and carried to the front the first company from Tarrant county that followed the fortunes of the stars and bars.
(submitted by Patty McGinty)


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