Col. Thomas Jefferson Word

Is your surname Word?

Connect to 1,042 Word profiles on Geni

Col. Thomas Jefferson Word's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

Col. Thomas Jefferson Word

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Mount Airy Surry County North Carolina
Death: May 25, 1890 (84-85)
Palestine, Anderson, Texas, USA
Place of Burial: Palestine, Anderson County, TX, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Thomas A. Word and Justiana Word
Husband of Mary Ann Word; Mary Elizabeth Word and Mary Lucretia Word
Father of Judge Jeff Word and Eoline Reagan
Brother of James Dickinson Word; Elizabeth Word; William Cuthbert Word; Justiana D Word; Martin Dickinson Word and 5 others

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Col. Thomas Jefferson Word

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=20060912

Plaque reads; Col. Thomas Jefferson Word 1805-1890. A Founder, First Lay Reader and First Senior Warden of St. Phillip's Church 1859 Colonel North Carolina Militia N.C. State Representative 1830 United States Congressman from Miss. 1838 Presidential Elector from Miss. 1840 Texas State Senator 1875 Born Mt. Airy N.C. Died Palestine Texas

Patriot, Lawyer and Devout Churchman Beloved from Generation to Generation.



https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/20060912/thomas-jefferson-word

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/word-thomas-jefferson

Thomas Jefferson Word, lawyer and congressman from Mississippi, was born in Surry County, the son of Thomas Adams and Justiana Dickerson Word. His grandfather, Charles Word, died at Kings Mountain on 7 Oct. 1780. In 1827 the younger Word held 350 acres in one tract and 72 in another. Elected to represent Surry County in the House of Commons in the session of 1832–33, he served on the committee on internal improvements.

Soon afterwards Word moved to Pontotoc, in north-eastern Mississippi, where he was admitted to the bar on 7 Nov. 1836. A contemporary who knew him at this time later described him as "a remarkably fine looking man" and mentioned his polished, agreeable manner. "Added to this," it was said, "he had a fine, humorous way of telling anecdotes, and could play well the violin." He contested a congressional election which was set aside, and Word was subsequently elected as a Whig. He served from 30 May 1838 to 3 Mar. 1839.

Word was married about 1839 and during the 1840s moved to the fast-growing Holly Springs, Miss., seat of Marshall County on the Tennessee state line. A convention of Mississippians at Jackson in October 1849 chose him from the state's First Congressional District to go to the Nashville Convention scheduled in June 1850 to consider the South's constitutional future. Though apparently not a slaveowner himself, Word supported those who believed that the national government had no jurisdiction over slavery. The next year he was again elected to represent his county at a states' rights convention in Pontotoc on 2 June.

Word's law practice made him a familiar figure in circuit, probate, and chancery courts in northern Mississippi, and some of his cases went to the High Court of Errors and Appeals, as the supreme court in Jackson was called. He spoke at various temperance, patriotic, and memorial gatherings but had faded from public notice by the mid-1850s. Neither the date of his death nor the place of his burial seem to be known.

The 1850 census records his wife as Mary E. Word, a native of Ireland, and their children as Justiana, 9; John J., 7; Jefferson, 4; and Sarah, 1.

view all

Col. Thomas Jefferson Word's Timeline

1805
1805
Mount Airy Surry County North Carolina
1848
November 14, 1848
Holly Springs, Marshall, Mississippi, United States
1870
1870
Age 65
Beat 3, Anderson, Texas
1890
May 25, 1890
Age 85
Palestine, Anderson, Texas, USA
????
????
Palestine City Cemetery, Palestine, Anderson County, TX, United States