Hon. C. C. Pearson, A Friend to the
Youth of his Country.
One of the best descriptive writers in the
United States journeyed to the Grand Canon of the
Colorado in Northern Arizona for the purpose of
preparing an article for a great periodical.
Standing on the brink of that wonderful gorge, the
grandeur and sublimity of the scene overwhelmed
him. Gazing down into that marvelous chasm with the
myriads of colors, down, down ten thousand feet
midst craig and pinnacle of wierd, fantastic shape,
like a [text unreadable] the beautiful Colorado
peacefully wound its way. Awe-struck and speechless
for a time stood the man of letters; then turning
to a companion, remarked, "I can't describe this. I
would that I could."
I would pay some just tribute to the memory of a
departed friend and companion, a friendship
cemented and strengthened by the association of a
lifetime; I hope I can make a truthful record, that
I can write of his many virtues sincerely and lay
not myself open to the charge of praising his work
unduly. Yet as I approach the task a feeling of
inability, of helplessness, comes over me; a
thousand endearing incidents of a life
companionship passes before me in the retrospect, a
thousand courtesies received at his hands is in
mind's eye, and if I write not dispassionately, the
reason will be evident.
Fifty-one years was the span alloted our friend
to fashion and build an earthly temple. Wednesday
afternoon, November 9th, 1910, rest came for his
work was finished. thursday afternoon with Masonic
honors, participated in by the lodges from Bertram,
Marble Falls and Burnet, and attended by hundreds
of his friends from all sections of the county,
interment was had at the Odd Fellows' cemetery,
Rev. C. A. Taylor conducting the religious
ceremonies. Out there in the silent little city,
free from earthly care and toil, our friend sleeps,
and though loving hands o'er the mound above him
piled in great profusion flowers and sweed scented
roses, he knows not their fragrance. Our words of
affection and praise are pitifully futile to awaken
in that bit of pulseless clay, one single
pleasurable emotion, for to this world poor Lum is
only a memory; but if he lived among us a manly
man, may God help us to cherish and keep forever
green in our hearts the record of his manliness.
Let us therefore view the temple he hath builded,
and see if head and hand and heart wrought not
wisely and well.
Christopher Columbus Pearson was the oldest son
of W. II and Margaret Pearson, both now deceased,
the father in 1890 and the mother in 1902. He was
born at buckhorn, Austin County, Texas, May 29th,
1850. He attended his first school at the age of
seven, his teacher being a German by the name of
Proddie. At this first school he received a merit
card which he has preserved to th is day. On the
back, in his own boyish and unsteady lettering is
written the word, "Clumbuss."
The family moved to Burnet when the subject of
this sketch was nine years old, and here he had for
his teachers Prof. George Stalley and Prof. J. T.
Motley, both of whom are still living, the former,
at his home place on Spring Creek West of Burnet,
in the 94th year of his age, and the latter in
Burnet, now well along towards eighty. In the early
seventies, the family again moved, this time to
what was known as Bagdad, in Williamson County.
Here he had two years in school under Prof. W. H.
Russell, now of Rivers, California. Returning to
Burnet County in 1876, the family settled in the
little village of South Gabriel, near the present
town of Bertram, and here again he took up his
studies under the late J. D. Riley, who taught in
the little crude stone building beside the "big
wide road." After a term in the Davilla Institute,
at Davilla, Texas and a commercial [text
unreadable] in a college at Austin in [text
unreadable] 1881 where he took [text unreadable]
bookkeeping [text unreadable] days ended.
When the Austin & Northwestern R. R. was
completed through Burnet in 1882, Mr. Pearson was
made agent and telegraph operator at Bertram, which
position he held until 1888, when he was elected
District Clerk of Burnet County. It was from
Bertram during this period that those interesting
and often highly humorous letters began to appear
in the county papers under the name of "Rustler."
He used this nom-de-plume for all his public
communications, and possessing a never-ending store
of droll, rich humor, with a style evidencing the
literary talent, these letters have for many years
added material benefit and pleasure to the reading
public of this section.
Elected County Clerk in November 1890, he served
for two years, after which he again took up
railroad work, this time as agent at Granite
Mountain, at the same time acting as bookkeeper for
the Texas & New York Granite Co. At the latter
end of Cleveland's second term as President in
1895, Mr. Pearson was appoointed postmaster of
burnet, and this position he held until a change of
administration, when he was succeded by his sister,
Miss Willie. Coming to Burnet from Granite
Mountain, he became station agent at Burnet for the
H. & T. C. R. R. and held this position at the
time of his death.
As the nominee of the Democratic party he was
elected to the Legislature from the counties of
Williamson and Burnet in 1902 and served with
distinction in the regular and called sessions of
the 28th legislature. The road law for Burnet
County, which bears his name was passed at this
session, and while it has been often criticized it
still remains the law of this county practically
unchanged, though three other sessions of our law
making bodies have been held since that time.
In 1908 Mr. Pearson was again elected and served
in all the sessions of the now famous Thirty-First,
and this year he was again nominated without
opposition and elected the day before his death. It
will be impossible in this sketch to speak of his
legislative work. That however is a matter of
record and known of all. It was his hand, however,
be it said to his everlasting credit, that framed
and had passed finally the law removing what was
known as the "pauper clause" in the matter of
allowing pensions to our disabled Confederate
soldiers, as well as making a substantial increase
in the amount thereof.
On the 15th of September 1997, he was married to
Miss Margaret, daughter of Capt. and Mrs. Darragh
of New York City. To this uniion, two children were
born, only one of whom, Sarah, aged ten, is living.
Beside the grief-stricken widow, there survives
him, a brother, W. H. Pearson, (or "Scrap," as he
is better known), and a sister, Miss Willie.
The best test of character, a true index of
man's real merit may be had from an insight into
his home life; his treatment of those dependent
dear ones whose happiness the laws of God and man
have entrusted to his keeping. For a number of
years, even before the death of his father, the
care of the family largely devolved on him, and
speaking from abundant opportunity to know, I must
say that never was man more devoted to mother,
brother, sister, wife and daughter. After his
father's death in 1890, a comfortable home was
purchased in Burnet and here he bountifully
provided for the comfort of mother and sister. Many
is the time the writer enjoyed the hospitality of
that home and well do I recall the good mother, who
seemed to never tire speaking of the [text
unreadable] of her loyal son, "Columbus." To
brother and sister he was alike kind and never
tiring in his efforts to assist them along life's
rugged road. As Miss Willie herself remarked to the
writer since his death, "God bless him, he was to
me father, mother, brother, sister and all. I went
to him always for aid and counsel and he never
failed me." To wife and little daughter he was
equally kind and devoted, and as we turn from this
page of his life's record I feel that he richly
deserves the plaudits of those who believe that a
part of our purpose here on earth is to bring some
happiness and sunshine into the lives of our
fellows.
Known personally to almost every man, woman and
child in this country, few men had more warm and
loyal friends than he,. Once your friend, Lum
Pearson never wavered, never doubted, never
hesitated in your defense, and as the Hon. Dayton
Moses aptly said at the cemetery, he was your
friend, whether right or wrong, and deserted you
only when your unworthiness was proven beyond every
shadow of doubt. God bless your memory my dear old
friend; who better than myself knows the bigness
and goodness of your heart? Leaving my native town
some years ago to try my fortunes in the big
hurrying, selfish world, yours was the last hand
clasp and your public utterance, "May God bless and
keep and prosper thee my friend, good bye" recurred
to me many times thereafter when the way seemed
rough and the heart grew faint. Returning home a
few years ago, none gave a warmer welcome, and now
Lum, looking back o'er all these years with their
successes and their failures, the joys and the
sorrows, with uncovered head and a sad heart I
stand before the temple of thyhandiwork, and humbly
thank God that you were my friend. Some of your
fellows may have misunderstood you, some may have
spoken ill of you, but I know and your God knows
the nobility of your soul. Driving into Burnet a
few short months ago, lat at night from some
meeting, he asked me this question: "Altman, if you
were chronicling the work of my life, would your
summary be failure?" Let me answer again: "No! A
thousand times no!"
It is impossible in a sketch of this kind to do
full justice to the manifold activities of our
friend in works and deeds worthy of emulation. But
one thing we cannot overlook or forgeet: public
education, the schools of our county, our boys and
girls striving after knowledge, never had a more
devoted and enthusiastic friend and supporter than
C. C. Pearson. He was never happier than when
attending some school closing or when making report
thereof to the county papers, praising and
commending their efforts. This work, as the writer
has heard him often remark, was one of the greatest
pleasures of his life; it might almost be said to
have been his hobby. A few days before his death,
fully conscious and realising the approaching end,
he called for paper and pencil and wrote: "A friend
to the youth of his country." "Let this be my
epitaph," he further wrote, and most every human
being in our good county knows how true and
fittingly should these lines adorn the stone that
shall mark his last resting place.
For the past twenty-one years, with probably a
skip of one or two, he has awarded to the
graduating class of the Burnet High School a medal
for the highest grade in oratory. The contest for
the "Pearson Medal" at the close of each school
year is always looked forward to with interest. But
in this, as in other matters, his mind ever clear
and heart ever true to the best interests of the
great cause of education, he has provided for the
continuation of this medal through some little
endowment which he arranged in an insurancy policy.
About three years ago, there appeared, first
through a little sore or pimple on his chin, what
later developed into the dread cancer. After one or
two slight operations at Austin he went to New York
and underwent there, what for a time seemed a
successful operation. But the disease reappeared in
mouth and stomach, and so on last Wednesday,
November 9th, death came, and he was ready. A
member of the Christian Church since August 1804,
to the rev. C. A. Taylor he said: "Iam ready. I
regret some of the things I have done in life, but
am ready to meet my God." He made all arrangements
for his funeral, giving names of friends whom he
wished advised of his death, and wrote to a few
parties with whom he had not been on good terms or
had had differences, saying he bore them no ill
will. Then came the summons, and a poor, weak,
pained-racked body was at ease, and the prophecy
fulfilled, that "The dust shall return unto the
earth as it was, and the spirit shall return unto
God who gave it." "Look after my family in a
Masonic way," were about his last written words and
as the lights on the other shore came out and
beckoned him and a cold, selfish world, the scenes
of his wonderful activities, grew dim in the
receding light, some way I wonder if poor Lum heard
not the welcome, "Well done, thou good and faithful
servant."
No man in public life can do his full duty at
all times and under all circumstances and not have
those who will abuse and deride. God made us all
after his own image it is true, but there the
likeness ends, for we are just mortal and liable to
err. So did Lum Pearson perhaps, but allowing for
the frailities of human mind and heart, taking the
work of this man even to the end, is it not worthy
of emulation in many things? If neither wealth nor
high honors came to him, does he not leave us a far
grander and more lasting legacy in the record of an
honorable life, spent, not altogether for self, but
for the betterment and for the happiness of those
among whom he lived?
Loving hands may mark your last resting place
with towering marble or granite, but Lum, you leave
something far more enduring than all these, a good
name. Yes it was true, you were a "friend to the
youth of his country," and in the hearts of the
living the love you so richly deserve will ever
bloom. The temple representing the work of your
life is finished, your fellow citizens pronounce it
well done, and may the great God of Mercy before
whom you now stand likewise approve. Lum, if we
have wrongly accused you and misunderstood you
betimes, He will not because He knows--maybe we did
not.
Dearest and best friend, good bye. May God help
us all to meet you in that "Beautiful isle of
Somewhere."
T. A. Altman
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