Chapter
VIII: A
History of
Jefferson
County, Texas
Personal
Glimpses
By W. T.
Block
A
significant
part of the
social history
of early
Jefferson
County is the
aggregate of
the lives of
its pioneers.
Whether one
raised cattle,
exported
cotton, made
shingles, or
worked for
wages; he
contributed
something to
the
development of
society in the
county. Most
of the
settlers were
subsistence
farmers,
destined to
live out their
lives in
conventional
and unheralded
mediocrity. A
small number,
however, stand
out as leaders
of industry,
government,
and
agriculture,
and a brief
glimpse into
their personal
lives will
remove them
from the
category of
statistics.
No
pioneer was
more respected
than Joseph
Grigsby, an
early cotton
planter and
legislator.
Born in
Virginia in
1771, Grigsby
and his wife
moved to
Kentucky,
where some of
their children
grew to
adulthood. In
1828,
financial
reverses
caused the
family to
resettle in
Jasper County
and
subsequently,
at Grigsby’s
Bluff, the
site of
present-day
Port Neches.
Their
daughter,
Frances,
married George
W. Smyth, a
signer of the
Texas
Declaration of
Independence.
Grigsby
served in
three of the
first four
Texas
congresses.
His
plantation,
with its
twenty-five
slaves, was
the birthplace
of the
county’s
earliest
cotton
culture. The
planter also
operated a
primitive,
horse-driven
sawmill and
built the
first
horse-driven
cotton gin at
Beaumont, a
town site in
which he owned
a one-quarter
interest. Any
possibility
that a cotton
plantation-slave
economy might
evolve in
Jefferson
County ended
in August 1841
when Grigsby
died. His
estate was of
such size that
the executor,
George W.
Smyth, could
not obtain the
necessary
bond, and an
enabling act
was enacted by
the Texas
legislature to
exempt him.1
Born
in Tennessee
in 1820, J.
Biddle
Langham,
Grigsby’s
protégé and
the only other
significant
cotton grower
in antebellum
Jefferson
County, came
to Texas in
1836. As a
youth, he
picked cotton
on the Grigsby
plantation,
and
thereafter,
lived on
numerous farms
in the
vicinity of
Beaumont. In 1
859, with the
help of four
slaves,
Langham
produced
forty-nine of
the
eighty-four
bales of
cotton grown
in Jefferson
County and
2,000 bushels
of corn.
Earlier, he
had served an
enlistment in
the Texas
Rangers and
was in the
Texas State
Troops during
the Civil War.
Langham’s son,
Thomas H.
Langham, and a
son-in-law,
Ras Landry,
held the
office of
Jefferson
County sheriff
continuously
from 1876
until 1910.
Biddle Langham
quit farming
in 1879 and
ran a livery
stable at
Beaumont until
his death
about 1900.2
Dr.
Niles F. Smith
was born in
New York in
1800 and
received his
medical
training
there. In
1834, he
migrated from
Michigan and
settled at
Milam on the
Brazos River.
Smith’s
family,
however,
remained in
Michigan until
1840, when the
physician
moved them to
Sabine Pass.
Dr.
Smith served
as an engineer
in the Texas
army, and in
December 1836,
was appointed
by President
Houston to
serve as
banking
commissioner.
In 1837, he
was a partner
with the Allen
brothers in
the Houston
Townsite
Company.
Despite his
many realty
and mercantile
ventures,
which are
related in
other
chapters, Dr.
Smith
continued his
medical
practice at
Sabine Pass
until shortly
before his
death in 1858.3
Another
prominent
early settler,
William
McFaddin, came
to Liberty
County with
his parents,
James and
Elizabeth
McFaddin of
Louisiana, in
1823. In 1833,
he moved to
Beaumont,
where he
married Rachel
Williams in
1837. Besides
service to the
Texas
Republic, the
43-year-old
cattleman
entered the
Confederate
army and
served as a
beef buyer for
the
Confederacy’s
Trans-Mississippi
Department
during the
Civil War.
Perhaps
no other
Jefferson
County
resident
foresaw the
potential
value of land
better than
William
McFaddin.
During the
1870’s, he
helped
organize the
Beaumont
Pasture
Company, with
the intent to
obtain the
rangelands of
South
Jefferson
County and
stock them
with cattle.
Eventually, he
bought out his
partners, and
the company
became known
as the
McFaddin
ranch, a
cattle domain
that once
exceeded
100,000 acres
in size and
included the
upper
twenty-five
miles of the
Texas coast.
As of 1880,
the ranch
owned 900
horses and
3,000 head of
cattle,
reaching its
peak in
numbers after
1900.
McFaddin, who
engaged in
many business
pursuits, died
at Beaumont in
October 1897.
His son, Perry
McFaddin,
continued the
family’s
ranching and
business
enterprises
thereafter.4
George
A. Pattillo,
born in
Georgia in
1796, left an
enviable
record of
public service
during his
lifetime. He
married in
Louisiana in
1819 and
acquired one
of the
county’s
earliest land
grants after
he moved to
Texas in 1830.
Pattillo, who
was en route
to San Jacinto
when the
battle was
fought, later
served as
representative
in 1841 and as
senator during
the last three
sessions of
the Congress
of the Texas
Republic.
Pattillo was
also
postmaster at
Pattillo’s
Station, the
first
associate
justice of
Jefferson
County, the
first chief
justice of
Orange County,
and was the
assistant
United States
marshal who
enumerated the
Jefferson and
Orange County
censuses of
1860. Pattillo
sold his
headright
league in 1855
and settled at
Bunn’s Bluff,
on the Neches
River north of
Beaumont,
where he
remained until
his death in
1871.5
Charles
H. Alexander,
a prominent
merchant in
early
Jefferson
County, was
born in North
Carolina in
1810. The
earliest
record of him
is in Jasper
County, where
in 1839 he
purchased the
headright
league of John
Myers. He soon
became a
mercantile
partner of W.
A. Ferguson of
Jasper and
founded the
firm’s second
store at
Sabine Pass in
1855.
Alexander kept
the store
after the
partnership
dissolved in
1857, eventually
becoming the
largest
merchant and
cotton broker
in Jefferson
County.
Alexander
owned many
steamers and
blockade-running
schooners
during his
lifetime,
mostly in
partnership
with Ruff
Brothers of
Beaumont. When
he died in
1872, he owned
the steamer Camargo,
a $45,000
store
inventory, a
one-third
interest in
the 307 lots
owned by the
Sabine
Townsite
Company, and
several
leagues of
land in East
Texas.
Surviving
Confederate
currency is
overprinted
“C. H.
Alexander and
Company,
Sabine Pass,
Texas.”6
Charles,
Robert and
Otto Ruff were
members of a
contingent of
German
immigrants who
arrived in
Jefferson
County in
1846. Born in
Prussia in
1831, the
latter Ruff’s
promising
career ended
during the
yellow fever
epidemic at
Beaumont in
1862. Earlier,
he had worked
as a clerk in
the W. P.
Herring store,
and in 1854,
formed a
realty
partnership
with his
future
brother-in-law,
John J.
Herring. In
1857, Ruff
married
Lucinda
Calder, a
daughter of a
prominent
Beaumont
family. In
1861, he and
Herring
reorganized
their
mercantile
partnership,
naming it J.
J. Herring and
Company, and
admitted
Charles Ruff
as a third
partner. In
1859, Otto
Ruff built
Beaumont’s
third steam
sawmill and
cut 1,250,000
feet of lumber
during the
succeeding
year. When he
died, Ruff was
a principal
stockholder in
the Texas and
New Orleans
Railroad and
was heavily
engaged in
cotton-buying
and
blockade-running
activities.7
McGuire
Chaison and
his aged
father, Jonas
B. Chaison,
were residing
in Jefferson
County by
1838, the year
that the
younger
Chaison was
issued a land
grant. About
1854, he
purchased the
former
residence of
Stephen L.
Smith, south
of Beaumont
near the Mobil
Oil Company
refinery, a
depot and sea
freight
terminal still
known as
Chaison,
Texas. By
1850, he had
acquired a
herd of 700
head of
cattle. In
1854, when
five school
districts were
established,
McGuire
Chaison became
one of the
county’s first
school
trustees. In
1853, a
missionary
priest, Father
P. F. Parisot,
held the
county’s first
Catholic
services in
the Chaison
home. The
senior
Chaison, born
in Halifax,
Nova Scotia in
1745, entered
the United
States as a
soldier in the
American
Continental
Army and died
at Beaumont at
age 109 in
1854. McGuire
Chaison died
there in 1860.8
Robert
Kidd was
another early
centenarian,
who at age 75,
migrated to
Jefferson
County in 1850
with his six
children. Born
in 1774, he
witnessed as a
child the
armies of Lord
Cornwallis and
General
Nathaniel
Greene surging
across his
father’s farm
prior to the
Battle of
Guilford
Courthouse.
Kidd lived
variously at
Aurora,
Grigsby’s
Bluff, Smith’s
Bluff, and
eventually, at
Beaumont and
farmed
actively until
age 100. He
died in Sealy,
Texas in 1890
at age ll6.9
Christian
Hillebrandt
was one of the
very few
European
immigrants who
settled in
Jefferson
County before
or during the
era of the
Texas
Republic. Born
in 1793 in
Schleswig-Holstein,
then a
province of
Denmark,
Hillebrandt
settled at
Abbeville,
Louisiana in
1820, where he
married
Eurasie
Blanchette, a
French
Acadian. Mrs.
Hillebrandt
and her
brother,
Alexis
Blanchette,
Sr., were in
the vanguard
of the Acadian
settlement in
early-day
Jefferson
County.
As a product
of land-hungry
Europe,
Hillebrandt
had unlimited
aspirations to
acquire
property. He
obtained a
Mexican land
grant of 4,428
acres in 1835,
and by 1839,
was paying
taxes on more
than 21,000
acres.
Hillebrandt
and his sons
greatly
influenced the
early cattle
industry in
Jefferson
County.
10
Born
in Connecticut
in 1800, John
Jay French
acquired a
land grant on
Taylor’s Bayou
in 1835. In
1845, he moved
to the French
Trading Post
in the west
end of
Beaumont,
where he
resided for
forty years.
He operated
the county’s
first tannery
there, a site
chosen because
of the
abundance of
oak tree bark
used in the
tanning
process.
French was one
of Jefferson
County’s
earliest rice
growers. At
the time of
his death in
1889, he owned
more than
43,000 acres
of Texas land.11
Alexander
Calder, a
native of New
York, settled
at Beaumont in
1838. He soon
became the
clerk of the
county court,
a post that he
held
continuously
during the
1840’s. About
1839, Calder
began the
study, and
later, the
practice of
law. After his
death in 1853,
his widow,
Luanza, was a
successful
farmer who
owned fourteen
slaves and 400
head of cattle
in 1860.12
William
P. Herring,
born in
Georgia in
1816, came to
Beaumont in
1838 and began
working as a
clerk in Simon
Wiess’ store.
Within a year,
he purchased
the store and
operated it
until his
death in 1859.
His widow,
Sarah Herring,
died a year
later. Herring
owned assets
worth $4,754
in 1850, but
during the
prosperous
decade that
followed, his
property
holdings
mushroomed to
$51,000. His
brother, John
J. Herring,
was also a
well-known
merchant who,
in the course
of his
lifetime, held
many county
offices,
including
chief justice
of the county
court from
1864 until
1
869.13
During his
tenure of
office, the
title was
changed to
county judge.
A
native of New
Hampshire,
Neal McGaffey
was born in
1794 and came
to Sabine Pass
with his son,
Otis, in 1839.
A lawyer by
profession,
the older
McGaffey
purchased in
1846 the
league of land
granted to his
brother, John
McGaffey. Neal
McGaffey,
Sidney A.
Sweet and
William M.
Simpson began
a realty and
industrial
partnership at
Sabine, which
continued
until
McGaffey’s
death in 1867.
In February
1848, Smith,
McGaffey, and
Sweet
furnished the
land and
lumber for the
first church
building in
Jefferson
County. Otis
McGaffey was a
successful
Sabine
merchant from
1846 until
1878, served
as postmaster,
notary public,
county
commissioner,
and justice of
the peace, and
died at
Houston in
1908.14
William
Carr, a native
of St. Landry
Parish,
Louisiana,
came to
Jefferson
County in 1834
and obtained a
Mexican grant
of one league
on Taylor’s
Bayou. His
family of
seventeen
children was
one of the
largest in
early-day
Texas. For
several
decades, Carr
was a leading
cattleman, his
herds
numbering 500
head in 1850,
1,200 head in
1860, and
2,386 head in
1870.15
Joseph
Hebert, an
early member
of the French
Acadian
migration, was
born in
Lafayette
Parish,
Louisiana in
1818 and came
to Jefferson
County in
1842. He
settled on a
1,200-acre
farm south of
Beaumont and
soon became
one of the
county’s
largest
cattlemen,
owning 870
head in 1850
and 3,000 head
in 1860. He
was also one
of the
earliest rice
planters,
growing 1,080
pounds in 1849
and 1,000
pounds in
1859. He was
the county’s
lone rice
grower in the
latter year.
In 1859, Hebert
also owned 200
hogs and grew
nine bales of
cotton, 600
bushels of
corn, 200
bushels of
sweet
potatoes, and
forty bushels
of beans. He
owned twelve
slaves and
combined
assets worth
$32,000 in
1860.16
In
May 1861,
Joseph Hebert
enrolled a
Beaumont
cavalry
company, the
Jefferson
County Mounted
Rangers,
organized
under the
Militia Act of
1858, and was
elected its
captain.
However, the
company was
not mustered
into service.
Hebert then
joined the
Texas State
Troops, served
at Houston,
and died at
Beaumont in
February,
1865.17
Joseph
P. Pulsifer,
who was born
in
Massachusetts
in 1806, came
to Beaumont in
1835. Two
early Beaumont
firms bore the
name of J. P.
Pulsifer and
Company, the
first being a
realty
partnership
involved in
the founding
of the
Beaumont
Townsite
Company. The
second firm,
beginning in
May 1846, was
a drug and
grocery
concern, the
successor to
one founded by
Henry Millard,
in partnership
with Dr. D. J.
Otho Millard.
Except
for short
periods as
either a
seafarer or
customs
collector,
Pulsifer was a
Beaumont
druggist until
his death in
1867. He held
numerous
county offices
and was the
sole survivor
of the
Beaumont
Townsite
proprietors at
the time of
his death. One
of Jefferson
County’s
oldest
legends,
related in
Florence
Stratton’s Story
of Beaumont, concerns
Pulsifer’s and
Margaret
Grigsby’s
blighted
romance in
1839.18
Dr.
Frederick W.
Ogden, born in
Kentucky in
1808, settled
at Beaumont in
1838 and was
soon awarded a
grant by the
Board of Land
Commissioners.
Although
trained in
medicine and
law, he
practiced only
the legal
profession in
early-day
Jefferson
County. Dr.
Ogden served
as district
attorney of
the Fifth
Judicial
District of
East Texas
from 1839
until 1842 and
as
representative
in the 7th
and 8th
congresses of
the Texas
Republic. He
practiced law
at Beaumont
for twenty
years and died
there about
1859.19
Four Millard
brothers,
Henry, Sidney
H., Anthony,
and Otho,
lived in
early-day
Beaumont, but
only the
latter
remained there
until his
death. Colonel
Henry Millard
moved to
Galveston in
1841, after
which Sidney
Millard and
his
brother-in-law,
George Bryan,
operated the
family store.
In May 1846,
the
proprietorship
passed to Dr.
D. J. Otho
Millard, a
druggist and
Beaumont’s
first
physician, and
J. P.
Pulsifer.
Dr.
Millard
replaced his
brother Henry
as chief
justice of
Jefferson
County in 1840
and died at
Beaumont in
1851. His
widow later
married
William Lewis,
a Beaumont
attorney and
sawmiller, who
held the
office of
chief justice
during the
1850’s.20
Captain
George W.
O’Brien, born
in Vermilion
Parish, La.,
in 1833,
settled at
Beaumont in
1852 and lived
there until
his death in
1909. By 1860,
he was an
alderman of
the town of
Beaumont,
served
conjointly as
county and
district
clerk, and in
1861 was
licensed to
practice law.
He soon
enlisted in
the
Confederate
Army and
served in
Virginia for
several months
until
discharged
there due to
ill health. In
March, 1862,
he mustered
Beaumont’s
Company E of
Spaight’s
Texas
Battalion,
eventually
participating
in three
battles in
Louisiana and
two at or near
Sabine Pass.
Captain
O’Brien
continued the
practice of
law until his
retirement
shortly before
his death. For
a brief time
after the
Civil War, he
engaged in
shingle making
and
subsequently
owned and
edited the Neches
Valley News and
its successor,
the Beaumont
News-Beacon. In
1892, he
joined Patillo
Higgins and
George W.
Carroll in
organizing the
Gladys City
Oil, Gas, and
Manufacturing
Company, and
his
unfaltering
belief in
Higgins’
‘dream’
eventually
resulted in
the gusher at
Spindletop.21
David H.
McFaddin, a
cousin of the
well-known
William
McFaddin of
Beaumont, was
born in
Montgomery
County,
Tennessee in
1816, and came
to Liberty
County with
his parents,
William and
Sarah Jett
McFaddin, in
1828. On March
6, 1836, he
joined Captain
Logan’s
company and
subsequently
fought at the
Battle of San
Jacinto.
Later, his
company
followed the
retreating
Mexican armies
to the Rio
Grande River,
and after
returning to
Goliad,
McFaddin
helped bury
the remains of
Colonel James
Fannin’s
ill-fated
volunteers.
 |
GEORGE
W. O’BRIEN—An
early Beaumont
attorney and
county clerk,
Captain
O’Brien
mustered Co.
E, Spaight’s
Battalion and
fought in many
Civil War
battles. Later
he was one of
three men who
organized the
Gladys City
Oil, Gas, and
Manufacturing
Co.
|
 |
SARAH
COURTS KING—Sarah
Ann King was
reputedly the
first white
female born at
Sabine-on Feb.
14, 1835. She
nursed yellow
fever victims
in 1862 and a
year later
witnessed the
Battle of
Sabine Pass
from a
rooftop.
|
 |
JAMES
M. LONG—An
early Beaumont
sawmiller,
Captain Long
enlisted in
Co. E,
Spaight’s Bn.,
in 1862.
Despite his
short life
span and death
in 1873, he
greatly
influenced the
growth of
Beaumont’s
lumber and
shingle
industries
during the
post-war
years.
|
 |
FRANK
L. CARROLL—With
James Long,
Francis
Lafayette
Carroll
purchased the
former Ross
and Alexander
mill site in
1860, but did
not move to
Beaumont
permanently
until 1866. He
was a leading
sawmiller
thereafter.
|
 |
WILLIAM
A. FLETCHER—A
Beaumont youth
in 1861, W. A.
Fletcher
hurried to
complete a
roof for fear
of missing an
opportunity to
enlist. He
fought in many
major battles
and became a
leading East
Texas
industrialist
in later
years.
|
 |
D.
R. WINGATE—As
commissioner
of defense,
Wingate, a
Sabine
sawmiller,
supervised
Jefferson
County’s
defense
preparations
in 1861. He
and his family
returned to
Newton County
when yellow
fever broke
out in 1862.
|
 |
JULIUS
G.
KELLERSBERG(ER)—Major
Kellersberg,
the
Confederate
chief engineer
for East
Texas, built
Forts Griffin
and Manhassett
at Sabine and
Fort Grigsby
at Port
Neches. He
spent most of
the year 1863
in Jefferson
County.
|
 |
JOSEPH
M. CHASTINE—Commanding
Co. F,
Griffin’s
Battalion, Lt.
Chastine won
lavish praise
from Col.
Smith for
having “rushed
immediately to
the scene of
danger” at the
Battle of
Sabine Pass.
He
subsequently
resided at
Sabine and
Beaumont.
|
After
settling at
Beaumont,
David McFaddin
married
Jerusha Dyches
of Pine Island
settlement in
1838, and in
1843 was
elected
sheriff of
Jefferson
County. In
1848 he moved
to the San
Gabriel River,
east of
Georgetown,
and soon after
carried the
petition to
Austin, which
resulted in
the
organization
of Williamson
County. He
became a
prosperous
cattlemen,
miller and
slaveholder
and died there
in October
1896. A son,
also named
William, was
killed in
action while
serving in the
Confederate
Army.22
Born
in Georgia in
1813, John
Kelly
Robertson
settled at
Beaumont after
completing an
army
enlistment
during the
Mexican War.
His arrival in
Jefferson
County was an
accident, the
result of
being rescued
from the “oil
pond,”
offshore from
Sabine Pass,
where his ship
had taken
refuge during
a storm. From
1849 until
1855, he
served as
county clerk
and in 1858
was licensed
to practice
law. He
remained a
prominent
Beaumont
attorney until
his death in
November,
1873.23
A
native of
Virginia, A.
N. Vaughn
began the
Beaumont Male
and Female
Academy in
1858, but quit
teaching in
January 1860,
when he became
publisher of
the Beaumont Banner.
He was
also mayor of
Beaumont
during that
year. In 1861
he enlisted in
Company F, 5th
Texas
Infantry, of
Hood’s Brigade
and saw action
during many of
the major
battles of the
Civil War.
On
January 1,
1868, while
serving as
Jefferson
County’s
assessor-collector
of taxes,
Vaughn was wed
to Allie B.
Keith of
Sabine Pass.
In 1869, he
became a
partner in
Sabine’s
cotton
brokerage firm
of Keith and
Vaughn. In
1878 he moved
to Cairo,
Jasper County,
to manage the
Texas Tram and
Lumber
Company’s
commissary and
died there in
1883.24
Vaughn’s
partner and
brother-in-law,
K. D. Keith,
was born in
Georgia in
1831, and in
1856 came to
Beaumont to
manage a new
mercantile
firm owned by
W. A.
Ferguson. In
1857 he moved
to Sabine and
bought a
half-interest
in the cotton
export
business owned
by his
father-in-law,
Otis McGaffey.
During the
Civil War,
Keith
commanded
Company B, of
Spaight’s
Battalion, an
artillery unit
that was
aboard the
gunboat Uncle
Ben at
the
Battle of
Sabine Pass.
After the war,
he continued
as a Sabine
cotton broker
until 1871. He
eventually
settled at
Luling, Texas,
where he
prospered as a
lumber and
hardware
dealer until
his death in
1911.25
Although
David R.
Wingate
resided in
Jefferson
County for
only four
years, from
1858 until
1862, the
pioneer s
contribution
to Southeast
Texas history
certainly
accords him a
place in this
volume. Born
in South
Carolina in
1819, he grew
up in the
Pearl River
delta region
of
Mississippi,
where from
1845 until
1852 he
operated a
sash sawmill.
In 1852 he
moved to
Newton County
(bringing some
55 slaves with
him), where he
purchased a
cotton
plantation
located on the
Linnville and
Lewis leagues.
In
1858, Wingate
bought the
abandoned
Spartan Mill
Company at
Sabine Pass
and built it
into the
largest
sawmill in
Texas. In
August 1862,
he and his
family fled
from Sabine
when yellow
fever broke
out, and six
weeks later,
the Federals
burned most of
his property
there. During
the first year
of the war, he
was Jefferson
County’s
commissioner
of defense, an
appointment
that resulted
in the
building of
Fort Sabine
and the
fourteen
cavalry
barracks and
stables on the
Front Ridge.
In December
1861, Wingate
was
commissioned
colonel of the
2nd
Regiment,
First Brigade,
of Texas
Militia, but
an appointment
as Confederate
marshal of
Southern Texas
prevented
active
military
service. From
1874 until his
death in 1899,
Wingate
remained a
prosperous
Orange County
sawmiller,
merchant,
steamboat man,
and rice
farmer,
despite the
fact that four
sawmill fires
during his
lifetime
resulted in
$500,000 worth
of uninsured
losses.26
Born
in Kentucky in
1811, James R.
Armstrong
moved to
Jasper County
in 1835 and
served in
Captain
Chessher’s
Jasper
Volunteers
during the
Texas
Revolution. A
lawyer by
profession, he
was the first
district
attorney of
the Fifth
Judicial
District and
moved to
Beaumont in
1840. While
serving two
terms in the
Republic of
Texas
Congress, he
signed Texas’
Joint
Resolution on
annexation and
was a member
of the first
state
constitutional
convention in
July 1845.
In
1848,
Armstrong
accompanied a
friend, David
McFaddin, to
Williamson
County, where
he was a
prosperous
attorney and
rancher until
1867, when he
returned to
Beaumont. He
remained a
prominent
cattleman and
lawyer until
his death at
Beaumont in
December 1879.
He also served
in many of the
state
legislatures
between 1846
and 1873.27
Isaiah
Junker, who
was born in
Pennsylvania
in 1818,
settled at
Beaumont in
the early 1
840’s and for
many years was
the
community’s
only
blacksmith.
During the
1850’s he
served in the
state
legislature
and as chief
justice of
Jefferson
County. In
1857 he was
one of the
promoters of
the Mexican
Gulf and
Henderson
Railroad
(subsequently
the Eastern
Texas). He
became a
merchant in
1861 when he
purchased a
store owned by
James R. and
Michael
Alexander. A
son,
Lieutenant
Wilson A.
Junker, was
executive
officer of
Beaumont’s
Company E,
Spaight’s
Battalion,
during the
Civil War and
afterward, was
captain of the
Sabine River
steamer Pearl
Rivers.28
Perhaps
no single
family
contributed
more to the
early history
of Jefferson
County than
that of
Bradley Gamer,
Sr., a veteran
of the Battle
of New
Orleans, all
of whose
children (four
sons and four
daughters)
settled at Old
Jefferson
(present-day
Bridge City)
between 1825
and 1828.
David Gamer
was twice
elected
sheriff of
Jefferson
County and
served in the
Fourth Texas
Congress. He
and two
brothers,
Isaac and
Jacob Garner,
fought at the
Battle of San
Antonio, the
latter serving
three
enlistments
between 1835
and 1837. A
son-in-law,
Claiborne
West, was a
merchant and
postmaster at
Jefferson,
served as its
delegate to
the
Consultation
of San Felipe,
signed the
Texas
Declaration of
Independence,
enlisted in
the Texas
Army, and was
elected to the
First Texas
Congress.
Another
son-in-law,
Benjamin
Johnson,
served three
army
enlistments
and fought at
the battles of
San Antonio
and San
Jacinto. Still
another, John
McGaffey, was
the founder of
Sabine Pass,
where he,
Johnson, and
Jacob Gamer
lived out
their lives.
Both West and
David Garner
were Mexican
land grantees.
The survey of
McGaffey’s
league at
Sabine was
completed
shortly before
the
Nacogdoches
land office
closed in
1835, and the
Republic of
Texas
subsequently
issued its
patent. 29
A
ship carpenter
by trade,
Peter D.
Stockholm was
born in
Brooklyn, N.
Y., in 1815
and in 1840
settled at
Sabine, where
he became a
boarding
inspector and
deputy
collector for
the Republic
of Texas
customhouse.
In 1847 he
married Mary
Keith, whose
parents,
George and
Lovenia Keith,
were pioneer
Sabine Lake
settlers.
Stockholm
spent more
than thirty
years as a
steamboat
captain and
pilot, engaged
in
shipbuilding
at Sabine Pass
and Orange,
and held
several county
offices,
including
county
commissioner,
justice of the
peace, and
inspector of
cattle and
hides. On
January 21,
1863, he
participated
in the
offshore naval
battle near
Sabine Pass
(where two
Union warships
subsequently
surrendered),
as pilot
aboard the
Confederate
gunboat Josiah
H. Bell. About
1880 he became
a real estate
promoter at
Beaumont and
died there in
1901.30
Captain
James M. Long,
who was born
in Georgia in
1837, settled
at Beaumont in
1859,
where he and
Frank L.
Carroll
purchased the
burned Ross
and Alexander
sawmill and
repaired it.
When Company
E, Spaight’s
Battalion, was
mustered at
Beaumont in
1862, Long was
elected second
lieutenant and
eventually
participated
in a number of
Texas and
Louisiana
battles. In
1865, he and
his father,
Davis Long,
resumed mill
operations and
built Long and
Company into
Beaumont’s
largest
post-bellum
industry.
Despite his
short life
span, James
Long, more
than any
single
individual,
deserves
credit for
influencing
Beaumont’s
industrial
growth after
the Civil War.
Following his
death in June
1873, his
family
connections,
including his
widow,
Theresa, and
his
brothers-in-law,
Frank L. and
Joseph A.
Carroll,
William A.
Fletcher, and
John W. Keith,
dominated the
Beaumont
lumber scene
thereafter.31
Personal
glimpses into
the lives of a
few of the
early settlers
reveal that
some came from
neighboring
Louisiana, a
few from
distant points
in the
northern
United States,
and others
from Europe.
All of them
had one thing
in common;
each found a
reason to
remain and
wager his
future in
Jefferson
County. In
frontier
fashion, a few
of them
prospered and
made a mark on
the county’s
history. The
majority of
settlers
simply marked
time in
Jefferson
County until
either
ensnared by
death or by
the lure of
greener
pastures
farther west.
 |
NEAL
McGAFFEY, JR.—The
son of
Sabine’s
founder, John
McGaffey, Neal
McGaffey was
reputedly the
first white
male born at
Sabine Pan. He
fought 4 years
in the
Confederate
army and was a
successful
rancher and
farmer.
|
 |
REV.
JOHN F. PIPKIN—John
Fletcher
Pipkin, a
Methodist lay
minister, won
the
appellation,
“father of
Beaumont
churches,”
because he
ministered at
the weddings
and funeral
rites of all
faiths.
|
Endnotes
1
Beaumont
Journal,
November 12,
1905; Beaumont
Enterprise,
August 12,
1964;
information
excerpted from
the G. W.
Smyth family
Bible and from
Virginia
Historical
Genealogies (Baltimore:
Boddie, 1965),
copies owned
by the writer;
G. White (ed),
The 1840
Census of The
Republic of
Texas (Austin:
Pemberton
Press, 1966),
p. 95;
Testament of
J. Grigsby,
Original
Probate,
Final, p. 95,
and land
grant, George
A. Nixon to J.
Grigsby,
Volume C, p.
126, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
2
Beaumont
Journal,
November 5,
1905; John H.
Brown, Indian
Wars and
Pioneers of
Texas (Austin:
L. E. Daniel,
189?), pp.
530-531;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule IV,
Products of
Agriculture,
Eighth Census
of the United
States, 1860.
3
“Analysis of
The 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII
(May, 1972),
pp. 71, 115;
Volume I, pp.
92-93, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
A. W. Williams
and Eugene C.
Barker, The
Writings of
Sam Houston,
1813-1863 (8
volumes;
Austin:
Pemberton
Press, 1970),
I, p. 507 and
II, p. 472,
and III, p.
492; E. W.
Winkler
(ed.,), Secret
Journals of
The Senate,
Republic of
Texas,
1836-1845, in
Texas
Library and
Historical
Commission
First Biennial
Report,
1909-1910 (Austin:
Austin
Printing
Company,
1911), pp. 32,
220, 282, 284,
307: (Houston)
Telegraph
and Texas
Register, February
6, 13, and
July 24, 1839;
(Galveston) Civilian
and Galveston
Gazette, May
17, 1839 and
June 2, 1848;
H. P. N.
Gammel
(compiler), The
Laws of Texas,
1822-1897 (10
volumes;
Austin: Gammel
Book Company,
1898), I, p.
1135; T. C.
Richardson, East
Texas: Its
History and
Its Makers (3
volumes; New
York: Dabney,
White, 1840),
III, p. 1344;
W. P. Webb and
H. B. Carroll,
Handbook of
Texas (Austin:
Texas State
Historical
Association,
1952), II, p.
625.
4
Brown,
Indian Wars
and Pioneers
of Texas, pp.
337-338;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County, Texas,
Schedules II,
Slaves (1860),
and IV,
Products of
Agriculture,
Eighth, Ninth,
and Tenth
Censuses of
the United
States, 1860,
1870, 1880;
Beaumont Journal,
April 14
and May 5, 12,
19, 1907;
Beaumont Enterprise,
October
4, 1931;
“Analysis of
The 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII
(May, 1972),
pp. 68, 73,
125. When a
century of
ranch
operations
ended about
1950, a
probable
150,000
animals had
been marked
with the famed
“Mashed-O”
brand.
5
Beaumont
Journal, October
15, 1905.
6
File
45-B, Estate
of C. H.
Alexander,
1872, Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Volumes B, pp.
145-147, 172,
and C, pp.
105-109,
Personal
Property
Record, and M,
pp. 132-133,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Beaumont
Journal, March
5, 1906. Mrs.
Willard Doiron
of Beaumont
owns the
overprinted
currency.
Until recently
the writer
owned the
original Myers
to Alexander
deed, one of
many deposited
for
safekeeping
with the
Jefferson
County clerk.
7
(Galveston)
Weekly
News, November
9, 1859; K. D.
Keith, “The
Memoirs of
Captain K. D.
Keith,”
unpublished
manuscript, p.
12; File 195,
Estate of Otto
Ruff, 1863,
Probate
Records;
Volume B, pp.
98, 105-109,
Personal
Property
Record; and
Volume M, pp.
536, 626, Deed
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
“Analysis of
The 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII
(May, 1972),
pp. 127, 129;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule I,
Population,
Eighth Census
of the United
States, 1860,
p. 45, res.
272; and
Schedule V,
Products of
Industry,
1860; Book A,
No. 267,
Marriage
Record,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Beaumont Journal,
April 23,
1905.
8
P.
F. Parisot, The
Reminiscences
of A Texas
Missionary (San
Antonio:
Johnson
Brothers
Printing
Company,
1899), p. 7; Standard
Blue Book of
Texas,
1908-1909 (Hobston:
Peeler
Standard Blue
Book Company,
1908), p. 72;
“Analysis of
The 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, pp.
66, 68, 72,
128-129;
White, The
1840 Census, p.
94; Volume B,
pp. 112-114,
Commissioners’
Court Minutes,
and B, pp.
30-31,
Personal
Property
Record,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule I,
Eighth Census
of the United
States, 1860,
p. 65,
residence 406;
Schedule III,
Mortality; and
Schedule IV,
Products of
Agriculture,
pp. 5-6, No.
13.
9
Brown,
Indian Wars
and Pioneers
of Texas, p.
565; Standard
Blue Book of
Texas,
1908-1909, p.
72; Beaumont Journal,
October
21, 1906;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County, Eighth
Census of the
United States,
1860, Schedule
I, p. 82,
residence 505.
Throughout the
nineteenth
century,
Smith’s Bluff,
the site of
Union Oil of
California’s
refinery near
Nederland,
Grigsby’s
Bluff,
Taylor’s Bayou
Hillebrandt
Bayou, Pine
Island, and
Sparks’
Settlement
were never
more than
scatterings of
farm houses.
10
Spanish
petition,
Hillebrandt to
George A.
Nixon,
Nacogdoches,
State of
Coahuila-Texas,
August 3,
1835, p. 1,
translation by
Pedro M.
Duelo,
University of
Houston, May,
1960, copy
owned by the
writer; Volume
B, pp.
301-307,
Personal
Property
Record, and
Original
Petition, 0.
L. Hillebrandt
No. 323 Versus
Espar
Hillebrandt,
December 4,
1858,
Jefferson
County
District
Court,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Beaumont Journal,
February
4, 1906;
Frederick L.
Olmsted, Journey
Through Texas:
A Saddle-Trip
on The
Southern
Frontier (reprint;
Austin: Von
Boeckmann-Jones
Press, 1962),
p. 246.
11
Beaumont
Journal,
October 1,
1905;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule I,
1850,
residence 75;
Federal
Writers’
Project,
Beaumont: A
Guide To The
City and Its
Environs (Houston:
Anson Jones
Press, 1939),
p.
53;(Galveston)
Weekly
News,
December 8,
1857;Rosine
McFaddin
Wilson, “The
John Jay
French Trading
Post,” East
Texas
Historical
Journal, VIII
(March, 1970),
14-23.
12
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County, 1860,
Schedule I,
Eighth Census
of the United
States, p. 44,
residence 274;
Schedule II;
and Schedule
IV, p. 5, No.
3; “Analysis
of The 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, p.
89;
(Galveston)
Weekly News, August
3, 1852. Most
of the early
archives of
Jefferson
County are in
Calder’s
unique
handwriting.
In 1859,
Luanza Calder
grew four
bales of
cotton and 700
bushels of
corn. For an
account of her
farming
activities,
see court
depositions
involving the
estate of her
father, File
160, Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
13
Beaumont
Enterprise,
November
22, 1908;
“Analysis of
The 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, p.
127;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County, 1860,
Schedule I, p.
40, residence
251, and p.
46, residence
286; and
Schedule II;
File 97,
Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
Sarah Herring
owned nine
slaves and
2,308 head of
cattle when
she died.
14
Oath
of allegiance
to Texas, Neal
McGaffey to
Judge Henry
Millard,
Beaumont,
December 31,
1839, Texas
State
Archives, copy
owned by the
writer; G. W.
McGaffey, Genealogical
History of The
McGaffey
Family
(Bradford,
Vermont:
Opinion Press,
1904), pp.
30-38; Volumes
E, pp. 301,
354, 372; F,
pp. 163, 209;
G, pp. 38, 94,
151-153; and
0, p. 453,
Deed Records
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Texas
Almanac, 1867
(Galveston:
Richardson and
Company,
1868), p. 207;
Beaumont Journal,
January
14, 1906; Port
Arthur
News, October
31, 1971.
15
Beaumont
Journal,
October 22,
1905; Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners,
p. 93, No.
107, Jefferson
County, Texas;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County,
Schedule IV,
Products of
Agriculture:
for 1850, p.
447; for 1860,
pp. 5-6; for
1870, pp. 3.4,
Microfilm Reel
No. 9, Texas
State
Archives;
“Analysis of
The 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, p.
76;
Volume A, p.
87,
Commissioners’
Court Minutes,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
16
Brown
Indian Wars
and Pioneers
of Texas, p.
551;
“Analysis of
The 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record,
pp. 68, 73,
122;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County, 1860,
Schedule I,
Population, p.
80, residence
499; Schedule
II, Slaves;
and Schedule
IV, pp. 5-6,
No. 39.
17
Brown,
Indian Wars
and Pioneers
of Texas, p.
551; Muster
Roll,
Jefferson
County Mounted
Rangers, May
4, 1861, Texas
State Archives
and recorded
in Volume C,
pp. 51-52,
Personal
Property
Record,
Jefferson
County, Texas.
18
”Analysis
of The 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record,
p. 129;
Minutes, Board
of Land
Commissioners,
p. 150; Record
of Retail
Licenses,
1839-1851; and
Volumes C, p.
364, and D,
pp. 40-47,
Deed Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Beaumont
Enterprise, November
22, 1908;
Florence
Stratton, The
Story of
Beaumont (Houston:
Hercules
Printing
Company,
1925), pp.
32-35.
19
Beaumont
Journal,
June 3, 1906;
“Analysis of
The 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, p.
125; Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners,
p. 222,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
Winkler, Secret
Journals of
The Senate, pp.
136, 139;
Nancy N.
Barker (ed.) The
French
Legation in
Texas (2
volumes;
Austin: Texas
State
Historical
Association,
1973), II, p.
494.
20
Beaumont
Journal,
June 6, 1908;
Record of
Retail
Licenses,
1838-1851,
pages
unnumbered,
Minutes, Board
of Land
Commissioners,
pp. 176, 181,
206; and
Volume A, pp.
45, 133-134,
Commissioners’
Court Minutes,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
“Analysis of
The 1850
Census,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, p.
129; Sam H.
Dixon and
Lewis W. Kemp,
The Heroes
of San Jacinto
(Houston:
Anson Jones
Press, 1932),
pp. 89-90.
21
C.
K. Ragan
(ed.). The
Diary of
Captain George
W. O’Brien (reprinted
from South
western
Historical
Quarterly,
LXVII. 1963),
4-17;
(Galveston) Ti-Weekly
News, May
10, 1872;
Beaumont
Enterprise, April
16, 1905;
Brown, Indian
Wars and
Pioneers of
Texas, p.
266.
22
“An Old
Hero—D. H.
McFaddin,”
(Galveston) Daily
News,
August 13,
1893; ibid.,
“Veteran
McFaddin
Fought at
San
Jacinto,”
October 17,
1896; Beaumont
Enterprise,
November
22, 1908;
Dixon and
Kemp, Heroes
of San
Jacinto,
p. 371.
23
Beaumont
Journal,
July 25, 1908;
“1850
Manuscript
Census
Schedules for
Jefferson
County,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record,
VII (May,
1972), 89.
24
Beaumont
Journal,
June 17, 1906;
Sabine Pass Beacon,
September
10, 1871;
Manuscript
Census
Returns,
Schedules I,
Jefferson
County, 1860,
1870.
25
“The
Memoirs of
Captain
Kaaciusko D.
Keith,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, X (November,
1974), 41-64.
26
T.
A. Wilson, Some
Early
Southeast
Families (Houston:
Lone Star
Press, 1965),
pp. 12-13;
Brown, Indian
Wars and
Pioneers of
Texas, pp.
760-761;
“Among the
Lumbermen,”
(Galveston) Daily
News,
July 11, 1896.
27
Biographical
Directory of
the Texan
Conventions
and Congresses
(Austin:
1941), p. 45;
(Galveston) Weekly
News, January
15, 1880.
28
1850
Manuscript
Census
Schedules for
Jefferson
County,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, VII
(May, 1972),
72, 127; ibid.,
“Spaight’s
Battalion, C.
S. A.,” VII
(November,
1972), 36;
Beaumont Enterprise,
November
6, 1880.
29
Beaumont
Journal,
January 14, 28
and February
11, 1906;
excerpts from
Garner-Keene
Genealogy (Charlottesville,
Va.: Jorman
Printing
Company,
1952);
Biography of
David Gamer,
Biographical
Directory of
the Texas
Conventions
and Congresses
(Austin:
1941); Port
Arthur News,
October 31,
1971 and
January 30,
1972; W. T.
Block,
“Minutemen of
1835-1836:
Southeast
Texans in the
War for Texas
Independence,”
Texas Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, XI
(November,
1975), 79-91;
Kemp, Signers
of the Texas
Declaration of
Independence,
pp. 361
-364; Minutes,
Board of Land
Commissioners
of Jefferson
County, pp.
24-27, 86,
109, 135, 174.
30
Beaumont
Journal,
September 26,
1901; Beaumont
Enterprise,
September
26, 1901;
November 22,
1908;June 1,
1913; W. T.
Block,
“Stockholm
Dean of East
Texas Steam
boatmen,” Port
Arthur News,
December
23, 1973.
31
Manuscript
Census
Returns,
Schedules I
and V,
Jefferson
County, Texas,
1860, 1870;
(Galveston) Tri-Weekly
News, June
23, 1873;
Beaumont
Journal, November
4, 1906;
“History of
Spaight’s
Texas
Regiment,”
University of
Texas
Archives; File
139, Estate of
James Long,
Probate
Records,
Jefferson
County, Texas;
W. T. Block
(ed.),
“Documents of
the Early
Sawmilling
Epoch,” Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record, IX
(November,
1973), 54-56.
|