Born in Galveston on January 19, 1868, Hally Ballinger Bryan Perry was the third child of Guy Morrison Bryan, nephew of Stephen F. Austin, and Laura Harrison (Jack) Bryan. In 1891 Hally Bryan founded the Daughters of the Republic of Texas with her cousin, Betty Ballinger. Hally Ballinger Bryan served as secretary for an early executive committee in the DRT, but thereafter chose not to hold an office. She married Emmett Lee Perry in 1909. After her father's death in 1901, Perry and her cousin Beauregard Bryan became executors of the Stephen F. Austin papers, which they presented to the University of Texas at Austin. Hally Ballinger Bryan Perry died June 27, 1955.
From the description of Hally Bryan Perry collection, 1835-1946. (San Jacinto Museum of History). WorldCat record id: 49964818
Born in Galveston on January 10, 1868, Hally Ballinger Bryan Perry was the third child of Colonel Guy Morrison Bryan, nephew of Stephen F. Austin, and Laura Harrison (Jack) Bryan. Hally's father served as a member in both the House and Senate of Texas, as speaker of the Texas House of Representatives, and as a member of the Thirty-fifth Congress of the United States. After her mother's death, the Bryan family moved to the Oaks, the home of Harriet Patrick and William Pitt Ballinger, Hally's aunt and uncle. Hally Bryan attended the Hollins Institute in Virginia and then returned to Galveston at the age of seventeen.
In 1891, she founded the Daughters of the Republic of Texas with her cousin, Betty Ballinger. The DRT was established to save historical places and documents, to encourage historical research, to promote the celebration of Texas Independence on March 2, and to honor the memory of the people who fought to establish the Republic of Texas. Hally Ballinger Bryan served as secretary for an early executive committee in the DRT, but thereafter chose not to hold an office.
Hally Ballinger Bryan married Emmett Lee Perry, a half cousin, on November 3, 1909 and the couple moved to Bay City; they had no children. After the death of her husband in 1921, Hally moved to Houston, where she lived for 27 years. She traveled to Europe and Latin America, as well as throughout the United States; she organized the Pan American Round Table of Houston in 1940. Perry also served on the State Library Historical Commission and was a member of the Texas State Historical Association, the Delta Kappa Gamma Society, the American Association of University Women, the Texas Folklore Society, and the Philosophical Society of Texas. Perry moved to Alpine in 1948, where she served as a member of the board of directors of the Alpine Community Center and the Presbyterian Church. She founded the local chapter of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas in Alpine, which is named in her honor. After her father's death in 1901, Perry and her cousin, Judge Beauregard Bryan, became executors of the Stephen F. Austin papers, which they presented to the University of Texas at Austin. The university then established the Hally Bryan Perry Fund for historical research in 1954. Hally Ballinger Bryan Perry died in Alpine on June 27, 1955, and was buried in the State Cemetery at Austin.
From the guide to the Hally Bryan Perry collection MC038. 49964818., 1835-1946, (Albert and Ethel Herzstein Library, )