Sturkie Family 2018B - Person Sheet
Sturkie Family 2018B - Person Sheet
NameSTURKIE, William Dudley 1
Birth2 Nov 1882, Proctor, Texas
Death30 May 1971, Palestine, Anderson Co, TX2,3
BurialBaggett Creek Cemetery; Comanche CO, TX
OccupationFarmer - Merchant - Democrat
EducationEighth Grade -
ReligionBaptist
ReligionDeacon in the Baptist Church and lead the singing. (Kathleen Sturkie Powell, Interview.)
FatherSTURKIE, John Ira (1859-1939)
MotherCOOK, Mary Elizabeth (1863-1935)
Spouses
Birth27 Mar 1884, Comanche CO, TX
Death5 Oct 19494
BurialBaggett Creek Cemetery; Comanche CO, TX
OccupationHousewife
EducationHS
ReligionMethodist
FatherLUKER, Benjamin Franklin (~1848-1886)
Marriage14 Dec 1902, Comanche CO, TX
ChildrenOpal Inez “Auntie” (1904-1989)
 Ira O’Quinn (1907-1995)
 Paul David (1911-2002)
 Lloyd Olen (1913-2006)
 Howard Neal (1918-1996)
 Kathleen Elizabeth (1920-2008)
Birth29 Aug 1883
Death5 Apr 1971, Dallas, Texas
FatherEWING, Finis Modrall (1849-1942)
Census notes for William Dudley STURKIE
1900 US Census, Comanche CO
Ir Sturkie Head bn. Dec 1859 SC age 40
Mary wife bn Jan 1863 age 37
William D. 17
Vesta 15
Mollie 13
Myrtle 10
Loyd 8
Dawn 3

1910 US Census, Pct 1, Comanche County, TX
William Dudley, age 27, md1 7 yrs, merchant,genl merchandise
Lu, age 25; md1 y yrs; children: 3/3; father born AL,mother bn MS
Opal I., age 6
Ira O, age 2
David P., age 7 mos.

Source Citation: Year: 1910; Census Place: Comanche, Comanche, Texas; Roll: T624_1541; Page: 11A; Enumeration District: 3; Image: 94.

1920 US Census, Pct 1, Comanche CO, TX
William D., age 37
Mattie L., age 35
Opal I., age 16
Ira, age 12
Paul age 10
Loyd O., age 7
Howard N., age 1 and 10 mos.

1930 US Census, Pct. 4, Comanche Co, TX
Will D. Sturkie, age 47, md@20
Mattie L., age 46, md@19
Loyd O., age 17
Howard N., age 12
Katheline, age 9

**Living next to Ira O. Sturkie
Bio notes for William Dudley STURKIE

William Dudley Sturkie, son of John Ira Sturkie and Mary Elizabeth Cook was born November 2, 1982 in Comanche County, Texas. John Ira was born in South Carolina and Mary Cook was born in Florida--so William was born a first generation Texan. His father and mother had eloped and purchased a small log house where William was born. He attended school through the eighth grade at Graham’s Chapel School. The Graham’s Chapel or Baggett Community was populated by a mix of families who had moved west after the Civil War to seek a better life. The land was rich, wildlife was abundant--a wonderful place to start over after the devastation of the war.

Growing up in the Graham Chapel Community, Will courted Mattie Lou Luker, (daughter of Benjamin Franklin Luker and Mary Catherine Ewing) by writing notes at school. The couple married December 14, 1902. Their first born, Opal, was born March 8, 1905. Their children were Opal, Ira, Paul, Lloyd, Howard and Kathleen.

Will learned the merchant trade from his father. He lived in Hasse and worked in his father’s (John Ira Sturkie’s) store. Leaving there, he took a job in Waco with Meadow Brothers. a grocery wholesaler, about 1921. From Waco, (only a short time there) he moved the family back to the old Luker Farm where he farmed for a while before he moved the family to Gustine.
Family Story notes for William Dudley STURKIE


Will Sturkie was born November 2, 1882, oldest son of John Ira Sturkie and Mary Eliza Cook. Growing up in the Graham Chapel Community, Will courted Mattie Lou Luker, daughter of Benjamin Franklin Luker and Mary Catherine Ewing by writing notes at school. The couple married December 14, 1902.

Will learned the merchant trade from his father. He lived in Hasse and worked in his father’s (John Ira Sturkie’s) store. Leaving there, he took a job in Waco with Meadow Brothers. a grocery wholesaler, about 1921. From Waco, (only a short time there) he moved the family back to the old Luker Farm where he farmed for a while before he moved the family to Gustine.

My Grandad Sturkie (W.D.) was sixty years old on the day I was born. As a small child it was always a mystery to me that he looked so old and we had the same birthday, November 2. Visiting his home in Gustine was a treat. His house was on the main street of town and he walked each day to his country store where he sold a little of everything from flour to seeds and baby chicks. In the rear of his store, Grandad maintained a huge incubator hatching hundreds of small chicks. Appalling to us small grandchildren were the bodies of dead hatchlings that were thrown out in the alley.

W. D. Sturkie was described by his daughter Kathleen as very headstrong, “always right”, a good father, honest, sincere and a strict Baptist. In a letter to a Sturkie cousin in South Carolina, WD described himself as “a Baptist and a Democrat, a tough combination.” Will ran for County Tax assessor in of Comanche County and was defeated. He served as Justice of the Peace from 1942 until 1958 in Gustine, Comanche CO, TX.

In 1926 Will Sturkie bought a Model A Ford, one of the first in the county. It had a rumble seat and his kids loved to ride in it.

After Mattie Lou died, he married Mattie Lula Ewing Koeph one of Mattie Lou’s best friends and a distant cousin.

The house on Main St. was the second Gustine house that Grandmother and Grandad owned. My memories of the first house are vague. All I recall is a slop jar Grandmother maintained to feed the chickens.

My memories of Grandmother Sturkie are vivid, and though she died when I was very young, I recall her wonderful family stories. Grandmother was tall, thin and had very black hair. How great it would be if I could talk to her today about her Luker/Ewing heritage. Grandmother came to Houston often to be treated by a cardiologist, Dr. Grunbaum. She, like her younger brother Ben Luker, suffered from congenital heart problems. I always remember that she was sick and seemed so tired. My mother said she was just “worn out” from farm work, raising a big family and putting up with my Grandad. Mattie Lou Sturkie was a gentle, loving steadfast Christian woman. She was very quiet, never complaining about life’s difficulties. Despite the fact that W. D. was so adamantly Baptist, she was a lifelong Methodist and never attended the Baptist Church.
Obituary/DC notes for William Dudley STURKIE
SSDI
William Sturkie
455-56-0584
75801 Palestine, Anderson, Texas
Born Nov, 1882
Died May 1971

Social Security Death Index
Name: William Sturkie
Date of Birth: Thursday November 02, 1882
Date of Death: May 1971
Est. Age at death: 88 years, 6 months
Last known residence:
City: Palestine; Elmwood
County: Anderson
State: Texas
ZIP Code: 75801
Latitude: 31.7467
Longitude: -95.6167
Social Security details:
State of Issue: Texas
Number: 455-56-0584
FindAGrave notes for William Dudley STURKIE
Find A Grave Memorial# 15793242
Census notes for Mattie Lou (Spouse 1)
1900 US Census, Comanche CO, Texas
Listed in Household of John Willliams as
Lou Luker
S. Dau Age 16
Bio notes for Mattie Lou (Spouse 1)
My Mother, Mattie Lou Luker Sturkie

from The Story of a Lifetime by Kathleen Sturkie Powell

She was always there when I got in from school. My mother did the house work and milked the cows. She did the washing on a rub board with no running water and hung the clothes on the fence.

She made quilts with frames hanging from the ceiling.

Mother was a good cook especially considering what she had to work with. Our breakfasts usually consisted of bacon, eggs, biscuits and syrup. We had bacon if Dad had killed a hog. Lunch was always the big meal of the day. We didn’t have meat everyday--chicken usually only on Sunday. During the week we ate whatever was in the garden--English peas, string beans, corn, potatoes, mostly vegetables and always corn bread for lunch. For supper we had left overs and/or just milk & corn bread. Mother made pies mainly for special occasions. We didn’t have dessert every meal. She made raisin pies and Dad’s favorite was sweet potato pie.

My mother was very neat, she had us sweep the yard until it was clean. We had no grass, it was clay or sand. There was no trash laying around.

She cooked for 8 people breakfast, lunch and dinner. She used to feed the thresher crew of 5 to 10 men.

She washed our clothes using a rub board and drawing the water out of a dug well. She milked 2 or 3 cows, morning and night, churned the butter and kept milk in a cooling pan as we didn’t have an ice box.

Her hobbies were sewing and quilting when she had time.

Which of your mother’s physical and personality characteristics did you inherit?
Calmness, I never heard my mother yell at her kids.. She was a kind and gentle person, a good cook and very good at saving.

Describe your mother’s traits with which you are least compatible.

I thought she let Dad run over her. She stood up to him when Hab was in the service. He didn’t think she could write him, but she let him know right away that she was going to write him and she did.

Did she experience much sadness or tragedy while you were little? How did she deal with it?

Her mother died and her brother Ben died, I think she took their death’s hard.

Happiest memory you have of your mother?
I slept with her when I was a senior in high school. After we moved to Gustine, we had just one bedroom. It had two double beds. Dad slept on one and mother & I slept on the other. I never thought anything about why they weren’t sleeping together. Dad was so big, I guess my mother preferred to sleep with me.

What is the most painful memory you have of her/
Her last years she was sick and had to rest a lot. I was holding her over the toilet the night she died. She had congestive heart failure.

Mother was a Methodist.

She died Oct. 4 1949. She had congestive heart failure at 64 years of age. She is buried by my dad in Baggett Cemetery, six miles from Gustine.

Most important things I learned from my mothers were patience, love and trustworthiness.
Notes for Mattie Lou (Spouse 1)
“Bennie’s sister Lula was also educated in the Graham Chapel school. She was like Aunt Mollie, a perfect seamstress and a lovely cook.”

“A beautiful brunette with these domestic assets she attracted a classmate, Willie Stone / who courted her by writing notes in class. They married and raised a brood of eagles. With Uncle Ben as their model, they got college degrees hither and yon. After their graduation, they had appointments to positions in universities and business corporations.

“Lula died many years later in the small town where her husband was a dry-goods merchant. “

“Bennie had given Lula the Ewing Clan book--the genealogy of the tribe--and Lula trained her children by the Ewing code. Aunt Mollie had many times told Lula the story of Grandsire Ewing’s death from exposure when he made a long trip in the winter to pay a debt. He had gone in a wagon to Waco with his son Alec to pay a lumber bill. Contracting pneumonia on the way back, Grandsire died and Uncle Alec drove home with the body. Grandsire was the first to be buried in the Ewing graveyard.”5

My memories of Grandmother Sturkie are vivid, and though she died when I was very young, I recall her wonderful family stories. Grandmother was tall, thin and had very black hair. How great it would be if I could talk to her today about her Luker/Ewing heritage. Grandmother came to Houston often to be treated by a cardiologist, Dr. Grunbaum. She, like her younger brother Ben Luker, suffered from congenital heart problems. I always remember that she was sick and seemed so tired. My mother said she was just “worn out” from farm work, raising a big family and putting up with my Grandad. Mattie Lou Sturkie was a gentle, loving steadfast Christian woman. She was very quiet, never complaining about life’s difficulties. Despite the fact that W. D. was so adamantly Baptist, she was a lifelong Methodist and never attended the Baptist Church.
Notes for Mattie Lou (Spouse 1)
“Kathleen Sturkie Powell describes her mother as:

gentle
steadfast Christian
loving
never complaining about anything
quiet

Her father:

Very head strong
Always right
Good father
Honest, sincere
Strict Baptist”
FindAGrave notes for Mattie Lou (Spouse 1)
Find A Grave Memorial# 13990357
Last Modified 26 Feb 2018Created 17 Mar 2018 Sturkie Family by Mary L. Ward
Copyright 2018 Mary Powell Ward