Another Account Of The Dove Creek
Fight
By John C. Cureton
Frontier Times has published
during the past eighteen years several
accounts of the great battle between
Kickapoo Indians and Texas frontiersmen
on Dove Creek, in 1865. Each account
we have published was given by actual
participants in the battle and each
one brings out additional facts.
The following account was written
in 1926 by John C. Cureton of Los
Angeles, California. He was but
fourteen years of age when the battle
occurred and he was engaged in it
under the authority of his famous
father, Captain J. J. (Jack) Cureton.
Here is his story.
Further Mentions: Palo Pinto
county, Texas * Henry Dillahunty
* Joe Curtis * old Fort Phantom
Hill * Captain Henry Fossett * Wash
Delong * Joe Byers * San Angelo
* Captain Gilletine * Captain Totten
* George Savage * Spring creek *
Culver, Barnes and Gillentine *
Jacob Dyer, a brother of Charles
Goodnight's wife * George Hazelwood
and Phillip Runnels * Kickapoos
and Potatamies * William Pearce
of Cleburne, Texas * Dave and Dick
Cunningham * Jack Wright of Comanche
*
Charles Goodnight, The Panhandle
Pioneer
By J. Marvin Hunter.
The name of Charles Goodnight
stands head and shoulders above
that of any other pioneer cowman
in Texas, and he is justly entitled
to the distinction by reason of
nearly three-quarters of a century
of successful experience in the
cow business. Charles Goodnight
was born in Macoupin county, Illinois,
March 5, 1836, and died in 1930.
In 1847 the family moved to Palo
Pinto county, then on the extreme
frontier. In 1856 Mr. Goodnight
started on a overland trip to California,
accompanied by J. W. Sheek, a young
man of his own age. Their outfit
consisted of a bull team and wagon
and three horses, and they bore
steadily westward until they reached
the San Saba river, where, deciding
that Texas was large enough to supply
an ample field for their energy,
they turned back. At the crossing
of the Brazos they encountered a
cattleman who proposed letting them
have a small herd to handle on the
shares, and a bargain was soon arranged.
The young men were to take charge
of the cattle—430 in number. This
was Goodnight's entry into what
would be his life-long love and
his field of consummate success.
This is his story.
Mentions: Keechi Valley * Kit
Carter, C. C. Slaughter, Dick Jowell
and George Lemley * Devil's River
* Oliver Loving * Fort Sumner, New
Mexico * the Goodnight & Loving
Trail * the Pecoa river * Miss Mary
Ann Dyer * Stock Growers' Bank of
Pueblo * Henrietta * John G. Adair
* the J A headquarters ranch * ranch
brand was JA * Rilla Mackie Dixon
* Whitney Montgomery and Vaida Stewart
Montagomery *
Texas Rangers On The Scout
By A. J. Sowell
In 1870-71 the Indians were very
numerous and hostile on the Texas
frontier, and a call was made by
the Governor for several companies
of volunteers to go on a campaign
against them. There was an immense
scope of country to protect, stretching
from the Rio Grande to Red River.
The Indians were more numerous in
the northwestern part of the State,
and committed many depredations
under the notorious leaders, Big
Tree, Satanta, Sittanka, and others.
This account especially deals with
the conditions of the Texas border
at that time, especially in the
northwest, and relates incidents
of Indian warfare as recalled by
old settlers in that region. (Continued
from Last Month.)
Mentions: William Caruthers *
Billy Sorrells * Sergeant Cobb *
Judson Wilhoit * Dan Edwards * Gus
Hasroot * Larkin Cleveland * George
Howell * Gus Hasroot * the Keep
ranch * Ed Cobb * Indian fighter
named Ferguson * Mrs. Jay * Bolivar
* Dan Edwards * Larkin Cleveland
* Dr. Bobbitt * Dr. Gillespie *
Hampton * the Keenan family * Oska
Horseback the Comanche chief * (Continued
Next Month) *
The Southwest In The World Of
Literature
By Joe O. Naylor
The Southwest offers many opportunities
for many things—and important is
its rise to prominence in the field
of literature. The Southwest has
been fortunate in being able to
draw from many sources for book
material: pioneers and cowboys;
the permeating Mexican elements;
the Negroes; the early adventuring
Spanish and French—all these in
addition to the shared Anglo-Saxon
background of other regions.
Mentions: Dr. Homer Price Rainey
* J. Frank Dobie * Thomas Carlyle
*
Alex Neal Recalls Some Kimble
History
By J. Marvin Hunter
Account of Mr. Alex Neal, an
old time cow hand, who in this account,
describes early days in Hamilton,
San Saba, and Kimble counties, and
is quite familiar with many of the
tragedies that occurred in those
days on the frontier. He was born
near Hexberry, Cooke county, Texas,
March 3, 1870, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Neal. His mother's maiden
name was Elida Russell, and she
was married to Dan Neal in Georgia.
The family moved to Texas and settled
in Cooke county, where Alex Neal
was born.
Mentions: Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Reed, near the head of the Medina
river, in Bandera county * Dan Neal
* Jim Neal * Mrs. Neal and her children
moved to Hamilton county, to a location
called Fort Wood on the Cowhouse
* Jonesboro in Coryell county *
Richland Springs * Charlie Graham
of Kerrville * Rochelle, in McCulloch
county * West Bear Creek * Lankford's
Cove road * Evant * Menardville
* Junction City * Gatesville * Carl
Lemmons * Ed Bertram * Fort McKavett
* F. Mayer * R. B. Allen * Bear
Creek * M. K. Braggin * John Kountz
of Junction * Horace Wilson, a young
Englishman * Mr. Braggin * Mr. Witson
* Miss Stella Graham * Gill Graham
a ranchmau of the Bear Creek region
* John Mayes, Henry Murr, Bob and
Albert Owens, John Tobey, Felix
Watson, Arthur Mudge, the Farmers,
the Kirklands, the Halls, Captain
O. Keith Gordon * Allen and Braggin
on East Copperas * the Live Oak
ranch, owned by Chas. Schreiner
* Boneyard * the Allen ranch * Robert
Real * John Mayes * the LC pasture
* Peter Patterson * South Llano
* Jim Crane * Sheriff John Jones,
Tom Taylor and John Gardner * Oscar
Latta, Bob Owens * a man named Frazier
* Bob Owens * Mrs. John Tobey *
Avery Tobey of Bandera * Jim Knight
* Sonn * Underwood * Pettigrew *
Fort Terrett * the Runge ranch *
Sheriff Dick Russell * Governor
Miriam Ferguson * Sam Jobes * Deputy
John Turman, T. C. Taylor, T. W.
Frazier, Oscar Latta end Bob Owen
* Chester Banuowsky * Jourd Knight
* Judge Scruggs, Toni Scruggs and
Lee Russell * Louie Zettlemeyer
* Ed Short of Richland Springs *
Peter Patterson of Junction *
A Tenderfoot Joins The Texas
Rangers
By J. Marvin Hunter.
The reputation of the Sieker
brothers, L. P. and Ed Sieker, as
gallant Texas Rangers, is well known
throughout Western Texas, these
brothers having lived at Menardville
for many years. L. P. Sieker served
for quite awhile as Adjuant General
of Texas. Both saw active service
on the frontier in the 1870's. Their
younger brother, Tom Sieker, came
out from Baltimore, Maryland, in
1876, to join the company of Texas
Rangers in which his two brothers
were serving, and in the following
narrative, which was written by
W. S. Adair, he relates some
of the adventures he experienced
in coming to West Texas as a tenderfoot.
Further Mentions: Dr. E. A. Sieker
* Mrs. J. W. Mears * E. A. Sieker
Jr * E. J. Davis * Governor Sayers
* Governor Hogg * Muskogee, Indian
Territory * Kingsbury Hotel * Dave
DeLong * Nimitz Hotel * Loyal Valley,
in Mason county * the Decker Hotel
* Lieut. Frank Moore * Fort McKavett
* a boy named Kuntz in Kimble county
* General Shafter * JUDGE O. W.
WILLIAMS' * W. H Baggett of Ozona
* the Mendosa Expedition * Mr. J.
W. Wiseman of Floresville * J. H.
Polley * Sutherland Springs * Dr.
and Mrs. Travis M.. Harrell of Corpus
Christi * Harrell Park * Round Rock
* W. C. Moore, Houston * M. M.
Breit * Fred Mosebach * Col.
and Mrs. M. L. Crimmins * Murray
Ballinger * Misses Angie and Bessie
Weibling, Miss Will E. Hunter, Mr.
and Mrs. John C. Fassnidge, Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas G. Head, San Antonio;
Brig. Gen. Frank P. Lahm, New York
; Judge O. C. Fisher, San Angelo;
John A. Lomax, Dallas; Dan Ferguson,
Dallas; Delos R. Johnson, Franklinton,
Louisiana; R. Groose, Mason; Mrs.
Ida B. Hall, Hollywood, California;
Miss Riva Latham, Alamogordo, New
Mexico