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Galba Fuqua

Male 1819 - 1836  (16 years)


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  • Name Galba Fuqua  [1
    Birth 9 Mar 1819  , Madison, Alabama, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Gender Male 
    Death 6 Mar 1836  Alamo, Hidalgo, Texas, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Burial San Antonio, Bexar, Texas, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Person ID I20304  Master
    Last Modified 3 Feb 2024 

    Father Silas Fuqua,   b. 17 Aug 1783, , Bedford, Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 26 Oct 1830, , Caldwell, Texas, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 47 years) 
    Mother Sally Toney Young,   b. 18 Sep 1797, , , Virginia, USA Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 25 Aug 1825, , Madison, Alabama, USA Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 27 years) 
    Marriage 25 May 1814  , Madison, Alabama, USA Find all individuals with events at this location  [3
    Documents
    Silas Fuqua and Sally Young Marriage license.
    Silas Fuqua and Sally Young Marriage license.
    Family ID F5143  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBirth - 9 Mar 1819 - , Madison, Alabama, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - 6 Mar 1836 - Alamo, Hidalgo, Texas, USA Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsBurial - - San Antonio, Bexar, Texas, USA Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Notes 
    • Galba Fuqua, Alamo defender, son of Silas and Sally (Taney) Fuqua, was born in Alabama on March 9, 1819. He was of French Huguenot descent. In the past he was also thought to be of Mexican or Jewish descent. As a resident of Gonzales, Texas, he was enrolled by Byrd Lockhart in the Gonzales Ranging Company of Mounted Volunteers on February 23, 1836. He rode to the relief of the Alamo garrison with this group and arrived on March 1, 1836. Susanna W. Dickinson later claimed that during the battle of the Alamo Fuqua came to her and tried to tell her something. He was unable to deliver his message because his jaw had been broken in the fighting. He died with the other Alamo defenders on March 6, 1836, three days short of his seventeenth birthday.
    • From: http://www.tamu.edu/ccbn/dewitt/gonzalesrangersf-k.htm
      Galba Fuqua, 16, was born in Alabama, a Gonzales resident and Private rifleman in the Gonzales Rangers. The Fuqua family are said to have originated with French immigrant William Fuqua (Farqua) (married Jane) to the American colony of Virginia as early as 1685. According to descendant Gerald Duvall, William Farqua came to America fleeing Catholic persecution, had a son Ralph Fuqua who had a son Joseph, the father of Silas, Benjamin and Ephraim Fuqua. Both Ralph and Joseph served in the American Revolution against the British. Galba Fuqua was the son of Silas and Sally Taney Fuqua. After wife Sally’s death between 1825 and 1828, Silas went to Texas with his children where he died in 1834. A letter to Stephen F. Austin from Silas Fuqua of 28 Mar 1828 expressed satisfaction with Texas and inquired about assistance and information. Silas Fuqua’s land grant was on the east bank of the San Marcos River in current CaldwellCo on the GonzalesCo line. According to his land certificate, Silas Fuqua arrived in the DeWitt Colony with a family of 6 on 11 May 1830. Galba Fuqua’s single uncle Benjamin Fuqua also came to the DeWitt Colony in 1830 where he received a quarter sitio of land on the west bank of the San Marcos just north of the Silas Fuqua league. Ben Fuqua was purported to be a mechanic and mercantile business man who owned a structure called "Luna" in inner Gonzales town on his brother Silas Fuqua's town lots. It may have been a blacksmith or mercantile business although some have speculated that it might have been a Grog Shop alluded to by author Edwards in his 1836 Texas which he critically termed "the center of attraction for both young and old of the Texians". Benjamin Fuqua married Nancy King (they had a daughter Mary), older sister of William King, also a member of the Gonzales Relief force. Family legends say that both Galba and Benjamin Fuqua were treated like sons by John and Parmelia King after the death of Silas Fuqua and the marriage of Benjamin to Nancy King. Legend says that teenage Relief Force members John Gaston, Galba Fuqua and William King were all good friends as well as the three families. Susannah Dickerson, a survivor of the Alamo related that during the battle Galba Fuqua burst into the Alamo chapel where she was hiding and he tried to tell her something.Because both jaws were broken, she could not understand him before he rushed back to the battle.
    • Silus, Ephram, Benjmn Fuqua and Galba Fuqua
      Added by mkfell1 on 4 Jan 2009

      From: http://www.tamu.edu/ccbn/dewitt/oldgonzales18.htm#fuqua
      Benjamin Fuqua first joined the Austin Colony in 1828, but moved to the DeWitt Colony in 1830where he received a quarter league of land as a single man on the San Marcos River north of Gonzales just inside current Guadalupe County. The following letter from Richard Ellis in Alabama recommended the Fuquas to Stephen F. Austin:
      " State of Alabama, Town of Tuscumbia 3rd Jany. 1828 D COLO I beg leave to introduce to your aquantence and notice Mr Silus, Ephram and Benjmn Fuqua and Mr Job Ingram and Kye Ingram, these Gentlemen have emigrated to your Coloney to become permanent settlers---The Mr Fuquas are Mechanics. two of them of the best kind; they are honest and respectable men and are determined to suport the Government to which they go, I have had much conversation with Mr Silus Fuqua, on the present and future prospects of your coloney; and tho he has never seen it, he has a most corect idea of its great advantages, you will find him an inteligent man and I have no doubt will be an acquisition to your Setlement, I have known these gentlemen twelve years, the Mr Ingrams I have not known personaly but from their universal good character and the Gentlemen they go with, I feel no hesitation to recomend them to your attention...........RICHARD ELLIS."
      Benjamin was a representative from the Austin Municipality and a signer of the Declaration of the People of Texas declaring the intention of Texans to fight for the restoration of the Constitution of 1824 and support of a separate state of Texas within the Republic of Mexico. He was a mechanic (artisan) and mercantile businessman and was said to have owned the structure in inner Gonzales town called Luna which has been suggested as possibly one of the Grog Shops alluded to in David Edwards History of Texas. It may simply have been Benjamin Fuqua's general business establishment. Luna was on property deeded to Benjamin's brother Silas Fuqua who was a neighbor of John King. Benjamin Fuqua married King's oldest daughter Nancy. Benjamin Fuqua's nephew, Galba Fuqua and nephew by marriage, William King (Nancy King Fuqua's brother), were members of the Gonzales Relief Force to the Alamo and both died there in Mar 1836.
    • Galba Fuqua was last seen alive when he rushed into the Alamo chapel to give a message to Mrs. Dickerson who was hiding there. Like the other defenders, his body was burned on the orders of Mexican general Santa Ana and the ashes scattered so that there were no remains for the families to identify and bury.
    • FUQUA, GALBA (1819–1836). Galba Fuqua, Alamo defender, son of Silas and Sally (Taney) Fuqua, was born in Alabama on March 9, 1819. He was of French Huguenot descent. In the past he was also thought to be of Mexican or Jewish descent. As a resident of Gonzales, Texas, he was enrolled by Byrd Lockhart in the Gonzales Ranging Company of Mounted Volunteers on February 23, 1836. He rode to the relief of the Alamo garrison with this group and arrived on March 1, 1836. Susanna W. Dickinson later claimed that during the battle of the Alamo Fuqua came to her and tried to tell her something. He was unable to deliver his message because his jaw had been broken in the fighting. He died with the other Alamo defenders on March 6, 1836, three days short of his seventeenth birthday.
      BIBLIOGRAPHY: Daughters of the American Revolution, The Alamo Heroes and Their Revolutionary Ancestors (San Antonio, 1976). Daughters of the Republic of Texas, Muster Rolls of the Texas Revolution (Austin, 1986). Bill Groneman, Alamo Defenders (Austin: Eakin, 1990). Andrew Jackson Sowell, Rangers and Pioneers of Texas (San Antonio: Shepard, 1884; rpt., New York: Argosy-Antiquarian, 1964).

  • Sources 
    1. [S645] Ancestry.com, Texas, U.S., Land Title Abstracts,1700-2008, (Ancestry.com Operations Inc).

    2. [S751] Ancestry.com, U.S., Find a Grave® Index, 1600s-Current, (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.) (Reliability: 3).
      Name: Galba Fuqua
      Birth Date: 9 Mar 1819
      Birth Place: Alabama, United States of America
      Death Date: 6 Mar 1836
      Death Place: San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas, United States of America
      Cemetery: The Alamo
      Burial or Cremation Place: San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas, United States of America
      Has Bio?: Y
      Father:
      Silas Fuqua
      Mother:
      Sally Fuqua
      URL:
      https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8859412/galba-fuqua
      https://www.ancestry.com/discoveryui-content/view/85576898:60525?tid=&pid=&queryId=7914457903cd688ed04cd2b350b4562d&_phsrc=PFA26781&_phstart=successSource

    3. [S363] Ancestry.com, Alabama, Marriage Collection, 1800-1969, (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006.).