In 1836 the 50,000
Texans then fighting for independence from Mexico were
beset not only on the western and southern borders of
the State, but as well on the northern and eastern borders.
On the south and west they had to guard against Mexico
enemies and on the north and east against Indians. The
tribe from which they had most to fear was the Cherokee.
The United States had forced these people, then half-civilized,
to migrate to the country west of the Mississippi river,
and a portion of the tribe under Chief Bowles had moved
and built their homes south of the Red River, and thence
had spread across the head-waters of the Sabine river
into Texas. Here is the story.
Mentions: * Gen.
Sam Houston and Col. John Forbes, * Col. Alexander Horton
* John H. Reagan * Chief Bowles * Gen. Edward Burleson
* The Hon. W. G. W. Jowers * the Killough and Williams
families * one Cordray, a half-breed Mexican * Lost
Prairie, Ark * Colonel Forbes * Mr. Lacy * John Ross
* Kelsey H. Douglas * Gen. Edward Burleson's regiment
* John Bowles, a son of Chief Bowles * . Albert Sidney
Johnston * David S. Kaufman * Dr. Rogers of Nacogdoches
*
The Haunted Spring Near Eagle Pass
By Taylor Thompson
Account of a
bold spring of water located about thirty miles above
Eagle Pass, on the Mexican side of the Rio Grande, where
a small rivulet is formed by this spring and flows down
a narrow and beautiful valley until its waters are mingled
with those of the Bravo del Norte, about half a mile
away. In this little valley the grass is green and luxuriant,
the wild flowers peculiar to that region abound and
the various shrubs and chaparral indigenous to that
section grow luxuriantly, while on each side of the
valley the soil is arid and usually has a parched appearance,
where neither flowers nor grass are to be seen. But
the tranquil scene is not all there is to this unusual
place. Here is the story.
Mentions: * Piedras
Negras * Juan Morales * St. Kene, in Cornwall *
Massacre of the Russell Family
By John Warren
Hunter
“One
of the most atrocious murders ever committed on the
frontier was the slaughter of the Russell family at
their home on Martin's Prairie, Wise county, in August,
1868. Mrs. Polly Russell was a widow with four children.
The youngest was a boy of ten years, the next a boy
17, third Martha Russell, a beautiful girl in her teens,
and lastly, Bean Russell, a young man. On the day of
this shocking tragedy. Mrs. Russell was helplessly surrounded
by her three youngest children. On Sandy Creek, some
miles distant, the government was operating a saw mill
where lumber was being furnished for the building of
the post at Fort Richardson, and at this saw mill Bean
Russell was working. Although the ever present danger
of Indian attack was realized and guarded against in
all possible ways, yet this family must earn its living
from the soil and must perforce remain upon the exposed
farm to achieve that worthy purpose, meanwhile trusting
a kindly Providence for safety and protection.
Situated a
short distance from Mrs. Russell's house was a large
cane patch, and in this patch, at some hour in the forenoon,
probably before daylight in the morning, a large party
of Indians had found concealment...”
Mentions: * Harvey
Russell * Jimmie Russell * Decatur * Martha Russell
* Upper Catlett Creek * J. D. White * Dick Couch, Jr
* Denton county *
“The
hellish work was now begun. Just who fell first or which
was the last to fall at the house will never he known.
The home was looted and every .article of furniture
was wrecked. The window panes and frames were smashed,
the feather beds ripped open and their contents thrown
to the winds, and all articles of clothing carried off.
No pen, no
language can depict the horror of the scene that met
the gaze of the faithful toiling son and brother, Bean
Russell, when he returned from his day's labor that
evening at sundown. His little brother lay dead and
mangled in the yard. Across the threshold of the cabin
door lay the mother in pools of her own blood. Blood
everywhere, and small footprints of crimson, made by
the little boy, covered the floor. In vain he called
for Harvey and the sister but no response came, and
with grief unspeakable he closed the door on the desolate,
wrecked and ruined home and hastened towards the saw
mill. At dawn the following morning he returned with
a party of men to bury the dead. Farther search revealed
the body of Harvey Russell under the wreckage in the
cabin home, but the sister was nowhere to be found.
During the
following day the young man was crazed with the one
burning, consuming desire—to find his sister, all the
while being oppressed with a certain sense of apprehension
that she had been murdered and left in the wilderness
to be devoured by wolves. With a party of men from who
rallied to his aid he took the trail and followed the
Indians. Reaching a point about three miles from home
they came upon all that was mortal of poor, a ghastly
remnant of the beautiful girl just budding into a joyous
womanhood. Wild beasts had torn the flesh from the disjointed
frame and near at hand lay the bonnet which the girl
had warn at the time of her capture...”
Early Days in the Ministry
By A. W. Young.
Account of Mr.
A. W. Young, who was a missionary preacher in the Chickasaw
nation.
Mentions: * I.
T. Morris * Queen's Peak, nine miles north of Bowie,
in Montague county, Texas * Dripping Springs and Signal
Peak about 25 miles above Red River * Montague county,
Texas * Belcher * old Spanish Fort, or Burlington *
John Schrock, a saloon-keeper at Spanish Fort * The
old Chisholm trail crossed Red River northwest of the
present town of Nocona, Texas * Belcherville * Peta
Nocona * Alex Belcher * the M. K. & T. branch line from
Whitesboro to Wichita Falls * P. W. Horn, * E. Y. Horn
* Jack Davis * Dee Hard * Joe Bailey * Gainesville *
Judge Charles F. Spencer of Wichita Falls * Bill Davis
* Tom Garrison and Dee Hart * Duncan *
Indian Troubles in East Texas
By J. Marvin
Hunter
George W. Wood
was a native of the State of Alabama and at the age
of twenty he married, Miss Jane Killough and came to
Texas in 1836. He first settled in Cherokee county just
before the war with the Cherokee Indians. They became
so dangerous that the settlers went to Nacogdoches county
for safety. In the fall, however, it became necessary
for them to return to Cherokee county to gather the
crops they had planted before leaving. This was in the
fall of 1837. While on the way back to their homes Mr.
Wood and other settlers met an old friendly Indian who
warned them of danger and advised them not to go back
into Cherokee county. This advice was not heeded and
they proceeded on their way. Here is the story.
Mentions: * Allen
Killough and his family. * Miss Killough and Miss Williams
* Michael Young * Mr. Haynes * Panfilo de Narvaez *
First Masonic Grand Lodge
By J. Marvin
Hunter
“Somewhat
dimmed by age—it was written one hundred and nine years
ago—but still plainly decipherable, the signature of
Sam Houston, first president of the Republic of Texas,
is attached to the proceedings of the meeting held in
Houston, December 20, 1837, at which it was decided
to form the Masonic Grand Lodge of Texas. These are
found in the first records of the organization, contained
in a large leather-bound volume, and stored in the vault
of the grand lodge temple at Waco. The first record
of a state gathering of Masons of Texas reads as follows...”
Mentions: * Holland
Lodge No. 36 of A. F. & A. M., * Brother Anson Jones
* Jeff Wright .and Thomas G. Western * Thomas J. Rusk,
I. W. Burton, Charles. S. Taylor, Adolphus Stern and
K. H. Douglas * McFarland Lodge No. 41, St. Augustine,
* Mr. Winchell * Mr. Stern * Holland Lodge No. 36, Houston—Sam
Houston, Anson Jones,. Milam No. 40, Nacogdoches * Adolphus
Stern; right worshipful grand junior warden, Jefferson
Wright; right worshipful grand junior warden, Christopher
Dart; right worshipful grand secretary H Winchell; right
worshipful grand treasurer, T. G. Western. * A. S. Ruthven
of Galveston * John A. Wharton, Asa Brigham, James A.
E. Phelps, Alexander Russell * J. P. Caldwell. * Asa,
Brigham; Junior Warden, J. P. Caldwell. * J. P. Henderson
* the Tarascan Indians in the Patzcuaro Lake region
of Mexico *
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