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The Stephen David Forman Family Home Page

Updated November 9, 2002

Stephen David Forman
16621 E. Forrestal
Montgomery, Texas 77316
United States
936-588-3664
sd4man1479@aol.com

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I am researching the Formans of the "Forman Colony" of Natchez, Mississippi Territory of 1790. They settled on the St. Catherine on land purchased under Spanish Land Grants of Governor Gayoso. General David Forman sent his brother Ezekiel Forman along with 67 Negro slaves from Monmouth County New Jersey in April of 1790 to establish the colony. Other Formans came from Pennsylvania, Kentucky, New York,North & South Carolina, Va. and Maryland. I am looking for information on George Forman, married to Sarah Irwin, their son, William Forman, who moved with members of the Forman family to Opelousas, Louisiana. Also in the group were, Andrus,Butler, Cole, Coward, Perkins,and Simmons. They all later moved to Texas about 1857. In 1862 Ebenezer Miller Forman (son of William & Susan (Cole) Forman, joined the 26th Texas Cavalry, CSA. Many of this group were members of the "Magnolia Rangers" and Terry's Texas Ranger Regt. during the War Between the States. Other surnames: Andrus, Butler, Cole, Coward,Hayes, Perkins and Simmons.
Any information will be deeply appreciated,
The Formans of New York-
In commemoration of the three hundredth anniversy of the Family in America 1643-1943.
By Henry Chandlee Forman, Ph.D.
The Formans of England-
For more than six hundred years, from the earliest records of the family in Lincolnshire, England, to the present day, the spelling of the name Forman has been unchanged. In 1316 land in Lincolnshire was granted to one Ralph Forman; in 1373 Thomas Forman, and 1375 Robertus Forman, a juror, were inhabitants of this county. In the Lincolnshire Rebellion of 1536 Robert Forman gave five marks to the rebels.[Lincolnshire Notes and Queries, vol. 11, p. 249; vol. 18, p. 58; Linc. Rec. Soc. vol. 30, pp. 77, 87, 227]. All through the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries there were Formans living in England, chiefly in Lincolnshire, according to the records.
The most distinguished member of the family seems to have been Sir William Forman, Knight, Lord Mayor of London, a native of Gainsborough, Lincolnshire. He was the son of William Forman, a yeoman of Gainsborough. His sister, Elizabeth Forman, married Morice Morgan.
Sir William Forman was Knighted on October 18, 1537, and was an Alderman in Parliament form Cripplegate Ward in the City of London from 1529 to 1545. He was High Sheriff of London in 1533 and Lord Mayor from 1538 to 1539. During a Muster of Citizens in 1539 he rode in a procession and carried a coat of black velvet embroidered with a cross; on his head was a black velvet cap with a rich jewel; and about him rode four footmen apparelled in satin hose and fine white silk.
By trade Sir William Forman was a haberdasher. In 1544 he, with others, leased from King Henry VIII the Manor of Tullesworth in Surrey. In the same year, on August 30, he married Blanche Palmer, a widow, of London. He died on January 13, 1547, and was buried in the Church of Saint George, Botolph Lane, in kEast Cheapside, London. A monument was erected there to his memory.
His great grandson, Robert Forman went to Amersterdam and received the Charter for Flushing, New Amersterdam, which is now Queens, New York. The Forman family flurished and soon spread to New Jersey, Pennsylvannia, Virginia, and Kentucky. They followed the migration patterns to North and South Carolina and on down to Louisiana and Mississippi Territories.
In the Natchez area, they formed the Forman Colony, and brought the first four-wheeled cart to the Mississippi Territory.
The Spanish Census of 1790 shows George "Jorge" Forman and family next to William "Guillermo" Irwin. They were settled on the Sara Bayou and Coles Creek area.
And the Saga goes on........


Family Photos

  • Sgt. Steve Forman (Civil War Reenactor) (145 KB)
    Steve @ Granbury, Texas CW Reenactment, early Civil War Impression. Texas Militia Uniform.
  • 12th Texas Cavalry at Liendo Plantation (39 KB)
    Steve Forman is in the second row behind the two young boys.
  • Tempe Ann Carpenter and John Henry Arnold (29 KB)
    First wife, Tempe Ann Carpenter and John H. Arnold. She Died in 1880.
  • Steve @ Beauvoir, gr.gr.uncle J.M. Cole's grave (116 KB)
    Steve at Beauvoir, Jefferson Davis Home and Presidential Library, Cemetery at the grave of his gr.gr.uncle J.M. Cole of the 8th Mississippi Infantry Co. C.
  • Dolly, Dorothy, Alice, and Grandpa John H. Arnold (101 KB)
    Stepmother Dolly, baby Dorothy(age 6 mos.)Alice (my grandmother) and gr.gr.grandpa John H. Arnold. This photo taken by Phillips Studio, La Fayette, Indiana in 1904.
  • Frank and Matilda Anderson (29 KB)
    Frank and Matilda Anderson, from Sweden, came to Indiana about 1878. Their daughter Ellen married Albert Grant Arnold, son of John H. Arnold.
  • Colonel James Brown Forman (256 KB)
    "The Boy Colonel" of the 15th Kentucky Volunteer Infantry, hero of the Battle of Perryville aka Chaplin Hills, Kentucky, killed at Murfreesboro aka Stone River, two weeks after his 20th Birthday.
  • General David Forman New Jersey Milita Amer. Rev. (85 KB)
    Picture of a portrait of General David Forman, New Jersey Militia, personal friend and confidante of Gen. George Washington during the American Revolution.
  • Gen. Thomas Marsh Forman, Continental Army (47 KB)
    Thomas Marsh Forman started as a Cadet to Captain John Stone's Company 1st Maryland Regiment. He was in Washington's army when it crossed the Delaware. by the end of the war he was a Colonel. In the War of 1812 he was a General in command of a Brigade of Maryland Militia and defended Baltimore in the War of 1812. He was in the Battles of Princeton, Brandywine, Monmouth and Valley Forge, at Green Tree Tavern. He represented Cecil County in the legislature in 1790, 1792, and 1800. He was the first president of the Maryland Jockey Club.
  • In Memoriam: Major David Wallace Forman (43 KB)
    My dad, a father, husband, soldier, patriot. An Army career that spanned three wars: World War II, Korea, and Viet Nam. A true American Hero, and a Christian who now resides with our Lord Jesus Christ.
  • Reverend Charles William Forman (68 KB)
    Born March 3, 1821 in Washington, Kentucky. Served as a Missionary in the Presbyterian Church in Kasauli, India for more than 40 years.
  • Colonel Forman Commands Military at SCV Convention (229 KB)
    Colonel Steve Forman commands the military portion of the Sons of Confederate Veterans Texas Division Convention Confederate Statue Dedication at Plantation Liendo, Hempstead, Texas.
  • John Henry Arnold (26 KB)
    My gr.great grandfather, John Henry Arnold, wounded in the Battle of the Wilderness, 20th Indiana Infantry. The bullet remained in his shoulder until removed in Lafayette, Indiana after the x-ray was invented, 1884. He carried the bullet in his vest pocket after it was removed. I have that bullet today, along with an unspent one he carried to show the comparison.
  • Forman Family Coat of Arms (779 KB)
    This is the Coat of Arms of Sir William Forman, Lord Mayor of London, England in 1538.
  • Dolly Atkins Arnold (87 KB)
    Dolly Atkins Arnold, second wife of John H. Arnold. CDV taken by J.E. Smith Art Studio La Fayette, Ind. about 1888.
 

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Related Files

  • 15th Kentucky Vol. Inf. Reg. US Civil War (6 KB)
    The history of the 15th Kentucky volunteer Infantry Regiment. Colonel James Brown Forman, Regimental Commander Killed at Murfreesboro.
  • Magnolia Rangers Co. D. 1st Bde. 1st Tx Cav. (12 KB)
    One of the earliest Texas Confederate Units. Formed before Texas seceded. Roster and history of the unit.
  • "The Boy Colonel.: (63 KB)
    A daring gallant young officer who fought for the Union, although he considered himself a Southernor. A true American Hero, in deeds, thought and actions. The Hero of the Battle at Perryville, Kentucky Oct. 8, 1862.
 

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