Stephen P. Goen + Arrena Stephens (Stevens)

9 children
1839
Birth: about 1839 29 22 Carr Township, Jackson, Indiana, USA
Death:
Elizabeth Goen
18401884
Birth: September 3, 1840 30 23 Carr Township, Jackson, Indiana, USA
Death: August 9, 1884Bell, Texas, USA
1842
Birth: about 1842 32 25 Carr Township, Jackson, Indiana, USA
Death:
David N. Goen ca 1880
18441886
Birth: June 1, 1844 34 27 Carr Township, Jackson, Indiana, USA
Death: February 13, 1886Bell, Texas, USA
18461869
Birth: about 1846 36 29 Carr Township, Jackson, Indiana, USA
Death: about 1869Grayson, Kentucky, USA
1847
Birth: about 1847 37 30 Carr Township, Jackson, Indiana, USA
Death:
18501852
Birth: 1850 40 33 Carr Township, Jackson, Indiana, USA
Death: about 1852Jackson, Indiana, USA
18521869
Birth: 1852 42 35 Jackson, Indiana, USA
Death: about 1869Cooke, Texas, USA
1880ca Edmund S Goen
18611921
Birth: April 17, 1861 51 44 Cooke, Texas, USA
Death: May 29, 1921Brady, McCulloch, Texas, USA
Stephen P. Goen, father of Elizabeth Goen
18101880
Birth: 1810 39 North Carolina, USA
Death: after June 18, 1880Bell, Texas, USA
18171880
Birth: 1817 37 Canada
Death: before June 18, 1880

Facts and events

Marriage
Citation details: pp. 49-50
Citation details: Book A-B, p. 190
Note: license issued 5 June, performed 7 June by Jesse Hughes, minister.

license issued 5 June, performed 7 June by Jesse Hughes, minister.
Their granddaughter Erie Catharine Taylor Wilks, daughter of Elizabeth Goen and Arrena Stephens, wrote abt 1950, "Arrena (Stephens) Goen was of Scotch and French descent. Her father was born in Connecticut and raised near Toronto, Canada. He was called a French Canadian. He never seemed to speak English plainly, but always with a brogue to his speech . . ."
Speaking of her grandfather Goen, she wrote: " . . . he had a favorite sister older than himself and her father was mean to her [this was in Tennessee]. He felt sorry for her, her so beautiful and humble. So one day he learned that one of their friends was loaded ready to move to Indiana. He asked them if his sister could go along with them. They told him if he would wait til they got out of the neighborhood that they would wait at a certain place for them to catch up with them and take her along. He saddled his horse that night, and took his sister up behind him and rode all night to catch them. He left his sister with them and got back home before his father missed them.
"Several years after that, desiring to see his sister, he went afoot to visit her. It took him many days to make the trip on foot from Tennessee to Indiana. After arriving there, though, he stayed several weeks, then walked back home. Butwhile there he met and fell in love with Miss Arrena Stephens. When he returned home one of Miss Arrena's brothers went with him to see Tennessee. [Grandpa] could not forget the lovely girl that he had met in Indiana so he decided to return for a visit with her. So he and her brother, Dave Stephens, walked back up there to see her, making the third time he had walked from Tennessee to Indiana.
"One night while they lay sleeping the stars began to fall. It scared them, but watching they did not know what to do or what to think. They thought maybe the world was coming to an end, but after the stars fell for a while they stopped sothey lay down and slept again. Everything seemed the same next morning and when night came again there were as many stars as ever.
"Again after he had been up in Indiana a few weeks, Lish decided he would go home again, but he wanted to see the beautiful girl before going away. He went to town and bought a large white silk handkerchief as a parting gift to the lovely girl. But after he got to her house and talked a while he decided he could not live without her. So he asked her to marry him. She accepted and in a few weeks they were married.
"He went a few miles from her home, and bought a tract of land, and started improving it. He first cut logs and built a lean-to, which is a house long and narrow with the roof sloping one way, and the front side is open. They hung curtainsover the front to keep out the cold and rain. It faced the south. They had a fireplace in one end. His wife made a lot of fine linen towels, sheets, and pillow cases, and table cloths, and some counterpanes or coverlets as they were called. They had two beds up in their lean-to. They lived very happily there for a year or two, then they built a two-story log house. They lived on the north bank of the Ohio River, carried water from a spring on the first bank. The house was on the second bank. They lived between Evansville and Owensville, and when that railroad was built along there Grandpa boarded the railroad hands. He and his boys worked on it. About the yar 1855 he sold out, loaded his wagons, and came to Texas. He settled in Grayson County."

Family census
Citation details: p. 6
Note: as Stephen Gowens, one male 20-30, one female under 5, one female 20-30; between the households of Avraim Weddell (40-50) and William Gowens (20-30)
Family census
Citation details: p. 171, hh 40
Note: as Stephen P. Goen 40 NC, Arrena 33 W. Canada (can't read or write), Caroline 11 and all children b. IN , Elizabeth 9, Arrena 8, David N. 6, Jonathan L. 4, Rufus 3, Amanda 5/12
Family census
Citation details: p. 243, 261
Note: in hh 329/337 as Stephen P. Goin 50 farmer $480-$100 VA, Arrena 42 Canada, Caroline 21 IN, Elizabeth 2 0 IN, Anna 18 IN, David N. 15 IN, Jonathan S. 14 IN, Rufus R. 12 IN, John A. 8 IN, Arrena Brooks 2 IN.

in hh 329/337 as Stephen P. Goin 50 farmer $480-$100 VA, Arrena 42 Canada, Caroline 21 IN, Elizabeth 2 0 IN, Anna 18 IN, David N. 15 IN, Jonathan S. 14 IN, Rufus R. 12 IN, John A. 8 IN, Arrena Brooks 2 IN.
Who was this family: 17 Jul 1860, p. 251 in hh 446-456, as J. A. Gown 43 farmer $400-$295 TN, Catherine M. 37 TN, Mary A. 14 TX, Stephen 11 TX, James V. 6 TX, Eliza R. 3 TX?

Unique identifier
CB4FB63F30E5B9D4D9E07EC0D109FF4EB022
Note

an indenture made 26 Jan 1839 between STEPHEN P. GOEN and ARRENA his wife of the County of Jackson and State of Indiana of one part and Alvin Lindley of same state of the other part, for and in consideration of $25 current money of the United States to them in hand paid before the unsealing or delivery of these present . . . a certain tract or parcel of land sold 40 acres, the S.E. corner of N.W. 1/4 of Sect. 33, Twp. 6, Range 3 East . . . STEPHEN P. GOEN [a large period after P.] signed his name, but Arrena's mark was written by the clerk as "ARRENA [her mark] POGOIN." The clerk misread the period as "o."
This copying error was repeated in the next line, an affidavit, "Be it remembered that the within named STEPHEN POGOIN and ARRENA his wife came this day personally before me a Justice of the Peace . . ."

Citation details: Book I, p. 36
Last change
May 31, 201820:08:59
Author of last change: barbaracorner
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William R. Newman (1885–1918) Martin T. McLean Sr (1895–1992) Francis Marion Quine (1849–1912) Marl Vane Wilks (1909–1980) Clara Caroline Corner (1884–1960) J. P. Newman (1887–1900) Eliza Ann Knight (1854–1945) Benjamin Carroll Wilks (1827–1919) Burt Aguaire (1887–1958) Mary Jimmy Newman (1913–2003) Alta Faye McLean (1907–1921) Robert Neal Quisenberry (1889–1976) Samuel Wilson McLean (1813–1901) Steven Jay Corner (1965–2010) Samuel McLean (1775–1850) 1860 Census for Grayson County, Texas, USA Julia McBride (1882–1941) Erie Catharine Taylor (1881–1951) Mote Bourne Kanatzar (1866–1917) Levia Taylor (1879–1970) Charles Jenkins Taylor (1894–1971) Mazie Emily Nipper (1865–1954) Harvey Allen McLean (1892–1952) Frank Alexander (1834–1917) Thomas Noble Reed (1883–1967) William Wesley Wilks (1884–1946) John Wesley George Washington Nicholson (1846–1924) Myrtle A. Newman (1895–1896) Dr. Samuel Stanley Wilks (1906–1964) Emely Elizabeth Herren (1843–1918) Ellis Elery Perry (1891–1956) Samuel McLean (1775–1850) Narcissus Jane Craig (1847–1934) Dr. Samuel Stanley Wilks (1906–1964) Linson Spinks Weaver (1887–1942) Lila Mae Hitt (1907–1999) Ann Elizabeth Kanatzar (1863–1921) Ethel Herring (1895–1985) Julia Simms (1868–1922) Arthur Amos Perry (1894–1981)