James Gee -- East Mount Cemetery, Greenville TX USA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 33° 08.092 W 096° 06.000
14S E 770539 N 3669982
The grave of War of 1812 veteran James Gee at East Mount Cemetery, Greenville TX USA, marked with two War of 1812 medallions
Waymark Code: WM17NJ0
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 03/14/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
Views: 1

The elegant connected tombstones of James H. Gee, a veteran of the war of 1812, and his wife Ann W. Gee, stand in peaceful East Mount Cemetery at Greenville Texas.

I found him in the War of 1812 pension index from the National Archives: (visit link)

Last name: Gee
First Name, Middle Name: James Hicks
Vital dates: 1799-1883
State of Service: TN
Residence: Hunt County, TX,
Wife Maiden name: Hawkins, Ann Warren
Marriage Date: 07 Nov 1826
Comments: none

From Find-a-Grave: (visit link)

"Hunt County, Texas Cemeteries, Volume 3, by Kathy Lynn Penson & Robert Lee Thompson, 1979, page 79:
GEE, James H., 5-20-1799 7-27-1883"

And more on a the Carol C Taylor Blog: (visit link)
Posted on October 30, 2016 by admin

"Next Sunday, November 6th several patriotic groups are planning a War of 1812 Patriot Grave Dedication for James H. Gee (1799-1883) in East Mount Cemetery at 2:00 P.M. The public is invited.

James Gee was born earlier than any other male in a marked grave in the cemetery. Several women are buried there who were born earlier, including his mother-in-law; Margaret S. Hawkins (1779-1859) wife of Brig. General Caleb Hawkins. But James H. Gee holds the distinction of being the only veteran of the War of 1812 buried in Greenville.

Gee, a fifteen-year-old musician in Captain Lewis Delahanty’s Company of the Tennessee Militia, served as a substitute for Joseph Woods. On November 13, 1814 he enlisted for six months at Nashville in General Andrew Jackson’s Army. The men boarded boats to float down the Mississippi, landing four miles north of New Orleans. The battle lasted for weeks in January 1815.

By spring of that year, Jackson began sending his troops north to Nashville for discharge. James H. Gee received his papers on May 13, 1815, exactly six months after he enlisted.

Not much is known about Gee until his marriage to Ann W. Hawkins in Lauderdale County, Alabama in 1826. By 1855 the large family was in Carroll County, Tennessee where James H. Gee received two 80-acre bounty land warrants under the Act of 1852. There he served as District Clerk and county surveyor. In November 1859, Gee and his family arrived in Greenville, in Hunt County, Texas in covered wagons.

A few weeks after their arrival in Greenville, Gee’s mother-in-law passed away. By 1860 his wife, Ann W. Gee was a schoolteacher at the Masonic Lodge supported school. When the first Confederate unit left Hunt County, daughter Lucy Gee presented the men with a flag and good wishes on their endeavor. Lucy was quite a beauty and many a man dreamed of her on the way to battle. Unfortunately, the flag bearer panicked in one battle and took off with the banner. Neither banner nor flag bearer were ever seen again.

The Federal government agreed in 1873 to issue pensions to surviving veterans of the War of 1812. James H. Gee filed the requisite applications with several character witnesses from prominent local men. The paperwork was processed in a timely manner in Washington, D. C. However, it was returned with the statement that while he had honorably served the United States in the War of 1812, he was disloyal to the government. Therefore, the pension was denied.

What happened? James H. Gee was the father of at least one Confederate soldier. His fifth son, Thomas Jefferson Gee, served as a scout in Company F, Third Texas Cavalry, Governor Ross’ Brigade. The War Department made a thorough check of confiscated Confederate records before issuing pensions. Anyone with the same surname as a Rebel in the same county was denied federal funds.

The Dallas Weekly Herald of August 2, 1883 eulogized James H. Gee by saying he died after living in Texas for over forty years. Gee was “a man held in high esteem by everybody.” A fitting tribute for a War of 1812 veteran and a leader of Greenville."
Date Erected/Dedicated: 6 Nov 2016

Who put it there? Private/Government?: Private: General Society of the War of 1812

Location/Address:
East Mount Cemetery
Greenville , TX USA


County/Province: Hunt Co. TX

Website (related) if available: [Web Link]

Hours or Restrictions if Appropiate: From: 7:00 AM To: 9:00 PM

Rate the Site:

Photos Will Be Uploaded: yes

Visit Instructions:
Visit logs must contain at least one new photo (by you) of the waymark. We prefer that neither you nor your GPS be in the photo.
Instead, Please provide some small tid-bit about your visit, or trip to this site, and, if possible, try to provide some fresh view or piece of information about the site.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest War of 1812
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log  
Benchmark Blasterz visited James Gee -- East Mount Cemetery, Greenville TX USA 03/15/2023 Benchmark Blasterz visited it