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Martha Matilda <I>Figures</I> Catterlin

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Martha Matilda Figures Catterlin

Birth
Coffeeville, Clarke County, Alabama, USA
Death
13 Nov 1907 (aged 81)
Grandview, Johnson County, Texas, USA
Burial
Grandview, Johnson County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Plot
Section D2
Memorial ID
View Source
Martha Matilida Figures was married to John Ezell, 4 April 1845. She also married Simeon Walton on 26 Dec 1860 in clarke Cty, AL. She then married Sandford E. Catterlin in 1890.
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She was born in 1826 in Coffeeville, AL, a town founded by her father Major Thomas Figures, a veteran of the War of 1812 and the Alabama Indian Wars.

At age 18 she married John Ezell, a widower 31 years her senior. They had 7 children before John's death in 1853. Including children, stepchildrn, and slaves, Martha was responsible for a household of over 30 people when she was barely 27 years old.

In 1860 she married Dr. Simeon Walton with whom she had an additonal 3 children.

After the death of Dr. Walton, she married Sanford E. Catterlin, a northerner, who was Choctaw County's delegate to the Alabama Secession Convention and an ardent secessionist. They later lived in Ashley, Illinois until Sanford's death.

Later in life Martha lived with her daughter Susan Ezell White in Grandview, Texas. She died in 1907 and is buried beside her daughter in Grandview.

Martha's descendents number in the many hundreds and include the Ezells of Choctaw and Sumter Counties and others scattered across many states.

Martha's brother, William Bibb Figures was the editor and publisher of the Southern Advocate, a widely read and influential North Alabama newspaper. William was appointed mayor of Huntsville during Reconstruction by President U.S. Grant.
Martha Matilida Figures was married to John Ezell, 4 April 1845. She also married Simeon Walton on 26 Dec 1860 in clarke Cty, AL. She then married Sandford E. Catterlin in 1890.
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She was born in 1826 in Coffeeville, AL, a town founded by her father Major Thomas Figures, a veteran of the War of 1812 and the Alabama Indian Wars.

At age 18 she married John Ezell, a widower 31 years her senior. They had 7 children before John's death in 1853. Including children, stepchildrn, and slaves, Martha was responsible for a household of over 30 people when she was barely 27 years old.

In 1860 she married Dr. Simeon Walton with whom she had an additonal 3 children.

After the death of Dr. Walton, she married Sanford E. Catterlin, a northerner, who was Choctaw County's delegate to the Alabama Secession Convention and an ardent secessionist. They later lived in Ashley, Illinois until Sanford's death.

Later in life Martha lived with her daughter Susan Ezell White in Grandview, Texas. She died in 1907 and is buried beside her daughter in Grandview.

Martha's descendents number in the many hundreds and include the Ezells of Choctaw and Sumter Counties and others scattered across many states.

Martha's brother, William Bibb Figures was the editor and publisher of the Southern Advocate, a widely read and influential North Alabama newspaper. William was appointed mayor of Huntsville during Reconstruction by President U.S. Grant.


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