Commander Gordon Of The British
Navy
By J. Marvn Hunter
From surveying the Red Sea, the
east coast of Africa, the Sea of
Marmora, and battling with slave
traders, to the activities of a
Texas ranchman is a long jump, but
such were the experiences of Captain
G. Keith Gordon, (account has old
photo of him) who was the last survivor
of the group of men who mapped the
east coast of Africa and surveyed
Constantinople harbor, against the
express commands and under the imperial
nose of the then all-powerful Sultan
of Turkey. In 1881 he retired from
the British Navy and came to the
United States, and established the
OWL ranch in Kimble county, Texas.
Here is his story. NOTE: beginning
in the October, 1941 issue, Frontier
Times begins Captain Gordon's Memoirs,
written about a year before he died,
in which he tells of months spent
in a life boat, how he hunted Captain
Kidd's treasure, how he fought with
negro slave traders, and relates
incidents of thrilling adventures
on the high seas as a midshipman,
and as a commander of a sailing
vessel in British service.
Mentions: large ranch interests
near Junction in Kimble county *
H. M. S. Fawn * H. M. S. Monarch
* George Peabody * Zanzibar * Seyid
Burgash bin Said * Sir Bartle *
H. M. S. Briton *
Fort Belknap On The Brazos
By Lynn Eliot
Excellent historical account
of the old Fort and its early notable
activities from the eye-witness
view of James Buchanan Long, of
Llano, Texas - a buffalo hunter.
Mentions: John Whittlesie * Satanta
* Buffalo Bill * the town of Jacksboro
* Brig. Gen. David E. Twiggs * Col.
Starr * Gen. Wm. T. Sherman * a
bloody massacre of Indians on Salt
Creek * Jesse Stem * Stem's Gap
* HAIL, GOVERNOR STEVENSON
Mentions: Coke R. Stevenson *
Governor W. Lee O'Daniel * Richard
Coke * Mr. S. C. Butler, of Kenedy,
Texas * O. L. Adams, Medina * W.
K. Hoffman, San Diego, Texas * Leslie
Traylor, New York * Dr. S. E. Thompson
of Kerrville * John McCarty of Amarillo
* Elmer J. Edwards, Jr. of San Antonio
* W. O. Dickerson of Roosevelt,
Texas * Delos R. Johnson of Franklinton,
La * Hon. A. P. Johnson of Carrizo
Springs, Texas * Mrs. C. T. Traylor
of Cuero * Mrs. L. B. Bone, Houston,
Texas * Rev. W. A. McLeod, Cuero
* Mr. J. L. Hiler of Frio Town,
Texas * Belvie Lee Hiler of Pearsall
* Eula Hiler of Dilley *
Cache Of Gold Guarded By A Rattlesnake
By J. Frank Dobie
Account of Pedro Hernandez and
Longworth of San Antonio, and of
the immense treasure of gold in
an Uvalde Co. cave that was being
made quite inaccessible due to the
presence of what must have been
an immense rattler. Mentions: the
fabulous San Saba, or Lost Bowie
Mine * The Broken Metate *
Peck Sharp, Old Cowboy, Wins
A Prize
Account of an old cowboy, J.
Peck Sharp, an interesting character
who was born in Dark Valley, Palo
Pinto county Texas in 1866. Mentions:
Gunter Hotel * Bonaparte, Iowa *
George Ketchem * Farmington * Tom
Pender * Hef. Stuards * old Doc
Simmons *
What Became Of Frank Jackson?
By J. Marvin Hunter
Account raises the question of
what actually did become of Frank
Jackson, longest surviving member
of the Sam Bass gang, which had
operated in Texas in the late 1870's.
It is true that Jackson lived quietly
in Arizona under an assumed name?
Mentions: Clifton, Arizona *
Clifton Copper Era * Charlie Bull
* The Arizona Copper Company * Chase
Creek * Lordsburg * Morenci * Metcalf
* the Hull Printing Company in El
Paso * Joe Lea * a deputy sheriff
named Durbin * Bisbee * Jeff Ake
* Eugene Manlove Rhodes * Alamagordo,
New Mexico * Round Rock * Sebe Barnes
* James B. O'Neil * Milt Tucker
* John Wesley Hardin, Scott Cooley
* Ben Thompson, King Fisher, George
Gladden * James B. O'Neil *
Chisholm's Portrait Hung In S.
& S. Club
By Edward N. Wentworth.
Mentions: the Saddle and Sirlion
Club in Chicago * the Kansas Pacific
R. R. * Texas town of Ringgold *
Red River Station * Tallahina Rogers
* Will Rogers * James Rogers * Robert
Bean * Fort Towson, Ark * James
Edwards * Fort Holmes * Bilby, Seminole
county, Oklahoma * Booneville, Mo
* Baxter Springs, Kans * Blaine
county, Oklahoma * Edward Fitzgerald
Beale * Othmar Hoffler * Jeff Wood
* Noah Armstrong * A. T. Mitchell
* M. H. Roberts * S. O. Durst *
C. M. Grady * N. J. Jones * John
R. Bannister of Austin * Mrs. Beatrice
Gay of Santa Anna * Millard Sampson,
of Santa Anna * J. J. Gregg * Dr.
P. B. Hill * Colonel M. L. Crimmins
* C. M. Grady of Brownwood * Dan
W. Roberts, Jeff Maltby, John B.
Jones, John R. Hughes, Frank Jones
*
Mrs. Loderick R. Gray, A Pioneer
By Ida Babcock-Hall, Austin,
Texas
Account of Mrs. Loderick R. Gray
at Lometa, Texas. Martha Nettie
McFarlin (Mrs. Gray) was born in
Llano county, December 11, 1858,
and lived in the wilds of Llano
county when only a few white folk
had made permanent settlements—when
the coming of darkness brought terrors.
The anxious whine of dog, the sudden
tinkling of a cowbell, the neighing
of horses or the sound of running
hoofs might mean that a burly redskin
was stealthily slipping upon a settler's
home. Such days were fraught with
danger. Here is her story.
Mentions: Mr. Dunman * the murder
of Reverend Dancer * Putman family
* a Mr. Jackson * Sister Nannie
and sister Eliza * Mr. John Barcus
* Sam Richardson * Dr. Isaac Reams
* Dead Man's Hole in Burnet county
* Marble Falls * Brothers Band *
John Scott * the Johnson family
* Burnet county * Legion Valley
* John Friend * Miss Amanda Townsend
* Mrs. Rebecca Johnson * Mrs. Samantha
Johnson * the Bradfords * Lee Temple
Friend * Melinda Caudle * Mr. and
Mrs. Phelps * Birdtown * the oldest
child, Nannie * Miss Martha White
* South Gabriel creek * Reverend
Bob Davis * John Epochs * Reverend
Ephriam McDaniel, a Baptist minister
* Jennings Creek community * Bertram
* Mormon Mill in Burnet county *
Mr. Reams * Cedar Mill * Alec Barton
* T. D. Vaughn * South Gabriel *
J. W. Gray * J. D. Riley, N. B.
Lockett, T. D. Vaughn, Charley Wolf
* Mrs. Ross * Lometa * Nelson Gray
*
Lee Hall Gets His Men
By Col. M. L. Crimmins
Of notable Texas Ranger Captain,
Lee Hall, it is said, "He did more
to rid Texas of desperadoes and
establish law and order than any
other Texan ever had. He has made
more bad men lay down their guns
and delivered more desperadoes and
outlaws into the custody of the
courts and used his own gun less
than any other officer in Texas."
Here is his story.
Mentions: the Rough Riders camp
in Roosevelt Park, San Antonio *
Dora Neill Raymond's excellent book,
"Captain Lee Hall of Texas," * the
Taylor-Sutton feud * John Wesley
Hardin * DeWitt county * Jim Taylor
* Marshal John Helm * Tres Palacios
* Joseph McCoy the pioneer cattle
shipper * General Mackenzie * Dr.
Philip Brazell * Bill Meador * Theodore
Brazell * Dave Augustine * Bill
Meador * General Williams Steele
* Joe Sitterlie * William Cox; Jacob
Ryan, David Augustine, Frank Heister
and Charles Heissig * Red Hall of
Denison and Sherman * Captain Jack
Elgin *
John B. Omohundro, "Texas Jack"
By J. Marvin Hunter.
John B. Omohundro, more familiarly
known as "Texas Jack," was one of
the daring frontier characters of
the West - He was a sailor, soldier,
Indian fighter and scout who ranked
in fearlessness and quick action
with any of the noted men of that
day. Here is his story.
Mentions: Colonel J. B. Stuart
* General Floyd * Buffalo Bill Cody
* Ned Buntline * Leadville * Madamoiselle
Morlacci *
Capt. W. A. Miller, Warrior And
Gentleman
By Garland R. Farmer
Account of Captain W. A. Miller
of Henderson, Rusk county, Texas.
Miller was born August 17, 1837,
in Georgia, but came with his folks
to Texas in 1838. He distinguished
himself at the battles of Mansfield,
Oak Hills, Pea Ridge and Prairie
Grove. His first battle was a skirmish
with the Yankees on Wilson's creek,
near Springfield, Mo., in the summer
of 1861, and at the time of Lee's
surrender he and his company were
on duty on the old San Gabriel River,
just below Georgetown, Texas. Here
is his story.
Mentions: Alexandria, Louisiana
* Gibsontown * the present town
of Henderson * R. H. Cumby Company
B * Colonel Lane * Captain Thompson
* Cherokee Chief Boles * General
Thomas Jefferson Rusk *
Westward, Ho! In 1941
By Elmer J. Edwards, Jr.
Mentions: Kerrville * Water Street
* Junction * Kimble county * Coke
Stevenson * Fort Terrett * Sonora
* Sutton county * Noah H. Rose *
Devil's River Junction * West Texas
Woolen Mills * J. M. Christian *
Mia Amigas Club * Eldorado High
School * Mrs. W. W. Carson of the
San Angelo * Mrs. Robert Carter
* Mr. J. B. Moore of Del Rio * Uncle
Bill Kellis * Mr. and Mrs. Settles
* Big Spring * the Scharbauer Hotel
* Permian Basin District * the T.
& P. Railway * the XIT Ranch rodeo
at Dalhart * Ab Blocker * "Uncle
Henry" Slack * Langtry * Mentone
* Odessa * Oliver Loving * the JA
Ranch in Palo Duro * Col. Charles
Goodnight * Red Bluff Dam * Mr.
and Mrs. J. T. Smith * Jim White
* Col. Thomas Boles * Ed A. Cahoon
* Roswell * William H. Bonney *
tire La Palorna Bar, "the Original
Bar of Billy the Kid," * El Torreon
* Mrs. Clyde Hunt * Wilbert Hunt
* Acoma Indians * Bernalillo * the
ancient pueblo of Kuaua of the Tiguex
Indians * Francisco Vasquez Coronado
* Geronimo * Frank Luke, Jr * Mr.
Griggs * W. D. Smithers *
Michael Cronican, A Mier Fighter
By Houston Wade
This account of one of the soldiers
who fought the infamous battle of
Mier again on Christmas Day, 1842,
raises the mysterious destiny of
the Irishman who fought nobly and
was reportedly killed in the fight,
but whose personage reappears in
Texas history after some years.
Mentions: Thomas J. Green in
his records on the Mier Expedition
* James Austin Sylvester * Adolphus
Stern, a Jewish citizen of Nacogdoches
* New Orleans Greys * William G.
Cooke * Benjamin Rush Milam * N.
O. Grays * William Graham * Captain
Robert Boyce * Captain William M.
Logan * Holland Lodge No. 1, A.
F. & A. M. * James Collinsworth
* Captain Charles Kirk Reese * the
Dawson men * Wilbur Cherry, R. D.
Serbin, Gideon K. Lewis, another
Mier prisoner, B. F. Neal and Willard
Richardson * Gideon K. Lewis * J.
S. (Old Rile) Ford * James A. Glasscock
* Miss Ellen R. Henry of Galveston
* Mrs. Mary A. Henry * Postmaster
A. B. Reagan, of Brady *
Dr. Robert T. Hill Passes On
Account of Dr. Robert Thomas
Hill, 82, geologist, geographer,
a youthful frontier cowboy who became
Texas' most distinguished man of
science.
Mentions: Dr. Arthur D. White,
president of Cornell University
* Garrett F. Service * Dr. Whitehill
* Major Powell * Dr. Alexander Agassiz
* Charles Schuchert * the Balcones
Fault * Paluxy and Woodbine acquifers
* Justine Hill * Mrs. Jean Hill
Guttormsen * Miss Justine Robinson
*
Some Exploits Of Ben Thompson
By Odie Minatra
Account of the character of enigmatic
Ben Thompson, gunman, gambler, and
city marshal of Austin, Texas by
those who knew him personally.
Mentions: J. Gregg Hill * the
Littlefield building * Glaser *
Sam Moore, late frontiersman of
Seguin and Austin * Captain John
Talley * Shanghai Pearce * George
Smith * Dan Searight *
James Kerr, First Settler On
The Guadalupe
By John Henry Brown
Account of James Kerr, who was
born near Danville, Ky., September
24th, 1790, removed with his father
to St. Charles county, Missouri,
in 1808, was a gallant soldier in
the war of 1812-15 —a lieutenant
under Capt. Nathan Boone—had been
sheriff of St. Charles county, a
representative in the legislature
and then a senator. He had a wife,
three little children and eight
or ten favorite negro servants.
With these he arrived at the mouth
of the Brazos in February, 1825.
Before the first of July his wife
and two of his little children had
died—the first in a camp, the others
on the roadside. During July he
reached the present site of Gonzales,
accompanied by five or six single
men and his servants. He erected
cabins, laid out the townsite as
the capital of the future colony
and began the survey of its lands.
On the 1st or 2nd day of July, 1826,
in his absence, Indians attacked
his houses in the temporary absence
of most of the inmates, killed one
man and severely wounded another,
robbed the establishment and then
retired. Thereupon Maj. Kerr removed
nearer the coast, to the Lavaca
river, in what is now Jackson county,
but continued his labors as surveyor
of DeWitt's colony, and subsequently,
also, as surveyor of the Mexican
colony of De Leon, next below on
the Guadalupe. To his laborious
duties, in January, 1827, were added
the entire superintendence of the
affairs of Col. Ben R. Milam in
his proposed Southwestern colony.