Edward
Thomas Broughton, Jr

Edward Thomas
"Tom" Broughton Jr. was born April 3, 1834
to Edward Thomas
Broughton and his wife Rachel
Winborne (Walker) Broughton. During
his childhood, he moved with his parents
and siblings from Monroe County
Alabama to Ouachita County, Arkansas in
1842 then to Jasper County, Texas
in 1847. By 1850, just in time for the US
Census a 16-year-old E.
T. Broughton Jr was living in Cherokee
County, Texas near Old
Larissa.
Then about 1852, the Broughtons
moved to Smith County, Texas
near Old Omen.
"It is stated
in an article written
in The
Encyclopedia of the New West in 1881
that he was educated in the
common schools of the country, but not
being satisfied with these
'meager attainments,' he began to study law
and classical literature and
taught
school. One family legend says that at age 18
he went back to Jasper
to teach and, apparently, to continue his
study of the law. In 1858 he
was admitted to law practice and he
immediately went into partnership with
T. B. Greenwood of Athens, in Herderson
County, Texas. His brother D. W. had already
joined the firm."
Tom, as Edward T. Broughton
Jr was called, married Mary Elizabeth Douglas
(daughter of Rev. Alexander
Douglas of Smith County, Texas) on June 6,
1856 in Smith County, Tx.
The Broughton
couple had seven children: Born in Smith
County, Texas
were:
Sargeant
Prentiss, born May 3, 1857
Tomie Margaret, born June 24, 1861
Salina Ema, born October 1863
born in Kaufman County, Texas
twins John and James "Jim" Postell, born
November 24, 1865
Born in Grayson County, Texas were
Edward Thomas III, born December 20, 1868
William Pinckney, born August 29, 1871
Tom supported
his family with his
law practice which continued to grow steadily
in Athens, but in 1859, he
and his brother D. W. moved their practice to
Kaufman, Texas where they
partnered with another attorney, R. H.
English. Tom even became a candidate
for District Attorney, carrying five of the
seven counties in the district,
but then came the Civil War....
THE CIVIL WAR
YEARS
In 1861,
shortly after the birth
of his second child, daughter Tomie Margaret,
Tom left his family and joined
the Confederate Army, enlisting in a
group called the Texas Wide
Awakes which was organized in Kaufman County.
He was on the muster roll
of Captain Jack Wharton's company. Then
records show became Captain
of the 7th Texas Infantry, Company C,
commanded by Col. John Gregg.
The company mustered in Marshall and in
October moved to Hopkinsville,
Kentucky.
Tom was
imprisoned twice during the
war. The first time was after his regiment was
sent to Fort Donaldson,
Tennessee where a four-day fight ended
with the Confederate fort
surrendering to General U. S. Grant. As a
prisoner of war, E. T. "Tom"
Broughton
Jr spend time at Camp Douglas
near Chicago, Camp Chase near Columbus Ohio
and Johnson's Island near Sandusky,
Ohio.
In September of 1862, he was taken to
Vicksburg where on the 26th, he was
exchanged. After his release, Tom came home
briefly to recruit and then
in December 1862 he went to Port Hudson,
Louisiana where he joined confederate
forces to battle Farragut's bombardment of the
fort with gunboats.
In a report filed in May of 1863
in the Official Record of the Union and
Confederate Armies, Colonel H.
B. Granbury, 7th Texas Infantry gives an
account Broughton at the engagement
of Raymond Mississippi.
He writes, "I omitted to state that
Captain E. T. Broughton, Company C, was among
the last to leave the creek,
having animated his men throughout the
affair with his presence
and bearing. He is among the missing."
Captain
Broughton found himself again a prisoner of
war at Johnson's Island where
he remained for a year and spent some of his
time studying French. While
he was held prison, his wife would give birth
to the couple's third child
and second daughter, Salina. Also during this
time Tom was stricken with
small pox and became nearly blind. It was in
this physical condition that
he was again exchanged in May of 1864.
According to
the War Department
- Adjutant's General's Office, when Tom's
wife, Mollie, applied for a pension,
their report states Captain Broughton was
paroled at Hammond General Hospital,
Point Lookout, Maryland on May 3, 1864 and was
received at Acken's Landing
May 8, 1864 for exchange. No later record has
been found.
Captain or Colonel?
One
researcher says
upon his exchange Tom was immediately promoted
to Lieutenant-Colonel of
the regiment then commanded by Colonel J.
W. Brown of
Rusk. He wrote of the promotion in letters to
his wife, Mollie, but
apparently
the promotion was never officially
recorded. Another researcher,
James McCaffrey, author of A Band
of Heroes, says a General Granbury
recommended
Broughton for a promotion on August 10, 1864
just a few weeks after the
Battle of Atlanta, "but the record is not
clear as to whether or
not the promotion came through." While records
indicate Broughton resigned
"as captain of Company C, 7th TX Infantry
Regiment," he's referred
to as Colonel Broughton in many records
following the war.
The End is
Near
Despite
his impaired health,
Tom returned to battle. He is said to
have joined John B. Hood's
Brigade and took part in those "desperate
and disastrous
campaigns."
He fought in battles at Decatur, Alabama,
Spring Hill and Franklin,
Tennessee.
During
the Battle at Franklin, where 15
generals were either killed or wounded, E. T.
"Tom" Broughton commanded
a regiment in three days of fighting around
Nashville despite receiving
a severe wounded in the thigh. According to
the book, A Band of
Heroes, Captain E. T. Broughton took over
command as senior
officer after General
Granbury had been killed at the battle of
Franklin, Tennessee and "that
the use of a Captain as Commanding Officer was
highly unusual and
indicates
the condition Confederate Forces were in."
After the army retreated to
Corinty and then to Tupelo, Mississippi, the
nearly blind and wounded
Broughton suffering from "obstinate
chronic conjunctivitis and
general debility"
resigned his command on January 16, 1865. He
was granted leave
of absence pending action on his resignation.
General Lee surrendered a
few
weeks later.
RECONSTRUCTION
- RETURN TO LAW
After the
war, Tom returned
to his law practice in Kaufman. In May 1867 he
moved his family to Sherman
Texas in Grayson County. In April 1869, the
Sherman Courier printed an
ad for his law firm: "Broughton and
Porter, Attorneys at Law Office
Northeast of the square."
From a History of Grayson County
we get this quote:
"The
following
are some of the attorneys who were residents
of Grayson County during the
reconstruction period:
E. T. Broughton for whom Broughton Street is
named; J. S. & George
W. Porter, Bros."
In Sherman,Texas, E. T. Broughton
Jr. ran for and was elected to the Texas State
Legislature. In Members
of the Legislature of the State of Texas from
1846 to 1939, E. T. Broughton
is recorded as serving in the Twelfth
Legislature under Gov. Davis and
Lt
Gov. Flannagan
in: Provisional Session (Feb. 8-24, 1870),
Called Session (April 26-August
15, 1870), Regular Session (Jan.10-May
31, 1871) and First Called
Session (Sept.12-Dec.2, 1871).
The record also shows him participating in the
Thirteenth Legislature under Gov. E.J. Davis
and Lt Gov. Don Campbell in:
Regular Session (Jan. 14-June 4, 1871)
"District 22 Sherman Grayson County
and other counties in the district: Cooke,
Denton,
Jack, Montague, Wise, Clay, Young Wichita,
Throckmorton and Baylor."
In The
Encyclopedia of the New West
the following description is given of
Broughton:
"Described
as a man of
fine appearance, nearly six feet tall,
erect commanding, he was a
man of superior intellect, strong in his
prejudices, ardent in his
attachments, bitter in his enmities, but
gentlemanly in
deportment, honest and true
in all his actions, an able lawyer, and
eloquent advocate, an upright
citizen
and one whom his fellowmen delighted to
honor."
Death
Edward T.
Broughton Jr.
lived until February 11, 1874 when he died
allegedly of a service-related
illness shortly before his fortieth birthday.
The following is his
obituary as published in the Sherman Courier
on February 12, 1874.
Col. E. T.
Broughton died at this residence
in this city at 2 o'clock yesterday evening,
from a lingering illness of
several months.
Col. Broughton has been in Sherman
since 1867 during which time Sherman has had
no more devoted a friend.
He served with distinction as a Senator
from the 22nd District in
the Legislature since 1869 and had it not been
for his bad health, he would
probably have been re-elected to that
important position. He won his military
title by service in the Confederate
Army, answering to the first
call made by the troops, and remained by his
flag he loved until all was
lost save honor. He leaves a small family and
a host of friends to mourn
his loss.
He was buried
in Sherman, Texas although,
sadly, no one knows his exact burial place.
Funeral Notice
The friends
and
acquaintances of Col. E. T. Broughton,
are requested to
attend his funeral this evening at 3
1-2 o'clock from his late
residence February 13 , 1874.
The home was on Broughton St.
Mollie, Do You
Love Me
Mollie, do
you love me?
Can the morning
beam
Love a lowly floweret living in its gleam?
Let me gentle whisper
All
my doubts
destroy,
Let my dreamy rapture
Turn
to waking joy,
Mollie, do you love me?
Tell me, Tell me true!
Mollie, do
you love me Love as I love you?
Tell me by
those ringlets,
By those
eyes of black,
Mollie, do you love me?
Love as I love you?
Flow from heartless
glee?
Must I
read no feeling In that
Melody?
Mollie, do you love me?
Tell me, tell me true!
Mollie, do you
love me Love as I love you?
Ah! my heart
has yielded
To those
smiles that play
With the merry dimples all the live-long day.
Though the
tender blossoms
need the Summer light,
Let
our hearts, united Brave afflictions blight,
Mollie! do you love me?
Tell
me, tell me true!
Mollie! do
you love me? Love as I love you?
By Edward
Thomas (Tom) Broughton , Jr. to wife, Mollie
Douglas Broughton,
Date not known.
Untitled
I will often
think of thee and
pleasant visions sense,
of these spells that come over me in other
happier
days.
When the hours
were passed as if each
one were but a mirror in the sun
Turning back the dazzling light It sheds
upon the surface bright.
I will often
think of thee
When stars
in the skies
And the billows of the sea Sing Spirit
melodies.
When the
glen is still and not a
note
Comes from the forest?
Songsters throat to dispel the mystery
That hangs
around sweet thoughts of thee
When in the
dazzling halos,
When mid
laugh and melodies
Times footsteps heartless falls
When amid the throng
moves not the
one
Who first my young affections
won
I will turn away to be alone, alone with thee,
(There is a
comma after
this last line as if
there was more, but page could not be
found.)
On the back
is written Mrs.
Mollie E. Broughton, Mary E. Broughton, Mollie
E. Broughton, Capt. E.
T. Broughton (So this was written during the
War)
Research
information submitted by: Mary Lee
Barnes of Tennessee, formerly of Texas,
great-grandaughter
.
<mearsm2@earthlink.net>
Biography Index
Susan Hawkins
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