Neill, Henry Hart 1a

Birth Name Neill, Henry Hart 2a 3a 4a 5a
Also Known As Neill, Hal Hart
Gender male
Age at Death 63 years, 7 months, 3 days

Narrative

Records not imported into INDI (individual) Gramps ID I12175691904:

Line ignored as not understood Line 4980: 3 _APID 1,6742::6753265
Line ignored as not understood Line 4989: 3 _APID 1,7884::27695132
Line ignored as not understood Line 4999: 3 _APID 1,2204::327055
Line ignored as not understood Line 5044: 3 _APID 1,6742::6753265
Line ignored as not understood Line 5053: 3 _APID 1,7884::27695132
Line ignored as not understood Line 5063: 3 _APID 1,2204::327055
Line ignored as not understood Line 5103: 3 _APID 1,6742::6753265
Line ignored as not understood Line 5115: 3 _APID 1,7884::27695132
Line ignored as not understood Line 5128: 3 _APID 1,2204::327055
Line ignored as not understood Line 5169: 2 _APID 1,7602::43035613

 

Families

Family of Neill, Henry Hart and Fagan, Dora M

Married Wife Fagan, Dora M ( * November 1861 + ... )
   
Event Date Place Description Sources
Marriage 1877     1b 5d
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
Neill, Robert Toombs27 April 18796 December 1962
Neill, Dora BrockJanuary 18891 December 1961

Source References

  1. Ancestry.com: 1900 United States Federal Census
      • Page: Year: 1900; Census Place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas; Roll: T623_1611; Page: 11B; Enumeration District: 96.
      • Source text:

        Birth date: Nov 1861
        Birth place: Tennessee
        Marriage date: 1877
        Marriage place:
        Residence date: 1900
        Residence place: San Antonio City, Bexar, Texas</line><line />

      • Citation:

        http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1900usfedcen&h=43035613&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

      • Page: Year: 1900; Census Place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas; Roll: T623_1611; Page: 11B; Enumeration District: 96.
      • Source text:

        Birth date: Nov 1861
        Birth place: Tennessee
        Marriage date: 1877
        Marriage place:
        Residence date: 1900
        Residence place: San Antonio City, Bexar, Texas</line><line />

      • Citation:

        http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1900usfedcen&h=43035613&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

  2. Ancestry.com and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints: 1880 United States Federal Census
      • Page: Year: 1880; Census Place: Stephenville, Erath, Texas; Roll: 1302; Family History Film: 1255302; Page: 125A; Enumeration District: 206; Image: .
      • Source text:

        Birth date: abt 1847
        Birth place: Mississippi
        Residence date: 1880
        Residence place: Stephenville, Erath, Texas, United States</line><line />

      • Citation:

        http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1880usfedcen&h=6753265&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

      • Page: Year: 1880; Census Place: Stephenville, Erath, Texas; Roll: 1302; Family History Film: 1255302; Page: 125A; Enumeration District: 206; Image: .
      • Source text:

        Birth date: abt 1847
        Birth place: Mississippi
        Residence date: 1880
        Residence place: Stephenville, Erath, Texas, United States</line><line />

      • Citation:

        http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1880usfedcen&h=6753265&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

      • Page: Year: 1880; Census Place: Stephenville, Erath, Texas; Roll: 1302; Family History Film: 1255302; Page: 125A; Enumeration District: 206; Image: .
      • Source text:

        Birth date: abt 1847
        Birth place: Mississippi
        Residence date: 1880
        Residence place: Stephenville, Erath, Texas, United States</line><line />

      • Citation:

        http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1880usfedcen&h=6753265&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

  3. Ancestry.com: 1910 United States Federal Census
      • Page: Year: 1910; Census Place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas; Roll: ; Page: ; Enumeration District: ; Image: .
      • Source text:

        Birth date: 1848
        Birth place: Mississippi
        Residence date: 1910
        Residence place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas</line><line />

      • Citation:

        http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1910uscenindex&h=27695132&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

      • Page: Year: 1910; Census Place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas; Roll: ; Page: ; Enumeration District: ; Image: .
      • Source text:

        Birth date: 1848
        Birth place: Mississippi
        Residence date: 1910
        Residence place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas</line><line />

      • Citation:

        http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1910uscenindex&h=27695132&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

      • Page: Year: 1910; Census Place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas; Roll: ; Page: ; Enumeration District: ; Image: .
      • Source text:

        Birth date: 1848
        Birth place: Mississippi
        Residence date: 1910
        Residence place: San Antonio Ward 5, Bexar, Texas</line><line />

      • Citation:

        http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=1910uscenindex&h=27695132&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

  4. Ancestry.com: U.S., Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970
      • Source text:

        Birth date: 1848
        Birth place:
        Death date: 1911
        Death place:
        Residence date:
        Residence place: United States</line><line />

      • Citation:

        http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=sarmemberapps&h=327055&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

      • Source text:

        Birth date: 1848
        Birth place:
        Death date: 1911
        Death place:
        Residence date:
        Residence place: United States</line><line />

      • Citation:

        http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=sarmemberapps&h=327055&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

      • Source text:

        Birth date: 1848
        Birth place:
        Death date: 1911
        Death place:
        Residence date:
        Residence place: United States</line><line />

      • Citation:

        http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?db=sarmemberapps&h=327055&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt

  5. Confederate veteran
      • Date: February, 1912
      • Page: Vol. XX, No. 2, p.76, “Judge H. H. Neill”
      • Source text:

        Judge H. H. Neill.
        Associate Justice Hal H. Neill, of the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fourth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, died at Cloudcroft, N. M., of apoplexy on September I, 1911. His death came as a great shock. He had recently been in El Paso on a visit to his son, Robert T. Neill, a young lawyer in that city, but he had gone to Cloudcroft, where he has been accustomed to spend the summer.
        The son went to Cloudcroft on the first train and accompanied the body to Alamogordo, where it was prepared for burial. The funeral was conducted in El Paso, Judge Neill's former home, the Masons of that city having charge. The bench and bar of El Paso took part, and the Masons and bar of San Antonio sent delegations. Mrs. Neill, who was at San Antonio, left for El Paso on an early train. Her daughter, Mrs. Frederick N. Raymond, of Raymondville, in the Lower Rio Grande country, could not attend the funeral. Just a day or two before his death Justice Neill was elated by receipt of a telegram stating that a son had been born to Mrs. Raymond.
        The death of Justice Neill causes the first vacancy in the Fourth Court of Civil Appeals since it was appointed by the late Governor Hogg in 1893. With John H. James, of San Antonio, as chief justice and W. S. Fly, of Gonzales, and H. H. Neill, of El Paso, associate justices, the court was a remarkably able one, and it had existed for eighteen years.
        Judge Neill as a lawyer had few equals. His mastery of
        the law was general, and he went into the abtruse fields of law much deeper than the ordinary jurist does. His industry was indefatigable; he frequently worked far into the night rather than fail to finish investigation of a case.
        Justice Neill's ancestry is traced in an unbroken line to the junior branch of the family of the last The O'Neill of Ireland, who was buried in Rome in 1616, and whose grave is still marked.
        Judge Neill was a native of Carroll County, Miss. He was born January 29, 1848, and was reared in the old colonial home of his father, Col. G. F. Neill, four miles from Carrollton. His father and his mother, Caroline Hart, were of Robinson County, Tenn.
        In the last year of the Civil War Hal H. Neill, then sixteen years old, joined the Confederate Army. Although his father was colonel of the 13th Mississippi, he became one of Capt. Ike S. Harvey's scouts and saw service in Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi under Generals Forrest and Hood. After the war he entered the University of Mississippi. Most of the university students had served in the army, and there "never was such a class of freshmen as those who entered the university just after the war."
        In 1872 he moved to Stephensville, Erath County, Tex., and in 1877 he was married to Dora Fagan, of Stephensville, who survives him. Of their five children two are living, Robert T. Neill and Mrs. Dora Raymond. He moved to El Paso in 1882, where he made his home until Governor Hogg appointed him to the bench, when he made San Antonio his home.
        Judge Neill was particularly the friend of young lawyers. He went out of his way to talk with them on terms of kindly intimacy and advice. One of these young men is Judge George Harvey, a Supreme Court judge in the Philippines. Harvey was his stenographer in his El Paso office, and while in this capacity he studied law. After the Spanish-American War Harvey went to the Philippines with letters from Justice Neill that obtained a hearing and a successful issue.
        Justice Neill was a lawyer of national repute. Two of his opinions handed down on this bench involving the law of divorce and of breach of promise suits have been incorporated in the textbook taught in the Columbia University law school. A system of leading cases edited and published in England containing opinions of the House of Lords and of leading tribunals of the world have contained Justice Neill's opinions. He had taken all the degrees of Masonry, was an Odd Fellow, and was a member of Albert Sidney Johnston Camp of Confederate Veterans.

      • Citation:

        http://books.google.com/books?id=CD3lAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA76

      • Date: February, 1912
      • Page: Vol. XX, No. 2, p.76, “Judge H. H. Neill”
      • Source text:

        Judge H. H. Neill.
        Associate Justice Hal H. Neill, of the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fourth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, died at Cloudcroft, N. M., of apoplexy on September I, 1911. His death came as a great shock. He had recently been in El Paso on a visit to his son, Robert T. Neill, a young lawyer in that city, but he had gone to Cloudcroft, where he has been accustomed to spend the summer.
        The son went to Cloudcroft on the first train and accompanied the body to Alamogordo, where it was prepared for burial. The funeral was conducted in El Paso, Judge Neill's former home, the Masons of that city having charge. The bench and bar of El Paso took part, and the Masons and bar of San Antonio sent delegations. Mrs. Neill, who was at San Antonio, left for El Paso on an early train. Her daughter, Mrs. Frederick N. Raymond, of Raymondville, in the Lower Rio Grande country, could not attend the funeral. Just a day or two before his death Justice Neill was elated by receipt of a telegram stating that a son had been born to Mrs. Raymond.
        The death of Justice Neill causes the first vacancy in the Fourth Court of Civil Appeals since it was appointed by the late Governor Hogg in 1893. With John H. James, of San Antonio, as chief justice and W. S. Fly, of Gonzales, and H. H. Neill, of El Paso, associate justices, the court was a remarkably able one, and it had existed for eighteen years.
        Judge Neill as a lawyer had few equals. His mastery of
        the law was general, and he went into the abtruse fields of law much deeper than the ordinary jurist does. His industry was indefatigable; he frequently worked far into the night rather than fail to finish investigation of a case.
        Justice Neill's ancestry is traced in an unbroken line to the junior branch of the family of the last The O'Neill of Ireland, who was buried in Rome in 1616, and whose grave is still marked.
        Judge Neill was a native of Carroll County, Miss. He was born January 29, 1848, and was reared in the old colonial home of his father, Col. G. F. Neill, four miles from Carrollton. His father and his mother, Caroline Hart, were of Robinson County, Tenn.
        In the last year of the Civil War Hal H. Neill, then sixteen years old, joined the Confederate Army. Although his father was colonel of the 13th Mississippi, he became one of Capt. Ike S. Harvey's scouts and saw service in Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi under Generals Forrest and Hood. After the war he entered the University of Mississippi. Most of the university students had served in the army, and there "never was such a class of freshmen as those who entered the university just after the war."
        In 1872 he moved to Stephensville, Erath County, Tex., and in 1877 he was married to Dora Fagan, of Stephensville, who survives him. Of their five children two are living, Robert T. Neill and Mrs. Dora Raymond. He moved to El Paso in 1882, where he made his home until Governor Hogg appointed him to the bench, when he made San Antonio his home.
        Judge Neill was particularly the friend of young lawyers. He went out of his way to talk with them on terms of kindly intimacy and advice. One of these young men is Judge George Harvey, a Supreme Court judge in the Philippines. Harvey was his stenographer in his El Paso office, and while in this capacity he studied law. After the Spanish-American War Harvey went to the Philippines with letters from Justice Neill that obtained a hearing and a successful issue.
        Justice Neill was a lawyer of national repute. Two of his opinions handed down on this bench involving the law of divorce and of breach of promise suits have been incorporated in the textbook taught in the Columbia University law school. A system of leading cases edited and published in England containing opinions of the House of Lords and of leading tribunals of the world have contained Justice Neill's opinions. He had taken all the degrees of Masonry, was an Odd Fellow, and was a member of Albert Sidney Johnston Camp of Confederate Veterans.

      • Citation:

        http://books.google.com/books?id=CD3lAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA76

      • Date: February, 1912
      • Page: Vol. XX, No. 2, p.76, “Judge H. H. Neill”
      • Source text:

        Judge H. H. Neill.
        Associate Justice Hal H. Neill, of the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fourth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, died at Cloudcroft, N. M., of apoplexy on September I, 1911. His death came as a great shock. He had recently been in El Paso on a visit to his son, Robert T. Neill, a young lawyer in that city, but he had gone to Cloudcroft, where he has been accustomed to spend the summer.
        The son went to Cloudcroft on the first train and accompanied the body to Alamogordo, where it was prepared for burial. The funeral was conducted in El Paso, Judge Neill's former home, the Masons of that city having charge. The bench and bar of El Paso took part, and the Masons and bar of San Antonio sent delegations. Mrs. Neill, who was at San Antonio, left for El Paso on an early train. Her daughter, Mrs. Frederick N. Raymond, of Raymondville, in the Lower Rio Grande country, could not attend the funeral. Just a day or two before his death Justice Neill was elated by receipt of a telegram stating that a son had been born to Mrs. Raymond.
        The death of Justice Neill causes the first vacancy in the Fourth Court of Civil Appeals since it was appointed by the late Governor Hogg in 1893. With John H. James, of San Antonio, as chief justice and W. S. Fly, of Gonzales, and H. H. Neill, of El Paso, associate justices, the court was a remarkably able one, and it had existed for eighteen years.
        Judge Neill as a lawyer had few equals. His mastery of
        the law was general, and he went into the abtruse fields of law much deeper than the ordinary jurist does. His industry was indefatigable; he frequently worked far into the night rather than fail to finish investigation of a case.
        Justice Neill's ancestry is traced in an unbroken line to the junior branch of the family of the last The O'Neill of Ireland, who was buried in Rome in 1616, and whose grave is still marked.
        Judge Neill was a native of Carroll County, Miss. He was born January 29, 1848, and was reared in the old colonial home of his father, Col. G. F. Neill, four miles from Carrollton. His father and his mother, Caroline Hart, were of Robinson County, Tenn.
        In the last year of the Civil War Hal H. Neill, then sixteen years old, joined the Confederate Army. Although his father was colonel of the 13th Mississippi, he became one of Capt. Ike S. Harvey's scouts and saw service in Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi under Generals Forrest and Hood. After the war he entered the University of Mississippi. Most of the university students had served in the army, and there "never was such a class of freshmen as those who entered the university just after the war."
        In 1872 he moved to Stephensville, Erath County, Tex., and in 1877 he was married to Dora Fagan, of Stephensville, who survives him. Of their five children two are living, Robert T. Neill and Mrs. Dora Raymond. He moved to El Paso in 1882, where he made his home until Governor Hogg appointed him to the bench, when he made San Antonio his home.
        Judge Neill was particularly the friend of young lawyers. He went out of his way to talk with them on terms of kindly intimacy and advice. One of these young men is Judge George Harvey, a Supreme Court judge in the Philippines. Harvey was his stenographer in his El Paso office, and while in this capacity he studied law. After the Spanish-American War Harvey went to the Philippines with letters from Justice Neill that obtained a hearing and a successful issue.
        Justice Neill was a lawyer of national repute. Two of his opinions handed down on this bench involving the law of divorce and of breach of promise suits have been incorporated in the textbook taught in the Columbia University law school. A system of leading cases edited and published in England containing opinions of the House of Lords and of leading tribunals of the world have contained Justice Neill's opinions. He had taken all the degrees of Masonry, was an Odd Fellow, and was a member of Albert Sidney Johnston Camp of Confederate Veterans.

      • Citation:

        http://books.google.com/books?id=CD3lAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA76

      • Date: February, 1912
      • Page: Vol. XX, No. 2, p.76, “Judge H. H. Neill”
      • Source text:

        Judge H. H. Neill.
        Associate Justice Hal H. Neill, of the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fourth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, died at Cloudcroft, N. M., of apoplexy on September I, 1911. His death came as a great shock. He had recently been in El Paso on a visit to his son, Robert T. Neill, a young lawyer in that city, but he had gone to Cloudcroft, where he has been accustomed to spend the summer.
        The son went to Cloudcroft on the first train and accompanied the body to Alamogordo, where it was prepared for burial. The funeral was conducted in El Paso, Judge Neill's former home, the Masons of that city having charge. The bench and bar of El Paso took part, and the Masons and bar of San Antonio sent delegations. Mrs. Neill, who was at San Antonio, left for El Paso on an early train. Her daughter, Mrs. Frederick N. Raymond, of Raymondville, in the Lower Rio Grande country, could not attend the funeral. Just a day or two before his death Justice Neill was elated by receipt of a telegram stating that a son had been born to Mrs. Raymond.
        The death of Justice Neill causes the first vacancy in the Fourth Court of Civil Appeals since it was appointed by the late Governor Hogg in 1893. With John H. James, of San Antonio, as chief justice and W. S. Fly, of Gonzales, and H. H. Neill, of El Paso, associate justices, the court was a remarkably able one, and it had existed for eighteen years.
        Judge Neill as a lawyer had few equals. His mastery of
        the law was general, and he went into the abtruse fields of law much deeper than the ordinary jurist does. His industry was indefatigable; he frequently worked far into the night rather than fail to finish investigation of a case.
        Justice Neill's ancestry is traced in an unbroken line to the junior branch of the family of the last The O'Neill of Ireland, who was buried in Rome in 1616, and whose grave is still marked.
        Judge Neill was a native of Carroll County, Miss. He was born January 29, 1848, and was reared in the old colonial home of his father, Col. G. F. Neill, four miles from Carrollton. His father and his mother, Caroline Hart, were of Robinson County, Tenn.
        In the last year of the Civil War Hal H. Neill, then sixteen years old, joined the Confederate Army. Although his father was colonel of the 13th Mississippi, he became one of Capt. Ike S. Harvey's scouts and saw service in Tennessee, Alabama, and Mississippi under Generals Forrest and Hood. After the war he entered the University of Mississippi. Most of the university students had served in the army, and there "never was such a class of freshmen as those who entered the university just after the war."
        In 1872 he moved to Stephensville, Erath County, Tex., and in 1877 he was married to Dora Fagan, of Stephensville, who survives him. Of their five children two are living, Robert T. Neill and Mrs. Dora Raymond. He moved to El Paso in 1882, where he made his home until Governor Hogg appointed him to the bench, when he made San Antonio his home.
        Judge Neill was particularly the friend of young lawyers. He went out of his way to talk with them on terms of kindly intimacy and advice. One of these young men is Judge George Harvey, a Supreme Court judge in the Philippines. Harvey was his stenographer in his El Paso office, and while in this capacity he studied law. After the Spanish-American War Harvey went to the Philippines with letters from Justice Neill that obtained a hearing and a successful issue.
        Justice Neill was a lawyer of national repute. Two of his opinions handed down on this bench involving the law of divorce and of breach of promise suits have been incorporated in the textbook taught in the Columbia University law school. A system of leading cases edited and published in England containing opinions of the House of Lords and of leading tribunals of the world have contained Justice Neill's opinions. He had taken all the degrees of Masonry, was an Odd Fellow, and was a member of Albert Sidney Johnston Camp of Confederate Veterans.

      • Citation:

        http://books.google.com/books?id=CD3lAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA76