Stories Collected by Billy Bob Bert Brazell,
Great-Grandson of Sarah Jane Cunningham Brazell
SARAH JANE SUSAN ABAGAIL
LENORA KATHERENE CUNNINGHAM BRAZELL
That was quite a long handle for a little girl, but
Southern Belles had several names. They
called her “Sallie” for short.
Sarah Jane was the daughter of Robert and Martha
Cunningham. She and her parents survived the War of the Northern Aggression
and in 1868 married William Monroe "Bill" Brazell in Aurora, Marshall
County, Alabama. See notes about William Monroe Brazell.
Robert Cunningham owned slaves prior to the
War. There was one slave that Sarah Jane just loved, a 16-year old Negro
girl named Hepsibah. Hepsibah milked the cows and helped with the other
household chores. Hepsibah would give Sarah Jane a cup of warm milk to
drink at milking time. When a cow would kick, Hepsibah would shove her
head into the cow's flank and throw her over. Sarah Jane would laugh when
telling her grandchildren this story.
Sarah Jane must have been quite a character.
She was a small woman, but very wiry. Sarah Jane had a mind of her own,
was stubborn, and must have had quite a temper. Maybe she had to be very
determined to raise a family of nine children by herself after Bill died at the
age of 42 in 1888. She was 40 years old at the time his death.
Sometime after Bill's death, Sarah Jane decided to
get married again. The man she was going to marry was a man named Mr.
Collins. He lived about a mile down the road from her. He was
Travis Brazell's mother's father. Everyone said that Sarah Jane was a
stubborn woman. Evidently, Mr. Collins was as stubborn as Sarah
Jane. They went to Tolar, Texas and got married. When they got back
to her house she said, "Stop the horse!" because he was driving on
past her house to his house. He said, "We are going to live at my
house." After a big argument, she
hopped out of the wagon and went into her house. They never lived
together a single day.
The marriage record at Granbury, Hood County, Texas
shows that she married William Thomas Collins on June 1, 1896.
Sarah Jane had four children left at home after her
son, John Brintley Brazell married on May 22, 1896. Sometime before November 1897, Sarah Jane's family all pulled up
stakes and moved to Roger Mills County, Indian Territory (Oklahoma).
Henry Floyd Brazell, Bill's twin brother, and his
family, Frank & Samantha "Fannie" Brazell Cunningham, moved
to Roger Mills County, Oklahoma and settled on the Washita River.
Jonathan, Bill’s brother, and his family remained in Hood County, Texas.
The probable reason that the Brazell &
Cunningham clans migrated to Oklahoma was the opening of land for homesteading.
They were farmers and needed land. Central Texas had been enduring a long
lasting drought in the mid 1880's.
The Homestead Act allowed any person
21 years old or older and who was an American citizen to claim 160 acres of
land by living on it for five years and improving it. Roger Mills County
was open for homesteading.
The 1900 Roger Mills County Census shows that Henry
Floyd Brazell and family was still living there. Living with them were
Sarah Jane, Jettie, and Bob; also a Otto Hasskerman, single. This was the
same person the Brazell kids called Uncle Hass.
Sarah Jane later moved in with her son John Brintley
Brazell. James Henry Hershell Brazell told this story: "We
were living in Roger Mills County. Grandma had a room over our dug-out.
Dad had built two rooms over the dug-out, one for her and one to store
wheat. She had a milk cow and I had to milk her. Grandma would give
me a pan of wheat to feed the cow. Dad saw me with the wheat and wanted
to know what I was going to do with it. I told him that Grandma said for
me to give to her cow. Dad said, "Wheat won't do the cow any good,
just feed it to the chickens." I did this for a while, not knowing
that Grandma was watching me. The cow’s milk production began to fall
off. When I brought the milk in,
Grandma said, "If you had fed the wheat to the cow instead of the
chickens, you would have gotten more milk."
"She had quite a temper.
Grandma got mad at Mama. It was raining, just pouring down. She got
her hoe and went out to the garden and started hoeing. Mama tried to get
her to come in, but she wouldn't. Dad came in and Mama told him what she
was doing. He went out and practically had to carry her into the
house."
Sarah Jane lived most of her later years with her
daughter Jettie and her husband, Charlie Hensley. She never knew exactly
how old she was. She never learned to read or write.
Sarah Jane raised a large family and suffered a lot
of hardships. She was a very hardy lady. She died January 31, 1936.
It was a very cold day. She was buried in Strong City, Oklahoma.
The cemetery is located one mile south of Strong City in Section 25-14-23.