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1860 census, CA, Del Norte, Indian Creek, Happy Camp P.O., p 44, July 9, HH 447/384
Joseph H. FARR, 22, M, miner, MO
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1870 census, TX, Austin, Hempstead, p 83, Oct 21, HH 630
FARR, Joseph H, 32, M, W, farmer, MO
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1880 census, TX, Waller, Hempstead, p. 18, ed 158, June 4, HH 178/196
FARR, J.H., 42, editor of paper, MO
FARR, S.T., 28, wife, TX
FARR, J.B., 4, son, TX
FARR, ?.F., 1, dau, TX
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1900 census, TX, Waller, j.p. 1, ed 46, 9-A, (T623-1676, 33), June 5, HH 165/167
FARR, Mrs. S.T., head, W, F, Aug 1851, 42, widowed, 4/3 children, TX, GA, AL
CUNY, Irene, dau, July 1878, 21, divorced, no children, TX, VA, TX
FARR, Essa, dau, Jany 1881, 18, TX, VA, TX
FARR, Bertha, niece, Aug 1884, 15, TX, MO, TX
FARR, Daisy, niece, Dec 1888, 11, TX, MO, TX
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1910 census, TX, Harris, Houston, ed 86, 18-A, (T624-1560, 29)
April 29, 1011 Lamar, HH 167/200 (a hotel)
FARR, Texana, head, F, W, 58, widowed, 4/3 children, TX, GA, GA, keeper, hotel
HARVEY, Columbia A., niece, F, W, 58, widowed, no children, TX, TN, AL, seamstress, private home
...7 boarders ...
FARR, Joe B., grandson, 10, TX, TX, TX
FARR, Adrian, grandson, 8, TX
FARR, Elnor, granddau, 4, TX
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San Antonio Daily Light, Thursday, May 6, 1886, p. 3
STATE NEWS
"J.H. FARR, editor of the Hempstead Chronicle, was shot and killed on yesterday by James Cloud, a justice of the peace. They were brothers-in-law, and the shooting grew out of an old family feud."
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San Antonio Daily Express, Thursday, May 6, 1886, p. 4
HEAMPSTEAD (Sic) TRAGEDY
A Newspaper Man Killed by a Justice of the Peace.
Mr. C.W. Newman, of the Express composing rooms, received a telegram yesterday from Hempstead informing him that his brother-in-law, J.H. FARR, editor of the Chronicle, had been shot and killed by James Cloud, a justice of the peace. No further particulars were given of the unfortunate affair other than as above stated. Mr. Newman will leave San Antonio for Hempstead to investigate the the killing today. FARR was an old Confederate soldier, a member of Sibley's celebrate brigade when it made their famous march from New Mexico to San Antonio, almost naked and starved, and is said to have been a good man and brave.
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HOMICIDE IN HEMPSTEAD
Editor FARR Shot and Killed by Justice of the Peace Cloud.
Special to The News.
HEMPSTEAD, May 5. -- This afternoon about 1 o'clock, J.J. Cloud, justice of the peace of this precinct, shot and killed Joseph H. FARR, the editor of the Courier. The apparent cause of the killing is said to be the publication of editorials in the Courier reflecting on the official record of county officers, and Cloud is said to have been found behind in his accounts about $1000 by the late finance committee. The whole assembly of citizens and visiting firemen were thrown into great confusion by the tragedy. Speakers alluded to the act from the rostrum of the Pavilion, and the throng dispersed with sad faces and saddened hearts. Major H. Boone was present and intended to address the citizens at 2 o'clock, but after the sad affair he declined to speak. An inquest was held on the body of deceased at 3 o'clock. Mr. FARR leaves a wife and three children. The community is greatly excited over the affair.
Galveston Daily News, Thursday, May 6, 1886, p. 9
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The Janesville Daily Gazette, Thursday, May 6, 1886, p. 2.
An Editor Shot Dead.
GALVESTON, Tex., May 6. -- At Hempstead, Wednesday, Joseph H. FARR, editor of the Courier, was shot dead by J.J. Cloud, a justice of the peace. FARR had published a statement that Cloud was $1,000 short in his accounts with the county. Cloud was arrested.
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Hempstead.
HEMPSTEAD, May 7. -- The inquest on the killing of J.H. FARR is concluded and the verdict rendered in accordance with the facts heretofore published. The examining trial is now in progress and the evidence discloses that FARR was shot in the back without warning. Cloud claims that the publications in the Courier had nothing to do with the homicide, but that he was actuated by the animus of an old quarrel. The widowed wife is Cloud's sister.
Galveston Daily News, Saturday, May 8, 1886, p. 2
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* Does this article have anything to do with the killings of the brothers Joseph and Napoleon FARR?
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In the early '70s the Waller County Courier was published by Mr. Joe FARR for several years as in independent newspaper with varying success. He abandoned the paper in the latter part of the '70s. In 1885 Messrs. FARR & White resumed the publication of the Courier. Mr. Joe FARR was at the helm, while Mr. White was the financial backing of the paper. The paper became sickly and died a slow death. In 1887 a Mr. Hutchinson published the Ledger. It, too, went to an early grave. The press was bought by Mr. E.P. Alsbury, a well known writer, who commenced the publication of the Advance Guard. It was this paper in which, in April 1888, there appeared an anonymous article which was construed to reflect on Sheriff Tom McDade. Stephen Alchin fathered the article, which caused one of the bloodiest feuds ever known in Texas. Deputy Sheriff Dick Chambers, Steven Alchin and ex-Sheriff Tom McDade are in the grave, Jack McDade and Dick Springfield are in the penitentiary, all caused by one harmless article. The Courier was reorganized by Mr. Reed two years ago. He struggled hard to make the paper a success, but the public did not support him as perhaps they should have done, and the Courier goes down, to be resurrected perhaps at some future day by someone else.
The Galveston Daily News, Sunday, Sept. 13, 1891, p. 6.
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