Sneha Girap (Editor)

William Joel Bryan

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Occupation
  
Planter

Spouse(s)
  
Lavinia Perry


Name
  
William Bryan

Died
  
March 3, 1903

William Joel Bryan wwwrootswebancestrycomtxwjbsrtwilliamjoelbry

Born
  
December 14, 1815
Sainte Genevieve County, Missouri

Relatives
  
Moses Austin Bryan (brother) Guy Morrison Bryan (brother) Stephen Samuel Perry (half-brother) Stephen F. Austin (uncle) Moses Austin (maternal grandfather) Mary Brown Austin (maternal grandmother)

Parents
  
Emily Austin Perry, James Bryan

Grandparents
  
Moses Austin, Mary Brown Austin

Uncles
  
Stephen F. Austin, James E.B. Austin

Similar People
  
Guy M Bryan, James Franklin Perry, Moses Austin, Stephen F Austin, James EB Austin

William Joel Bryan (December 14, 1815 – March 3, 1903) was a Texas soldier and planter.

Contents

William Joel Bryan William Joel Bryan Brazos County Historical Commission

Early life

William Joel Bryan William Joel Bryan 1815 1903 Find A Grave Memorial

William Joel Bryan was born on December 14, 1815 at Hazel Run in Sainte Genevieve County, Missouri. His father was James Bryan and his mother, Emily Austin Perry. He was the grandson of Moses Austin and Mary Brown Austin. Stephen F. Austin was his uncle. He had two brothers, Moses Austin Bryan and Guy Morrison Bryan, and a half-brother, Stephen Samuel Perry.

He attended school in Potosi, Missouri until 1830. In 1831, his mother (Emily) and stepfather, James Franklin Perry, followed his uncle, Stephen F. Austin, to Texas. They settled in the eastern part of Brazoria County, Texas. In 1832, the family moved to the Peach Point Plantation in Jones Creek, Texas, where Bryan was instructed by a governess and his parents together took care of the plantation, cattle and other such property of Bryan's uncle. (The estate of Stephen F. Austin went in whole to Emily Austin Perry and remained her separate property until she died in 1851.)

Career

Shortly after Texas declared its independence from Mexico in 1835, Bryan took his part in the siege of Bexar at his uncle's side among the Brazoria County Volunteers. He also served with Sam Houston in the retreat of the army across Texas. However, he became ill with the measles shortly before the Battle of San Jacinto.

From 1836 to 1839, he served in a managerial capacity at the Peach Point Plantation. Upon getting married, he became the owner of the Duranzo Plantation in Jones Creek. During the American Civil War of 1861-1865, he fed Confederate troops stationed at the mouth of the Brazos at his own expense.

Shortly after the war, in 1865, he granted the Houston & Texas Central Railroad a right-of-way through his land in Brazos County. A projected townsite, Bryan, Texas was named in his honor. He gave the town financial assistance and helped to establish its bank.

He was a member of the Texas Veteran's Association.

Personal life

He married Lavinia Perry, his stepfather's niece, in April 1840. The Duranzo Plantation, an extension of Peach Point Plantation, was given to them as dowry. The couple had seven children, four of whom served in the Confederate States Army during the Civil War.

Death

He died on March 3, 1903.

Legacy

The Brazos County Historical Commission erected an Historical Marker for William Joel Bryan.

References

William Joel Bryan Wikipedia