How Van Horn, Texas, Got Its
Name
By Colonel M.
L. Crimmins, U. S. A., Retired
BRIGADIER GENERAL
Robert Osborn Van Horn, U. S. Army,
affirms that Van Horn, Culberson
county, Texas, was probably named
after his father, 2d Lieutenant
James Hudson Van Horn, who was stationed
there before the Civil War. Here
is the story of the early development
of that town.
Further Mentions:
Major General W. F. Smith * Fort
D. A. Russell, Wyoming * Fort McKinney,
Wyoming * Fort Shaw, Montana * Dr.
Albert J. Myer * Lieutenant E. P.
Alexander * Lieutenant J. E. B.
Stuart * the Van Horn Mountains
* the Van Horn basin *
Cattle On Range Branded With
Running Iron
Account details
much good information on the running
iron method of branding cattle versus
the stamp iron method. Much detail
included on the various brands operative
into the 'open range' days of the
1880s and before.
Mentions: Gus
L. Ford * W. C. Gay * one of Coleman
county's pioneers, C. C. Hudson,
branded `Coon' on the left side
and as a consequence was known far
and wide as Coon Hudson. * the pioneer,
R. L. Dunman * a brand like 'Bar-Six'
* the BSK brand of the Busk ranch
* the ATB brand of the Adam T. Brown
ranch * the Overall brand TYE, which
was a contraction of Mrs. Overall's
given name * 'Yong' which was the
Andy Young ranch brand for both
cattle and horses * the Morris ranch
brand (Rafter-Three) * 'OH-Triangle.'
* `Turkey Track' *
The Ghost Of Camp
Colorado
Robert E. Howard
Account of a substantial
ghost, built of square cut stone
and sturdy timber, but just the
same it is a phantom, rising on
the ruins of a forgotten past. It
is all that is left of the army
post known as Camp Colorado in the
pioneer days of Texas. This camp,
one of a line of posts built in
the 1850's to protect the settlers
from Indian raids, had a career
as brief as it was stirring. Here
is the story.
Mentions: the
Jim Ned creek in Coleman county
* Henry Sackett * Major Van Dorn,
Captain Theodore O'Hara * General
John B. Hood, General James P. Major,
General Kirby Smith, and the famous
General Fitzhugh Lee * Peta Nacona
* Captain Sul Ross * Captain Maltby's
Frontier Battalion Rangers * Dove
creek, in Runnels county * Big Foot
and Jape the Comanche * Miss Mary
MacNamara, daughter of Captain Michael
MacNamara * the Sackett house *
the great Dibrell ranch * white
faced short horned Herefords of
Breeze's breed * Andalusia *
WHITLOCK MASSACRE
RETOLD
In this account,
Mrs. W. J. Faris, 78, of Llano,
vividly recalls the massacre of
the Whitlock family in Llano county
in 1870, the major Indian crime
of early days in that section. She
was a neighbor of the Whitlock family
when a girl.
Mentions: the
Yett settlement near Marble Falls
* the Whitlock home on the east
side of Long Mountain * the late
Isaac Sampson Haile, who settled
in the Long Mountain community in
1853 *
Old Tascosa, Cowboy Capital Of
The Plains
By Roscoe Logue
As the cattle
industry was pushed westward by
the oncoming settler, the cowman
rode in the vanguard of civilization
and flocked to those streams of
living water as their only resource.
Years previous to their arrival,
Tascosa, destined to become the
breezy cowtown metropolis of the
Plains, was one of the few Mexican
settlements that dotted the Canadian,
and one Don Cassimero Romero, an
enterprising sheep owner and freighter,
was their patriarch. Worthwhile
creeks, up which their fleecy flocks
could be drifted, made this an expanding
little area and redoubtable Mexican
"villa." It was christened Atascosa
by the Mexicans. Little did they
know the ignoble future and ultimate
demise that was destined for this
village. Here is the story.
Mentions: Oliver
Goldsmith * the head of Palo Duro
* the Canadian river * Col. Goodnight
* the famous JA Ranch * Howard and
McMasters from Dodge City * Rhinehart,
from Springer, New Mexico * Cone
and Duran * Captain Jinks' saloon
* Jack Ryan * Miss Lizzie Rhinehart
of Tascosa * Mrs. Tom Bugbee of
Old Clarendon * Mrs. Mary Goodnight
* "Hogge" Jenkins * Hogtown * "Boot
Hill" cemetery * Mobeetie * Judge
Wallace * Cape Willingham * C. B.
Vivian * the F. W. & D. Railway
* Amarillo and Channing * Mrs. Frenchy
McCormick * Romero's yard *
Recounts Days Of Buffaloes And
Indians
B. F. Blanton,
the son of Ransom Gwynn Blanton,
a Virginian who helped the Allen
brothers launch Houston on its path
to metropolitan greatness, recalls
in this story, the Texas of yesteryear
when the great cities of today were
the feeding grounds for vast herds
of bison or the stamping grounds
for large tribes of Indians.
Mentions: W. N.
Blanton * Ham White, who was one
of the truly bad hombres of his
day * Fayetteville * the Dripping
Springs post office * Blanton's
oldest brother, James * Lockhart
* P. J. Willis & Brother * James
Blanton, 90, of Bowie, Ariz., Mrs.
Betty Burchard, 88, of Waxahachie;
Mrs. Mattie McCarthy, 79, of Los
Angeles ; Andrew B. Blanton, 81,
of Whitney, and Mrs. Emma Christian,
69, of Kyle. * Captain Becknell
* the Mier Expedition * Mr. Ransom
G. Blanton * Mr. Blanton volunteered
and joined the company of Captain
William Mosby Eastland * Alexander
Somervell * Captain Wm. S. Fisher
* Mr. Asa Hill * Rutersville *
"Thundering Herd" Times Recalled
Dean T. U. Taylor's
new book, "The Chisholm Trail and
Other Routes," published by Frontier
Times in October, is receiving a
lot of favorable comment from newspapers
of both Texas and Oklahoma. One
of the best reviews that has come
to our notice is that given by the
Chickasha (Oklahoma) Daily Express,
and which is reprinted in this article.
Mentions: Oklahoma
at Red River Station, near the site
of the present bridge on Highway
81 * Shanoan Springs, in the Chickasha
city park * the late "Uncle Buck"
Sparks * Silver City, near Tuttle
* Kingfisher * Doan's Crossing,
far to the west of Red River Station
* Elk City * Woodward * Cantonment
(later Fort) Gibson * Tiana * Caldwell,
Pond Creek, Enid * Concho * the
Washita Valley * Johnny Left-Hand
Spring in Blaine county, not far
from Geary * James White * John
Chisum, Major Butterfield * Mrs.
Harriet Cluck *
A Journey Through Texas In 1856
By Frederick Law
Olmsted
(Continued from
Last Month)
TWO INTERESTING
BOOKLETS
Account describes
two very entertaining and interesting
booklets, the first "Under Texas
and Border Skies," 111 pages, and
the second "Tumble Weeds and Barb
Wire Fences," 110 pages, both of
which deal with the Panhandle country
and West Texas. The author, a Mr.
Logue is truly a pioneer in the
Plains region.
The Blue Hills Of Bandera
T. C.. Richardson
Account describing
original settlement of Bandera county
which lies on the upper courses
of the Medina river. When a few
daring settlers began to locate
on the upper Medina in the early
50's, it was as primitive as when
Cabeza de Vaca skirted its boundary
more than three centuries before.
Giant cypresses lined the banks
of the purling streams; pecans deployed
in open order back of the close
ranks of the feathery cypress, and
showered down their autumnal. harvest
for the taking; patriarchal liveoaks
dotted the upland slopes and level
glades, and tall cedars cast their
shadows over …
Mentions: Piedras
Pintas ranges of mountains * the
Balcones * The Edwards Plateau *
Ben McCulloch * Captain Jack Hays
* Elder Lyman Wight and his Mormon
colony of about 250 people * Noah
Smithwick * Zodiac * the Pedernales
* Hamilton creek, near Austin *
Charles de Montel * John James *
the Castro colony * Mrs. Francis
Moravietz * Amasa Clark * the Nowlin
family * Turkey Creek * Major Wayne
* Fort Defiance, New Mexico * Zuni
* Hadji Ali, the last survivor *
Quartzite * Lieutenant Beale * One
of the first cattlemen to adopt
Bandera was J. L. Stevens * Andrew
Mansfield * Karnes City * Judge
J. B. Davenport * James McElroy
* Colin Campbell * the James ranch
in Bandera * Among those who drove
cattle to California from Texas
was James Walker * Damon Slater
of Llano * the mutilated body of
Jack Phillips * Lieutenant Bullis
*
"INTO THE SETTING
SUN."
Description of
"Into the Setting Sun", the title
of a fine 193-page book describing
the history of Coleman county written
by Mrs. Beatrice Grady Gay, of Santa
Anna, Texas.
Let's Know Texas And Texans
BY WILL H. MAYES
Mentions: Jean
Lafitte * DeLeon's colony * Los
Adaes * Robeline, La., * Sterling
C. Robertson * George C. Childress
* the Kleburg ancestors * Robert
Justus Kleberg * Robert J. Kleberg
* Westphalia, Germany * Atascosita
road * Bailey Hardeman * William
J. E. Hard * Henry Rosenburg, of
Galveston * James C. Collingsworth
* Francisco Madero * Atascocito
* William Sydney Porter *
With The Spanish Explorers Of
1528-1542
Dr. Robert T.
Hill
THE writer of
this article was not a historian,
but a geographer and a geologist,
who was the only man who has traveled
over and scientifically studied
every foot of the routes of three
great explorers-Cabeza de Vaca,
Francisco Coronado and Hernando
de Soto. This is his story. Lengthy
and detailed account also includes
map of the expeditions.
Mentions: Cabeza
de Vaca, Francisco Coronado and
Hernando de Soto * The Narvaez expedition
* Dr. Sauer * Oviedo * Melchoir
Diaz and Father Marcos * The Coronado
expedition financed by Mendoza *
San Bernalillo (Tiguex) * Pecos
Pueblo (Cicuye) * the village of
Haxa or Taovaya, a Wichita village
on Red River near Spanish Fort *
Moscoso * Demederes * Parilla *
the Caddo Reservation * the Davis
Mountains or Volcanic Plateau *
Chisos Country * Terlinga * Socorro
* Jornado del Muerto * the Datil
Mountains * the Cananea Mountains
* Sonora Valley * Culiacan * Yaqui
and the Sinaloa * Quivera *
A Soldier Of Fortune In Texas
Account given
by R. H. Williams, "sometime lieutenant
in the Kansas Rangers and afterwards
a captain in the Texas Rangers."
Captain Williams was an Englishman,
a soldier of fortune and in this
story, offers many thrilling anecdotes
of his experiences on the border.
Mentions: General
Gordon * E. Lee Childe * General
Scott * General Twig, * the K. G.
C. (Knights of the Golden Circle)
lodges in Eastern Texas * Colonel
Ben McCulloch * T. Paul * atCastroville
* Nauvoo * Lieutenant Hill *
William Henry Huddle, Texas Artist
Mrs. Lucille Runnels
Wright
Account describing
the works of Mr. William Henry Huddle,
a prominent Texas artist.
Mentions: his
cousin, J. F. Fisher * Miss Nannii,
Z. Carver * the Jamestown Colony
* Munich, Germany * Governor L.
S. Ross * Presidents Henry Smith,
David G. Burnett, Samuel Houston,
Mirabeau B. Lamar and Anson Jones;
and Governors J. P. Henderson, A.
J. Hamilton, J. W. Throckmorton,
E. J. Davis, Richard Coke, R. B.
Hubbard, 0. M. Roberts, John Ireland
and L. S. Ross. * General Thomas
Jefferson Rusk * Judge A. W. Terrell
* Governor Frank R. Lubbock * James
Stephen Hogg * Governor Joseph D.
Sayer's administration * Surgeon
George Ewing *
The Ku Klux Klan In Texas
By James A. Wright.
The roots and
early development of the vigilante
organization and especially its
early activities in Texas is the
subject of this account. One
of the most active of the Texas
clans was that of Tyler. There was
a reason for this. Tyler was the
Eastern head. quarters of the Federal
forces that occupied the state following
the Civil war. The force stationed
here consisted of two regiments
of colored troops. These troops,
like, nearly all soldier bodies
of that period, without due constraint
were given to the practice of unlawful
depredations upon the person and
property of the citizenship of the
community. This practice reached
the point in and around Tyler where
white women did not dare to leave
the safety of their homes without
male escort. Even the men would
not venture out at night alone.
This state of things finally became
unbearable, when suddenly there
appeared upon the streets and roads
nearby a company of robed and hooded
mounted men, who rode slowly and
silently without the sound of voice
or anything but that made by the
hoofs of the horses striking the
roadways. However, evidence of their
activity was not lacking, for upon
the limbs of trees and elsewhere
could be seen almost every morning
the gruesome dangling body of a
negro soldier.
Further Mentions:
John Polk, brother of James K. Polk,
the President * John Wright, who
was ably supported by another young
man named Wellborn * the intrepid
cavalry leader, "Jeb" Stuart, of
the Confederate army. *
Stoicism And Endurance Of The
Indian
Various accounts
are offered in this story describing
the incredible endurance and fortitude
of Indians under privation, torture
and suffering.
Mentions: a family
named Tanner * Sol Tanner * Mrs.
Martha P. Williams * Mrs. S. C.
Hutchison of Houston * Mrs. Belle
Bridges of Mason, Texas * M. V.
Bridges * H. M. Holmes * Henry Zinsmeister's
son, Louis Zinsmeister * Mr. and
Mrs. Foster Harris of Dallas * Dr.
Robert T. Hill * the Jefferson Hotel
* Miss Rebecca Smith of the Texas
Christian University, Fort Worth
* . Dr. L. W. Payne of the University
of Texas * Mr. and Mrs.. Fred Hoeflin
* W. H. Roberts * George Baker of
San Saba * His grandfather, James
H. Baker * Trickham, Texas * Dick
Cheatem