Tag Archives: Texas History

Today in Texas History – March 29

From the Annals of Flood Control – In 1965, the Army Corps of Engineers began the deliberate impoundment at Sam Rayburn Reservoir.   Construction on the reservoir had begun in 1956 at which time the project was known as “McGee Bend Dam and Reservoir”, because of its’ location immediately upstream from McGee Bend on the river.  In September, 1963, the 88th Congress adopted a special resolution changing the name to “Sam Rayburn Dam and Reservoir”, in honor of the recently deceased Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Sam Rayburn, a long-time champion of soil and water conservation.

The dam is an 20,000 foot earth embankment with a concrete power-intake structure and flood-control outlet works located near the right end of the dam. SRR can store up to 4,442,400 acre feet of water encompassing a surface area of 153,800 acres. At top of flood control pool, elevation 173 feet above mean sea level, the reservoir can hold 3,997,600 acre feet of water encompassing a surface area of about 142,700 acres.

Today in Texas History – March28

From the Annals of the Irregulars –  In 1864, William C. Quantrill was captured by Confederate forces after reporting to Bonham.  Quantrill was already notorious at the time for his raid on Lawrence, Kansas in which men and boys were indiscriminately killed and other atrocities, but Lt. Gen. Edmund Kirby-Smith found Quantrill to be useful to the Confederacy’s goal of instilling fear and terror in the western theatre of the war.  Kirby-Smith order Gen. Henry McCulloch to use Quantrill to help round up the increasingly larger numbers of deserters and draft-dodgers in North Texas. Quantrill’s raiders mostly killed those they found and were pulled from this duty.  Quantrill’s next mission – to track down a band of Comanche raiders – was equally unsuccessful.   Quantrill moved south of the Red River during the winter of 1864, at which time Quantrill’s lieutenant, William (Bloody Bill) Anderson, formed perhaps an even more vicious band.  The two competing renegade groups began raiding Grayson and Fannin Counties and the level of violence became such that regular Confederate forces had to be assigned to protect residents from the activities of the irregular Confederate forces.

General McCulloch finally decided to run Quantrill out of North Texas.  On March 28, 1864, when Quantrill appeared at Bonham as requested, McCulloch had him arrested on the charge of ordering the murder of a Confederate major. Quantrill escaped later that day and returned to his camp near Sherman, pursued by over 300 state and Confederate troops.

Quantrill’s raids in Texas were essentially over and he was supplanted when his gang of bandits elected George Todd, a former lieutenant to Quantrill, as their new leader.  Quantrill and an increasing small band continued raiding.  In Kentucky they were surprised by Union irregulars. Quantrill was shot through the spine, captured and died in a Union prison in Louisville, Kentucky shortly after the end of the war.

Today in Texas History – March 24

From the Annals of Colonization –  In 1825, the Mexican legislature passed the State Colonization Law of March 24, 1825. The legislation was designed to encourage development of Coahuila y Texas.  For a nominal fee, the law granted settlers as much as a square league (4,428.4 acres) of pastureland and a labor (177.1 acres) of farmland. Immigrants were temporarily free of every kind of tax. Newcomers had to take an oath promising to abide by the federal and state constitutions, to worship according to the  Catholic religion, and to display sound moral principles and good conduct. After accepting these terms and settling in Texas, immigrants earned the standing of naturalized Mexicans.

Today in Texas History – March 22

From the Annals of Reconstruction – In 1866, the Texas State Central Committee of Colored Men met in Austin with Baptist minister Jacob Fontaine presiding. It was the first in a series of conventions held in Texas from the Reconstruction era until the coming of the Jim Crow era in the 1890s.  The group was focused on issues of concern to African Americans which were largely ignored by Texas politicians.  At the first meeting the TSCCCM opposed a request by Episcopal bishop Alexander Gregg for funds which presumably would have benefited former slaves. The committee members did not trust Gregg, himself a former slaveholder and ardent supporter of secession.  The committee instead proclaimed their support for the work of the Freedmen’s Bureau.

Photo of Jacob Fontaine from austinlibrary.com.

 

Today in Texas History – March 21

From the Annals of Bloviation –  In 2010, then Texas Attorney General Greg Abbot made the following statement regarding the recently passed Affordable  Care Act: “The federal health care legislation passed tonight violates the United States Constitution and unconstitutionally infringes upon Texans’ individual liberties. To protect all Texans’ constitutional rights, preserve the constitutional framework intended by our nation’s founders, and defend our state from further infringement by the federal government, the State of Texas and other states will legally challenge the federal health care legislation.”

Wrong, wrong and wrong.  As our latest in a long line of Poor Idiot Governors, Abbot has cost Texas literally billions of dollars in pandering to his Tea Party base. Not to mention the many dollars Abbot has wasted as AG and Governor in frivolous litigation.

Today in Texas History – March 15

From the Annals of Masonry –  In 1836, Texian soldier Lewis Ayers was captured by forces under the command of Mexican General Jose de Urrea.  Ayers in action under Captain Amon King engaging Urrea’s rear guard when he was captured  with 32 other soldiers.  The prisoners were ordered to be executed as rebels.  One of Urrea officers, Colonel J.J. Holzinger  intervened to spare the German prisoners.  Ayers was not German but was included in the group to be spared.  Legend has it that he was later released after giving a Masonic sign that Gen. Urrea recognized.

Image of Gen. Urrea from tshaonline.org.

Today in Texas History – March 14

From the Annals of the Equines – In 1940, horse enthusiasts and ranchers met in Fort Worth to form the American Quarter Horse Association. Among those in attendance were rancher and Quarter Horse breeder Anne Burnett Hall and King Ranch president Robert J. Kleberg. The meeting was the first in a series that led to the formation of an organization to “collect, record and preserve the pedigrees of Quarter Horses in America.”  The name Quarter Horse goes back to the origin in colonial times when the speedy horses earned fame for their performance in quarter-mile races.   The AQHA was the first to regularize the breed and establish pedigrees.  Now based in Amarillo, the AQHA is an international organization dedicated to the preservation, improvement and record-keeping of the American Quarter Horse  In Texas, the Quarter Horse brings to mind images of the cowboy, the cattle drive and today – the rodeo.  Quarter Horse racing is in decline across the Southwest, but the breed continues to compete in roping, barrel racing and other rodeo competitions.

Image from aqha.com.

Today in Texas History – March 10

From the Annals of the Civil War – In 1864, President Abraham Lincoln appointed Ulysses S. Grant as Lieutenant General in command over all Union forces.  Grant was promoted from Major General in command of the western front of the War with the Armies of the Tennessee and Cumberland.  From this point on, the fate of the Nation rested largely in the hands of one rather ordinary man who had both a hatred and genius for war.  At the beginning of the war, if anyone had suggested that Sam Grant, the failed shopkeeper and farmer from Ohio, would rise to command the entire Union Army, the laughing and knee slapping would have gone on for hours. In fact, Grant himself would probably have thought that he might aspire to be a competent Brigade commander based on his West Point training and experience in the Mexican-American War.  Grant’s primary experience had been as a quartermaster in charge of supplies and provisions.  From that work, Grant knew exactly what was required for fighting units to succeed.  His first units were superbly equipped and it showed on the battlefield. Grant’s victories at Forts Henry and Donelson  were two of the very few early Union successes and were widely publicized in the North.  These victories secured him a quick promotion to Major General and command of the Army of the Tennessee.  And his victory at Shiloh, at almost unspeakable cost for both sides, secured him a top leadership position for the remainder of the war.  Grant understood that just being in the Army was the greatest danger most soldiers faced.  More troops were dying from illness and disease than from combat wounds.  It was a brutal numbers game, but he was determined to bring the war to a swift conclusion by fighting.  The 30 Days campaign was intended to do just that and it broke the back of the Army of Northern Virginia.  Even though the war on the Eastern front settled into trench combat for many months, the 30 Days Campaign assured ultimate Union victory. It is not hyperbole to say that but for U.S. Grant, there is no United States of America as we know it.

Grant has been much maligned over the years as an incompetent general and corrupt politician. His skill as a military man should be unquestioned.  His greatest blunder was at Cold Harbor where troops were forced to wait to assault Confederate lines giving the rebels a chance to dig in.  Grant was forthright in acknowledging his mistake. But as a general, he knew he had the power of men and might on his side and used them effectively.  As President (for Grant was not a politician), his administration had several notable achievements.  He secured the Treaty of Washington which ended all disputes between the U.S. and Great Britain and set in place the greatest alliance of the past 175 years, he almost single-handedly stopped the extirpation of the plains Indians, he balanced the budget,  he supported the rights of the freedmen in the South (who were later abandoned by the Republican Party), and negotiated the annexation of the Dominican Republic (which was stopped by a short-sided Congress).

There is some new thinking on Grant, exemplified by Jean Edward Simith’s tremendous biography Grant.  And if you are in the mood for an excellent read on Texas in the late 1840’s, read Grant’s Memoirs.

Today in Texas History – March 9

From the Annals of the Colonists –  In 1731, colonists from the Canary Islands established Villa de San Fernando. Under the leadership of Juan Leal Goraz, the group marched overland from Veracruz to the presidio of San Antonio de Bexar.  The party had increased by marriages on the way to fifteen families with a total of fifty-six persons. They joined a military community that had been in existence since 1718. The group ultimately became part of the Villa of San Fernando de Bexar, the first regularly organized civil government in Texas. Several of the old families of San Antonio trace their descent from the Canary Island colonists. María Rosa Padrón was the first baby born of Canary Islander descent in San Antonio.

Today in Texas History – March 7

From the Annals of Flora –  In 1901, the Texas legislature proclaimed the bluebonnet (lupinis texensis) to be the official state flower.  The shape of the petals on the flower resembles the bonnet worn by women pioneers.  The use of the flower to beautify Texas highways did not begin with Lady Bird Johnson.  The effort preceded her admirable work by at least 30 years.  In the 1930s the state began a highway-beautification program that included scattering bluebonnet seed along highways and byways.  The bluebonnet is the subject of many landscape paintings – mostly bad.  With the reasonable rains we have had, the show should be fairly good this year.  Just be careful when pulling off the highway for your bluebonnet picture.  The peak of bluebonnet season is usually in late March or early April.