Martha Eliza "Lida" McClellan Gregg (Contributed by: Elnora Lloyd League) Lida was lost on the Steamer Stonewall when it caught fire. The tragedy was in the headlines of the Memphis newspaper for several days. The fire was said to have been caused by a lantern being knocked over on a bale of hay by some "rowdy men" on the deck. Over 250 people were aboard, and only a handful of about 30 survived. The following is engraved on a Monument in Marshall City Cemetery, Marshall, TX. "A Mother Comes Home to Her Daughters. In Memory of M. Eliza McClellan Gregg, wife of John Gregg, Born September 16, 1818, Lost on the Steamer Stonewall, October 27, 1869." The monument lies between the monuments for her husband John and daughters Nola and Alla, all within an iron fence. Members of the Hynson family [her sister & bro.in law] are also buried in this spot. MARSHALL OBITUARY: IN MEMORIAM -- Among the list of passengers reported lost by the burning of the steamer Stonewall, on the Mississippi River below St. Louis, was Mrs. M. E. Gregg; wife of our fellow citizen, Col. John Gregg. The news of her loss falls with crushing weight upon her lonely and disconsolate husband, who was daily expecting her arrival, and the hearts of her many devoted friends and relatives in our community. Obituary in Marshall Paper: What a sad fate was hers, and what a fatality has seemingly pursued the family! A few years since no happier household could be found in all our Southern country than that of Colonel John Gregg's. But death, the merciless despoiler, came, and one by one the children were borne away, leaving the aged husband and wife alone around their desolated hearthstone. A few months since they went to Missouri for the improvement of their health. Business called the husband back to his old home, and the wife was embarked upon the steamer Stonewall to rejoin him. When the joy of again seeing her was seemingly so soon to be realized came the news that she was lost! Who can picture the bereavement and anguish of Col. Gregg on receiving the heart-rendering information that the dear partner of his bosom -- the mother of his children who had sunk into the tomb leaving them to mourn with and sustain each other -- had met with so terrible a fate? The hearts of all our people are deeply moved with sympathy for him in his sorrow, and loneliness. May God give him strength to bear the blow! Mrs. Gregg was an estimable Christian woman, and though the summons of her Savior was so sudden and unexpected, it did not find her unprepared. The long life which she had devoted to God, was a sure passport from earth to Heaven. In that blissful land she is now singing the new song, and wearing the white robes and glittering crown of the redeemed. SHREVEPORT OBITUARY: The citizens of Shreveport who knew Mrs. Eliza Gregg, wife of John Gregg, were shocked at the news of her loss, by the burning of the ill-fated steamer Stonewall. For several years of her life she had lived and moved among us, loving and beloved. She was regarded as nearly faultless as humanity may become, and the writer of this humble tribute to her memory, who knew her well, endorses the general verdict. When lost, she was on her way from Missouri, to join her husband, now in Marshall, Texas. She was desirous of being buried by the side of her two daughters in the Marshall cemetery, but the third and last telegram from St. Louis, dated November 4th and addressed to her husband announces that "Parties returned; no hope of recovering remains." Thus has passed away one of the good ones of this world, leaving an aged husband to console himself, as best he may, by swelling on her transcendent virtues and by the assurance that she is in a better world. ... A FRIEND (Contributed by: Elnora Lloyd League)