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Holland Coffey (1807 - 1846)

Holland Coffey aka Coffee
Born in KY, USAmap
Ancestors ancestors
Husband of — married 19 Jan 1839 (to 5 Oct 1846) in Independence, Washington, TX, USAmap
[children unknown]
Died at age 39 in TX, USAmap
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Profile last modified | Created 11 Feb 2016
This page has been accessed 211 times.

Biography

Raised in McMinnville, Tennessee, trader and politician Holland Coffee (1807-1846) arrived in Fort Smith, Arkansas, in 1829 and established Coffee, Colville, and Company with Silas Cheek Colville. The business supplied local settlers, Indians, and trapping expeditions. An 1833 trapping expedition to the upper Red River led Coffee to establish a trading post in Oklahoma. Coffee learned the local Oklahoma Indian languages and customs and negotiated the release of several captured settlers. President Sam Houston appointed Coffee an Indian agent in November 1837. The following year, Coffee enacted a treaty between the republic and the Kichai, Tawakoni, Waco, and Tawehash tribes. He was also elected to the Texas House of Representatives from Fannin County, which he served from 1838 to 1839. Shortly thereafter, Coffee dissolved his partnership with Colville and began developing Glen Eden plantation on the Red River in Grayson County. He furnished provisions for the 1840 Military Road expedition of William G. Cooke, participated in framing the Texas Indian treaty of August 24, 1842, and provided the supplies promised in the Comanche treaty of 1846.

On January 19, 1839, Coffee married Sophia Suttenfield Aughinbaugh (1815-1897), the second child of William and Laura Taylor Suttenfield in Fort Wayne, Indiana. She moved to Nacogdoches, Texas, in 1835 with her husband, druggist and teacher Jesse Augustine Aughinbaugh, who abandoned her shortly thereafter. As a member of the Texas House of Representatives, Coffee successfully lobbied the passage of a bill granting Sophia divorce. On October 1, 1846, offended by a remark made by trader Charles Ashton Galloway about Sophia, Coffee attacked Galloway and was killed in the ensuing fight.

In December 1847, Sophia married Major George N. Butts (or Butt), who joined her in operating Glen Eden. Butts was killed in 1863, reportedly ambushed by a member of William C. Quantrill's outlaw gang. During the Civil War, Sophia earned the nickname "Confederate Paul Revere" for riding across the Red River to warn Col. James G. Bourland that Union troops were at Glen Eden. On August 2, 1865, Sophia married Judge James Porter, and the couple lived at Glen Eden until his death in 1886. Sophia never had children of her own, but raised two of Holland Coffee's nieces.

Sources

  • Coffey family records

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=coffee&GSfn=holland&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GScntry=4&GSob=n&GRid=53867353&df=all&

http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/utcah/02057/cah-02057.html

http://www.gravesfa.org/gen220.htm





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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Holland by comparing test results with other carriers of his ancestors' Y-chromosome or mitochondrial DNA. However, there are no known yDNA or mtDNA test-takers in his direct paternal or maternal line. It is likely that these autosomal DNA test-takers will share some percentage of DNA with Holland:

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