Asbury, Samuel E. (Samuel Erson), 1872-1962
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Asbury, Samuel E. (Samuel Erson), 1872-1962
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Name :
Asbury, Samuel E. (Samuel Erson), 1872-1962
Asbury, Samuel E.
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Name :
Asbury, Samuel E.
Asbury, Samuel Erson, 1872-1962
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Name :
Asbury, Samuel Erson, 1872-1962
Samuel E. Asbury
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Name :
Samuel E. Asbury
Asbury, Samuel Erson
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Name :
Asbury, Samuel Erson
Asbury, Samuel E. (Samuel Fuller), 1872-1962.
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Name :
Asbury, Samuel E. (Samuel Fuller), 1872-1962.
Asbury, Samuel E., 1872-1962.
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Name :
Asbury, Samuel E., 1872-1962.
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Biographical History
Asbury, a native of Charlotte, North Carolina, was assistant state chemist at the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station at Texas A&M University and an amateur historian and collector of Texana.
Historian and chemist.
Harrison was the founder of Harrison County, Texas. Before moving to Texas, he had been the first lawyer in Lewiston, NY, and collector of the Port of Entry; he was the husband of Elizabeth Cooke and was a prominent figure in Buffalo.
Samuel E. (Samuel Erson) Asbury (1872-1962), native of Granville County, N.C., was an historian of Texas, mainly concerned with North Carolinians in the Texas Republic.
Chemist and Texas historian. Born 26 Sept. 1872 in Charlotte, N.C.; served as assistant state chemist with the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station from 1904-1940.
Historian and chemist, of Texas.
Born in Charlotte, N.C., educated at North Carolina State A & M in Raleigh, N.C., Samuel Erson Asbury was an agricultural chemist and researcher in fertilizer and feeds in College Station, Tex., working as the Assistant State Chemist with the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station on the campus of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. Asbury's fame, however, rests primarily with his extensive research into Texas history, particularly his discovery of little known primary resources regarding the Texas Revolution, including those concerning Jonas Harrison, John A. Williams, and the journal of Juan Nepomuceno Almonte.
Historian.
Samuel Erson Asbury, a native of Charlotte, North Carolina, was assistant state chemist at the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station at Texas A & M University and an amateur historian and collector of Texana.
Samuel Erson Asbury was born on 1872 September 26 in Charlotte, North Carolina. He received his college education at North Carolina State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts in Raleigh (now North Carolina State University), earning Bachelor's and Master's degrees in chemistry. Asbury spent several years as an assistant state chemist at the North Carolina Experiment Station before taking a similar job at the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station on the campus of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas (now Texas A&M University), serving from 1904 until his retirement.
After coming to Texas, Asbury became interested in Texas history and began researching the state's past, particularly the Texas Revolution. He corresponded widely and began collecting historically important documents. Asbury was also interested in music and planned the production of a musical drama based on the Texas revolution, a work that was never completed.
Asbury retired in 1945, but continued his historical research. He was a fellow of the Texas State Historical Association and a member of the Southern Historical Association at the time of death, which occurred in Bryan, Texas, on 1962 January 10.
References
Nance, Joseph Milton. "Samuel Erson Asbury." Handbook of Texas Online . http://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fas01 .
Samuel Erson Asbury was born in Charlotte, North Carolina on September 26, 1872, the son of Felicia Swan (Woodward) and Sidney Monroe Asbury . Asbury spent his childhood traveling with his family from Charlotte to Lincolnton, to Morganton, N. C. while his father attempted to establish a successful business.
In the fall of 1889, Asbury enrolled in North Carolina Agricultural and Mechanical College in Raleigh after first promising his father that he would put his seven brothers and sisters through college also. As a member of the first graduating class at North Carolina A & M, Samuel Asbury received his B.S. in chemistry in 1893. He was then employed as an instructor at the college while he worked on his M.S., which he received in 1896.
Between 1895 and 1904, Asbury worked alternately with the North Carolina Experiment Station, the State Chemist 's office in Richmond, Va., the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, and the State Chemist of Tennessee . On November 1, 1904 he accepted a position as Assistant State Chemist with the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station on the campus of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas . From 1905 to 1915 his work required him to travel throughout East Texas as a fertilizer inspector for Dr. G. S. Frap, the State Chemist. Asbury made the most of the situation by spending his spare time getting acquainted with the local old-timers, many of them participants in the Texas Revolution, Civil War, and/or the Reconstruction . He spent the remainder of his career with the experiment station employed in the analysis of fertilizer and feed until his retirement in 1945. Samuel Asbury died in Bryan, Tex. on January 10, 1960 at the age of 89.
Outside of his work as a chemist, Samuel is known primarily as an authority on Texas history . Asbury considered himself a hunter and not a writer, and as such became renowned for looking up little known documents, such as those concerning Jonas Harrison, John A. Williams, and the journal of Juan Nepomuceno Almonte . Asbury's chief historical interest lay in the Texas Revolution, and he spent much of his time writing an opera, or musical-drama review to illustrate it.
Samuel Asbury was also interested in all facets of the Arts. He had extensive scientific, literary, and music libraries, and, although deaf, he also had four Steinway pianos in his living room. All available wall space in his house was covered with framed reproductions of the Masters. He shared his interest with students and townspeople by encouraging them to attend poetry readings, music recitals, and similar functions held at his house.
Another of Asbury's passions was his roses . By experimenting with various strains of roses and kinds of fertilizers, he soon had roses growing on trellises 40 feet high, hiding his house from view. Asbury also did extensive research on the history of Texas roses .
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https://viaf.org/viaf/28785294
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n95110534
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n95110534
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Autobiographies
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Fredonian Insurrection, 1826-1827
Frontier and pioneer life
Frontier and pioneer life
Goliad Massacre, Goliad, Tex., 1836
Migration, Internal
Migration, Internal
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Roses
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San Jacinto, Battle of, Tex., 1836
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Texas
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Texas
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Harrison County (Tex.)
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Texas
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Texas
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Texas
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Alamo (San Antonio, Tex.)
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United States
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United States
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Texas
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United States
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San Antonio (Tex.)
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Texas
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Alamo (San Antonio, Tex.)
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Texas
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Texas
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Texas
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