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Sarah Hembree Day

Birth
Anderson County, South Carolina, USA
Death
1856 (aged 60–61)
Prairie Lea, Caldwell County, Texas, USA
Burial
Prairie Lea, Caldwell County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Born in Pendleton District, South Carolina, daughter of James and Asenath Hembree.

She married Johnson Day on June 30, 1814 in Pendleton District (now Anderson County) South Carolina, son of Ballard Day and Sylvia Mayfield.

From The Sons of Dewitt Colony:
"James Wilson Nichols (1820-1891) was born 27 Dec 1820 in Franklin Co., Tennessee. His parents were George Washington and Mary Ann Walker Nichols. The Nichols and Johnson Day families traveled crossed the Sabine River and entered Texas on 16 Dec 1836, according to Nichols' journal, Now You Hear My Horn.
"Although their goal was San Antonio, both families eventually settled in Gonzales on 2 Mar 1837 after spending the interim in East Texas. Although the Nichols and Days moved considerably, they usually returned to the area around Seguin in Guadalupe Co. or Gonzales."

An unpublished Day family history by unknown author states: ""Johnson Day…was drafted into the army for the War of 1812 (Captain Reed's Co., Lt. Col. Wm. Austin's Reg't South Carolina Draft Militia) in February of 1815 and honorably discharged March 1815, one month before the birth of his first son. He appears on the census for the first time in 1820 in Anderson County, South Carolina.
"According to the small prayer book and diary left by Sarah Hembree Day (owned by Lola Hankins Cloninger of Phoenix) Johnson Day was a person who found it difficult to stay in one place. After the birth of four of their children they moved to Tuscaloosa, Alabama where another child was born. In 1822 they moved to Hall County, Georgia, and in 1828 back to Anderson, South Carolina. In 1830 they moved into the Charleston District of South Carolina where two more children were born. Finally in 1833 they left South Carolina, going to Bolivar, Tennessee, and from there crossing the Sabine River into Texas in 1835, living at Gonzales and Seguin before Johnson Day was killed in 1838.
"Johnson Day received an Unconditional Certificate #1 as a land grant from Texas. (1,280 acres in Gonzales County). Mrs. Weinert, a historian of that area, states that he was killed by Indians in July of 1838.
"Of their seven children, six survived, and the five girls married men who took an active part in the history of Texas. (For example: Solomon Brill, a doctor, gathered the bones of the dead leaders of the Alamo, and made the casket which holds them today.)
"Sarah Hembree, a remarkable woman, apparently quite intelligent, extremely religious and highly articulate, lived a hard life, and the demands she made upon herself in behalf of her church led to a breakdown of her health. She died on asthma or tuberculosis.
"She established the first Sunday School in Seguin under the auspices of the Methodist Church, although she herself was a Baptist. She is buried in the Hankins cemetery at Prairie Lea, Texas."

Her daughter Mrs. Hankins is not buried on the Hankins farm but is buried with her husband in the Prairie Lea Cemetery.


See A Twentieth Century History of Southwest Texas (1907), vol. 2, pp. 401-403, for the Day and Hankins family histories.

Children of Sarah Hembree and Johnson Day:
Sylvia Day, b. January 13, 1816.
Elizabeth Caroline Day, b. Oct. 09, 1830 (Mrs. Hankins)
Hepzibah Day, b. February 06, 1825.
James Milford Day, b. May 11, 1815.
Meekness Amanda Day, b. November 19, 1832.
Polly Mary Day, b. December 06, 1818.
Mahala J Day, b. December 11, 1821.
Sarah Medissa Day, b. December 18, 1822, Anderson County, South Carolina, d. September 25, 1856, Blanco, Texas


James Milford Day (1815–1894) was a 19th-century Texas military figure and a member of the Texas Rangers. He was a member of Mathew Caldwell's and Jack Hay's Seguin Rangers and a participant in the Mexican-American War.
Born in Pendleton District, South Carolina, daughter of James and Asenath Hembree.

She married Johnson Day on June 30, 1814 in Pendleton District (now Anderson County) South Carolina, son of Ballard Day and Sylvia Mayfield.

From The Sons of Dewitt Colony:
"James Wilson Nichols (1820-1891) was born 27 Dec 1820 in Franklin Co., Tennessee. His parents were George Washington and Mary Ann Walker Nichols. The Nichols and Johnson Day families traveled crossed the Sabine River and entered Texas on 16 Dec 1836, according to Nichols' journal, Now You Hear My Horn.
"Although their goal was San Antonio, both families eventually settled in Gonzales on 2 Mar 1837 after spending the interim in East Texas. Although the Nichols and Days moved considerably, they usually returned to the area around Seguin in Guadalupe Co. or Gonzales."

An unpublished Day family history by unknown author states: ""Johnson Day…was drafted into the army for the War of 1812 (Captain Reed's Co., Lt. Col. Wm. Austin's Reg't South Carolina Draft Militia) in February of 1815 and honorably discharged March 1815, one month before the birth of his first son. He appears on the census for the first time in 1820 in Anderson County, South Carolina.
"According to the small prayer book and diary left by Sarah Hembree Day (owned by Lola Hankins Cloninger of Phoenix) Johnson Day was a person who found it difficult to stay in one place. After the birth of four of their children they moved to Tuscaloosa, Alabama where another child was born. In 1822 they moved to Hall County, Georgia, and in 1828 back to Anderson, South Carolina. In 1830 they moved into the Charleston District of South Carolina where two more children were born. Finally in 1833 they left South Carolina, going to Bolivar, Tennessee, and from there crossing the Sabine River into Texas in 1835, living at Gonzales and Seguin before Johnson Day was killed in 1838.
"Johnson Day received an Unconditional Certificate #1 as a land grant from Texas. (1,280 acres in Gonzales County). Mrs. Weinert, a historian of that area, states that he was killed by Indians in July of 1838.
"Of their seven children, six survived, and the five girls married men who took an active part in the history of Texas. (For example: Solomon Brill, a doctor, gathered the bones of the dead leaders of the Alamo, and made the casket which holds them today.)
"Sarah Hembree, a remarkable woman, apparently quite intelligent, extremely religious and highly articulate, lived a hard life, and the demands she made upon herself in behalf of her church led to a breakdown of her health. She died on asthma or tuberculosis.
"She established the first Sunday School in Seguin under the auspices of the Methodist Church, although she herself was a Baptist. She is buried in the Hankins cemetery at Prairie Lea, Texas."

Her daughter Mrs. Hankins is not buried on the Hankins farm but is buried with her husband in the Prairie Lea Cemetery.


See A Twentieth Century History of Southwest Texas (1907), vol. 2, pp. 401-403, for the Day and Hankins family histories.

Children of Sarah Hembree and Johnson Day:
Sylvia Day, b. January 13, 1816.
Elizabeth Caroline Day, b. Oct. 09, 1830 (Mrs. Hankins)
Hepzibah Day, b. February 06, 1825.
James Milford Day, b. May 11, 1815.
Meekness Amanda Day, b. November 19, 1832.
Polly Mary Day, b. December 06, 1818.
Mahala J Day, b. December 11, 1821.
Sarah Medissa Day, b. December 18, 1822, Anderson County, South Carolina, d. September 25, 1856, Blanco, Texas


James Milford Day (1815–1894) was a 19th-century Texas military figure and a member of the Texas Rangers. He was a member of Mathew Caldwell's and Jack Hay's Seguin Rangers and a participant in the Mexican-American War.


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  • Created by: Ray Isbell
  • Added: Sep 26, 2016
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/170606624/sarah-day: accessed ), memorial page for Sarah Hembree Day (6 Aug 1795–1856), Find a Grave Memorial ID 170606624, citing Hankins Farm Cemetery, Prairie Lea, Caldwell County, Texas, USA; Maintained by Ray Isbell (contributor 47188697).