YOUNG PIERCE, JR.
&
ROXIE BROWN

roxie
ROXIE BROWN

    Armelia (Gray) Pierce gave birth to her son Young Pierce Jr. on 
July 18, 1859, four months after her husband Young was killed in a Comanche 
Indian raid.


      In 1861 Armelia married Stephen O'Neal and they had three children.  
Young was raised as a brother to these younger O'Neal children. Young Pierce
Jr. grew up in Sugar Loaf working on farms.  In the fall of 1882 he joined 
the contract threshing crews that moved from county to county working the 
harvest.  In Brown County he met Roxie Brown daughter of Thomas Early Brown 
and they were married in Brownwood March 4, 1883.  They had four children, 
Amelia, Abia, Ethel and Lewis born at Sugar Loaf.


    Young had followed the threshing crews to San Saba and believed this 
fertile river bottom country would offer better living. In 1891 Young and 
Roxie loaded the wagon and moved to San Saba.  The journey took four days.  
They settled in China Creek on the San Saba River where Ernest was born 
January 31, 1893.  In China Creek they built a two story log cabin and 
prepared the land for farming.  Three more children, Nettie, Eugene and Earl 
were born.  In 1904 they moved to the Rainey farm on the north bank of the 
San Saba River where Dea was born.


    In 1905 their first grandchild, Bertha Till, three year old daughter of 
Mary Amelia died from typhoid.  Someone told Young that if he moved to the 
south side of the river his family would be safe. They moved to the 
Sanderson place 2 1/2 miles west of San Saba where Gladys was born.  
    Young had one of the first irrigated farms in the community. Crops were 
bountiful until 1922 when the San Saba River flooded the farm.  Water was 
four feet deep in Young's house.  Crops and livestock were lost and topsoil 
washed away.  By 1929 all of the children except Abia and Gladys were married 
and some had moved away.  Young's health failed and the couple left the farm 
and moved to San Saba.  In December of 1936 Young Pierce and his son Lewis 
died one day apart and a double funeral was held.


    Roxie lived in San Saba until her death in December 1949.  Young, Roxie, 
Amelia, Abia, Lewis, Nettie, Gladys and many other descendents are buried in 
China Creek where Young was the first President of the Cemetery Board of 
Directors. 

By Eldon Pierce, grandson of Young Pierce and Roxie Brown Pierce.

Copyrighted Eldon Pierce & Bobbie Ross Sep. 2000