GREAT GRANDPARENTS ALBERT & NANCY ANDERSON
On February 15, 1836, Albert Jackson Anderson was born to Henry M. and Sarah Anderson in Caddo Cove, Garland County, Arkansas. He was the sixth of eleven children. Albert would be our branch of the Anderson tree.

Albert Jackson Anderson
Sometime before Albert’s 12th birthday, the family moved from Arkansas to Williamson County, Texas Republic. The move was 360 miles and was made by covered wagon. Some of Alberts life experiences after the move;
In 1850, by age fourteen, he knew he wanted to be a rancher, like his father, Henry M. Anderson
In 1855 the lure of millions of longhorn cattle in west Texas found the family moving to Young County, west of Fort Worth. For protection from the raiding Comanche Indians, they ranched near the Military Forts built along the Brazos River.
In 1861 Albert’s brother, James Anderson, was caught stealing his brother’s cattle. Local rumor indicates that John and Mitchell Anderson hung their brother.
1861-4 the Civil War found Albert enlisting in the Confederate Army, First Frontier District, Young County Texas. Their duty was to patrol northwest Texas, between the Red River and the Rio Grande. He also served as a scout.
In 1864, after the Civil War, Albert and most of his brothers became Texas Rangers, His brother John Henry was on a Indian search and was shot in the arm by an arrow.
On September 20, 1865, Samuel Newcomb, a teacher at Fort Davis, wrote in his diary “Albert Anderson got in from Weatherford (Texas) this evening and had not been to long until it was reported around town that he was going to get married in a week or two”. He was correct in that Albert married Nancy Alveria Wilson on October 1, 1865. His brother John Henry married Nancy’s sister Martha Erma Wilson.

Nancy Alveria Wilson
In 1867, Albert and Nancy had their first child, William Henry Anderson. There were no doctors at Fort Davis, so they traveled to Weatherford Texas, where William was born. While living in Texas, Nancy had three girls, Sarah (died as infant), Melinda and Martha Ellen.
Perhaps the memories of Albert’s previous cattle drives up the Goodnight Loving cattle trail to cool Colorado, led him to move his family to La Junta, Colorado. They traveled through Oklahoma Territory to Kansas, where they boarded a train with all their possission and moved to La Junta, Colorado.
The year they arrived in Bent County, Colorado, the town of La Junta was being built at the end of the rail spur owned by the Kansas Pacific Railroad. La Junta was the last camping ground along the Arkansas River for the Santa Fe Trail. From La Junta, the trail turned south and set forth over the desolate trail to Santa Fe, New Mexico and on to California.

Nancy and Albert Anderson
In La Junta, four more children were born. They then had 9 children, William H., Sara E, Melinda E., Martha E., Minnie (died as infant), Albert Calvin, May Emmaline, Nancy Belle and adopted Ada.
Albert, like his father, was a rancher and horseman. He made a living by gathering wild horses (Mustangs), breaking them and driving them down the Goodnight Loving Trail to Texas. His granddaughter, Noma Anderson, said “he had 1100 head of horses on the free range” (Comanche grassland). The demand for these horses in Texas was high, as each cowboy needed several horses for their cattle drives up the Chisholm Trail to the Kansas rail heads. Supply and demand……Colorado was short on cattle, Texas needed horses. Albert would drive the horses down to Texas and return to Colorado with cattle.

Nancy Wilson Anderson

After leaving Colorado, Great Grandmother Nancy ran a hotel in Laurel, Montana, (while Albert was out looking for gold in Wyoming). When Albert thought his time was near, he went back to Cheyenne, Oklahoma where he wanted a Baptist funeral! Nancy was a Methodist and Albert wanted to have his funeral in a Baptist Church. Nancy died June 12, 1919 and had a Methodist funeral in Laurel, Montana.
Very touching post, papa jim. What a skilled writer you are.
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