All patriotic Texians revere the name
of William Barrett Travis, who at the age of only twenty-seven,
made the supreme sacrifice for the liberty of Texas.
When he came to Texas in 1831 he found a Mexican province,
dominated wholly by a tyrannical Mexican government,
which seemed to throw every obstacle in the way of development
of the country by the American colonists who had come
in. Stephen F. Austin had settled several hundred families
in Texas only five years before Travis came, and the
treatment accorded those colonists by the Mexican government
brought about the revolution that finally won independence
from Mexico. This story records the role that Travis
played in the great destiny-shaping events of those
days.
Mentions: * Travis was born in Edgefield
District, South Carolina, August 1, 1809 * Abbeville
District * Mark Travis, the father of the subject *
Edgefield * Jemima Stallsworth * Conecuh county, Alabama
* Prof. McCurdy * Miss Lucinda Cato * Patrick C. Jack
* President Bustamente * J. B. Bonham *
Henry Hartman, Medina County Settler
By A. J. Sowell
Account of some of the life experiences
of Mr. Henry Hartman, who offers details of early history
in the Medina county, TX region and also of one of the
most desperate encounters with Indians, one such as
but few of our most noted and famous Indian fighters
have passed through. Mr. Hartman came from the principality
of Schaumburg Lipe to New Fountain in 1860.
Mentions: * the Galveston News in Medina
county * Judge M. Charobiny * the Verde Creek * the
German Methodist church * Quihi * Castro's colony *
the sailing vessel Wesser * he moved to the upper Guadalupe,
twenty miles above Kerrville * Chris Wachter * Louis
Hartman, Fred Folk, Charles Martin * The Hondo River
* Captain Richarz * the terrible battle near Carrizo
* Sam H. Dickey * S. M. Dickey * Judge L. Gough *
Obituary
of Mrs. Amasa Clark
Brief obituary and bio. of the wife of
frontier veteran Amasa Clark, long-time Bandera, TX
resident. Mrs. Clark was born in Jackson county, Mississippi,
January 7, 1859, and came to Texas in 1881, settling
near Sabinal. She was married to Amasa Clark, a Mexican
War veteran, on May 4, 1885. Her husband died in January,
1927, at the ripe age of 102.
Mentions: * Mody C. Boatright and Harry
H. Ransom * G. C. Robinson, J. W. Moses, O. W. Nolen,
Thomas W. Dwyer, Florence Fenley, Frank Collinson, Homer
Hoyt, Frank M. Lockard, Thomas James, Hortense L. Sanger,
Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance, J. Frank Dobie, R. B.
Cunninghame Graham, Robert M. Denhardt, W. A. Whatley,
George Pattulo, Ruth Dodson, Frank Goodwyn, W. H. Hudson,
Lincoln A. Lang. W. J. Powell, James K. Greer, Helen
Michaelis, L. A. Guajardo, Riley Aiken Frank Bryan,
Frank S. Hastings, John A, Lomax, Arthur Babb, Jovita
Gonzales de Mireles, D. C. Earnest, Badger Clark. *
Dr. James C. Nowlin, Pioneer
By A. J. Sowell
Dr. James Crispin Nowlin was born in
Caldwell county, Kentucky, April 16, 1817. In 1821 he
went with his parents to the western district of Tennessee,
but came to Texas from Mississippi, by way of Missouri
and Kansas, in 1855. Dr. Nowlin was a slaveholder but
not liking the situation in Kansas, came on to Texas
and first settled in Gonzales county, and in 1856 moved
to Kerr county and settled near the present town of
Center Point. Here is his story.
Mentions: * the Rees family * Dr. Ridley
and family, Joshua Brown and family and De Witt Burney.
Tom Saner * George Phillips and Dr. Scott and family
lived at the mouth of Silver Creek and Mrs. Denton lived,
at the mouth of Cherry, below the present town of Center
Point * Mr. Long and George Nichols lived on Verde Creek,
and Nichols had a sawmill there * Captain Parmer. Henry
Moore, * Henry Moore. Captain Parmer * Rodrigues, a
Mexican guide and trailer * the pasture of Alonzo Rees
* A Mexican named Jim Tafolla * Fort McKavett * Curry's
Creek * Mr. Ammond's, on the Guadalupe River, * Francis
Keiser and Charley Williams * John W. Sansom * Judge
Jones * Capt. John W. Sansom * The Tonkaway chief, Castile,
* William Causten * Neal Coldwell's company of rangers
* Alexander Merritt * Devil's River * Bear Creek, fifteen
miles from the present Junction City * Wallace Creek
* Pink Jones and a Mexican named Serelda *
Suggestions About Family Histories
By Edwin Starkey, 706 N. E. 18th Street,
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Excellent advice from an experienced
Genealogist on best methods of acquiring useful and
meaningful data, especially geared toward frontier and
pioneer research.
The Killing of Jesse James
The account of Jesse James death from
the April 15, 1882 issue of the Runnels County Record,
published in the now defunct town of Runnels, Texas.
Mentions: * World's Hotel * Robert and
Charles Ford * The Home of the Fords * Jim Cummings
* Bob Ford * Jefferson City * Mr. Howard * Wood Hite
* N. H. Rose, Photographer *
Heroines of the Hills
By T. U. Taylor, Autsin, Texas
This is excellent early history and genealogy
of Gillespie County, TX. Because it deals with the earlies
events and origins of the region, it contains much valuable
history of the hardy German families who settled the
region.
Mentions: * Louis Jordan, a German-American
* Grandma Klingelhoefer * The Klingelhoefers were among
the first German settlers who came to Texas and settled
at New Braunfels * John O. Meusebach * Dave Dillingham
* Ben Thompson * Mrs. Robert Lewis * Mrs. Clara Resseman
Feller * John Peter Resseman * the Meusebach treaty
* William Feller * Mr. Pellet * Peter Burg * Mr. Kirchner
and Mr. Blank * Martin Dittmar * Annie Elizabeth Dittmar
* John George Dittmar * Reverend Rode * a beautiful
young lady by the name of Eckert * Beaver Creek in Mason
county * Billy Peril, known as William A. Peril * Mary
O11ie Lock *
Abel Morgan, Soldier and Romeo
By Grace Miller White, San Antonio, Texas
Account of eccentric frontier soldier
and enigmatic figure, Abel Morgan who was born in February,
1790 in Hopkins county, Kentucky. As a soldier, he followed
Ben Milam at Bexar; cared for the wounds of Colonel
Fannin at Goliad; listened to General Sam Houston deliver
an impassioned speech to his men; and in later years
visited with John C. Duval, the father of Texas literature,"
who not only made his getaway at Goliad but lived to
write an account of it, (Early Times in Texas). Abel
remembered them all. But what was his true legacy? What
happened in Mexico while he was there fighting for the
cause of Texas freedom? Who was Thomas Smith? Here is
the story.
Mentions: * the famous Morgans of North
Carolina * Doctor Stuart, a wise old Scot who had come
over from Edinburgh to become a frontier doctor * Shiloh
community * Honey Grove * Shiloh graveyard * Paducah,
Kentucky * Thomas Smith * Concepcion * General Cos *
William Scurlock * Doctors Barnard and Shackleford,
* Clarence B. Wharton * the Lovings, the Millers, the
Pratts, the Littlepages, and the Morgans, *
When Populism Was in Flower
By J. Marvin Hunter
Account of Populist party activities
in and around Mason county, TX and their encounter with
the Mason Herald newspaper in the 1890's.
Mentions: * Coxey * Menardville * John
Warren Hunter * the People's Party, or the Populist
Party * . V. Wood, E. L. Sewalt, L. B. Earnest, J. W.
Baker, O. L. McMahan, J. W. Reeder, W. A. Hall, J. D.
Patterson, A. J. Boston, T. H. Westbrook, Baker Batterton,
and William Lackey * D. C. Broyles * William Jennings
Bryan * Thomas E. Watson * Sewell * Dr. D. J. Grandstaff,
a leading physician of Mason * Mark M. (Brick) Pomeroy
* Brick Pomeroy *
The Bloody Days of Bastrop
By John Henry Brown
“Before and immediately after the Texas
revolution of 1835-6, Gonzales, on the Guadalupe, and
Bastrop, on the Colorado, with the upper settlements
on the Brazos, were more exposed to Indian depredations
than any other distinct localities in Texas. These sketches
have more fully done justice to Gonzales and the Brazos,
than to Bastrop, the home of the Burlesons, Coleman,
Billingsley, Wallace, Thomas H. Mays, Wm. H. Magill,
the brothers Wiley, Middleton and Thomas B. J. Hill,
Washington and John D. Anderson, Dr. Thomas J. Gasley,
L. C. Cunningham, Wm. A. Clopton, Bartlett Sims, Cicero
Rufus Perry, the Wilbargers, Dr. J. W. Robertson, John
Caldwell, Hurch Reed, John H. Jenkins, Hon. William
Pinkney Hill, for a time Robert M. Williamson, the eloquent
orator and patriot, Highsmith, Eblin, Carter Anderson,
Dalrymple, Eggleston, Gilleland, Blakey, Page, Preston
Conley, the Hardemans, the Andrews brothers, the Crafts,
Taylor, the Bartons, Pace, John W. Bunton, Martin Wolper,
Geren Brown, Logan Vandeveer, George Green, Godwin,
Garwood, Haldeman, Miller, Holder, Curtis, Bain, Hood,
McLean; Graves, Allen, Henry Jones, Thomas Nicholson,
Vaughan, Hugh Childers, Hancock and John Walters.
Aside from many important battles, in
which a large per cent of those men and others not named,
participated, as at and around San Antonio in 1835,
at San Jacinto in 1836 (in which fifty of them fought
under Col. Burleson in Capt. Jesse Billingsley's company,
and in which Lemuel Blakey was killed, and Capt. Billingsley,
Logan Vandeveer, Washington Anderson, Calvin Page and
Martin Walter were wounded), at Plum creek in 1840,
in which a hundred of them and thirteen Toneahua Indians
fought under Burleson, and other important contests,
for fifteen years they were exposed to Indian forays
and had numberless encounters and also fruitless pursuits
after those ever active and cunning enemies. Some of
these sanguinary incidents have been described; but,
many have not and some, from the death of the participants
and failing memories, never will be. But enough has
been preserved to shed a halo of honor on those pioneers,
by this writer many years ago styled—"The brave men
of Bastrop."
In this chapter, availing myself somewhat
of the recollections of Mr. John H. Jenkins, I will
briefly summarize some of the incidents not heretofore
given.”
Further mentions: * Lieut. Wrenn, of
Coleman's Company * Mr. Gocher (or Gotier) east of Bastrop
* Mrs. Crawford * Mr. Spaulding, a trader * Piney creek
* Mrs. Hart and Weaver * Messrs. Robinson and Dollar
BUILDING OF STATE CAPITOL
Account of William Bouldin of West Oakland,
California, whom as a brakeman on the Houston & Texas
Central railway in the early 1880s helped haul the stone
for the statehouse from the quarries at Burnet 75 miles
away. Describing the capitol construction from the angle
of the men who transmitted the materials, Bouldin said
the blocks of granite were so large and the grade so
difficult two engines were required to pull five loaded
cars from Burnet to Austin. More than 15,000 carloads
were brought to Austin and shunted to the building site
on a specially constructed spur. The cornerstone weighed
16,000 pounds.
An Escape From the Alamo
Prairie Plains, Grimes County, Texas,
This account embraces a report of the
last scene in the Alamo that has ever been made known
to the survivors of those who fell in that fortress.
Mentions: * Moses Rose, a native of France,
was an early immigrant to Texas * Rose was a warm friend
of Col. James Bowie * Tapley Holland * W. P. ZUBER *
Prairie Plains, Grimes County, Texas * William P. Zuber
* MARY ANN ZUBER *
Some Tragedies I Have Witnessed
By J. Marvin Hunter
From the author's vivid recollection,
certain tragedies of which he was an eye-witness are
recalled.
Mentions: * the shooting of John Vaden
at Fort McKavett in 1886 * Lige Reynolds * a man by
the name of Lowrey * Mrs. Reynolds * Sulphur Springs
in Hopkins county * Ben Daniels * Sam Wallick's store
* P. C. Baird, * John Simmons * Jesse Simmons * Sheriff
John Butler * Drs. Gatliff and Beck * Devil's River
News office * Decker Hotel in Sonora, Texas * Mayer
Bros. & Co's. store * Walter Sapp * Ollie Sapp * Charlie
Adams * Frank Johns * Jim Hunter * Mayer Bros. store
* a restaurant in Clifton, Arizona, in July, 1900 *
Indian Attack Upon the Gregg Family
By Judge Rufus Y. King
This account is taken from a paper by
Judge Rufus Y. King which was read before the Bell County
Old Settlers Association, 1903. It concerns the bloody
and brutal Indian attack upon the family of Judge John
Gregg who came from Alabama to what was then Milam county,
about six miles northeast of the town of Caldwell in
the present county of Burleson. The event takes place
early in the spring of 1841.
Mentions: * Claiborne Fitch * Sterling
Fitch, a brother of Claiborne Fitch * Lucinda Gregg,
Martha Gregg and Mary Gregg * Thaddeus Gregg, Ellis
Gregg, John Gregg * Henry Gregg * Mrs. Jacob Reed *
Mrs. King * Gabriel Jackson * John E. King * Capt. J.
D. Black of Fannin county * Phantom Hill * Tom Cade
*
A Report on yellow Fever, Made in 1853.
This article detailing the tragic yellow
fever plague of Selma, Alabama is a report made to the
Sanitary Commission of New Orleans by Dr. A. G. Mabry,
in 1853, and was sent to Frontier Times by his son,
Colonel W. S. Mabry of Selma, Alabama.
Mentions: * Valley Creek * Beach Creek
* Broad and Water Streets * John Erhart, a German, a
clerk in a grocery store on the corner of Broad and
Water Streets * Mr. Nilands, a clerk in a clothing store
on Broad Street * McCraw and Prestidge's building *
Mr. Smith, * Col. Burr * blackvomit * Mr. Blevins *
Mr. Mitchell, a young lawyer * Maj. Gee of the Dallas
House * Mr. Bradshaw * Mr. White, Mr. Atkinson and Dr.
Barnum died, two or three with black vomit *
Murder of Mrs. Hunter and Daughter
By John Henry Brown
Account of assault and murder that occurred
in the year 1840, in the valley of Red River, about
eight miles east or below the trading house or village
of Old Warren and several miles from any other habitation.
Mentions: * Mr. William Lankford of Warren
* the first settlements along Red river in the counties
of Fannin and Grayson *
News Items of Half a Century Ago
News items from old Texas newspapers,
circa 1850's-1880's, are gleaned many notable incidents.
Mentions: * Leonard Haynes, son of Collector
Haynes of Brownsville, Texas * District Attorney W.
E. Cummings * The Ballinger and Menardville United States
catamaran mail and stage line * Jose Maldonado * Paint
Rock * George Thomerson * Judge J. D. Scruggs * Mr.
Maldonado * Mr. Ramirez * Barber Amarine * Justice Wilkinson
* Captain Lee Hall * Miss Bessie Weidman * Bandera Bugle,
December 4, 1880 * HYMEN'S ALTAR * Hal L. Gosling *
Miss Nellie Mayes * A tragedy was enacted at Hondo City,
Medina county, which shocks all who hear it. W. D. Ward,
formerly editor of the Castroville Quill, and at present
traveling agent of the San Antonio Daily Express, and
Robert G. Fly, son of Rev. B. F. Fly of Gonzales county,
entered a saloon to get a glass of beer. Ward had been
drinking to excess and was crazed from the effects.
After the drink they had a short controversy, when Ward
without provocation... * W. F. McNealy, head boss for
Schreiner, Lytle & Light * Mr. R. S. Davis * Deputy
U. S. Marshal Fred Niggli * Sheriff Foster, of Medina
county * Bob Moris * W. D. Burnett * Emil Bader captain
of the German squad * Captain Joe Shely's company *
Brown Litburu *
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