Jump to content

Thomas E. Sherwood

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rev. Thomas Emory Sherwood
7th Mayor of Dallas
In office
1861–1862
Preceded byJ. L. Smith
Succeeded byNo mayor due to the American Civil War
Personal details
Born(1835-05-31)May 31, 1835
Washington County, Indiana
DiedApril 10, 1897(1897-04-10) (aged 61)
Dodd City, Fannin County, Texas
Resting placeCity Cemetery, Sulphur Springs, Texas
Nationality USA
SpouseNannie Lavinia Henry McCreary
ChildrenLucretia Sherwood, Effie E. Sherwood, Marvin B. Sherwood
OccupationMinister
Military service
AllegianceCSA
Branch/serviceCo. C, 15th Texas Cavalry
Years of service1862–1863
RankPrivate, Commissary

Thomas E. Sherwood (May 31, 1835 – April 10, 1897) was the first post master of Farmersville, Texas (1857), mayor of Dallas, Texas (1861–1862) and became a Methodist minister in 1867.

Biography

[edit]

Thomas Emory Sherwood was born in Washington County, Indiana, to Rev. Jeremiah Sherwood and Sarah Elrod on May 31, 1835. Around 1842, Sherwood’s parents moved the family to Kauffman County, Texas, where his father was a Methodist Minister. On October 30, 1856, he married Nancy (Nannie) Lavinia McCreary in Rockwall, Texas, which was in Kauffman County at the time.[1] (Note: Rockwall county was created in 1873.) The couple had two daughters and two sons named Lucretia, Effy, Marvin, and Alvin respectively.[2]

From 1857–1859, Sherwood served as the postmaster in Farmersville, Texas, in Collin County.[3] He left this post and moved to Dallas, where he was elected mayor in August 1861 at age 26. Serving with him was Peter Stevenson as marshal and George W. Guess, James N. Smith, Edward W. Hunt, William W. Peak, and Dr. Samuel B. Pryor as aldermen.[4]

Records of city government at this time are sparse, and it is unknown whether Sherwood resigned as mayor to join the Civil War or if his term had ended. In either case, he was the last mayor until 1868. During the Civil War, no mayors, either appointed or elected, served Dallas.[5]

In 1862, at age 27, he enlisted in the Confederate States Army. He was part of Company C of the 15th Texas Cavalry Regiment led by Colonel George Sweet. Sherwood was promoted from his enlistment rank of private to Commissary of Subsistence before being discharged.[6]

After the war, in 1866, following in his father's footsteps, Sherwood was licensed to preach by the Dallas Circuit, Dallas District, East Texas Methodist Conference. He was ordained in 1870. He traveled as a circuit rider and preached in North Central and East Texas, including Greenville, Rockwall, Sulphur Springs, Honey Grove, Pilot Point, Wichita Falls, Scyene, Sherman, Pottsboro, Bonham, and Dodd City.[7][8] His final assignment was in Sulphur Springs, Texas. While in Scyene, he was also a teacher from 1869–1871 at the Scyene Masonic Institute in Scyene, Texas.[9]

Sherwood died April 10, 1897, in Dodd City, Texas, and was interred in City Cemetery, Sulphur Springs, Texas.[10]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Widow's Application for Pension No. 17871. Mrs. Nannie L. Sherwood, Hopkins County, Sulphur Springs, February 5, 1910.
  2. ^ Rev. Thomas E. Sherwood. n.d. http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~huntnews/history/wesley%20church/Rev._Thomas_E._Sherwood_1871-73/ (accessed December 5, 2019).
  3. ^ Stambaugh, J. Lee and Lillian J. Stambaugh. A History of Collin County. Austin: The Texas State Historical Association, 1958
  4. ^ City of Dallas, City Secretary's Office. History of Mayors and City Councils 1866-Present. Dallas, Texas: City of Dallas, n.d.
  5. ^ City of Dallas, City Secretary's Office. History of Mayors and City Councils 1866-Present. Dallas, Texas: City of Dallas, n.d.
  6. ^ Civil War Muster Rolls Index Cards, Texas, 1838–1900. Enlistment card. n.d
  7. ^ Rev. Thomas E. Sherwood website
  8. ^ Thomas Emory Sherwood. Thirty-First Session North Texas Annual Conference, Methodist Episcopal Church, South, 1897. p. 30
  9. ^ Dallas Morning News. "Scyene in the '60s." March 26, 1933.
  10. ^ Dallas Morning News. "Mortuary." April 13, 1897, p. 6.