One of the family branches that has been told of quite often at gatherings and reunions was Ferguson Montgomery Small's.
F.M.Small, Susan Ann (Montgomery) Small, and J.S. Small, their son.
F.M.Small was born in Amite County, Mississippi on September 10, 1829. His father was Samual Small, who was a member of the 1st Mississippi Infantry, Co. B, in the Mexican-American War. He was wounded at Saltillo and buried in Monterrey. F.M. was a carpenter and farmer and provided for his family with his trade. His wife was Susan Ann Montgomery. She was born in 1826. Together they had a large family of thirteen children.
When the War Between the States broke out in 1861, F.M., like many of the men in Mississippi enlisted. His unit was the 39th Mississippi Infantry, Company H (nicknamed the "Dixie Guards."). Records indicate that he was captured at Port Hudson in 1863, yet testimony by compatriots was that he served a full three years in the Confederate army.
After the war, F.M. returned home to a burned-out farm, and by the time of his death in 1906, the family was in Sherman, Texas. His wife survived him by many years and lived to collect his soldier's pension. Susan's genealogy is known further back than F.M.'s. In fact, her line of ancestry goes back to the colonial period in Baltimore, Maryland.
Not long before her death in her mid-90s, Susan Ann Small published the following in a farm and ranch paper:
I am writing to thank the Dear Friends who remembered me with so many letters and cards. I surely did enjoy them. I will say to those who want to know something about me that I was born June 21, 1826, and was reared in Amite County Mississippi. My maiden name is Montgomery. I came to Texas in 1871. I am the mother of Thirteen children, six of whom are living. I have seventy-two grandchildren, and one hundred-sixty great-grandchildren and I now live with my children. I have been a member of the Church fifty-nine years. I know that I shall soon pass over the River and I hope to meet all of you good Christians in the home prepared over there.
The following poem was written by Susan Ann:
My life is a wearisome journey.
I'm tired of the dust and the heat
The rays of the sun bat upon me,
The briars are piercing my feet.
But the City to which I am going
Will the toils of the road seem sweet
When I get to the end of the way.