25 July 2024

Letha Elizabeth Gandy and Her Marriage to Doc Lincecum

Letha Elizabeth Gandy was born on 25 September 1873 at Gandy Bend in Lavaca County, Texas to Barnabas Pipkin Gandy (d. 1914) and Mary Elizabeth Allen. The community in which Letha was born was settled by her grandfather Daniel "in the big bend of the Navidad" River.

View a larger Google map here.

At the "spinsterish" age of 24, Letha married Dr. Addison Lysander "Doc" Lincecum (1874-1965). He was a son of Dr. Lucullus Garland Lincecum (d. 1900) and Louisa Frances "Fannie" Rainwater (1843-1878). Soon after the young couple's marriage, they moved to Lampasas, where their arrival was noted in the local paper:

Friday, 3 December 1897
Lampasas Leader (Texas)

Marriages

LINCECUM - GANDY. -- Lampasas has captured another prize. Dr. Ad. L. Lincecum and Miss Letha Gandy of Hallettsville, Lavaca county, were happily married, and arrived in this city last Saturday.

And thus it is that Lampasas has added another bright star in her constellation of fair daughters.

The bride is of one of the oldest and most highly respected families, and a young lady of culture and refinement.

The groom is the son of Dr. L. G. Lincecum and is well known to everybody, having lived in Lampasas since early childhood. He is a promising young physician, and all Lampasas has a warm welcome for the young couple -- the groom to his old and the bride to her new home.

For the present they are domiciled at the groom's father's residence on West Third street.

Letha and Doc had three children: Barnabas Pipkin Gandy (1900-1999), who was named after Letha's father; Ruth Elizabeth (1903-1982), whose middle name is the same as her mother and maternal grandmother; and Addison Turney (1913-1989), whose middle name is the maiden name of Letha's paternal grandmother.

Historian Clarence Wharton wrote the following about Letha in Texas Under Many Flags (pub. 1930):

Mrs. Lincecum is a Texas author, has been an investigator and writer on historical topics, and many of her writings have been published and have secured for her special recognition and honors from the university and other institutions.  Her great-grandfather, John Gandy, of North Carolina, was a soldier in the American Revolution.  Her parents were Barnabas P. and Mary (Allen) Gandy, her father a native of Alabama and her mother of Mississippi.
 
Letha died two days after Christmas in 1959, and burial was in the family cemetery at Gandy Bend. Her tombstone bears an emblem for the Order of the Eastern Star.

Ancestry US

24 July 2024

Addison "Bubba" Lincecum Died from Burns Received in a Boat Accident (1983)


Addison Turney "Bubba" Lincecum, Jr. was born on 16 October 1933 in Pierce, Wharton County, Texas to Addison Lincecum Sr. (1913-1989) and Elsie Mae Clarke (1914-1985). Addison married at least once and had at least one child.

In late July 1983, Addison was involved in a boat accident at a Freeport, Brazoria County, Texas marina where he worked. A boat that was refueling caught fire and exploded. He was flown to Houston for treatment after suffering cuts and second and third-degree burns on more than 40% of his body, according to the U.S. Coast Guard office at Galveston.

Unfortunately, Addison did not survive the injuries and died a week before his fiftieth birthday on 9 October 1983 in Houston. Burial was in Wharton City Cemetery in Wharton County.



Ancestry US

Individual Report for Addison Turney "Bill" Lincecum (1913-1989)


Addison Turney "Bill" Lincecum was born on 19 February 1913 in El Campo, Wharton County, Texas. He was one of at least three children born to Dr. Addison Lysander Lincecum (1874-1965) and Letha Elizabeth Gandy (1873-1959). I have seen Addison referred to as William Lincecum a couple of times while conducting research, so don't dismiss that moniker outright if you see it.

Addison was married at least three times. At age 18, he first married Elsie Mae Clarke (1914-1985). They were wed on 16 May 1931 in Brazoria County, Texas. Elsie was a daughter of Fred Webster Clarke, an English immigrant, and Cora Wade Sanders. I think Addison and Elsie had at least four children. Two were Elsie Elizabeth (1931-2015) and Addison Turney Jr. (1933-1983). The elder Addison and Elsie divorced around the mid-1940s.

Addison's second marriage was to Carrie Bell Sledge (1918-1977), daughter of Albert Lee Sledge and Ellie Spitowski. If my information is correct, the younger couple was married on what would've been the thirty-sixth anniversary of Addison's first marriage, 16 May 1967. 💔 They, too, were wed in Brazoria County.

Lastly, Addison married Barbara Gwyndol Anderson (1920-2009), daughter of B. L. and Mabel, on 19 July 1978 in Houston, Harris County, Texas.


Addison spent a good portion of his life in the neighboring Texas counties of Wharton and Brazoria. The last address I have for him was in the city of Freeport, located on the Gulf of Mexico. Addison died in that city on 24 November 1989. Burial was in Restwood Memorial Park Cemetery.

Photo by Lois Martin McDonald (2009).
Permission for use granted in FindAGrave bio.
According to an obituary published in the 26 November 1989 Victoria Advocate (Texas), Addison was "a well-known inventor.  He acquired several patents beginning in his teen years and continuing his career into his 70s.  He was a veteran of World War II, and a member of several civic and fraternal organizations."

I was able to easily and freely verify the claim about Addison being an inventor with the help of the U.S. Government's Patent Public Search website. In March of 1929, at the age of 16, A. T. filed a patent for a Portable Electric Air Heater. The patent was received a year later. Another found was for "new and useful improvements in an engine," dated 25 January 1965. Approval came a couple of years later.




Ancestry US

19 July 2024

Individual Report for Addison Lysander Lincecum (1874-1965)

This is a long one, folks. Settle in when you can.

He was my 3rd cousin, 5x removed.

Addison Lysander Lincecum was born 8 April 1874 in Long Point, Washington County, Texas to Dr. Lucullus Garland Lincecum (d. 1900) and Louisa Frances "Fannie" Rainwater (1843-1878). While only two children were born to Lucullus and Fannie, Addison's father was married at least three times and fathered at least ten children.

Biographical / Genealogical Notes

When Addison was but four years old, his mother Fannie "died of heart disease while sitting at the supper table."

For the taking of the 1880 US Federal census, Addison was listed with his father and third wife, Marie/Mary Oliphant.

Addison was educated at the University of Texas, Dallas Medical School, and Baylor University Medical School. His father died in 1900, a few years before Addison graduated with the first class of medical students from Baylor. The younger Dr. Lincecum would practice medicine for the next fifty years, much of that time being in El Campo, Wharton County, Texas. Addison was actually a third-generation medical practitioner. His grandfather was Dr. Gideon Lincecum, the famed naturalist*, who died the year Addison was born.

According to Lois Burkhalter's biography of Gideon Lincecum*, Addison worked his way through medical school as an engineer on trains transporting granite blocks for Galveston jetties.

On 24 October 1897, Addison Lincecum married Letha Elizabeth Gandy in Lavaca County, Texas. Letha, a fellow Texan born 25 September 1873 at Gandy Bend, was a daughter of Barnabas Pipkin Gandy (d. 1914) and Mary Elizabeth Allen.

Addison and Letha would be the parents of at least three children: Barnabas Pipkin Gandy (1900-1999), Ruth Elizabeth (1903-1982), and Addison Turney (1913-1989).

Clarence Wharton, author of Texas Under Many Flags, published the following in 1930: "Dr. Addison L. Lincecum, who has done a great deal of public health work, is practicing medicine and conducting a high class private hospital at El Campo...He is a Republican, member of the Christian Church, and is a Lodge and Royal Arch Chapter Mason."

Following from the "Addison L. Lincecum Papers, 1908-1965" housed at the Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin (information extracted by Kathy Herzik, Jean Difloe, and Julia Payne about 1981):

During the Spanish-American War, [Addison] served with Teddy Roosevelt’s Rough Riders, and he fought Pancho Villa’s encroachments on the Texas border as a Texas Ranger in the 1910s. In World War I, Lincecum served as a combat surgeon in France, participating in the Meuse-Argonne and Saint-Mihiel campaigns. Upon returning to the states, he founded and served as first commander for an American Legion Post at El Campo. In 1920, at the outbreak of bubonic plague, Governor James E. Ferguson sent Lincecum to Galveston, later appointing him to the State Board of Health. Lincecum also served one term as mayor of El Campo (1932), acted as the town’s postmaster (1935-1949), and established (1939) and superintended the Nightingale Hospital for 10 years.

Per Texas Ranger Biographies*, Addison was a Special Ranger from 1 August 1917 to 17 June 1918 "(attached to Co. C)."

Dr. Lincecum Day

24 March 1960 Edna Herald (Texas)
El Campo Pays Tribute to Dr. A. L. Lincecum

...EL CAMPO -- Riding with Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders and hunting Pancho Villa are minor events in the life of a local doctor compared with the celebration staged in his honor here Friday.

El Campo citizens honored Dr. A. L. Lincecum, 86, with "Dr. Lincecum Day."

It was right after he had married a young teacher named Letha Gandy in 1897 that "Doc" Lincecum interrupted his medical studies to join the Rough Riders in the Spanish-American War.

...He became enraged in 1917 when Pancho Villa killed a doctor friend of his, and he came out fighting. He asked for and received a commission in the Texas Rangers and joined the hunt for the famed Mexican bad man.

...World War I found him fighting in the trenches of France as a captain with Texas' rugged 36th Infantry Division.

...His friends drafted him as mayor and elected him on a write-in ticket...

Death and Obituaries

Dr. Addison Lysander Lincecum died of "generalized arteriosclerosis" on 6 December 1965 in Lavaca County, Texas. He was buried two days later in Gandy Cemetery at Gandy Bend (Lavaca County).

- 7 December 1965 Dallas Morning News (Texas)

Widely Known Physician, Dr. A. L. Lincecum, Dies
EL CAMPO, Texas (AP) - Dr. A. L. Lincecum, last surviving member of the Baylor Medical School's first graduating class and widely known country doctor for 5o years, died Monday. He was 91.

Moments after his daughter, Mrs. Ruth Crosby, a want ads employee for the Houston Post, learned of his death at his isolated ranch near El Campo, her husband, certified public accountant T. A. Crosby, 64, suffered a fatal heart attack.

...He retired in 1953 and devoted himself to his role of "roving reporter" for KULP radio station in El Campo until he was paralyzed by a stroke in 1958.

...He is credited with making the first report that the malaria-bearing anopheles mosquito from Mexico was in this country in 1905. He later won recognition for research on bubonic plague.

Funeral services for Dr. Lincecum will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Wheeler Funeral Chapel in El Campo.

In addition to his daughter, he is survived by two sons, Bill Lincecum and Barney Lincecum. Dr. Lincecum's wife, Letha, died in 1959.

- 7 December 1965 Amarillo Globe-Times (Texas)

Baylor Medical Original Grad Dies at Age 91

EL CAMPO (AP) -- The last surviving member of Baylor Medical School's first graduating class, Dr. A. L. Lincecum, 91, is dead.

Lincecum was at his ranch home near El Campo when death came Monday.  He had been paralyzed since a stroke in 1958...

- 9 December 1965 The Cuero Record (Texas)

Dr. Addison L. Lincecum, Pioneer Texan, is Dead
Dr. Addison L. Lincecum, 91-year-old retired physician, died early Monday at his son's home in Gandy's Bend above Morales in Jackson Co, according to the Yoakum Herald-Times.

Dr. Lincecum, a veteran of the Spanish-American War and the St. Michiel and Argonne-Meuse offensives of World War I, was a former administrator of the Nightingale Hospital at El Campo.  He moved to Louise in 1910 and established his practice in El Campo in 1911.

Dr. Lincecum was a member of a pioneer Texas family and the son and grandson of physicians.

Four hours after his daughter, Mrs. T. A. Crosby, of Houston learned of her father's death, her husband died of a heart attack at his home.

In addition to being a physician, Dr. Lincecum was a railroad engineer, Texas Ranger and postmaster and mayor in El Campo...

Dr. Lincecum was paralyzed by a stroke in 1958.

...He was in Brownsville when raiders of the Mexican bandit, Pancho Villa, killed a fellow doctor who was a good friend of Dr. Lincecum.  He asked for a special Ranger commission and accompanied U. S. forces into Mexico to track down the raiders.

...Military burial was at 3 p.m. in the family plot at Gandy's Bend.

In addition to his daughter, Dr. Lincecum is survived by two sons, Bill of Gretna, La., and Barney with whom he had lived since 1960.  His wife, Mrs. Letha Gandy Lincecum died in 1959.

Funeral services for his son-in-law, T. A. Crosby, were held Tuesday at 4 p.m. in Houston.

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