Shelby County TN Archives Obituaries.....GRAY-Beattie(Borland), Mary (Mollie) Melbourne February 17, 1938 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/tn/tnfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Bill Boggess william-boggess@webtv.net April 9, 2006, 3:30 am Northwest Arkansas Times, 2/16/38 (revision; 04/09/06)      Northwest Arkansas Times Fri Evening, Feb 18 1938           Price Two Cents Mrs. O. C. Gray's Dies in K C ;                    Burial Here         -------------- Step-Mother of Carl Gray, Union Pacific President; Funeral Tomorrow A.M.            ------------- Mrs. Mary Beattie Gray, step-mother of Carl Gray, president of the Union Pacific railway, and wife of the late Col. Oliver Crosby Gray, for many years a resident of Fayetteville and Little Rock, died yesterday in Kansas City. The body was cremated in Kansas City today and accompanied by Carl Gray and his step-sister, Mrs. John Beattie Bell of Belzoni, Miss., is expected to arrive in Fayetteville for burial tomorrow, over the Frisco lines. The funeral party will reach here at 9:35 a.m. and proceed at once to Evergreen cemetery where the ashes will be buried beside Col. Gray. Friends of the family who care to do so are asked to join the funeral party at the train and accompany them to the cemetery where funeral services will be said. Rev. Harry Goodykoontz, pastor of First Presbyterian church of which the Gray family were members during their residence here, and in which Col. Gray was an elder during his local residence, will officiate. Col. Gray was a veteran of the Confederate Army, third Arkansas Cavalry, and was buried in Fayetteville with Confederate military honors following his death in Little Rock where he served as head of the blind school for a number of years after leaving Fayetteville where he was on the University faculty. Col. and Mrs. Gray and Col. Gray's son, Carl Gray, and Mrs. Gray's two daughters resided in Fayetteville on Dickson street near the Frisco station where Carl Gray got his first railway job. A portion of the home is still standing. Mrs. Gray was the former Mrs. Mary M. Beattie. Besides her famous step-son, she leaves two daughters, Mrs. John Bell of Belzoni, Miss., who accompanies the ashes, and Miss Grace Beattie, an instructor in the Colorado School for the Deaf at Boulder, Colo., who is unable to be present. Mrs. Gray lived here from her marriage to Col. Gray in 1889 until the family removed to Little Rock where Col. Gray died. Her husband returned to Arkansas after the War Between the States to resume his teaching in which he was engaged before hostilities. He first was principal of St. John's Junior College in Little Rock and later its president from which office he and his family came to Fayetteville where he was professor of mathematics on the University faculty from 1875 to 1886. In 1886 Col. Gray resigned from the University faculty to accept principalship of Fayetteville public schools, which office he held two years, after which he returned to the University, a position he held until 1895, when he was elected superintendent of the blind school at Little Rock. From 1899 to 1901 he was principal of the Speers-Langford Institution at Searcy. In 1901 he was re-elected blind school superintendent, a position he held until his death. He was twice married. His first wife was Miss Virginia L. Davis, (Carl Gray's mother) to whom he was married in 1857. In 1889 he was married to Mrs. Mary M. Beattie who with her two daughters, mentioned above, and his son, survived him. Mrs. Gray for a number of years has been ill in Kansas City and her death was not unexpected.            -------<>------- Additional Comments: Not mentioned, is that her father was U S Senator Solon Borland, M D, as Colonel, July 29, 1861, was Col Gray's first Army commander. Third paragraph stipulates her ashes are buried along side husband O C Gray. A search of Volume VII, Fall 1985 publication by Northwest Arkansas Genealogical Society of Rogers, AR fails to show her buried with O C, V L, Ethel and Virginia, their page #31 in Cemeteries of Washington County, Arkansas. under Fayetteville's Evergreen Cemetery! Nor did we find such notation anywhere we searched except in the newspaper. Mrs O C Gray moved to Memphis Aprl 1869, married John Beattie in 1872, he died in 1878 yellow fever epidemic, as did her sister's husband then her sister Fanny Moores died of yellow fever, 23 August 1879. Mary moved to Little Rock shortley after 1880 census. File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/tn/shelby/obits/g/graybeat8ob.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.poppet.org/tnfiles/ File size: 4.9 Kb