“To understand Texas, and therefore
Texans, it must be borne in mind, first of all, that
Texas is big. Senator Ben (Pitchfork) Tillman of South
Carolina is credited with having said (and Texans gustily
repeat it) that Texas has more trees and less timber,
more rivers and less water, more cows and less milk,
and you can see further and see less than any durned
country in the world.”
“Then Texas has picturesque creatures,
some of whom could have escaped from Ripley's Believe
It or Not. Drawings: cunning coyotes, armor-plated armadillos,
prairie dogs, scorpions, centipedes, fierce javelinas
(wild boars), the comical-looking roadrunner that kills
deadly rattlesnakes, that hairy-legged, dread spider,
the huge tarantula, and the fearsome-appearing but harmless
horned frog, that shoots blood from its eyes.”
“And if one would understand why a
Texan is like he is, it must be remembered that Texas
has a history all its own. For Texas has been under
six flags: the banners of Spain, France, Mexico, the
Republic of Texas, the Confederacy and the United States.
Texas was freed from Mexico more than a hundred years
ago by bold, adventurous men from other States—some
of whom had "left their country for their country's
good." The expression "Gone to Texas" (sometimes expressed
"G.T.T.") once was in vogue in other states as the explanation
for some man's sudden departure.”
Further Mentions: * H. J. Justin & Sons
* Llano Estacado * Staked Plains * the rugged Big Bend
section * Magic Valley * Travis, Crockett, Bowie and
Bonham * Alamo * Goliad * Fannin * Pecos Bill * Strap
Buckner * Gib Morgan * O. Henry * Amon Carter * Jesse
Jones * Albert Sidney Johnston * the million-acre King
Ranch *
Berry Roebuck, Pioneer Cowboy
By Odie Minatra
Account of Berry Roebuck of Lockhart,
one of the men who made modern Texas. A boyhood spent
in privations and hardships did not prevent his becoming
a staunch and wholesome Texan—a well-to-do and leading
citizen of Central Texas. The eminent jurist, Frank
Roberts, of Brackenridge, Texas, says, "A finer man
never walked the earth than Berry Roebuck.
Mentions: * His father, W. W. Roebuck
* Cardwell county * Albert Gardner on the Carmen Storey
ranch * Bob Cardwell * the Haynes ranch * Navidad Prairies
* Lampasas Springs. * Mr. Tally * Ben Thompson, Wild
Bill Hickok * Buffalo Bill * Andrew Jackson Potter *
Ellsworth, Kansas * President Diaz * A. Y. Baker in
Brownsville * Mac Stewart *
Fredericksburg Gun Cap Factory
By Don H. Biggers.
During the war between the States the
scarcity of ammunition became a serious matter throughout
Texas, and especially in Gillespie county. Particularly
was there a scarcity of caps for guns and pistols, all
guns at that time being of the cap and ball make. The
citizens of Gillespie county must procure game for food,
and they must have fire arms for protection against
the Indians. Without caps, bullets and powder were useless.
Two men, Captain E. Krauskopf and Adalph Lungkwitz,
met the emergency. Cap. Krauskopf was a gunsmith, and
Lunkwitz was a silversmith, and both were endowed with
a high degree of mechanical skill and inventive genius.
They first made their own machine for rolling the copper
to proper thickness and a machine for cutting out or
stamping the caps. They made both the "hat" caps ,and
percussion caps for guns and pistols. For loading and
priming the caps both saltpeter and quicksilver must
be used. From the bat caves in the mountains around
Fredericksburg they got the material for the saltpeter,
and Captain Krauskopf made a trip to Galveston to get
the quicksilver. They not only saved the ammunition
situation in Gillespie county, but in time found a considerable
market for their caps throughout this section of the
country. Here is the story.
Mentions: * muzzle-loading double-barrel
English made shot gun at one 'time the property of General
Robert E. Lee * old Fort Martin Scott, near Fredericksburg
* Nimitz hotel * General Lee * John M. Hunter, a Kentuckian
* Santanna, the big Comanche Indian chief * Oscar Krauskopf
*
An Angora Goat Story
By Tex Ward, As Told to Sam Ashburn.
This dramatic story, written by the late
Sam Ashburn, originator of the "From the Top of the
Windmill" column of the San Angelo Standard-Times Wool
and Mohair Edition of July 10, 1934. The story won national
recognition when it was printed in a book entitled "The
Best News Stories of 1934." Because of its interest,
the story is reprinted here.
Murder of Williams and Haggett
By J. W. Wilbarger
Dreadful and bloody account of the attack
of about 100 Indians that occurred in the spring of
1836 in what was known as the Hornsby settlement, part
of the earliest settlers of Austin's upper colony.
Mentions: * Reuben Hornsby * Jacob Harrell,
Joe Duty, Casper and Webber * Jacob Howell * Captain
John Tomlinson * Williams, Haggett and Cain * Webber's
Prairie * Bastrop * Miss Cynthia Casner * Burdett's
old ford, * Blakey *
The Great World War Comes to An End
“Japan surrendered unconditionally
August 14th, and history's most destructive war came
to an end, except for formalities. President Truman
released the stirring news over the radio on that date
at 6 p. m. Central War Time, and announced that he had
appointed General Douglas MacArthur supreme Allied commander
to receive the surrender. While the world celebrated
with unrestrained joy President Truman ordered a Japanese
government (which once had promised to dictate peace
terms in the White House) to stop the war at all fronts...”
Mentions: * HON A. P. Johnson of Carrizo
Springs,* Judge Vandervoort * Charles Schreiner * District
Judge Valls *
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