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TABLE OF CONTENTSCorrespondence: Benjamin Rush Milam Correspondence: Jefferson Milam Correspondence: Robert A. Milam Correspondence: Collin McKinney Financial: Benjamin Rush Milam Legal: Collin and Elizabeth McKinney Printed Materials: Newspaper Leaves |
Milam-McKinney Family PapersManuscript Collection: MC040
Creator SketchSoldier, colonizer and entrepreneur Benjamin Rush Milam was born in Frankfort, Kentucky on October 20, 1788, the fifth of six children of Moses and Elizabeth Pattie Boyd Milam. He began a life of traveling after serving with the Kentucky state militia in the War of 1812. In New Orleans in 1819, Milam joined an expeditionary force to help the Mexican revolutionaries gain independence from Spain. He served as a colonel and was twice imprisoned and twice released. In 1824 Milam was granted Mexican citizenship and made a colonel in the Mexican army. That year he also met English entrepreneur and Mexican army general Arthur G. Wavell, with whom he became a partner in a silver mine in Nuevo Leon and a licensed empresario for Texas colonies. Milam managed the Wavell Colony, located in what is now Lamar, Red River, and Bowie counties, as well as portions of Fannin and Hunt counties in Texas, and Miller County in Arkansas. Milam's duty of drawing settlers from the United States was hampered by Mexican hostility to slavery, massive log jams on the Red River, and disputes between the United States and Mexico over the eastern boundary of the colony. In 1835 the Mexican government was overthrown and Milam was captured and imprisoned by Santa Anna's forces. He eventually escaped and made it to the Texas border in October of 1835. He joined the cause for Texas independence and participated in the Texian capture of Goliad. Convinced that the army's official decision not to attack San Antonio would be a terrible mistake, Milam rallied 300 volunteers on December 4, 1835, to strike the next morning, thus drastically changing the course of the revolution. On the morning of December 7, Milam was struck in the head by an enemy sniper's bullet, killing him instantly. Two days later General Cos' Mexican force surrendered to the Texas rebels. Collin McKinney was born on April 17, 1766 in Hunterdown County, New Jersey, the second of ten children of Daniel and Massie Blatchley McKinney. The family migrated to Virginia in 1770 and in 1788 to Kentucky. In 1792 McKinney married Annie Amy More, with whom he had four children. After Annie's death, he wed Elizabeth Leek Coleman, in 1805, and had six children with her. McKinney moved with his immediate and extended family to Hempstead County, Arkansas in the mid-1820s and there met and befriended Benjamin Rush Milam. Between 1830 and 1831 McKinney and most of his relatives moved into the Wavell Colony. He knew the colony was in disputed territory but was lured by Milam's promise of large land grants. McKinney became involved in the burgeoning Texas government. One of five delegates from the Red River Colony to the 1836 Washington-on-the-Brazos Convention and one of five appointed to a committee to draft the Texas Declaration of Independence, McKinney was a signatory to the document. He was a member of the committee that produced the Constitution of the Republic of Texas, and was elected as a Red River County delegate to the First, Second and Fourth congresses of the Republic. In 1840 he joined other family members in the portion of Fannin County that became Grayson and Collin counties. The latter county and its seat, McKinney, were both named in his honor. He died on September 9, 1861, at his home in Collin County. In his 95 years McKinney was a land surveyor, merchant, politician and lay preacher, and a subject or citizen of six different governments. Jefferson Milam (1802-1844), only son of Archibald and Susan Shannon Milam, was Ben Milam's nephew and worked with his uncle as a surveyor of the Wavell Colony, beginning in 1826. Milam settled in the area in 1830, and in 1831 married Eliza Serene McKinney (1813-1904), youngest daughter of Collin McKinney. The couple had ten children, including Robert A. Milam (1840-1913), who grew up in Bowie County, Texas, served in the Confederate Army, ran a brick manufacturing business in Cedar Bayou, and served as a judge of a justice court in Harrisburg. Robert Milam married Lucy Webb Milam. Return to the Table of Contents Scope and Content NoteCorrespondence, financial papers, legal papers, printed materials, photographs, creative works and a map document the families of Benjamin Rush Milam and Collin McKinney from 1809 to 1941. The business dealings and colonization activities of Benjamin Rush Milam, Collin McKinney, and their associates, especially in the 1820s and 1830s in the Wavell Colony of the Mexican state of Texas, are recorded in the correspondence and financial and legal papers. Ben Milam's correspondence consists of three letters sent and 16 received from 1827 to 1835, concerning the Wavell Colony, a silver mine in Mexico, and Milam's visit to England, circa 1831. Five letters to Collin McKinney, 1836 to 1854, cover military matters, martial law in Texas, disputes over Ben Milam's lands, and annexation of Texas to the United States. Other correspondence includes proclamations by David G. Burnet and Sam Houston (one letter each) in 1836 to the people of the Red River settlements, and four letters from Robert A. Milam concerning his experiences as a Confederate soldier before, during and after capture by Union forces at the battle of Vicksburg. The financial papers of Ben Milam consist of statements, bills, inventories and receipts, from 1828 to 1834; his legal papers include printed colonization contract forms, other contracts, petitions, a lease and a promissory note. The legal papers of Collin McKinney and his family are membership affidavits and certificates. The Printed Materials series contains speeches before the U.S. House of Representatives and the Texas legislature, as well as newspaper clippings of obituaries on various Milam and McKinney family members. Creative Works consists of poetry and genealogical data. The map is an 1879 Rand McNally map of Texas and the Indian Territory (present day Oklahoma). Two photographs of paintings of Benjamin Rush Milam, and one photograph of the Collin McKinney Chapter of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas, circa 1921, are also of interest. The collection is arranged by series, according to type of material, then by sub-series, according to the creator. Those documents of the Correspondence, Financial and Legal series not addressed to or written by any Milam or McKinney family member are arranged under "Collected" sub-series of their respective series. Return to the Table of Contents
Return to the Table of Contents RestrictionsRestrictions on AccessNone. Terms Governing UseOpen for research by appointment. Publication RightsCopyright has not been assigned to the San Jacinto Museum of History. All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Library Director. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the San Jacinto Museum of History as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained by the researcher. Return to the Table of Contents
Return to the Table of Contents Related Material
Return to the Table of Contents Administrative InformationCitation[Identification of Item], Milam-McKinney Family Papers, MC040, San Jacinto Museum of History, Houston, Texas. AcquisitionPurchased from Robert A. Milam, Jr., 1954. Processing InformationProcessed by Joel Minor, 2001. Return to the Table of Contents Bibliography:
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