Historical records matching Captain Fergus Kyle (CSA)
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About Captain Fergus Kyle (CSA)
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=23216410
Texas Pioneer, Soldier, Politician and founder of Kyle, Texas. His family were among the early settlers of Hays County, Texas settling by the Blanco River in 1850. He grew up in a log house, which has been restored and is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
During the Civil War Kyle enlisted as a Private in the Eighth Texas Cavalry, also known as Terry's Texas Rangers. He was promoted to Captain after the Battle of Shiloh. He later became an aide to General Benjamin F. Cheatham.
After the War he was elected to the House of Representatives for the Twelfth Texas Legislature from 1870 to 1871. He was one of the few Democrats to serve during the Reconstruction Era.
In 1880 the town of Kyle, Texas was named in his honor after he and his father-in-law, David Moore, deeded the land for the site on the railroad route from Austin to San Antonio. His wife was Anna E. Moore. Town lots were auctioned under a historic Texas tree which still exists - the Kyle Auction Oak.
Kyle became Sergeant At Arms of the Texas Senate from 1881 to 1884. Returning to the House in 1901, he cosponsored the 1905 Alamo purchase bill, thus saving the Alamo for a second time.
In his third term he was the oldest member of the Texas State Legislature when he died while in office at the age of 71 of pneumonia.
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Fergus Kyle, politician and founder of Kyle, Texas, the son of early settlers of Hays County, Lucy (Bugg) and Claiborne Kyle, was born on September 6, 1834, in Hinds County, Mississippi. The family moved to Texas in 1844 and settled in Hays County about 1850. Kyle grew up in an unusual four-room log house near the site of what is now Kyle, Texas; the house has been restored and is listed in the National Register of Historic Places. He was educated at Thrall's Academy in Austin, and in 1860 he married Anna Elizabeth Moore, whose family came to Texas from Alabama in the 1850s.
During the Civil War Kyle enlisted as a private in the Eighth Texas Cavalry (Terry's Texas Rangers). After the battle of Shiloh he was promoted to captain, and his four brothers, William, Polk, Curran, and Andrew Jackson, were under his command. He then became an aide to Gen. Benjamin F. Cheatham. Kyle continued throughout his life to wear his Confederate gray uniform on frequent occasions.
After the war he returned to Hays County and began farming and raising stock. He was elected to the House of Representatives for the Twelfth Texas Legislature (1870–71) and was one of the few Democrats to serve during Reconstruction.
In 1880 Kyle, Texas, was named in his honor after he and his wife, along with his wife's family, deeded the land for a townsite on the Austin-San Antonio route of the International-Great Northern Railroad. Town lots were auctioned under a historic Texas tree, the Kyle Auction Oak. Kyle continued his political career as sergeant-at-arms of the Texas Senate from 1881 to 1884. He returned to the House in 1901 and cosponsored the Alamo purchase bill of 1905, which saved the Texas shrine. He was, in his third term, the oldest member of the legislature when he died on May 19, 1906.
Kyle, a Baptist, was buried in the Kyle cemetery. Two of Kyle's nine children were well known. Edwin Jackson Kyle, the Texas A&M dean for whom Kyle Field was named, was appointed ambassador to Guatemala by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Mary (Kyle) Hartson was elected mayor of Kyle in 1937 and served until 1947.
Captain Fergus Kyle (CSA)'s Timeline
1834 |
1834
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Hinds County Mississippi
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1865 |
December 6, 1865
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1876 |
July 22, 1876
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1906 |
1906
Age 72
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Kyle Cemetery Kyle Hays County Texas
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