Silas Calmes Buck and his twin brother, Paul, were sons of William
Calmes Buck and Isabella Miriam Field.
They were born on November 1, 1847 in Louisville, Kentucky. Paul was
born at "20 min. after 5 and Silas at half past 7" according to the
notes of their father.
Paul died on July 5, 1848 of “cholera infantum” - an acute noncontagious intestinal disturbance of infants, now relatively rare.
Silas’s sister, Emma, wrote in her diary of February 14, 1862 that Silas and his brother Field were in school at Carrolton (probably Alabama).
Paul died on July 5, 1848 of “cholera infantum” - an acute noncontagious intestinal disturbance of infants, now relatively rare.
Silas’s sister, Emma, wrote in her diary of February 14, 1862 that Silas and his brother Field were in school at Carrolton (probably Alabama).
While only fourteen years old, Silas accompanied and
assisted his father who served as a missionary to the soldiers of the Civil
War. Before he was sixteen, he joined the 16th Confederate Cavalry as Color Bearer. This group was still fighting a week after
Lee's surrender. When word of the surrender reached his unit, Silas removed the
flag from the staff and hid it under some leaves. Later, Silas retrieved the flag and gave it
to his commanding officer Colonel Philip B. Spence. Many years later, Col. Spence brought it to
Texas to an old soldier's reunion in Dallas.
A photograph was taken of Silas with the flag and he was allowed to keep
it for a year.
Silas also served in Company D, 12th Mississippi Calvary
having enlisted on October 15, 1864 at Pickensville as a private. He was surrendered at Citronelle, Alabama on
May 4, 1865 and paroled at Cainesville, Alabama on May 14, 1865. Philip B. Spence was lieutenant colonel of
the 12th Mississippi Cavalry which was also known as the 16th
Regiment of the Confederate Cavalry.
After the war, Silas studied law at Waco University (now
Baylor). He moved to Stephenville, Texas
about 1875 where he continued the practice of law and was soon elected District
Attorney. He helped to bring law and
order to those fourteen counties. One of
the most notorious criminals that he prosecuted was John Wesley Hardin whom
Silas Buck sent to the penitentiary.
Overwork in his office resulted in ill health for much of the later
years of his life. With his poor health
came financial hard times.
His daughter, Emma Virginia Buck, wrote that some thought
him severe but he was actually was not.
He was "just in his disciple and a most loving and self-sacrificing
father, and a devoted husband. He was a
humble sincere Christian, taught his children the Bible, tried to train them in
its precepts and to instill in them a vital faith in God."
Silas Calmes Buck and Georgia Rebecca Titus were married on
July 25, 1877 in Texas. Georgia Rebecca
Titus, daughter of Peter Wright Titus and Susan Torrence Hines, was born on June
9, 1854 in Texas. Her daughter, Emma Virginia Buck wrote that "No woman
ever lived in Stephenville who was more beloved than my mother." More than twenty nieces, nephews and grandchildren
were taken into her home to attend the Stephenville schools.
Silas Calmes Buck and Georgia Rebecca Titus had the
following children:
- Mary Susan Buck (1879-1966); married Harrison D. Buck, 1918. Harrison D. Buck was the son of Giddings Judson Buck and Mary Cottingham Halbert.
- Emma Virginia Buck (1880-1975); married Rube Hendrix. She lived in Stephenville all her life. Emma Virginia Buck was the author of a well-used and appreciated Buck family history. In a letter to Gordon S. Buck, Sr., Emma wrote: "... Cousin Charlie told me that his brother, Will, was the very best man he knew." (This would be Charles Willis Buck, Jr. speaking of William Calmes Buck, II, grandfather of Gordon S. Buck, Sr.)
- Silas Calmes Buck Jr. (1883-1963); married Ada Williams.
- Mattie Buck (1887-1887)
- William E. Buck (1887-1887)
- Georgia Buck (1893-1977); married Thomas Jewell Arnold. Thomas Jewell Arnold applied for a Confederate Pension for Georgia Rebecca Titus Buck in 1928. The pension was approved October 1, 1928. Her application and the approval process included information and even some letters from Silas.
Silas Calmes Buck signed his will on March 27, 1904 in Erath
County, Texas. His wife, Georgie Titus
Buck, was the sole executrix of his will which was witnessed by Susie Buck
(probably their daughter) and L. N. Frank.
Georgia Rebecca Titus Buck died on August 15, 1939 at the
age of 85. She was buried in West End
Cemetery, Erath, Texas. Silas Calmes
Buck died in 1908 at the age of 61 in Erath County, Texas.
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