Chapter
V: A History
of Jefferson
County, Texas
Mexico
and the
Anglo-American
Pioneers
By
W. T. Block
Following
the Louisiana
Purchase in
1803, Spain
quickly
renewed its
interest in
East Texas and
dispatched
troops to
reoccupy four
key points,
one of which
was El
Atascosita on
the lower
Trinity River.1
From this
beginning, the
“distrito de
Atascosita,”
of which
Jefferson
County was a
part,2
gradually
evolved with
the following
boundaries:
-
The
Atascosita
District
bounded…on the
West by the
Colony of San
Felipe de
Austin, on the
North by the
District of
Nacogdoches,
on the East by
the reserved
lands on the
Sabine, on the
South by the
Gulf of
Mexico,
including all
Islands and
Bays within
three leagues
of Sea Shore.3
By
1805, Spain
faced a
multitude of
prospective
immigrants to
East Texas.
These included
Spanish,
French,
Indians, and
Anglo-Americans
of Louisiana,
who sought to
escape the
sovereignty of
the United
States. Many
Anglo-Americans
were
adventurers or
fleeing from
justice. Some
Louisiana
tribes feared
the American
Indian policy
and expected
better
treatment at
the hands of
the Spanish.
Spanish
officials
developed a
plan whereby
the applicants
of European
derivation
were to be
resettled in
the interior
of Texas,4
while a buffer
zone of
reserved lands
along the
coast and
between the
Trinity and
Sabine Rivers
was to be
populated by
Indian
refugees
considered to
be hostile to
the United
States.5
After Spain’s
eviction from
Texas, the
principle of a
reserved
buffer zone
was continued
by Mexico.
The
problems
experienced by
Spain’s
successor in
the Atascosita
District are
depicted in
the following
quote:
-
While
the French
activities
were
temporary, the
Anglo-Americans
were not.
After Texas
became a part
of Mexico in
1821 and
opened the
area legally
to colonists,
settlers
poured in by
the hundreds.
Since the
region was so
far removed
from the
capitols at
San Antonio
and Saltillo
and the
Mexican
administration
moved so
slowly in all
matters, the
frontiersmen,
in their
typical
impulsive
fashion, moved
onto the land
and worried
later about
legalities of
title. This
proved to
cause
considerable
trouble in the
Atascosita
District...6
Between
1821 and 1836,
Mexico’s
policy toward
Anglo-American
immigration to
Texas
vacillated
between
acceptance and
open
hostility,
tempered by
the chaos of
contending
political
factions and
the fear of
American
encroachment.
Its positive
side is
observed in
the
colonization
law of 1824
that permitted
Stephen F.
Austin and
other
impresarios to
secure land
grants in
Texas.7
Its negative
side is seen
in the decree
of 1830, which
was designed
to curtail
Anglo-American
immigration,
and the
efforts to
suppress civil
liberties in
Texas in
1835-1836.
Additional
factors were
the large
numbers of
hostile
Comanches who
raided at will
throughout the
province and
the failure of
efforts to
colonize
Mexicans in
Texas.8
Settlement
in the
Atascosita
District, much
of which lay
within the
reserved zone,
was regulated
by the
Colonization
Laws of 1824
and 1825
(later amended
by the decree
of April 6,
1830). Article
4 of the 1824
colonization
act provided
that “there
cannot be
colonized any
lands,
comprehended
within twenty
leagues
[approximately
sixty miles]
of the limits
of any foreign
nation, nor
within ten
leagues of the
coasts,
without the
previous
approbation
of the general
supreme
executive
power.”9
Article 7 of
the same law
provided that
“until after
the year 1
840, the
general
congress shall
prohibit the
entrance of
any foreigner
as a colonist,
unless
imperious
circumstances
shall require
it, with
respect to the
individuals of
a particular
nation.”10
The
Coahuila-Texas
State
Colonization
Law of 1825
continued the
proscription
of settlement
in much of the
Atascosita
District and
in all of the
Jefferson
County area.11
For that
reason,
squatters in
the forbidden
zone could not
apply for land
titles until
the reserved
lands were
granted to the
impresario
Lorenzo de
Zavala in
1829.12
Because
of the
disproportionate
ratio of
Americans to
Mexicans in
East Texas,
the Law of
1830 was
designed to
curtail the
immigration of
Americans to
Texas and to
replace them
with Mexican
and European
colonists.13
However, the
Mexican
commandant of
the Eastern
Provinces,
General Mier y
Teran, feared
the result of
a total ban on
American
immigration,
and gradually,
an
interpretation
prevailed that
the ban did
not apply to
the colonies
of Stephen F.
Austin and
Green Dewitt.
Eventually,
the ban was
not enforced,
and General
Mier y Teran
suggested that
Austin
incorporate
the squatters
of Atascosita
District into
the San Felipe
colony, adding
“it is all the
same to me
whether you
bring a family
from Tennessee
or the
Sabine.”14
In
1826, the
alcaldes of
Atascosita
District,
George Orr and
Henry Munson,
were already
aware of the
advantages of
incorporation
into either
the Department
of San Felipe
or
Nacogdoches.
On September
10, 1826, an
election was
held, and, by
a vote of
thirty-seven
to twenty-one,
Atascosita
citizens chose
union with
Stephen F.
Austin’s
colony rather
than with
Nacogdoches.15
On September
28, a letter,16
the results of
the ballot,
and a census,
which listed
331 free
citizens and
seventy-six
slaves in the
Atascosita
District,
were,
forwarded to
San Felipe for
Austin’s
consideration.17
Although
consolidation
was not
possible under
the
Colonization
Acts of 1824
and 1825
without the
special
permission of
the Mexican
congress, it
is interesting
to note that,
apparently,
Austin
considered the
suggestion for
some time. For
one thing, he
knew very
little about
the remote
Southeast
Texas sector,
and, in 1827,
sent John A.
Williams to
reconnoiter
the area.
Williams began
at the San
Antonio Road,
traveled down
Attoyac Bayou,
the
Angelina-Neches
watercourses,
and Sabine
Lake, and
stopped
intermittently
to take
astronomical
bearings. With
the assistance
of George Orr,
the Atascosita
alcalde who
knew the
region
thoroughly,
Williams
prepared a
rough map of
the Atascosita
District, and
sent it to
James E. B.
Austin, along
with his
letter of
October 14,
1827.18
After the
impresario
Lorenzo de
Zavala
acquired the
border and
coastal
reserves as a
land grant,
Atascosita was
absorbed into
the Department
of Nacogdoches
in 1831 as the
Municipality
of Liberty.19
In
1826, the only
family living
in present-day
Jefferson
County is
listed in the
Atascosita
census, along
with the names
of others who
moved to
Jefferson
County before
its separation
from Liberty
County. In
1824, Noah and
Nancy Tevis
and five of
their children
settled at
Beaumont
(known then as
Tevis Bluff),
where a sixth
child 20
was born soon
afterward.21
In 1833, James
and Elizabeth
McFaddin moved
to Beaumont,
having resided
near Liberty
for the
previous ten
years.22
John and Sarah
McGaffey, who
formerly lived
in the hamlet
of Jefferson,
on Cow Bayou
in present-day
Orange County,
became the
first settlers
at Sabine Pass
in 1832.23
Ten or twelve
families who
lived between
Jefferson and
the Sabine
River were
omitted from
the census.24
In
January 1826,
before the
census was
taken, John
McGaffey had
visited with
Stephen F.
Austin at the
home of John
Castleman on
the Colorado
River.
According to
his petition
that follows,
McGaffey felt
that the
influx of
settlers using
the lower
Atascosita
trail to the
Trinity River
was sufficient
to warrant a
ferry over the
Neches River
in south
Jefferson
County, but
there is no
record that
McGaffey
request was
ever granted:
-
River
Niege25
(Neches),
January 10,
1826
-
To
The Honorable
The
Authorities…of
Texas
-
Your
petitioner has
with great
pains…partially
established a
ferry to cross
the River
Niege on the
Teskasito
[sic] Road
leading to
Trinity… Your
petitioner…solicits…a
right to these
marshes…to
make good
roads on the
East side
leading to and
from the banks
of the said
River Niege…
-
As
compensation…your
petitioner
respectfully
solicits a
right to a
league of land
convenient and
adjacent to
the ferry for
the
Maintenance
and Support of
himself and
family.
-
John
McGaffey26
One
of the
earliest
rumblings of
impending
revolt
occurred in
the Atascosita
District in
1831,
following the
stationing of
150 Mexican
soldiers under
Colonel John
Bradburn at
Anahuac.27 The
affair began
when Bradburn
arrested
Francisco
Madero, the
commissioner
of land
titles,28
but it
mushroomed
when because
of Bradburn’s
despotic
conduct,
William B.
Travis and two
others were
imprisoned.
The
Ayuntamiento
of Liberty was
dissolved,
causing its
members to
flee to
Austin’s
colony. A
small citizen
army rose in
protest and
was soon
joined by
units from the
San Felipe and
Nacogdoches
departments.
Colonel Jose
Piedras of
Nacogdoches
marched a
force to the
relief of
Bradburn, but,
upon
determining
that the
colonists’
complaints
were
justified,
Piedras
relieved
Bradburn of
his command.29
The
issuance of
land titles in
Jefferson
County was to
emanate in
Nacogdoches,
where, on
April 15,
1825,
impresario
Haden Edwards
was granted a
contract to
settle 800
families.30
Using
arbitrary
methods,
Edwards
charged a
higher price
for land than
was permitted
and threatened
to evict title
holders unless
they paid the
difference in
price. When a
flood of
protests
resulted,
Edwards’
contract was
cancelled on
October 2,
1826, and the
abortive
Fredonian
Rebellion
resulted, with
the principal
conspirators
escaping to
Louisiana.
31
Apart
of Edwards’
grant was
reissued in
1826 to David
G. Eurnet and
Joseph Vehlein
of Mexico
City, and the
remainder,
which included
the
twenty-league
border reserve
eastward to
the Sabine
River and all
of the
Atascosita
District, was
granted to
Lorenzo de
Zavala on
March 12,
1829.32
Since they
lacked the
funds to
develop their
large grants,
Burnet,
Vehlein, and
Zavala entered
into an
agreement with
the Galveston
Bay and Texas
Land Company
of New York,
which issued
scrip at ten
cents per
acre, the
purchase of
which was
regarded as
equivalent to
a land title.33
The land
company soon
encountered
difficulties
with General
Mier y Teran
who refused to
recognize it
as the
impresarios’
agent.34
Eventually,
the problem
was resolved,
and, by 1834,
the company
was
established at
Nacogdoches,
where Major
George A.
Nixon served
as its land
commissioner.35
Land
was granted to
Americans in
quantities not
exceeding one
league and one
labor (4,428
and 177 acres
respectively),
while Mexicans
were entitled
to grants not
exceeding
eleven
leagues.36
The latter
extravagance
resulted in a
low regard for
land ownership
among
Mexicans, and
it was said
that one
Nacogdoches
Mexican traded
four leagues
(17,712 acres,
valued by
Americans at
$10,000) for
one hunting
dog.37
Two
Nacogdoches
Mexicans were
among the
early land
grantees of
Jefferson
County. Jose
Maria Mora
received a
one-league
grant at
present-day
Nederland,
while Manuelo
de los Santos
Coy received a
two-and-one-half
league grant
at Sabine
Pass, the same
passing to his
agents, Sam
Houston and
Philip
Sublett, when
Santos Coy
died in l836.38
Two
early grants,
now in Orange
County, were
issued to John
Stephenson and
Theron Strong
on February 17
and March 9,
1830. The
earliest grant
in present-day
Jefferson
County was
patented by a
non-resident
claimant,
Thomas F.
McKinney of
Quintana in
Austin’s
colony, on
April 26,
1831.39
During 1830,
McKinney
operated a
keelboat on
the Neches
River while
transporting
cotton from
Nacogdoches to
New Orleans.
He located his
claim at the
site of the
high Indian
mounds at Port
Neches40
and gave that
city its
original name
of McKinney’s
Bluff.41
McKinney also
surveyed a
town site
there to be
named Georgia,
but the plan
did not
materialize
because of the
sale of
two-thirds of
his league in
1837 to Joseph
Grigsby, Port
Neches’ first
settler.42
Settlement
progressed
rapidly east
of the Neches
River, which,
ironically,
resulted in
the present
limitations of
Orange County
being
synonymous
with those of
the original
Municipality
of Jefferson.
In 1824,
Robert and
Elizabeth
Johnson moved
to Green’s
Bluff
(Orange), a
site named for
Reason Green,
an early
Sabine River
boatman, who
was an
associate
justice of
Jefferson
County in
l837.43
In 1824, David
and Jacob
Gamer moved to
Jefferson on
Cow Bayou,
present-day
Bridge City,
Texas, where
their
brothers-in-law,
Claiborne West
and John
McGaffey,
settled in the
same year.44
In 1828,
Bradley Gamer,
Sr., and his
wife (and sons
Bradley and
Isaac) joined
their four
children at
the Cow Bayou
community.45
Other
early settlers
east of the
Neches River
included James
and Absalom
Jett, who
arrived in
1823,46
John Jett in
1826, John and
William Allen
in I 827,47
John Cole,
David Cole,
David Burrell,48
and James,
William, and
Gilbert
Stephenson in
1828.49
Theron Strong,
David Harmon,
and George and
John
Stephenson
were
subsequent
arrivals there
in 1829.50
John Harmon,
Stephen Jett,
Hiram Bunch,
Clark Beach,
and George A.
Pattillo came
in 1830.51
Subsequent
settlers prior
to 1835
included
William Clark,
John and
Peyton Bland,
Benjamin
Johnson,
Abraham
Winfree,
Richard
Ballew,
William
Milspaugh,
William and
Jesse Dyson,
Sam and
William Davis,52
and Aaron,
Abner and
William
Ashworth.53
Beginning with
the grants to
Strong and
Stephenson,
more than
thirty Mexican
land patents
had been
issued in the
Municipality
of Jefferson
(present-day
Orange County)
by 1836.54
After
John McGaffey
moved to
Sabine Pass in
1832, he was
joined in the
same year by
Thomas Courts,
an Englishman,
who had
abandoned the
Lavaca Bay
region because
of hostile
Indians.55
In 1835,
McGaffey
applied for a
land grant at
Sabine, but,
shortly after
Dr. John A.
Veatch
completed the
league’s
survey in
November,
1835, the
Nacogdoches
land office
closed. There
is no record
of other
settlers at
Sabine Pass
until Benjamin
Johnson and
Jacob H.
Garner,
McGaffey’s
brothers-in-law,
moved there in
April 1838.56
That
settlement in
the Beaumont
area did not
gain momentum
until 1833 is
apparent in
the Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners
of Jefferson
County. Also
the issuance
of Mexican
land grants in
that vicinity
did not begin
until
December,
l834.57
In 1833-1834,
Hezekiab,
Absalom,
Charles, and
Hezekiah R.
Williams
settled at
Beaumont, and
all of them
received land
grants between
December 4 and
December 24, 1
834.58
David
Brown was
issued a
league of land
adjacent to
Noah Tevis’
grant on
January 15,
1835.59
Additional
grants were
issued to John
A. Veatch,
Pelham
Humphries,
Asahel and
Harvey P.
Savery,
Almonzan
Huston, James
Drake, S.
Stivers, and
J. Rowe, but,
except for
Drake and
Rowe, the
others were
non-resident
claimants.60
John Bollinger
and his sons,
Peter and
Ephraim,
settled on the
James Gerish
league, a few
miles west of
Beaumont, in
July 1835. Two
brothers from
Mississippi,
Henry and Dr.
D. J. Otho
Millard, came
to Beaumont
and opened a
store in the
same month.61
M. J. Brake,
whose musket
broke during
the Battle of
San Jacinto,
was an early
settler on the
bayou which
bears his
name. Captain
Samuel Rodgers
was an early
land promoter
and Mexican
customs
official at
Beaumont.
Although
William F.
Gray wrote
that Beaumont
contained
“only three or
four houses”
in April,
1836,62
it is
apparent, from
the number of
troops that
one company
enlisted there
a month
earlier, that
many settlers
were living on
farms in the
immediate
vicinity.63
Three
other
locations of
Mexican land
grants in
Jefferson
County are
distinguished
by their
proximity to
navigable
water, namely,
the Taylor’s
Bayou and Pine
Island Bayou
watersheds and
the northwest
shore of
Sabine Lake.
Hiram Brown,
Horatio M.
Hanks, Joseph
Butler, and N.
Coleman had
located claims
in the latter
area by 1835,
but, in each
instance, the
grantees were
non-resident
claimants.64
The
Taylor’s Bayou
watershed,
with its north
and south
forks, plus
Big Hill,
Hillebrandt,
Den, and
Double Point
Bayous, was
popular among
land seekers
because of the
abundance of
fertile soil
and timber.
Many of
Jefferson
County’s
earliest
settlers,
including two
brothers,
Robert and
David Burrell,
and a Danish
immigrant,
Christian
Hillebrandt,
located their
claims and
were living in
that vicinity
by 1831.65
By 1836,
William Carr,
John J.
French,
Bennett and
Josiah D.
Blackmon,
Michael
Peveto, and
Marcello
Grange had
obtained land
grants and
settled at
Taylor’s
Bayou.66
By 1840, the
Burrells and
Hillebrandt
were leading
cattlemen, the
latter’s herd
totaling 9,000
cattle and
1,000 horses
by 1858.67
The
Pine Island
Bayou region
attracted an
equal number
of land
hunters. By
1836, Thomas
Spear, Daniel
Easley, Wesley
and Josiah
Dyches, David
and John
Choate, Thomas
D. Yocum,
Henry
Stephenson, A.
Byerly,
Stephen
Jackson,
Walter Petit,
and Isaac
Applewhite had
obtained
Mexican land
grants there,
and nearly all
were resident
claimants.68
As
the storm
clouds of
revolt
gathered in
October 1835,
it is apparent
that Jefferson
County’s
citizens were
in the
forefront of
the action. At
that time,
Claiborne
West, who
operated a
store on Cow
Bayou, was
certified by
the citizens
of Jefferson
as that
community’s
representative
at the
Consultation
of San Felipe
in November,
1835.69
Henry Millard
of Beaumont
represented
the
Municipality
of Liberty,70
and the two
men were
instrumental
at the
Consultation
in obtaining
the
legislation
which created
the
Municipality
of Jefferson.71
Its borders
were:
-
To
commence on
the Sabine
River, fifteen
miles above
Ballew’s
Ferry, and run
down said
river to its
junction with
Sabine Bay;
thence west,
along said
bay, to the
mouth of the
Neches River,
thence up said
river to
Grant’s Bluff
[later Wiess
Bluff], and
thence, on a
direct line to
the place of
beginning. .
.
.that Messrs.
John Cole,
Richard
Ballew, John
Harmon, and
Thomas Heart
be, and they
are hereby
authorized, to
select a
suitable place
for the Seat
of Justice for
the aforesaid
Municipality.72
Millard
also obtained
a commission
for himself as
lieutenant
colonel of the
First Regiment
of Texas
Infantry.73
His brilliant
performance in
the Texas army
between
December
15, 1835
and December
16, 1836 won
for him a
lasting
friendship
with General
Sam Houston.
While still in
the army,
Millard was
appointed as a
commissioner
to treat with
the Indians,
and, in 1837,
President
Houston
appointed him
as chief
justice of
Jefferson
County.74
There can be
little doubt
but that
Millard, a
proprietor of
the Beaumont
town site,
used his
influence with
the president
to effect the
removal of the
county seat
from Jefferson
to Beaumont,75
and for the
expansion of
Jefferson
Municipality
to Jefferson
County in
1837, with the
following
boundaries:
-
All
the territory
in the
following
limits shall
constitute and
compose the
County of
Jefferson, to
wit: Beginning
on the Gulf of
Mexico, from
which a
straight line
drawn due
north shall
strike Wolf
Point, then
North to Big
Sandy Creek
[Village],
then down said
creek to its
entrance into
the Neches
River, thence
due east to
the Sabine
River, thence
down said
River to the
Gulf of
Mexico, thence
west along the
Gulf of Mexico
to the place
of beginning.76
Even
as Millard and
West were in
session at the
Consultation,
other
Southeast
Texans went
west to
bolster the
Texas
defenses.
William
McFaddin of
Beaumont
joined Captain
Andrew
Briscoe’s
company at
Liberty, and
took part in
the storming
of San Antonio
de Bexar
between
December 5-9,
l835.77
Benjamin
Johnson
enlisted in
Captain Willis
H. Landrum’s
company,
fought at San
Antonio, and
was discharged
at the Alamo
on January 1,
1836.78
Captain David
Garner led a
company of
Jefferson
County
volunteers
(which
included his
brothers Jacob
and Isaac) to
San Antonio,
fought in the
“Grass Fight,”
and discharged
his men at the
Alamo on
December 31,
1835. In
November 1835,
Captain James
Chessher, the
long-time
ferryman over
Pine Island
Bayou,
mustered a
company of
Jefferson and
Jasper County
volunteers and
joined Colonel
Ben Milam’s
forces during
the siege.
Members of his
company
included David
Chessher,
William and
Adam Byerly,
James Drake,
Murad W.
Bumstead, Amos
Thames, Enoch
and Nathaniel
Grigsby, and
William,
Moses, George,
and Elisha
Allen.79
Evidently, the
retreat of
General
Perfecto de
Cos’ force
instilled a
false security
among the
Texans, for
William
McFaddin
lingered on in
the city until
February.
While en route
home afoot, he
rejoined the
Texas army at
the Colorado
River.80
In
March 1836,
Claiborne West
was again a
delegate to
the Convention
at
Washington-on-the-Brazos,
where he and
William B.
Scates, the
other delegate
from
Jefferson,
signed the
Texas
Declaration of
Independence.81
Scates, who
had just
purchased a
league of land
on Pine Island
Bayou from
David Choate,
then joined
Captain B. F.
Bryant’s
company and
fought at the
Battle of San
Jacinto.82
While
returning
home, West
apparently
incurred the
ire of Mrs.
Susan Choate
Jackson of
Pine Island
Bayou, who
told W. F.
Gray that West
“ran off from
Washington,
after signing
the
Declaration of
Independence,
before the ink
was dry, and
in his panic,
forgot his hat
and coat.”83
When
Joseph Dunman
reached
Liberty on
March 1,1836
with a copy of
Colonel
William B.
Travis’ letter
from the
Alamo, Captain
Benjamin F.
Harper
immediately
raised a
company of
twenty-eight
men at
Beaumont. At
Liberty,
Harper’s
company was
merged with
Captain
William
Logan’s
company and
fought at the
Battle of San
Jacinto.84
The following
Jefferson
County men
from Logan’s
company were
veterans of
the Battle of
San Jacinto:
David Choate,
David Cole,
Patrick J.
Curneal, Lovic
P. Dyches,
Lefroy Gedry,
David H.
McFaddin,
Ephraim
Bollinger,
Peter
Bollinger,
James Cole, M.
J. Brake,
Benjamin F.
Harper,
Michael
Peveto, David
Scott, John
Stephenson,
Hezekiah
Williams, and
William D.
Smith.85
Other
Jefferson
County men
were at or
near San
Jacinto,
although most
of them did
not
participate in
the fighting.
Benjamin
Johnson
reenlisted in
Captain James
Gillaspie’s
company and
fought in the
battle.86
William
McFaddin’s
company was
detailed to
guard the
baggage train
three miles
away.87
On March 23,
1836, Captain
Chessher and
Andrew F.
Smyth raised
the Jasper
Volunteer
Company, but
missed the
Battle of San
Jacinto
because of a
guard
assignment.
Oliver H.
Delano of
Beaumont and
James
Armstrong were
members of
Chessher’s
second
company.
Captain
William
Milspaugh
raised a
company at
Jefferson,
which saw no
action because
of a detail to
guard military
prisoners near
San Jacinto.
Jacob H.
Gamer, Elisha
Stephenson,
and Payton
Bland were
members of
Milspaugh’s
company.88
Even
after the
victory at San
Jacinto and
the surrender
of General
Santa Anna,
there were a
number of
Mexican armies
still intact
in Texas, and
the volunteer
Texas
companies were
sorely needed
to escort the
Mexican forces
to the Rio
Grande. The
threat of a
renewal of
hostilities
continued. On
June 6, 1836,
Captain
William Logan
discharged his
90-day
volunteers,
but his
lieutenants,
Franklin
Hardin and B.
J. Harper,
re-enlisted
most of them
into two
companies. A
number of
Jefferson
County
soldiers
served in each
unit. Captain
Hardin
enlisted the
following men:
Reason Green,
David Burrell,
William Smith,
Claiborne
West,
Christopher
Yocum, Elisha
Stephenson,
James
Stephenson,
and George W.
Tevis.
The
following
Jefferson
County
volunteers
joined Captain
Harper’s
company at
Beaumont on
July 7:
Ephraim
Bollinger,
George Allen,
William H.
Irion, James
McFaddin,
Absalom
Williams,
Charles
Williams, C.
Bollinger,
Murad W.
Bumstead,
George Hodges,
Moses Allen,
John C. Read,
David Scott,
John Clark,
Gilbert
Stephenson,
Clark Beach,
Absalom Jett,
John Allen,
Aaron
Ashworth, John
Turner, and
William
Ashworth.89
In
her Story
of Beaumont, Florence
Stratton
stated that
Captain George
W. Hargraves
commanded a
militia
company of
sixty-two men
at Beaumont in
August, 1835,
and was en
route to San
Jacinto with
twenty-one men
when the
battle was
fought. As
recalled by
Hargraves, the
members of his
company
included:
-
William
Clark, …
Clark, John
Coale, …
Coale, Bill
Ashworth,
Aaron
Ashworth,
Tapler
Ashworth, Luke
Ashworth,
Charles
Cronier,
Elisha
Stephenson,
Lije [Elijah]
Stephenson,
Tom Berwick,
Batiste
Peveto, Dave
Harmon, George
Medgar,
William
Beckham, David
Garner, Isaac
Garner. Jim
McCall, John
Allen, …
Allen, Joe
Linsicomb,
Jake Hays, Jim
Jett, … Jett,
Clark Beach,
Powers, Archie
Richie, Wash
Tevis, Jack
Tevis,
Williams, Tom
Yoakum, Jim
Foreman, Ben
Johnson, and
Jim Courts.90
On
another
occasion,
Hargraves
reported that
General
Houston
requested his
help prior to
the Battle of
San Jacinto.
Hargraves
added that,
when he left
Beaumont with
twenty-one
men, he
“furnished the
ammunition and
supplies; I
spent $42 for
ammunition, $6
for flour and
$10 for meat
for the trip.”91
Judge Tom J.
Russell, an
early Beaumont
lawyer,
described a
company that
left Beaumont
on April 18,
1836. He added
that Beaumont
“men, women,
and children
engaged in
molding
bullets,
baking bread,
and drying
beef” for the
company’s
provisions.92
Claiborne West
was another
who furnished
provisions to
departing
soldiers. 93
There
were others
from Jefferson
County who
volunteered
during the
Texas
Revolution.
Robert E.
Booth, who was
postmaster at
Mount Holland
(present-day
Orange County)
in 1840,
served from
December 1835,
until August,
1836.94
Randolph C.
Doom, who was
collector of
customs at
Beaumont from
1837 to 1839,
enlisted for
six months in
Captain
Fowler’s
company.95
Charles Cronea
of Sabine
Pass, who once
was a cabin
boy on one of
Jean Lafitte’s
privateers,
was awarded
1,280 acres of
land for
military
service during
the revolt
against
Mexico.96
Other
county
residents paid
substitutes to
serve for them
in the Texas
Army. Abraham
B. J. Winfree
hired J. B.
Dupre, who
enlisted for
three months
in Captain F.
Hardin’s
company.97
Abner and
William
Ashworth paid
Elijah Thomas
and Gibson
Perkins (the
latter four
were free
Mulattoes) to
fight in their
place.98
One
of the saddest
commentaries
of the fateful
month of April
1836 is that
of William F.
Gray, who
described the
refugees of
the Runaway
Scrape
converging
upon the banks
of the Neches
River, then at
flood stage,
at Beaumont.
His diary
states:
-
As
we approached
the Neches, we
found there
was a great
uncertainty
about crossing
the river. The
boats were
said to have
been taken
from all the
ferries and
carried down
to the lower
bluff. Thither
we bent our
way, passing
great numbers
of fugitives,
men, women,
and children,
black and
white, with
all the
accustomed
marks of
dismay… There
are many
families here
[Grigsby’s
Bluff] waiting
to be ferried
across the
bay, a
distance of
seven or eight
miles, and put
on the United
States shore.
There are at
least 1,000
fugitives here
… Started at
10 o’clock …
Arrived at
Beaumont about
1 o’clock.
Passed on the
road the
Kuykendall
family. They
have in charge
the poor
little lost
baby, which
each carries
by turns. I
took pleasure
in carrying it
a short
distance to
relieve the
old man…99
In
time, the
results of the
battle won on
April 21,
1836, stilled
the fears of
the fugitives
and alleviated
the congestion
caused at
Beaumont by
the refugees
of the Runaway
Scrape, most
of whom began
the long trip
homeward to
rebuild their
farms and
fortunes.
Meanwhile,
Beaumont and
Jefferson
awaited the
return of
their
soldiers. As
Jefferson
County
approached the
threshold of
the Texas
Republic, its
population had
done much for
which they
could be
proud. They
had punctured
the wilderness
although it
remained a
continual
threat to
their
existence.
They had
furnished many
of the
soldiers who
had help forge
a victory out
of chaos. With
the war behind
them, the
county’s 250
free
inhabitants,
who revered
the soil upon
which they had
settled,
wished only to
till their
farms in peace
and to develop
the abundant
resources that
surrounded
them.
WILLIAM
McFADDIN—One
of Beaumont’s
earliest
pioneers,
McFaddin
fought
throughout the
Texas
Revolution and
in the
Confederate
army. A
leading
stockman and
landholder,
his
descendants
dominated the
county’s
cattle
industry for
decades
afterward.
GEO.
W. SMYTH, SR.—A
Jasper County
resident and
signer of the
Texas
Declaration of
Independence,
Smyth held
public office
during much of
his lifetime.
He also
influenced the
course of
early
Jefferson
County
history.
Endnotes
1 B.
Faulk, The
Last Years of
Spanish Texas,
1778-1821 (The
Hague: Mouton
and Company,
1964), p. 40.
2 H
Yoakum,
History of
Texas (2
volumes; New
York:
Redfield,
1855, as
reprinted by
Steck Company,
Austin), I, p.
276.
3 Mary
M. Osburn
(ed.), “The
Atascosita
Census of
1826,” Texana,
I (Fall,
1963), p. 4,
as reprinted
by the Liberty
County
Historical
Survey
Committee.
4 Carlos
Castenada, Our
Catholic
Heritage in
Texas (6
volumes;
Austin: Von
Boeckmann-Jones,
1942), V p.
293.
5 Ibid.
pp. 294-295;
Faulk, Last
Years of
Spanish Texas,
pp. 69-70.
6 Osburn,
“The
Atascosita
Census of
1826,” Texana,
p. 3. In
time, the
Atascosita
District
included a
portion of the
reserved zone.
Twenty
leagues, or
sixty miles,
is the
approximate
distance from
Liberty, Texas
to the Sabine
River.
7 Eugene
C. Barker, The
Life of
Stephen F.
Austin,
Founder of
Texas, 1
793-1836
(Austin: Texas
State
Historical
Association,
1949), p. 65;
Mary V.
Henderson,
“Minor
Empresario
Contracts For
The
Colonization
of Texas,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly,
XXXI (April,
1928), pp.
299-300.
8 Ohland
Morton, “Life
of General Don
Manuel de Mier
y Teran,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly,
XLVIII
(October
1944), p. 214.
9 E.
Wallace and D.
M. Vigness,
Documents of
Texas History
(Lubbock: The
Texas Tech
Press, 1960),
p. 48.
10 Wallace
and Vigness,
Documents of
Texas History,
p. 48.
11 Ibid.
p. 49.
12.
Henderson,
“Minor
Empresario
Contracts For
The
Colonization
of Texas,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, p.
299.
13 Wallace
and Vigness,
Documents of
Texas History,
pp. 66-67.
14 Morton,
“Life of
General Don
Manuel de Mier
y Teran,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, pp.
204-205.
15 E.
W. Winkler
(compiler),
Manuscript
Letters and
Documents of
Early Texians,
1821-1845
(Austin: Steck
Company,
1937), pp.
50-51.
16 Ibid.
p. 49.
17 Osburn,
“The
Atascosita
Census of
1826,” Texana,
pp. 3, 22-23.
18 E.
C. Barker
(ed.), The
Austin Papers,
in Annual
Report of The
American
Historical
Association
For The Year
1919 (3
volumes;
Washington, D.
C. Government
Printing
Office, 1924),
II, Part 2,
Pp. 1698-1700.
19 Yoakum,
History of
Texas, I, p.
276.
20 The
Atascosita
census
indicates that
Delilah Tevis
was
probably
the first
child born of
white
parentage in
Jefferson
County.
21 Osburn,
“Atascosita
Census of
1826,” Texana,
p. 21;
Beaumont
Journal, May
13, 1906 and
April 14,
1907.
22 Osburn,
“Atascosita
Census of
1826,” Texana,
p. 13; John H.
Brown, Indian
Wars and
Pioneers of
Texas (Austin:
L. E. Daniel,
189?), pp.
337-338.
23 Osburn,
“Atascosita
Census of
1826,” Texana
p. 14;
Beaumont
Journal,
January 14,
1906; G. W.
McGaffey,
Genealogical
History of The
McGaffey
Family
(reprint;
Bradford,
Vermont:
Opinion Press,
1904), p. 33.
24 Osburn,
“Atascosita
Census of
1826, Texana,
p. 23.
25 Neches
River was
known as the
River Niege to
the earliest
Anglo-American
settlers.
Apparently,
“Niege” was a
corruption of
the Spanish
name, Rio de
los Nieves,
meaning Snow
River, the
name used by
the Hasinai
Indians
because of the
white sands
along its
banks.
26 Barker,
Austin Papers,
II, Part 2,
pp. 1247-1248,
1257.
27 William
Kennedy,
Texas: The
Rise,
Progress, and
Prospects of
The Republic
of Texas
(reprint; Fort
Worth: The
Molyneaux
Craftsmen,
Incorporated,
1925), p. 366.
28 Winnie
Allen (ed.),
“The
Autobiography
of George W. S
myth,’
‘Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly,
XXXVI
(January,
1933), p. 206.
29 Ibid.
pp. 206-207;
Yoakum,
History of
Texas, I, pp.
290-292; Edna
Rowe, “The
Disturbance at
Anahuac in
1832,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, VI
(October,
1902), pp.
265-299.
30 Henderson,
“Minor
Empresario
Contracts For
The
Colonization
of Texas,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, p.
299.
31 Wallace
and Vigness,
Documents of
Texas History,
pp. 59-60;
letter,
Edwards to
Austin,
Nacogdoches,
January 9,
1826, as
reprinted in
Winkler,
Manuscript
Letters and
Documents, pp.
43-44.
32 Henderson,
“Minor
Empresario
Contracts For
The
Colonization
of Texas,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, p.
299.
33 Wallace
and Vigness,
Documents of
Texas History,
pp. 67-68.
34 Morton,
“Life of
General Don
Manuel de Mier
y Teran,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly, p.
208.
35 A.
A. Parker,
Trip To The
West And Texas
(reprint;
Austin:
Pemberton
Press, 1968),
pp. 152-153;
Juan N.
Almonte,
“Statistical
Report on
Texas, 1835,”
Southwestern
Historical
Quarterly,
XXVIII
(January,
1925), p. 207.
36 Wallace
and Vigness,
Documents of
Texas History,
pp. 49-50.
37 Parker,
Trip To The
West and
Texas, p. 153.
38 0.
H. Delano,
county
surveyor, “Map
of Jefferson
County,” April
1840, Texas
General Land
Office, copy
owned by the
writer.
39 Volumes
A, pp. 27, 79
and D, p. 423,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
40 E.
C. Barker and
A. W. Williams
(eds.), The
Writings of
Sam Houston,
1813-1863 (8
volumes;
Austin:
Pemberton
Press, 1970),
IV, pp. 34-36;
D. W. C. Baker
(compiler), A
Texas
Scrapbook
(reprint;
Austin: Steck
Company,
1935). pp. 27
9-280, photo
p. 206; Volume
D, p. 423,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
41 Invoice,
N. Grigsby to
Sabine
customhouse,
McKinney’s
Bluff, Texas,
November 19,
1839, Custom
Records, File
4-21/10, Texas
State
Archives;
Volume B, p.
143, Deed
Records, and
Original
Probate,
Final, p. 95,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
42 W
F. Gray, From
Virginia To
Texas, 1835:
Diary of
Colonel
William F.
Gray (reprint;
Houston:
Fletcher Young
Publishing
Company,
1965), p. 167;
Volume A, p.
39, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
43 Works
Progress
Administration,
Inventory of
The County
Archives of
Texas: Orange
County, Nr.
181 (San
Antonio: Texas
Historical
Records
Survey, 1941),
pp. 1-2; “The
1850
Manuscript
Census
Schedules For
Jefferson
County,
Texas,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII
(May, 1972),
p. 98, res.
114; Volume A,
p. 2.
Commissioners’
Court Minutes,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
44 Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 24, 25,
27, 135,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Inventory of
The County
Archives:
Orange County,
p. 2; L. W.
Kemp, The
Signers of The
Texas
Declaration of
In dependence
(Salado: Anson
Jones Press,
1944), pp.
361-364.
45 Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners,
p. 130;
Inventory of
The County
Archives:
Orange County,
p. 2;
Garner-Keene
Genealogy
(Charlottesville,
Virginia:
Jorman
Printing
Company,
1952),
excerpts owned
by the writer.
46 Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 22, 75;
Inventory of
The County
Archives:
Orange County,
p.
2.
47 Ibid.
Minutes, Board
of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 7, 15, 16,
60, 66;
Delano, “Map
of Jefferson
County,”
April, 1840;
Volume A, p.
319, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
Subsequent
deed records
cited in this
chapter
involve only
Mexican land
grants.
48 Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 15, 64,
68, Jefferson
County, Texas.
49 Volume
B, p. 66, Deed
Records, and
Minutes, Board
of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 6, 61,
Jefferson
County,
Texas;
Inventory of
The County
Archives:
Orange County,
p. 2; Florence
Stratton, The
Story of
Beaumont (Houston:
Hercules
Printing
Company,
1925), p. 29.
50 Volume
A, pp. 26, 79,
Deed Records,
and Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 19, 73-74,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Delano, “Map
of Jefferson
County,”
April, 1840.
51 Volumes
B, p. 115, and
G, p. 67, Deed
Records, and
Minutes, Board
of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 14, 50-51,
120-121,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Inventory
of The County
Archives:
Orange County,
p. 2; Delano,
“Map of
Jefferson
County,” April
1840.
52 Volumes
A, p. 314; B,
pp. 1, 5, 29,
115; and C, p.
166, Deed
Records, and
Minutes, Board
of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 73, 89,
106, 124, 128,
146, 155, 167,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
53 Andrew
Forest Muir,
“The Free
Negro in
Jefferson and
Orange
Counties,
Texas,”
Journal of
Negro History,
XXXV (April,
1950), p. 185;
Minutes, Board
of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 109-111,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Delano, “Map
of Jefferson
County,”
April, 1840;
Inventory of
The County
Archives:
Orange County,
p.2.
54 Volumes
A, pp. 27, 79,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Delano, “Map
of Jefferson
County,” April
1840.
55 “History
of The Thomas
Courts
Family,” Port
Arthur News, undated
clipping,
circa 1938,
copy owned by
the writer.
56 Indenture,
John McGaffey
and Joseph
Grigsby,
Sabine Pass,
February 8,
1839, recorded
in Volume C,
pp. 215-216,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Beaumont Journal,
January
28 and
February 11,
1906.
57 Pattillo
Higgins, “Map
of Jefferson
County,” 1898;
J. F. Clark,
“Map of
Jefferson
County,” July
22, 1896,
Texas General
Land Office,
Austin, Texas.
58 Clark,
“Map of
Jefferson
County,” July,
1896; Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 53, 112,
and Volumes B,
pp. 55, 61,
and C, p. 131,
Deed Records
Jefferson
County, Texas;
S. H. Dixon
and L. W.
Kemp, The
Heroes of San
Jacinto
(Houston:
Anson Jones
Press, 1932),
p. 374; “Early
History of
Beaumont,”
Standard Blue
Book of Texas,
1908-1909 (Houston:
A. J. Peeler
Standard Blue
Book Company,
1908), p. 71.
59 Clark,
“Map of
Jefferson
County,” July,
1896; Volumes
A, p. 130, and
C, p. 193,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
60 Clark,
“Map of
Jefferson
County,” July,
1896; Volumes
C, p. 118; D,
p. 187; H, p.
295; and M, p.
396 Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
61 Volume
A, pp. 87-89,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Pixon and
Kemp, Heroes
of San
Jacinto, pp.
89, 366; Gray,
From
Virginia to
Texas, p.
89; Beaumont Journal,
June
6, 1908.
62 Gray,
From
Virginia to
Texas, pp.
166-168; Dixon
and Kemp, Heroes
of San
Jacinto, p.
366; Volume B,
p. 193, Deed
Records, and
Volume A, p.
14,
Commissioners’
Court Minutes,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
63 Dixon
and Kemp, Heroes
of San
Jacinto, p.
365.
64 Clark
“Map of
Jefferson
County,” July,
1896; Volumes
A, p. 211, and
C, pp. 205,
258, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
65 Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 88,
101-102, 209,
and Volume C,
p. 145, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Clark, “Map of
Jefferson
County,” July,
1896; Beaumont
Journal, October
22, 1905 and
February 4,
1906.
66 Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 88-89, 93,
117, and
Volumes A, p.
154, and B,
pp. 140, 196,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Beaumont Journal
October 22,
1905; Clark,
“Map of
Jefferson
County,” July,
1896. Michael
Peveto and
Bradley Garner
(footnote 45)
were veterans
of the Battle
of New
Orleans.
Burwell
Jackson,
another
veteran of
that battle,
died at Sabine
Pass in 1860.
67 Gifford
White (ed.), The
1840 Census of
The Republic
of Texa4
(Austin:
Pemberton
Press, 1966),
pp. 94-95;
Original
Petition, 0.
Levi
Hillebrandt
No.323 Versus
Espar
Hillebrandt,
December 4,
1858,
Jefferson
County
District
Court; Volume
B, pp.
301-307,
Jefferson
County
Personal
Property
Record; W. T.
Block,
“Christian
Hillebrandt,
Cattle Baron,”
Texas Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII
(November,
1971), pp.
38-41.
68 Volumes
A, p. 167;B,
pp. 128,
177;D,p.
321;K, p. 307;
and L, p. 541,
Deed Records,
and Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Gray,
From Virginia
To Texas, p.
166.
69 Kemp,
Signers of The
Texas
Declaration of
Independence,
p.
362.Beaumont Journal,
January 28 and
February 11,
1906; H. P. N.
Gammel
(compiler), The
Laws of Texas,
1822-189 7 (10
volumes;
Austin: Gammel
Book Company,
1898),
I, pp. 496,
509.
70 Dixon
and Kemp, Heroes
of San Jacin
to, p.
89.
71 Dixon
and Kemp, Heroes
of San
Jacinto, p. 89;
Gammel, Laws
of Texas, I,
p. 547.
72 Gammel,
Laws
of Texas, I,
p. 955.
73 Dixon
and Kemp, Heroes
of San
Jacinto, p.
89; Gray, From
Virginia To
Texas, p.
89.
74 Dixon
and Kemp, Heroes
of San
Jacinto, p.
89; E. W. Winkler
(ed.),
Secret
Journals of
The Senate,
Republic of
Texas, 183
6-1845, in
Texas Library
and Historical
Commission
First Biennial
Report,
1909-19 10 (Austin:
Austin
Printing
Company,
1911), pp. 22,
39, 86; Volume
A, p. 2,
Commissioners’
Court Minutes,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
75 Federal
Writers’
Project,
Beaumont: A
Guide To The
City and Its
Environs
(Houston:
Anson Jones
Press, 1939),
p. 43.
76 Gammel,
Laws
of Texas, I,
p. 1452.
77 Brown,
Indian
Wars and
Pioneers of
Texas, p. 337;
Dixon
and Kemp, Heroes
of San
Jacinto, p.
95.
78 Military
discharge, W.
H. Landrum to
Benjamin
Johnson,
Alamo,
Headquarters,
Bexar, January
1, 1836, Texas
State
Archives, copy
owned by the
writer;
Widow’s
Pension
Application,
Matilda
Johnson to
Judge John F.
Pipkin, File
119, Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Lamar Donation
Warrant No.
720 to Willis
H. Landrum,
“having been
at Bexar
between 5th
and 10th
Dec., 1835,”
Dec. 27, 1838,
General Land
Office.
79 Pension
Application,
Jacob H.
Garner to A.
B. Bledsoe,
comptroller,
Sabine Pass,
Texas, January
4, 1871, Texas
State
Archives;
“Siege of
Bexar, 1835.
Muster Roll,
Captain
Chessher’s
Company
Volunteers,
the Army
before Bexar,”
p. 22, Muster
Roll Book,
Texas General
Land Office;
Bexar Donation
Grant No. 535
to Isaac
Garner, August
4, 1881, and
Fannin
Donation Grant
No. 1154 to
Jacob H.
Garner, Jan.
24, 1885,
General Land
Office, copies
owned by the
writer.
80 Brown,
Indian
Wars and
Pioneers of
Texas, p. 337;
Fannin
Bounty Warrant
No.
9572, Rep.
of Texasto
William
McFaddin,
General Land
Office, copy
owned by the
writer.
81 Kemp,
Signers of The
Texas
Declaration of
Independence,
pp. 317-318,
362-363.
82 Ibid.
p. 318; Gray,
From Virginia
To Texas, p.
166.
83 Gray,
From Virginia
To Texas, p.
166. West, the
postmaster at
Jefferson,
served a
three-months
enlistment in
Captain F.
Hardin’s
company in
1836. He was
elected to the
First Texas
Congress in
September
1836. See
Kemp, Signers
of The Texas
Declaration of
Independence,
p. 364.
84 Dixon
and Kamp,
Heroes of San
Jacinto, pp.
365, 370.
85 Ibid
pp. 366-374;
John J. Linn,
Reminiscences
of Fifty Years
in Texas
(reprint;
Austin: Steck
Company,
1935), p. 220;
“Capt. William
Logan’s
Company
Volunteers,
March 7,
1836,” p. 37,
Muster Roll
Book, General
Land
Office.
86 Widow’s
pension claim,
Matilda
Johnson to
Judge John F.
Pipkin, File
119, Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Dixon and
Kemp, Heroes
of San
Jacinto, p.
403; Linn,
Fifty Years in
Texas, p. 221.
87 Brown,
Indian
Wars and
Pioneers of
Texas p. 337.
88 Pension
application,
Jacob H.
Garner to A.
B. Bledsoe,
comptroller,
Sabine Pass,
Texas, January
4, 1871, Texas
State
Archives, copy
owned by the
writer; “The
Jasper
Volunteer
Company,
Rendezvous…
March 23,
1836, by James
Chessher,” p.
124, Muster
Roll Book. Texas
General Land
Office.
89 “Return
of Capt. F.
Hardin’s
company, July
7 to October
7, 1836,” p.
57, and
“Return of
Capt. B. J.
Harper’s Co.,
3 months, July
7, 1836,” p.
26, Muster
Roll Book,
Texas General
Land Office;
Bounty
Warrants Nos.
458 and 460 to
Elisha
Stephenson and
George W.
Tevis, General
Land Office,
copies owned
by the writer.
90 Stratton,
Story of
Beaumont, pp.
97-98.
Credibility
arises
concerning
some members
on Hargraves’
list who may
have been too
young. Census
records and
tombstones indicate
that Courts
and McCall
were born in
1829 and 1830,
respectively.
Peveto swore
before the Board
of Land
Commissioners
that he
arrived in
Texas in 1838.
91 Federal
Writers’
Project,
Beaumont, p.
41.
92 Beaumont
Journal, January
28, 1906.
93 Ibid.
February 11,
1906.
94 Milam
Bounty
Certificate
No. 3464,
Republic of
Texas to R. E.
Booth, May 19,
1838, General
Land Office,
copy owned
by the writer.
95 “Muster
Roll, Capt.
Fowler’s Co.,
1st Regt.,
Volunteers,”
p. 85, Muster
Roll Book, and
Bounty
Certificate
No. 3357,
Republic of
Texas to R. C.
Doom, May 14,
1838, General
Land Office,
copies owned
by the writer.
96 Bexar
Donation
Certificate
No. 1153 to
Charles Cronea,
Jan. 24, 1885,
General Land
Office.
97 “Return
of Capt. F.
Hardin’s Co.,
July 7 to Oct.
7, 1836,” p.
57, Muster
Roll Book, and
Bounty
Certificate
No. 2129,
Republic of
Texas to A. B.
J.
Winfree,
January 26,
1838, General
Land Office,
copies owned
by the writer.
98 F.
Muir, “The
Free Negro in
Jefferson and
Orange
Counties,
Texas,”
Journal of
Negro History,
XXXV (April
1950), p. 186.
99 Gray,
From Virginia
To Texas, pp.
166-167.
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