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Almonta “Monte” <I>Huling</I> Abney

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Almonta “Monte” Huling Abney

Birth
Jasper County, Texas, USA
Death
27 Jan 1922 (aged 75)
Brownwood, Brown County, Texas, USA
Burial
Brownwood, Brown County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Married James Addison ABNEY in 1893 in Brownwood, Brown, Tx.


Arriette Almonte ‘Monte’ Huling Randolph Bartlett Abney

Following the Civil War in 1865, Monte's father, Thomas B. Huling, an early settler and one of the citizens who signed a petition to make Lampasas a county, died. His widow, Elizabeth, was left with six children and a large estate to administer. A daughter, Almonte ‘Monte’ (1846-1922) had two older sisters: Isabella ‘Bell’ and Rebecca, and four younger brothers: William ‘Dick’, John, Mark, and Proctor.

In 1859, Monte and her older sisters were sent to school in Austin, and Bell wrote to her mother in Lampasas complaining of Monte’s conduct. Bell wrote, “I want you to write to her and tell her she must behave herself. She quarrels here before the boarders and will disgrace herself if she don’t quit it, and I have told her of it and talked to her and it don’t do any good.”

When Monte was a young girl, one of her favorite things to do was ride horseback and race with her brother, Dick. One of these rides turned into a life-threating event when they went riding up Pitt Creek, northwest of the Huling ranch house. Monte was on her favorite horse and was considered a good rider. That particular day, Dick was riding a young horse that had not been “broken” long. They reached Pitt Creek, a waterhole about 1 ½ miles from their house, and were letting their horses drink, when Dick saw a small band of Indians approaching from the west. He told Monte to ride as fast as she could for the house. She started off and looked back to see Dick’s horse bolting. She came back to him, and he told her to hurry and he was sure his horse would follow. It did, and they were chased right up to the ranch house by the Indians.

The two older sisters had already married when members of the Townsen family introduced Almonte to a handsome young blade named Robert S. Randolph. Against her mother’s best judgement, they were married. Her mother had him investigated and found he was part of a San Saba gang who robbed and murdered in surrounding counties. He began to demand that Almonte receive a large portion of her inheritance. When her mother, Elizabeth, refused, he encouraged his friends to intimidate her by crawling under the house at night and beating on the floor. They even went so far as to threaten harm to Almonte’s three younger brothers.

In the middle of the night, Elizabeth and Morgan Jordan, a freed Negro man who had been overseer of her property for years, harnessed up the buggy and drove her young sons to Salado. In Salado she entered them in Salado Academy. Elizabeth and Morgan hurried home so that no one would know they had gone.

At home, Dick, then twenty, had become head of the household and was doing his best to protect the family. One night he was coming down the hall and looked through the door into his mother’s bedroom, where he saw Mr. Randolph holding a knife at his mother’s throat. He was demanding that she sign a land deed over to him. Almonte was locked in an upstairs bedroom, so it was left to Dick to protect his mother. He pulled out his gun and shot Mr. Randolph to death. Almonte, her mother, and brother decided that they would report that Randolph accidentally shot himself while cleaning his gun.

Fearing revenge from the “San Saba Gang”, the family staged an elaborate funeral complete with grieving widow, mother-in-law, and brother-in-law. He was buried in November 1870 in the Huling family cemetery plot, and a tombstone was erected.

Several years later, when Almonte consented to become the bride of J.C. Bartlett, a local lawyer, she took Morgan Jordan out to the family cemetery where they rolled Mr. Randolph’s tombstone over the side of the hill and flattened the grave even with the ground.

Mr. Bartlett died in 1891, and was buried in the Huling cemetery. Almonte then married Dr. James A. Abney, and they lived in Brownwood. – Written by Charlene Nash and Evelyn Smith. Contributed by Peggy Smith Wolfe, Technology Chair of Lampasas County Historical Commission. Several other members of the Huling family and some of their former slaves also have stories well worth reading in this book, Lampasas County Texas, Its History and Its People, Vol. I.

Above information provided courtesy of Find A Grave member Peggy Smith Wolfe #47006885.
Married James Addison ABNEY in 1893 in Brownwood, Brown, Tx.


Arriette Almonte ‘Monte’ Huling Randolph Bartlett Abney

Following the Civil War in 1865, Monte's father, Thomas B. Huling, an early settler and one of the citizens who signed a petition to make Lampasas a county, died. His widow, Elizabeth, was left with six children and a large estate to administer. A daughter, Almonte ‘Monte’ (1846-1922) had two older sisters: Isabella ‘Bell’ and Rebecca, and four younger brothers: William ‘Dick’, John, Mark, and Proctor.

In 1859, Monte and her older sisters were sent to school in Austin, and Bell wrote to her mother in Lampasas complaining of Monte’s conduct. Bell wrote, “I want you to write to her and tell her she must behave herself. She quarrels here before the boarders and will disgrace herself if she don’t quit it, and I have told her of it and talked to her and it don’t do any good.”

When Monte was a young girl, one of her favorite things to do was ride horseback and race with her brother, Dick. One of these rides turned into a life-threating event when they went riding up Pitt Creek, northwest of the Huling ranch house. Monte was on her favorite horse and was considered a good rider. That particular day, Dick was riding a young horse that had not been “broken” long. They reached Pitt Creek, a waterhole about 1 ½ miles from their house, and were letting their horses drink, when Dick saw a small band of Indians approaching from the west. He told Monte to ride as fast as she could for the house. She started off and looked back to see Dick’s horse bolting. She came back to him, and he told her to hurry and he was sure his horse would follow. It did, and they were chased right up to the ranch house by the Indians.

The two older sisters had already married when members of the Townsen family introduced Almonte to a handsome young blade named Robert S. Randolph. Against her mother’s best judgement, they were married. Her mother had him investigated and found he was part of a San Saba gang who robbed and murdered in surrounding counties. He began to demand that Almonte receive a large portion of her inheritance. When her mother, Elizabeth, refused, he encouraged his friends to intimidate her by crawling under the house at night and beating on the floor. They even went so far as to threaten harm to Almonte’s three younger brothers.

In the middle of the night, Elizabeth and Morgan Jordan, a freed Negro man who had been overseer of her property for years, harnessed up the buggy and drove her young sons to Salado. In Salado she entered them in Salado Academy. Elizabeth and Morgan hurried home so that no one would know they had gone.

At home, Dick, then twenty, had become head of the household and was doing his best to protect the family. One night he was coming down the hall and looked through the door into his mother’s bedroom, where he saw Mr. Randolph holding a knife at his mother’s throat. He was demanding that she sign a land deed over to him. Almonte was locked in an upstairs bedroom, so it was left to Dick to protect his mother. He pulled out his gun and shot Mr. Randolph to death. Almonte, her mother, and brother decided that they would report that Randolph accidentally shot himself while cleaning his gun.

Fearing revenge from the “San Saba Gang”, the family staged an elaborate funeral complete with grieving widow, mother-in-law, and brother-in-law. He was buried in November 1870 in the Huling family cemetery plot, and a tombstone was erected.

Several years later, when Almonte consented to become the bride of J.C. Bartlett, a local lawyer, she took Morgan Jordan out to the family cemetery where they rolled Mr. Randolph’s tombstone over the side of the hill and flattened the grave even with the ground.

Mr. Bartlett died in 1891, and was buried in the Huling cemetery. Almonte then married Dr. James A. Abney, and they lived in Brownwood. – Written by Charlene Nash and Evelyn Smith. Contributed by Peggy Smith Wolfe, Technology Chair of Lampasas County Historical Commission. Several other members of the Huling family and some of their former slaves also have stories well worth reading in this book, Lampasas County Texas, Its History and Its People, Vol. I.

Above information provided courtesy of Find A Grave member Peggy Smith Wolfe #47006885.


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  • Created by: Terry Teague
  • Added: Jan 12, 2009
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/32870334/almonta-abney: accessed ), memorial page for Almonta “Monte” Huling Abney (3 Dec 1846–27 Jan 1922), Find a Grave Memorial ID 32870334, citing Greenleaf Cemetery, Brownwood, Brown County, Texas, USA; Maintained by Terry Teague (contributor 46866050).