Story of Two Families
Charles Daniel Calvin Eiland

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Name Charles Daniel Calvin Eiland [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17] Born 26 Feb 1839 Montgomery, Montgomery, Alabama, USA [1, 2, 3, 9, 10, 12, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25]
Gender Male Residence 1850 Montgomery, Alabama, USA [10, 12, 21]
Residence 1860 Montgomery, Alabama, USA [10, 12, 19, 20]
Residence 1866 Montgomery, Alabama, USA [15]
Residence 3 Oct 1870 Hunt, Texas, USA [10, 12, 26]
Residence 1880 Byrds Store, Brown, Texas, United States [1, 2, 3, 9, 10, 12, 24, 25]
Age: 40; Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Self Death 1886 Texas, USA [2, 3, 22, 23]
Residence 28 Jun 1900 Tarrant, Texas, USA [3, 12, 18]
Residence 21 Apr 1910 Kaufman, Texas, USA [10, 12]
Died 8 May 1917 Trotman, Georgia, USA [9, 10, 12]
Residence 30 Apr 1930 Harrison County, Mississippi, USA [12]
Person ID I13 My Family Last Modified 21 Jun 2022
Father Isaiah Eiland, b. 11 Oct 1811, Clinton, Jones County, Georgia, USA , d. 31 Oct 1882, Union Springs, Bullock, Alabama, USA
(Age 71 years)
Relationship natural Mother Sarah A Caffey, b. 19 Oct 1817, North Carolina, USA , d. 10 Dec 1895, Ramer, Montgomery, Alabama, USA
(Age 78 years)
Relationship natural Married 25 Feb 1835 Montgomery, Montgomery, Alabama, USA [22, 23, 27, 28, 29]
Family ID F428 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family 1 Jerusia Winifred Tolbert, b. 16 Apr 1844, Pike, Alabama, USA , d. 1891, Cuthbert, Mitchell, Texas, USA
(Age 46 years)
Married 14 Dec 1859 Montgomery, Alabama, USA [4, 5, 6, 22, 30, 31, 32]
Children 1. Sarah E Eiland, b. 16 Sep 1861, Montgomery, Alabama, USA , d. 28 Oct 1918, Terrell, Kaufman, Texas, USA
(Age 57 years) [natural]
2. John I Eiland, b. 14 May 1866, Montgomery County, Alabama, USA , d. 9 Mar 1921, Roswell, Chaves, New Mexico, USA
(Age 54 years) [natural]
3. Daniel Jackson Eiland, b. 1 Oct 1867, Montgomery, Montgomery, Alabama, USA , d. 31 Aug 1958, Cimarron, Oklahoma, USA
(Age 90 years) [natural]
4. Mollie Miranda Eiland, b. 16 Feb 1870, Montgomery, Alabama, USA , d. 19 Oct 1953, Abilene, Jones, Texas, USA
(Age 83 years) [natural]
5. Thomas Calvin Eiland, b. 1 Mar 1873, Greenville, Hunt, Texas, USA , d. 22 Feb 1956, La Jolla, San Diego, California, USA
(Age 82 years) [natural]
6. Genett Eileen (Nettie) Eiland, b. 23 Apr 1874, Cuthbert, Mitchell, Texas, USA , d. 14 Feb 1940, Visalia, Tulare, California, USA
(Age 65 years) [natural]
7. Isabelle Belzara Eiland, b. 8 Jan 1877, Texas, USA , d. 7 Sep 1941, Terrell, Kaufman, Texas, USA
(Age 64 years) [natural]
8. Louisa Winnifred Eiland, b. 17 Nov 1878, Brown, Texas, USA , d. 18 Nov 1973, Dunn, Scurry, Texas, USA
(Age 95 years) [natural]
9. Irene Francis Eiland, b. 13 Aug 1880, Byrd's Store, Texas, USA , d. 27 Apr 1960, Poway, San Diego, California, USA
(Age 79 years) [natural]
10. Charley A Eiland, b. 1862, Alabama, USA , d. 14 Apr 1927, USA
(Age 65 years) [natural]
11. Levi Eiland, b. 1880, d. 1894, New Mexico, USA (Age 14 years) [natural]
Last Modified 21 Jun 2022 Family ID F11 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family 2 Rebecca Mirah Wilson Married 17 Dec 1858 [22] Last Modified 21 Jun 2022 Family ID F10 Group Sheet | Family Chart
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Event Map = Link to Google Earth
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Photos Charles Daniel Calvin Eiland Eiland family Eiland Tolbert
Documents Charles Daniel Calvin Eiland profile
Albums CDC Eiland (4)
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Notes - WRITTEN ON JULY. 1982
(Torn and Maudie Eiland were the parents of Earl Desmond Eiland., and grandparents to John Calvin
Eiland and. Carl Victor Eiland)
The history of the Eiland family as told to me by my father, Thomas Calvin is as follows:
I, Lena Eiland McBurney, the oldest daughter of Thomas Calvin Eiland and Maudie
Burrows Eiland, there were ten children born in to this union. They were Earl, Lena,
Leonard, Lorene, Victor, Frances, Evelyn, Louise, Helen and Dorothy.
The family was Welsh, Scotch and Irish decent. In England the custom was for the oldest
son to inherit the family estate when the old folks passed away. The family surname in
England was Halifax.
One of the younger sons left England to come to America as he wanted no part of
England or the Halifax name. On the trip to America he took the name of Eiland, as his
older brother still in England, would become Lord Halifax. There is no record of him
arriving in America or where he settled.
The next record of the Eiland family was during the Civil War. The Eiland men fought in
the South, mostly in Tennessee and Texas. My father, Thomas Calvin Eiland had seven
uncles killed in the Civil War.
While Charles Daniel Calvin Eiland, the father of Thomas Calvin Eiland, was fighting in
the Civil war a daughter was born. Our Grandmother Minnie Talbert Eiland, not knowing
whether or not her husband would return named the baby girl after her father, so she
became my Aunt Charlie. She raised her family in Texas. There was sons Sid and Walter,
daughters Luby and Lena.
Charles Daniel Calvin Eiland did come home from the war. When my father was a
toddler, his father and mother left him in the care of the older sisters. It was before
stoves, so they cooked in the fireplace. My father toddled over to the fireplace, and fell
into a skillet of hot grease. He was burned so badly that he did not walk until he was 6 years
old.
Charles Daniel Calvin Eiland was killed by a train, as he was going to board. He was
crossing one track to get to the second track that his train was on when another train
came down the first track hitting him and killing him. It was believed that because of his
failing eyes sight he did not see the train approaching on the second track. At the time of
his death he was on his way from Colorado to Texas to visit his daughters Lou and Bell
and their families. He was buried on the Colman Ranch near Cuthbert, Texas, where his
wife Minnie Talbert Eiland was buried.
Minnie Talbert Eiland was born 1845 - died February 5, 1885. She was 40 years old at
the time of her death.
My father Thomas Calvin Eiland was born March l, 1873 at Colorado City, Texas. He
died February 22,1956 of a heart attack in San Diego, California. He is buried in Hemet,
California, where his wife is buried.
My father left Texas when he was a young man; his brother Perry Eiland, came with him
to New Mexico with sheep. It was at the time when the cattlemen were trying to keep the
sheep men out New Medco. My father had to go into Portales, New Mexico to get
supplies, so he left the sheep ranch in a wagon with a team of horses to get supplies.
When he returned 30 days later his brother Perry, had been killed and my father figured
that the cattlemen had killed his brother. My father stayed another 2 years with the sheep,
then he sold the sheep for $12,000.00 which he never was able to collect, as the men that
purchased the sheep drove them into Texas making it impossible for my father to do
anything about it.
Charles Daniel Calvin Eiland and Minnie Talbert Eiland had 9 children:
Nettie, Charles, John, Jack, Tom, Irene, Louise, Belle andPerry
This history is the best of my knowledge of what my father had told me over the years.
Lena Eiland McBurney
ALABAMA CIVIL WAR RECORD
Last Name: Eiland
First Name: C Ml: D
Branch: Cavalry
Regimental Unit. 51st AL
Company Unit: H
Authority: Statement of Stephen F. Nunnalee 1864/10/06; compiled roll from Mrs. M.L. Kirkpatrick's scrapbook
Enlistment lnfo: AL, Pine Level, Private.
Remarks: Prisoner at Ft. Delaware. Voi.1, page 195.
Charles came to Texas to hunt buffalo in the 1870s. He and Winney lived in Greenville, Hunt Co, TX in 1870 and in Brownwood, Brown Co, Texas in 1880 according to the census.
Charles D C Eiland was a rancher in the Cuthbert area. The Eiland Ranch was sold, as the story goes, to pay a debt to the local general store. lt later was known as the Cuthbert Ranch. Charles was shot on a train to Shreveport in 1885.
His wife, Winifred died in the 1891 and is buried on a plot on what was the old Eiland ranch.
Law offices of Barrett and Files
Suite 321-2-3 Commercial National Bank building
Shreveport Louisiana
May 11th,1917
Mrs. Luisa Johnson
Dunn, Texas
Dear Madam.:
On yesterday I received a telegram stating that your father, CDC Eiland had been killed by a freight train at Richland, Georgia and I immediately made an effort to ascertain if he had any relatives, and if so, their whereabouts.
Mr. Eiland, before leaving here asked me to sell a little place which he owned near the town of Blanchard. I had passed the deed to him when he acquired the property. He had been at my office several times recently, and, finally, on Friday last, he returned and asked me to get him a loan of from $400-$500. I urged him to get as little as he could get along with and prevailed upon him to only borrow $340. This amount I secured for him and went with him to the bank and bought New York exchange with part of it, and went with him to the V. S. & P. ticket office and bought a ticket for him to Columbus, Georgia, where he said he wanted to go and had relatives.
The message of his death came to me four or five days later. Indeed, the only way he was identified was by this New York exchange upon his person, gotten by me for him from the bank.
I have your wire asking that his remains be forwarded to Snyder, Texas, if the railroad would pay the charges. I do not know what the expense of embalming and shipping the body from Georgia will be, but I take it for granted that with his little piece up dear Blanchard and with what We will save out of the New York exchange found upon his body, it will be sufficient to pay his debts and take care of all sucession and funeral expenses.
I am just in receipt of a wire stating that his body had been prepared for shipment and forwarded today from Georgia. This ought to bring his remains here Saturday or Sunday, and then we will have the undertaker here forward the body on to Snyder, Texas.
You may, therefore prepared to receive the remain sometimes within the usual course of train service from here.
Very respectfully,
Thomas C Barrett
(The following letter from a representative of the Railway to the attorney Thomas Barrett, was copied and sent from the Dunn location of Beakley and Company. Beakley had nothing to do with the letter itself. The copy is undated)
Office of Beakley &Company
General merchandise
Agents for P & O implements
Dunn, Texas
Mr. Thomas C Barrett
Shreveport, Louisiana
Dear Sir:
Referring to exchange of wires of the 10th, inst., with reference to the body of DC Eiland. I beg to advise there was no undertaker near the point where the accident occurred, but arrangements were made with the Americus Undertaking Company of Americus, Georgia who came for the body and prepared for burial and shipped according to your instructions. We likewise requested the undertaking company to make draft on the Commercial National Bank for the expense involved in complying with your request.
From the information we have been able to secure, Mr. Eiland was a passenger on S.A.L. train number 19, May 8th, out of Columbus, Georgia for Savanna, Georgia. Upon reaching Richland, Georgia where a change of cars was necessary, the conductor of the train carried Mr. Eiland to the waiting room of the passenger station and showed him the train which he was to board for Savanna, Georgia. These trains are the S.A.L. Railways and in no way connected with this company. However, when train number 19 left Richland for Albany, Georgia, Mr. Eiland had again boarded the train which he had just left, probably by mistake and the conductor told him to get off at Kimbrough, a small place were our line crosses the Columbus-Albany branch of the S.A.L. Railway and wait there until he returned and he would take him back to Richland and see he was put on the right train for Savanna. Mr. Eiland left the train at that point and went into the depot and the agent at that point said he acted rather strangely and he gained the impression his mind was affected. Instead of waiting for the return of this train, he left the depot with his grip and wandered around the station for a while and then left walking south along our railroad tracks going in the opposite direction from Richland until he reached the station about 5 miles south known as Trautman, Georgia. Upon reaching this point he seemed exhausted and acted strangely according to statement of people with whom he came in contact and bought a bottle of Chamberlains Colic Cure and immediately drank about half of it and soon thereafter fell asleep and remained there from about between 8 and 10 o’clock in the morning in this condition until about 5 o’clock in the afternoon when he awoke. He then attempted to hire a conveyance to return to Richland but being unable to make a satisfactory trade he again picked up his grip and started wandering back up the public road, he having made the statement he was out all night previous to some parties which he met at the latter point. At 7:55 PM of the same day, the night being very dark as our northbound red ball freight train was going to Richland at or near the 169 mile post a man was seen off the railroad track on the inside of the curve with a grip; when the locomotive was within about 30 or 40 feet of this party he dropped his grip on the ground and ran towards the track in front of the locomotive; the train crew witnessed this action on his part were convinced that Mr. Eiland attempted suicide for the reason when he reached the point where the body would reach the track he began falling as though throwing himself across the rails. However, he never reached the rails as the pilot beam struck him in the head resulting in instant death. There was also found in his grip some bottles of lemon extract, and the belief was expressed by some of the disinterested parties that he was either suffering and had been taking these drops to relieve him or that possibly he may have been drinking and use these for the alcohol in them, or he was mentally deranged, some young ladies having ran from him the evening he was killed on account of the very queer actions of the man and made statement they were afraid the old gentleman was insane.
I am giving you the facts as I find them for the reason I do know whether Mr. Eiland was addicted to drink, mentally deranged or suffering from an illness which may have produced this condition. It seems that a man with money would have walked all night and tramped up and down a railroad as he did for a day or two when trains are running regularly both on this company’s lines and the S.A.L. Railway and the further fact that automobiles were passing up and down the road almost hourly in this section of the country. He may have had reason for preferring to walk, but as I understand, he was about 70 years of age and it would hardly be reasonable to resume he was tramping over the country by preference without some mental condition being responsible for this exposure and effort.
We regret exceedingly the accident but feel there is no liability since he was off our tracks when first seen and immediately threw himself in front of the train at a time it was within 30 or 40 feet of him, making it impossible for the engineer to prevent the accident. The engineer immediately applied his air and reversed his engine as soon as he saw this party moving towards the track but being only 30 feet from him made it impossible to avoid the accident.
Yours truly,
Office of Beakley &Company
General merchandise
Agents for P & O implements
Dunn, Texas
Mrs. Luisa Johnson Shreveport, Louisiana May 17, 1917
Box 27, Dunn, TX
Dear Madam.:
We are corresponding with attorneys in Georgia where Mr. CDC Eiland was killed, asking them to investigate the facts connected with the accident and to let us know if there is a reasonable ground upon which to bring suit.
I am today in the receipt of a letter from the general manager of the road, a copy of which I herewith hand you.
As I had represented Mr. Eiland in all professional matters since he has lived here, I assume if there is any ground for suit that your family would want us to look after it and we have, therefore, made haste to gather the evidence while the facts are fresh in the minds of those who had knowledge of the accident. I’ve been trying to ascertain the value of the little place Mister Eiland owned near here, which is variously estimated to be worth from $500-$600 and which, however, is cumbered with the mortgage recently executed by Mr. Eiland for $340. In addition, there is pending against this property a suit involving a flaw in the title and this would necessarily reduce its value some. I had been representing Mr. Eiland in his defense of the suit.
Mr. Eiland had a small crop of corn and oats on the place, but he got sick early in the season and went to the hospital here and I understand it has been neglected so there is no outcome to the crop. I’ve asked a neighbor of his, to get the best out of it possible.
I expect it would be best to apply for an administration and will take steps to do so at once.
Yours respectfully,
signed-Thomas C Barrett
Cal D. Hicks
Attorney at Law and Notary Public
room 329 Ward building
PO Box 525, Shreveport, Louisiana
June 21, 1917
Mrs. Molly Eiland Carpenter
Potosi, Texas
Dear Madam.,
You are doubtless aware of the fact that Mr. Charles DC Eiland died in this parish on or about May 9th this year, leaving the estate of 40 acres of land and $313.65 in the Commercial National Bank of the city and that Mr. TC Barrett had applied to be appointed administrator, claiming to be a creditor to the amount of $400 which he can do in this State. I do not know if you are aware of the fact that I had been appointed attorney for absent heirs, of whom I am informed, you are one.
This application was duly advertised and Mr. Barrett will be confirmed as administrator next Saturday unless some opposition develops. Of course, the land will have to be sold to satisfy the debts which will be in addition to Mr. Barrett’s claim, the funeral expenses. Unless the heirs or any one of them desire to pay off the debts and then take over succession of course in that event the one taking over the succession, unless they all combine, would have to make settlement with the others.
Do you desire to do anything else other than see than see matters carried on according to law and the debts are paid and the funds are properly distributed? If not, then I will attend to that part of it, though Mr. Barrett is a reputable gentleman, and will do just as the law directs and as an honest man should.
Yours very respectfully,
Cal D. Hicks
- WRITTEN ON JULY. 1982
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Sources - [S965] 1880 United States Federal Census, Ancestry.com and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2010;), Year: 1880; Census Place: Byrds Store, Brown, Texas; Roll: 1292; Family History Film: 1255292; Page: 392B; Enumeration District: 024.
Record for J. I. Eiland1880 United States Federal Census - [S956] Ancestry Family Trees, (Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.;), Database online.
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Online publication - Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2004.Original data - United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900.T623, 1854 rolls. Tarrant, Texas, ED , roll , page .1900 United States Federal Census - [S978] 1860 United States Federal Census, Ancestry.com, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2009;).
Online publication - Ancestry.com. 1860 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2004.Original data - United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Eighth Census of the United States, 1860. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1860.M653, 1,438 rolls. District 2, Montgomery, Alabama, post office Ramah, roll M653_19, page 127, image 128. - [S978] 1860 United States Federal Census, Ancestry.com, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2009;), Database online. District 2, Montgomery, Alabama, post office Ramah, roll M653_19, page 127, image 128.
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Ancestry.com. 1850 United States Federal Census [database online]. Provo, Utah: MyFamily.com, Inc., 2005. Original data: United States. 1850 United States Federal Census. M432, 1009 rolls. National Archives and Records Administration, Washington D.C. District 2, Montgomery, Alabama, roll M432_12, page 194, image 250. - [S983] OneWorldTree, Ancestry.com, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA;).
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1880 U.S. Census Index provided by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints © Copyright 1999 Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved. All use is subject to the limited use license and other terms and conditions applicable to this site. Byrds Store, Brown, Texas, ED 24, roll T9_1292, page 392.2000, image .1880 United States Federal Census - [S965] 1880 United States Federal Census, Ancestry.com and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2010;), Year: 1880; Census Place: Byrds Store, Brown, Texas; Roll: 1292; Family History Film: 1255292; Page: 392B; Enumeration District: 024.
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Alabama, Marriages, Deaths, Wills, Court, and Other Records, 1784-1920 - [S507] Alabama, Select Marriages, 1816-1942, Ancestry.com, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2014;).
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Online publication - Ancestry.com. Alabama Marriage Collection, 1800-1969 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2006.Original data - <li>Alabama Center for Health Statistics. Alabama Marriage Index, 1936-1969. Alabama Center for Health Statistics, Montgomery, Alabama.<li>Dodd, Jordan R., et. al. Early American Marriages: Alabama to 1825. Bountiful, UT: Precision Indexing Publishers, 19xx.<li>Hunting For Bears, comp. Alabama marriage information taken from county courthouse records. Many of these records were extracted from copies of the original records in microfilm, microfiche, or book format, located at the Family History Library.<li>Dodd, Jordan R., comp. Early American Marriages: Alabama, 1800 to 1920..
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