Joe M. Bounds
Letters of guardianship given in County Court, November 1860
Kazie Bounds is this day appointed guardian of the person and property of Frances M., George W. and Malinda C. Bounds. Nov. 26
Kazie Bounds, W. J. and C. W. Bounds as surieties are held firmly bound unto the Chief Justice in sum of $1,000 of the children who are by law William Bounds’ heirs. First filed Dec. 15, 1859.
In another document Ann S. Hurt got guardianship over the children of J. M. and Elisa Bounds, namely, Virginia, Joseph, and Maggie Bounds.
Ann S. Hurt came to the Peters Colony in the 1840s, a widow with her children, and filed on a 640 acre headright. Later married a Bounds.
Estate papers for J. M. and Eliza Bounds filed June 18, 1875.
BOUNDS
McKinney Daily Courier-Gazette, Nov 1, 1922
The old family home of the Bounds’ stood on the site now occupied by the America Theatre on North Kentucky street. The deceased (Joe M. Bounds, Jr.) was one of three children...two sisters, Mrs. Garnett of McKinney and a deceased sister, Mrs. H. S. Sisk.
His father, Joe M. Bounds, Sr., was a pioneer Texas, who came to Collin county before McKinney was founded as a town. He was a merchant of McKinney, being a member of the firm of Bounds & Barnett, and also conducted the first hotel in this city.
LIBERTY HOUSE, MCKINNEY, COLLIN COUNTY, TEXAS
J. M. BOUNDS, PROPRIETOR
McKinney Daily Courier-Gazette, July 8, 1926
From The Standard, Clarksville, Texas, August 19, 1854
The undersigned has opened this house for the accommodation of the public, and will spare no exertions to render comfortably those who may favor him with a call. The stable is large, and well provided with a variety of forage and good ostlers. Charges moderate. J. M. Bounds, November 12, 1853.
BROTHER OF McKINNEY WOMAN IS DEAD
Joe. M. Bounds Jr. Was Born in McKinney in 1854.
McKinney Courier-Gazette, November 1, 1922
Mrs. M. H. Garnett of this city has received the news of the death of her brother, J. M. Bounds, which sad event occurred at his home at Mooringsport, La., Saturday, Oct. 28, after a several years period of ill health. His remains were laid to rest at his home town in that state Sunday, Oct. 29.
The deceased, Joe M. Bounds, Jr., was born in the old family homestead in McKinney, Feb. 17, 1854, and therefore 68 years, 8 months and 11 days old at the time of his passing. The old family home of the Bounds’ stood on the site now occupied by the America Theatre on North Kentucky street. The deceased was one of three children – a brother and two sisters, Mrs. Garnett of McKinney and a deceased sister, Mrs. H. S. Sisk, who died at her home in Houston ten years ago. Joe M. Bounds, Jr., was reared to manhood in McKinney and has lived many years in Louisiana, where he died. His father, Joe M. Bounds, Sr., was a pioneer Texan, who came to Collin county before McKinney was founded as a town. He was a merchant of McKinney, being a member of the firm of Bounds & Barnett, and also conducted the first hotel in this city. He was a Mexican War Veteran. When the Civil War broke out he helped raise and became Captain of Company G, 11th Texas Cavalry, Col. Young of Grayson county commanded the 11th Texas Cavalry and was himself killed in the service in the year 1863. The mother of Joe M. Bounds Jr. and wife of Colonel Joe M. Bounds, Sr., was before her marriage Miss Eliza Hurt, daughter of Mrs. Ann S. Hurt, the latter a young widow thirty years old who emigrated from her native state of Virginia to Texas in 1846. She headrighted land in this county and lived to a ripe old age, dying in her eighties while visiting at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Haynes at Weatherford, Texas. Her remains were brought to McKinney for interment in Pecan Grove Cemetery, where her daughter, Mrs. J. M. Bounds, wife of Colonel J. M. Bounds and mother of the deceased, is also buried. The deceased, Joe M. Bounds Jr., is survived by his wife, and two daughters, Mrs. A. E. Lipp and Mrs. L. S. Richards. Both of the daughters live in Philadelphia at present. The deceased was a nephew of Capt. F. M. Bounds of McKinney and a cousin of Lee Bounds, a prominent and widely known citizen of Celina. Two other uncles of the deceased were prominent Collin county citizens, both of them now being dead. They were Carroll Bounds of Weston, and Jack Bounds of Celina.
The many old boyhood friends in McKinney of the deceased will be pained to hear of his death and all sincerely sympathize with the surviving wife in Louisiana, the two loving daughters in Philadelphia, and the sister, Mrs. Garnett, in McKinney. The last visit of the deceased to his old home in McKinney was made in August 1918 for the purpose of attending the funeral of his brother-in-law, the late District Judge M. H. Garnett of the Fifty-ninth Judicial District of Texas.
Kazie Bounds is this day appointed guardian of the person and property of Frances M., George W. and Malinda C. Bounds. Nov. 26
Kazie Bounds, W. J. and C. W. Bounds as surieties are held firmly bound unto the Chief Justice in sum of $1,000 of the children who are by law William Bounds’ heirs. First filed Dec. 15, 1859.
In another document Ann S. Hurt got guardianship over the children of J. M. and Elisa Bounds, namely, Virginia, Joseph, and Maggie Bounds.
Ann S. Hurt came to the Peters Colony in the 1840s, a widow with her children, and filed on a 640 acre headright. Later married a Bounds.
Estate papers for J. M. and Eliza Bounds filed June 18, 1875.
BOUNDS
McKinney Daily Courier-Gazette, Nov 1, 1922
The old family home of the Bounds’ stood on the site now occupied by the America Theatre on North Kentucky street. The deceased (Joe M. Bounds, Jr.) was one of three children...two sisters, Mrs. Garnett of McKinney and a deceased sister, Mrs. H. S. Sisk.
His father, Joe M. Bounds, Sr., was a pioneer Texas, who came to Collin county before McKinney was founded as a town. He was a merchant of McKinney, being a member of the firm of Bounds & Barnett, and also conducted the first hotel in this city.
LIBERTY HOUSE, MCKINNEY, COLLIN COUNTY, TEXAS
J. M. BOUNDS, PROPRIETOR
McKinney Daily Courier-Gazette, July 8, 1926
From The Standard, Clarksville, Texas, August 19, 1854
The undersigned has opened this house for the accommodation of the public, and will spare no exertions to render comfortably those who may favor him with a call. The stable is large, and well provided with a variety of forage and good ostlers. Charges moderate. J. M. Bounds, November 12, 1853.
BROTHER OF McKINNEY WOMAN IS DEAD
Joe. M. Bounds Jr. Was Born in McKinney in 1854.
McKinney Courier-Gazette, November 1, 1922
Mrs. M. H. Garnett of this city has received the news of the death of her brother, J. M. Bounds, which sad event occurred at his home at Mooringsport, La., Saturday, Oct. 28, after a several years period of ill health. His remains were laid to rest at his home town in that state Sunday, Oct. 29.
The deceased, Joe M. Bounds, Jr., was born in the old family homestead in McKinney, Feb. 17, 1854, and therefore 68 years, 8 months and 11 days old at the time of his passing. The old family home of the Bounds’ stood on the site now occupied by the America Theatre on North Kentucky street. The deceased was one of three children – a brother and two sisters, Mrs. Garnett of McKinney and a deceased sister, Mrs. H. S. Sisk, who died at her home in Houston ten years ago. Joe M. Bounds, Jr., was reared to manhood in McKinney and has lived many years in Louisiana, where he died. His father, Joe M. Bounds, Sr., was a pioneer Texan, who came to Collin county before McKinney was founded as a town. He was a merchant of McKinney, being a member of the firm of Bounds & Barnett, and also conducted the first hotel in this city. He was a Mexican War Veteran. When the Civil War broke out he helped raise and became Captain of Company G, 11th Texas Cavalry, Col. Young of Grayson county commanded the 11th Texas Cavalry and was himself killed in the service in the year 1863. The mother of Joe M. Bounds Jr. and wife of Colonel Joe M. Bounds, Sr., was before her marriage Miss Eliza Hurt, daughter of Mrs. Ann S. Hurt, the latter a young widow thirty years old who emigrated from her native state of Virginia to Texas in 1846. She headrighted land in this county and lived to a ripe old age, dying in her eighties while visiting at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Haynes at Weatherford, Texas. Her remains were brought to McKinney for interment in Pecan Grove Cemetery, where her daughter, Mrs. J. M. Bounds, wife of Colonel J. M. Bounds and mother of the deceased, is also buried. The deceased, Joe M. Bounds Jr., is survived by his wife, and two daughters, Mrs. A. E. Lipp and Mrs. L. S. Richards. Both of the daughters live in Philadelphia at present. The deceased was a nephew of Capt. F. M. Bounds of McKinney and a cousin of Lee Bounds, a prominent and widely known citizen of Celina. Two other uncles of the deceased were prominent Collin county citizens, both of them now being dead. They were Carroll Bounds of Weston, and Jack Bounds of Celina.
The many old boyhood friends in McKinney of the deceased will be pained to hear of his death and all sincerely sympathize with the surviving wife in Louisiana, the two loving daughters in Philadelphia, and the sister, Mrs. Garnett, in McKinney. The last visit of the deceased to his old home in McKinney was made in August 1918 for the purpose of attending the funeral of his brother-in-law, the late District Judge M. H. Garnett of the Fifty-ninth Judicial District of Texas.