MARSHALL S. PIERSON
MARSHALL S. PIERSON, president of the Haskell National Bank, Haskell, Texas,
is a man who has for years figured prominently in the business and social
circles here. Briefly, a sketch of his life and ancestry is as follows:
The Pierson family first made its appearance in America at an early period in
the history of this country. One branch found a home in South Carolina, from
whence some members moved to Alabama, settling principally in Tuscaloosa
county, where William Howell Pierson, the father of Marshall S., was born in
October, 1814, son of William Pierson and one of a family of five children,
two sons and three daughters, that lived to be grown. In February, 1848,
William Howell Pierson moved from Alabama to Texas, locating in Rusk county,
where he owned several hundred acres and carried on extensive farming
operations. He made his home in the town of New Salem, near the west line of
Rusk county, and while there he was elected and served as justice of the peace
for some twelve or fourteen years. He sold his farm afterward and moved to
Gilmer, Upshur county, for the purpose of giving his children better
educational advantages. He died there in 1868, at the age of fifty-four years.
His wife, to whom he was married in Tuscaloosa county, Alabama, was Miss
Malinda Sharp, a Tennessean by birth. She was injured in a cyclone at Emory,
Rains county, Texas, March 17, 1894, and died from injuries on the 24th of
that month, at the age of seventy-four years. Of her ten children, seven sons
and three daughters, six sons grew to maturity.
Marshall S. Pierson dates his birth April 6, 1838, and was his tenth year when
he came with his parents to Texas. Up to the age of fifteen his time was
divided between work on the farm and attendance at the common schools. His
father then sent him to a high school at Larrissa, Cherokee county, where he
had been less than a year when he was taken ill with typhoid fever. As soon as
he recovered he returned home, and again went to the schools near his home,
attending school off and on until he was nineteen. At that age he was employed
by his uncle, Marshall Pierson, in the general merchandise business, and
remained with him two years. Then he began teaching school. After he had ten
months' experience in teaching, he was employed by some of the more wealthy
people in the community to teach a private school, and was thus occupied when
the country became intensely excited over Civil war events. Closing his
school, Mr. Pierson enlisted, in the spring of 1862, in Company C, Seventeenth
Regiment, Texas Cavalry, commanded by Col. James R. Taylor; and soon after
entering the service was elected in al the engagements in which his regiment
took part, many of them hotly contested fights. At the battle of Mansfield,
Louisiana, he was wounded in the foot, which laid him up for a while. Several
officers of his command were killed in that engagement and the adjutant of the
regiment was wounded. Before he could walk Mr. Pierson was in the saddle on
duty and about a month after the fight he was appointed to act as adjutant in
place of the disabled officer, a position he filled until the close of the
war. His regiment disbanded on the Brazos river in southern Texas.
On his return home from the war, Mr. Pierson resumed his work in the school
room, as teacher at New Salem. He continued teaching four years, after which
he went to Emory, Rains county, and engaged in the mercantile business on his
own account, a business he continued for a period of thirty-six years, ten
years after his coming to Haskell county. He also has a mercantile business at
Winsboro, Wood county, which is in charge of his brother, W. C. Pierson. It
was in 1890 that Mr. Pierson came to Haskell county. His first work here was
in connection with the organization of the Haskell National Bank, of which he
was made president, a position he has since occupied. This bank was organized
with capital stock of fifty thousand dollars, which in 1903 was increased to
sixty thousand dollars, and which is one of the most successful business
enterprises of the town. Mr. Pierson is also a stockholder and president of
the First National Bank of Aspermont, Texas. In Haskell and Stonewall counties
he has large farming and stock interests, having some two hundred and fifty
acres of land under cultivation.
Mr. Pierson was first married July 13, 1865, to Miss Roxana Ryan, a native of
Union Parish, Louisiana, born July 30, 1845. She died May 31, 1881, leaving
five children, as follows: Lee, William, Alice, wife of D. R. Couch,
Marshall
and Samuel. He was married again, April 8, 1883, to Miss Bettie
Barker of
Emory, Rains county, Texas, who died December 19th of the same year. His
present wife he married Miss Maggie Rice, is a native of Laclede county,
Missouri, and was born September 20, 1863. They have six children, three sons
and three daughters, namely: Maggie, Mary, Cleveland, Alfred, Rice and
Ruth.
Mr. Pierson has been a Mason since he was a soldier in the army, in 1864, and
he has advanced through the various degrees of the order up to and including
the Knight Templars. For thirty-eight years he has been a worthy member of the
Baptist church.
B. B. Paddock, History and Biographical Record of North and West
Texas (Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1906), Vol. I, pp. 559-560.
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