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Abraham “Abram” Alley

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Abraham “Abram” Alley

Birth
Sainte Genevieve, Ste. Genevieve County, Missouri, USA
Death
16 May 1862 (aged 58)
Alleyton, Colorado County, Texas, USA
Burial
Alleyton, Colorado County, Texas, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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ALLEY, ABRAHAM (1803–1862). Abraham (sometimes Abram) Alley, early settler, son of Thomas and Catherine (Baker) Alley, was born on October 22, 1803, in Missouri. He traveled to Texas in the spring of 1822, accompanied by two of his brothers, John C. and Thomas V. Alley. He landed on Galveston Island and journeyed on foot to the Fort Bend settlement on the Brazos River but later settled on the Colorado River, where another brother, Rawson Alley, had located in 1821. The Alley family, of French Huguenot descent, had been friends of the family of Stephen F. Austin in Missouri. A fourth brother to Abraham, William Alley, immigrated to Texas in 1824. That year Abraham Alley took part in a campaign against the Waco and Tawakoni Indians. In 1825 he was reported as a farmer in Stephen F. Austin's colony. He was a member of an 1829 expedition against the American Indians in the San Saba area. On April 26, 1835, Abraham Alley married Nancy Millar, daughter of Texas pioneers John and Elizabeth (Payne) Millar. The Alleys had five (adult) children. On June 17, 1835, Alley and his wife applied for land on the Atascosito Road north of the Colorado River. During the Texas Revolution he enlisted as a volunteer guard under Capt. William Walker. He was assigned to escort women and children to the Trinity River (during the Runaway Scrape") and did not participate in any battles. For his service, February 20 to May 20, 1836, he was awarded several hundred acres of land in Leon County. In December 1837 he was appointed president of the Colorado County committee on the state land bill. In 1840, he declared for tax purposes that he had title to 3,800 acres of land, with 4,444 acres under survey, and that he also had four slaves, seventy-five cattle, and one horse. In 1850 he owned seven slaves and in 1860, fourteen. Alley died May 16, 1862, and was buried in the family cemetery. His wife died on October 28, 1893.

Texas State Historical Association - Handbook of Texas
https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/alley-abraham

Abraham's brother, John C. Alley & 2 friends went canoeing up the Colorado River for provisions when attacked by Karankawa Indians near the mouth of Skull Creek. John C. Alley was killed on February 23, 1823. Abraham's brother Thomas V. Alley was on a campaign against the Waco and Tonkawa Indians in the Spring of 1826, when he fell from his horse while crossing the Colorado River and drowned.

A sister, Cynthia Alley would also migrate to Texas and marry Williamson Daniels.
ALLEY, ABRAHAM (1803–1862). Abraham (sometimes Abram) Alley, early settler, son of Thomas and Catherine (Baker) Alley, was born on October 22, 1803, in Missouri. He traveled to Texas in the spring of 1822, accompanied by two of his brothers, John C. and Thomas V. Alley. He landed on Galveston Island and journeyed on foot to the Fort Bend settlement on the Brazos River but later settled on the Colorado River, where another brother, Rawson Alley, had located in 1821. The Alley family, of French Huguenot descent, had been friends of the family of Stephen F. Austin in Missouri. A fourth brother to Abraham, William Alley, immigrated to Texas in 1824. That year Abraham Alley took part in a campaign against the Waco and Tawakoni Indians. In 1825 he was reported as a farmer in Stephen F. Austin's colony. He was a member of an 1829 expedition against the American Indians in the San Saba area. On April 26, 1835, Abraham Alley married Nancy Millar, daughter of Texas pioneers John and Elizabeth (Payne) Millar. The Alleys had five (adult) children. On June 17, 1835, Alley and his wife applied for land on the Atascosito Road north of the Colorado River. During the Texas Revolution he enlisted as a volunteer guard under Capt. William Walker. He was assigned to escort women and children to the Trinity River (during the Runaway Scrape") and did not participate in any battles. For his service, February 20 to May 20, 1836, he was awarded several hundred acres of land in Leon County. In December 1837 he was appointed president of the Colorado County committee on the state land bill. In 1840, he declared for tax purposes that he had title to 3,800 acres of land, with 4,444 acres under survey, and that he also had four slaves, seventy-five cattle, and one horse. In 1850 he owned seven slaves and in 1860, fourteen. Alley died May 16, 1862, and was buried in the family cemetery. His wife died on October 28, 1893.

Texas State Historical Association - Handbook of Texas
https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/alley-abraham

Abraham's brother, John C. Alley & 2 friends went canoeing up the Colorado River for provisions when attacked by Karankawa Indians near the mouth of Skull Creek. John C. Alley was killed on February 23, 1823. Abraham's brother Thomas V. Alley was on a campaign against the Waco and Tonkawa Indians in the Spring of 1826, when he fell from his horse while crossing the Colorado River and drowned.

A sister, Cynthia Alley would also migrate to Texas and marry Williamson Daniels.


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  • Maintained by: Susan Moors
  • Originally Created by: flgrl
  • Added: Mar 9, 2010
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/49474065/abraham-alley: accessed ), memorial page for Abraham “Abram” Alley (22 Oct 1803–16 May 1862), Find a Grave Memorial ID 49474065, citing Alley Cemetery, Alleyton, Colorado County, Texas, USA; Maintained by Susan Moors (contributor 47987781).