"Squire Cruse ', who came to this locality in 1833, when Texas was still a Mexican province, and continued there as a farmer and a trader, throughout the war for independence and until his death, long after the republic had become firmly established among the states. Both he and his son, John, were emigrants from Tennessee, of which they were natives."
Historical Review of South-East Texas and the Founders, Leaders and Representative Men, Vol 2, by Dermot Hardy and Maj. Ingham S. Roberts, Page 698, by The Lewis Publishing Company, Chicago, 1910
"Squire Cruse ', who came to this locality in 1833, when Texas was still a Mexican province, and continued there as a farmer and a trader, throughout the war for independence and until his death, long after the republic had become firmly established among the states. Both he and his son, John, were emigrants from Tennessee, of which they were natives."
Historical Review of South-East Texas and the Founders, Leaders and Representative Men, Vol 2, by Dermot Hardy and Maj. Ingham S. Roberts, Page 698, by The Lewis Publishing Company, Chicago, 1910
Family Members
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Elijah Cruse
1820–1833
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John Cruse
1820–1907
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Susan Cruse
1827–1833
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Mary Cruse
1828–1833
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William Cruse
1835–1859
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Clementine Cruse Clark
1837–1893
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Ellender "Ellen" Cruse Barclay
1840–1922
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Paulina Cruse Durham
1843–1912
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Anderson Pruitt Cruse
1845–1939
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Squire James Franklin Cruse
1847–1936
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Thomas Jefferson Cruse
1850–1938
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Elvira Cruse
unknown–1833
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