Pioneer
Citizen Called by Death
Mrs. Frank Thomas, a pioneer citizen of Burnet
County, died at her ranch home a few miles west of
Burnet on Feb. 20, 1936. Her body was interred the
next day in the Odd Fellows' Cemetery in Burnet. The
funeral service was conducted by Bro. L. V. Nobles,
Church of Christ minister, with the Burnet Funeral
Home in charge. The active pallbearers were John
Baker, Pete Elliott, Vert Gibbs, Charley Schnabel,
Pres Graves and Ballard Dorbandt. The honorary
pallbearers were Chris Dorbandt, R. J. Knox, Basil
Baker, O. A. Riggs, John Harness, Henry Harness,
Eppie Debo, Ed Magill, Hardee Chamberlain, Gus
Stuart, Frank Pavitte, Ellis Guthrie, Earl Foulds,
John Davidson, M. G. Schnabel and Captain D. G.
Sherrard.
Mrs. Thomas was a daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. J. L. Rowntree, pioneer citizens
of Burnet County. She was born March 10, 1845 in Milam
County, Texas, making her at the time of her death
almost 91 years of age. With her parents she moved to
Burnet County while a small child and has been a
resident of this section ever since. She was united in
marriage to Frank Thomas on December 12,
1866. To this union was born seven children, one of
whom died in infancy. A daughter, Mrs. V. T.
Breazeale, a resident of Nevada, was called by
death a few years ago. Five children, three sons and
two daughters, survive her. They are: Marshall
Thomas of Dallas, Mrs. J. A. Graham of
Brownsville, Robert Thomas of Tampica, Mexico,
Frank Thomas and Miss Louise Thomas of
Burnet. She is also survived by three brothers and one
sister, Jeff and James Rowntree of Nogales,
New Mexico, J. M. Rowntree of Bertram and Mrs.
J. W. Fitts of Berkley, California.
Until only a few years ago, Mrs. Thomas,
notwithstanding her advanced age, was very active in
her home and business affairs. Upon her visits to
town, scarcely a week would pass that she failed to
visit the Bulletin office and it was a pleasure to
converse with her. She had been a resident of this
county for more than 80 years and could recount many
interesting events of this section when it was a
frontier, in some of which she was an active
participant. She was here when the Indians made their
forays into Burnet County, stealing horses and
murdering the settlers. She knew pioneer life in all
its varied aspects and with the people of that day met
and bravely overcame the many dangers and problems
that made our present day civilization. Almost since
the earliest settling of Burnet County, the Thomas and
Rowntree families have been numbered among its
leaders. For many years Mr. and Mrs. Thomas resided in
the town of Burnet, where Mr. Thomas was one of the
pioneer merchants and where their children grew to
manhood and womanhood and received their early
education. A number of years ago they moved to their
ranch a few miles west of Burnet, where Mr. Thomas
first died, and now his companion has joined him.
People of 60 years of age and older are able to
realize to some extent the stability and worth of
people like Mr. and Mrs. Thomas who so courageously
brought this country from a wilderness to what it is
at the present time, but a recital of such sounds like
fiction to the youngest generations. Most of them have
passed to their reward and a monument should be
erected to their memories and placed upon the
courthouse square in our county seat, so that as time
passes, their heroic lives may not be forgotten.
The Bulletin joins the many friends of the Thomas and
Rowntree families in extending condolence and sympathy
to the bereaved relatives in the death of this
remarkable and good woman.
|