In the spring
of 1873, J. A. and T. E. Van Ness, brothers and Texas
cattle dealers, made a sale of 30,000 head of cattle
to the Mormons of Salt Lake City, Utah, and agreed to
deliver them to the Mormons the following summer. The
Mormons took delivery of the cattle and proceeded on
their drive to Salt Lake City – their first and last.
The venture proved very unprofitable for the Mormons,
as they managed to get through to Utah with only a few
thousand of the original 30,000 head of cattle. They
never made another attempt to purchase Texas longhorns.
Here is the story.
Mentions: * the
"Bill Warrick Place." * Bill Warrick * The Van Ness
brothers * Bonner Springs, Bell county, near the old
Stage Stand * Newt Proctor * Belton, Texas * Henry Carnes
J. T. Hazelwood
Tells of Pioneer Life in Texas
The following
story was given us some twenty-five years ago by J.
T. Hazelwood, who was then living at San Angelo. In
this sketch Mr. Hazelwood tells of the real pioneer
life in early Texas. He came to Texas with his family
in 1852 settling first in Panola county, then in Palo
Pinto county, settling on Eagle Creek, west of Palo
Pinto, and finally in 1860 to Stephens county, near
the line of Shackelford, settling on Sandy Creek, and
then on Battle Creek.
Hood's
Texas Brigade
This story is
an address delivered by Colonel H. M. Henderson, USA,
Retired, before the Texas Landmarks and Historical Association
at the Blue Bonnet Hotel, Thursday, February 13. 1947.
Mentions: * Lewis
T. Wigfall * Eltham's Landing * Private John Deal of
Company A * Gaines' Mill * Antietam * Fredericksbug
* Private Dick Childers * the James River *
The Capitol
of Texas
Horace C. Walker
Mentions: * 3,050,000
acres of land in Northwest Texas * the famous Littlefield
ranch of 300,000 acres * land in Deaf Smith, Parmer,
Castro, Lamb, Bailey, Hockley, Dallam, Hartley, Cochran
and Oldham counties * the London Free-hold Syndicate
* Farwell, Taylor, Babcock * The Grand Lodge of Masons
* Will Lambert * Governor Ross, A. W. Terrell, Temple
Houston, and Colonel Abner Taylor, * William H. Huddle
* McArdle * Jefferson Davis, John A. Wharton, Albert
Sidney Johnston, Barnett Gibbs * Mrs. Rebecca J. Fisher
* Robert H. Williamson * Clara Driscoll Sevier * David
Culberson * Austin, Governor Hogg, Frank R. Lubbock
and Ed Burleson. *
Sion R.
Bostick, Texas Veteran
J. Marvin Hunter
“It
was my privilege to know Sion R. Bostick, who participated
in the Battle of San Jacinto, and was one of the captors
of Santa Anna. Mr. Bostick, who lived in San Saba, county,
Texas, and died there in about 1905, often visited in
our home in Mason, and I have heard him relate the details
of the battle which freed Texas from Mexican tyranny.
In 1915 Honorable Joe F. Brown, of Cherokee, San Saba
county, gave me a copy of an affidavit made by Veteran
Si Bostick, who was then 82 years old, and had a clear
recollection of the battle.” This affidavit is given
in this story.
Mentions: Captain
Splann's company * Captain Poe * Capt. Mosely Baker
* Groce's Retreat * Jack Bell, I. L. Hill, and Pettus
* Donoho's below Groce's Retreat * Joel Robinson * the
Plum Creek fight * Claiborne Herbert * JOE F. BROWN
*
The Trail
of Blood in Bandera County
Account describes
some of the early settlers and their hardships that
occurred in Bandera County. It especially focuses on
The Killing of Jack Phillips, Rufus Click's Escape,
The Killing of Thomas Click and The Killing of David
Cryer.
Mentions: * Mrs.
Bruce Mansfield of Bandera * A. J. Sowell * Mr. M. C.
Click * Hondo Canyon * a Mr. Foster, who lived in the
Canyon north of the Bandera road, * A man at Bandera
named O. B. Miles * Sugar Loaf Mountain * D. A. Weaver
* John A. Jones * Dr. FitzGibbon * Seco Canyon * Mr.
F. L. Hicks * Mr. William Felts and Miss Josephine E.
Durban * Dave Weaver * Joel Casey * Dr. J. C. Nowlin
* Wallace Creek *
Some Texas
Frontier Forts
J. D. Fauntleroy
About the first
thing the United States Government had to do in Texas
after the Mexican War was to make some arrangement for
permanently protecting the border against wild Indians.
For this purpose a line of forts was established along
the border and from San Antonio north to the Red River.
Here is the story.
Mentions: * Highland
Park * Old Fort Croghan * John B. Hood, Earl Van Dorn
and George B. McClellan * Capt. John Bird * Bird's Creek
* old Fort Griffin * Capt. L. S. Ross * Coryell County
* the present town of Gatesville * Fort Gates * Captain
Lynch * Chief John "Bowles * Fort Worth, named for General
William A. Worth * Ripley A. Arnold * Major Hamilton
W. Merrill and Captain J. W. Bornford * E. M. Daggett,
K. M. Van Zandt, C. M Peak, J. Peter Smith * Captain
Phillip St. George Cooke * Hollie Coffee * William Dougherty
* Fort Washita * Fort Arbuckle *
Col. Jeff
D. Milton, 85, Noted Peace Officer, Dies
J. F. Weadock
Account of Col.
Jeff D. Milton, one of the most noted peace officers
of the west. He served with the Texas Rangers, as a
deputy sheriff in New Mexico and Arizona, as chief of
police in El Paso, as a Wells Fargo messenger, as a
customs inspector and border patrolman and as a U. S.
Deputy marshall. His entire early life story became
a part of the saga of the taming of the lawless frontier.
Mentions: * Mrs. Mildred Milton, Dr. N. C. Bledsoe *
Carson Morrow * the Congregation Church with Dr. Ronald
Bridges * J. Evetts Haley, of Canyon, Texas * Marianna
Florida * Sylvania * Huachuca mountain ranch home *
deputy sheriff in San Mateo county * St. Johns * President
Cleveland * Tombstone * Fairbanks * Benson * Three Fingered
Jack * Emma Goldman * the Soviet Ark * Gobernauer, New
York * Pete Kitchen * Gov. B. B. Mouer *
The Hopi
and the Rattlesnakes
Colonel M. L.
Crimmins
This account
examines the long-standing claim that the Hopi Snake
Dancers are immune to the bite of rattlesnakes. In seeking
to find grounds for or against this clam, the author
consulted Dr. J. Walter Fewkes, who was the chief of
the American Bureau of Ethnology at the Smithsonian
Institution on the subject. Having advanced knowledge
of the Hopi, he suggests certain possible explanations
of their immunity to the bites.
Mentions: * the
Rattlesnake Clan * Captain Burks "Medicine Man of the
Apaches," * Dr. Weir Mitchell of Philadelphia * Dr.
Afranio DeAmaral * Mrs. Martha Odell Learn, of San Antonio,
Texas * Acton and Knowles reported in the "Indian Journal
of Medical Research" * Geo. S. Coleman *
The Old
Prospector in the North American Continent
H. H. Roberts
Account describes
the traits of the Old Prospector, that real pioneer
of the Western plains and mountains of this North American
continent—that lone human, whose visions of fabulous
wealth at the end of the rainbow lured him on to seek
the gold at the risk, and often the cost, of his life
and to endure great hardships. To him, primarily, must
be given the credit for breaking the trail that has
resulted in the population, civilization and wealth
of the northwest of the North American continent, since
its discovery by the Europeans so long ago. Here is
the story.
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