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Frontier
Times Magazine
Vol. 20 # 6 March,
1943
Contents
of this volume:
Robbery of the Union Pacific
By J. Marvin Hunter.
In September, 1877, a Union Pacific train
was held up and robbed of sixty thousand dollars in
gold at Big Springs, Nebraska, by Joel Collins, Bill
Heffridge, Tom Nixon, Jim Berry, Jack Davis and Sam
Bass. This was one of the most sensational train robberies
of that day and time, and created a great deal of excitement
all over the country. Here is the story.
Mentions: * Deadwood, South Dakota *
"The Authentic History of Sam Bass and His Gang," published
at Denton, Texas, in 1878: * Duck Creek * Ogallala,
Station, Nebraska * Sheriff Bardsley of Ellis county,
Kansas * Mrs. Mattie Johnston of Pipe Creek, Texas *
Last Range of Big-Foot Wallace
By F. E. Harris, Bertram, Texas
Bigfoot Wallace was a noted frontiersman,
an efficient Ranger, a soldier of the Mier Expedition
and the Mexican War, a Ranger captain, and a mail carrier
from San Antonio to El Paso in the early 1850s, when
it took a brave man to hold such a post. A great deal
has been written about his more adventurous life, but
little has been said about his activities as a free
grass rancher on vacant lands of the Southwest frontier;
first on the Medina from 1840 until 1857; then on the
Chicon until 1873, and lastly on the San Miguel where
barbed wire "played hell" with his range, and from which
he was evicted by a land loan corporation. Here are
the details on this part of the good man's life.
Mentions: * John C. Duvall * the Chicon
range * Hardy & Lamkin * Mr. Cummings * John S. Thomas
* Mr. O'Brien * Bramlet, Doc Cochran * Longview Cemetery
*
When Barbed Wire Came to Texas
By J. Marvin Hunter.
J. F. Glidden, a farmer of DeKalb Illinois,
invented barbed wire in 1873, but it did not come into
general use in Texas until the late 1870s and early
1880s, to cause a great deal of trouble and some bloodshed.
Previous to the introduction of barbed wire the country
was all open and the range was free. Much of the domain
was State-owned, and small stock-raisers could range
their herds on the free grass, but with the coming of
barbed wire landowners began fencing the range, including
in their fencing much State-owned land, thus crowding
out smaller stockmen, who owned no land. Naturally this
was resented by the smaller fellows, and as a result
fence-cutting at once became a menace to the land owners,
and brought on what was known as the " Fence.-Cutters
War." Here is the story.
Mentions: * Lish Gooden * Dr. Doerr *
Mr. Ripley *
The Violin of Perote
San Angelo Standard-Times
The "Violin of Perote," rests in a glass
case in the State Library at the Capitol, and has a
glamorous history. It had a stirring part in Texas'
battle for liberty. During the Meir expedition, it was
made by a prisoner from soup-bones, a stolen file and
bits of wood left in the carpenter shop by the worker
who built the chair of state for Santa Anna.
Mentions: * Henry Journeay * E. M. Journeay
* Mrs. E. M Journeay * Harry Emmett, Jr. * Merle and
Mozelle Journeay of San Angelo * Mozelle * Emmett *
S. C., * George, Nelson and Lurlene * Caroline Wetsell
*
Grandma Jones Called Home
J. Marvn Hunter.
Account of Mrs. Mattie Southward Jones
who was born at Georgetown, Texas, January 24, 1852.
She came to Bandera county in 1865, after the close
of the Civil War, and on July 2; 1868, was married to
Sam Jones, the county's Chief Justice, Henry Stevens,
performing the ceremony. They lived on a ranch north
of Bandera for soma years, where Mr. Jones died in 1876,
leaving her with five small children. These children
she raised to manhood and womanhood, and they went on
to occupy high stations in life, and reflect the gentle
influence exerted by that noble mother in rearing them
to be useful men and women.
Mentions: * Mrs. Mena Gibbons of San
Antonio: Mrs. Mahala Southward of Duncan. Oklahoma;
Jim I; Jones of Bandera ; W. C. (Bill.) Jones of London.
Kimble county; Sam Jones of San Antonio * William Southward
of Dibble. Oklahoma, and Ed Duncan of Medina Lake *
Mrs. J. D. Gibbons * Jack Phillips Minute Company *
Robert Ballentyne *
Story of the Old Butterfield Trail
Story of the stage line established in
1848, which began at St. Louis and terminated in San
Francisco.
Mentions:
* the Great Eastern * San Angelo * the Daughters of
the American Revolution * Carlsbad, Texas * The Pocahontas
Chapter * Sam Fargo * Fort Chadbourne *
A Brilliant Mind That Cracked
Georgetown Sun, Sept. 18, 1925.
Account of a brilliant Waco lawyer who
soured his own reputation by his bitter statements about
public acceptance at the end of his life - a very sad
account.
"To all young men: If you want to
succeed as a lawyer disregard entirely the admonitions
of your forebears—be a cross between a politician, a
preacher and a pawnbroker—and with the mercy of God
you may survive—but my advice to all men is to be honest,
and for God's sake stop trying to be an admonitor of
the public weal. They don't want it and you are a fool
for thrusting it upon them! Be a worker ! Let the white
collar fellows carry the burden. Don't be a damn fool!
Don't try to help anyone, and don't think the public
will appreciate your efforts. Be sane and selfish. I'm
through! The world will judge me harshly—but I've tried
hard and failed. My religion teaches me that men are
fools. I've 'tried to do the right thing, but what's
the use? Everybody expects a prominent man to live up
to his position—more bull and...”
“I'm tired—oh, so tired! Let's quit.
Goodbye. To my wife, N—, I leave my measly, pitiful
all; my balance is $1,905.27 Goodbye ye damn fools—modernists
and all! Ye don't know!”
A SERMON IN A MINING CAMP.
Mrs. Lydia Buell, of Pipe Creek, Texas,
offers record of a sermon delivered by a preacher in
a mining camp :
Mentions: * Mrs. Mary V. Cooke of Byars,
Oklahoma * Pvt. Donald A. Graham * Jesse Chisholm *
Fort Bragg, North Carolina * Rufus M. Alexander, * Miss
Julia Garrett *
"Brothers and Sisters: I come to say
good-bye. I don't believe God love's this church, because
none of you ever die. I don't think you love each other,
because I never marry any of you. I don't think you
love me, because you have not paid me my salary. Your
donations are mouldy fruit and wormy apples, and `by
their. fruit ye shall know them.' Brothers, I am going
to a better place. I have been called to be chaplain
of the penitentiary. Where I go ye cannot cone. I go
to prepare a place for you, and `may the Lord have mercy
on your souls,'"
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Condition:
Excellent: May have minor shelf wear
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