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TSHA | SEARCH
Search Use the box below to search the entire TSHA website, including entries from our popular Handbook of Texas, information on TSHA's education programs and teacher resources, our catalog of publications,and more.
TSHA | FRANCKLYN LAND AND CATTLE COMPANY The Francklyn Land and Cattle Company was an English syndicate chartered in 1881 to invest in the "Beef Bonanza." It was headed by and named for Charles G. Francklyn, a son-in-law of E. G. Cunard, owner of the Cunard Steamship Line, who helped finance the venture. The syndicate purchased a total of 631,000 acres of land in thePanhandle
TSHA | SHERMAN RIOT OF 1930 The Sherman riot of 1930 was one of the major incidents of racial violence that occurred in the United States at the onset of the Great Depression, when lynching and other lawless acts increased with economic problems. The incident initiated a flurry of racial violencein Texas.
TSHA | ORCOQUIZA INDIANS The Orcoquiza (Arkokisa, Akankisa, Acconcesawas, Horcaquisaes) Indians, an Attacapan group, lived north of Galveston Bay along the Trinity and Colorado rivers and were from time to time associated with the Bidai and Aranama Indians and other groups. TSHA | PERRY, CICERO RUFUS Cicero Rufus (Old Rufe) Perry, Texas Ranger, was born in Alabama on August 23, 1822. In 1833 he moved with his parents to Bastrop, then in Washington County. He participated in the siege of Bexar, served from July 1 to October 1, 1836, in Capt. William W. Hill 's company of Texas Rangers, and was involved in an Indian fight on Yegua Creek.TSHA | MALAKOFF MAN
Malakoff Man. Thomas H. Guderjan General Entry. Malakoff Man. On a terrace of the Trinity River near Malakoff in Henderson County, a mystery in Texas archeology began in the 1930s. In 1929 the first of three apparently carved stone heads was claimed to have been found deeply buried in a gravel deposit near Malakoff by quarry workers. TSHA | LOCKHART, MATILDA Matilda Lockhart, who as a young girl was taken captive by Comanche Indians, was probably born in Illinois around 1825. Her father, Andrew Lockhart, emigrated with his family from Illinois to Texas in 1828 and settled on the Guadalupe River in Green DeWitt's colony. In the fall of 1838, when Matilda was about thirteen years old, she and four children of Mitchell Putnam were captured by TSHA | DICKINSON, ANGELINA ELIZABETH Angelina Dickinson, called the Babe of the Alamo, daughter of Almeron and Susanna (Wilkerson) Dickinson (also spelled Dickerson), was born on December 14, 1834, in Gonzales, Texas. By early 1836 her family had moved to San Antonio. On February 23, as the forces of Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna entered the city, Dickinson reportedly caught up his wife and daughter behind his saddle and TSHA | KENEDY, MIFFLIN Mifflin Kenedy, rancher, the son of John and Sarah (Starr) Kenedy, was born on June 8, 1818, at Downington, Chester County, Pennsylvania. His parents were Quakers, and he was educated in the common schools of the county and spent some time in a boarding school headed by Jonathan Gause, a Quaker educator. TSHA | HOMESEE MORE ON TSHAONLINE.ORGTSHA | SEARCH
Search Use the box below to search the entire TSHA website, including entries from our popular Handbook of Texas, information on TSHA's education programs and teacher resources, our catalog of publications,and more.
TSHA | FRANCKLYN LAND AND CATTLE COMPANY The Francklyn Land and Cattle Company was an English syndicate chartered in 1881 to invest in the "Beef Bonanza." It was headed by and named for Charles G. Francklyn, a son-in-law of E. G. Cunard, owner of the Cunard Steamship Line, who helped finance the venture. The syndicate purchased a total of 631,000 acres of land in thePanhandle
TSHA | SHERMAN RIOT OF 1930 The Sherman riot of 1930 was one of the major incidents of racial violence that occurred in the United States at the onset of the Great Depression, when lynching and other lawless acts increased with economic problems. The incident initiated a flurry of racial violencein Texas.
TSHA | ORCOQUIZA INDIANS The Orcoquiza (Arkokisa, Akankisa, Acconcesawas, Horcaquisaes) Indians, an Attacapan group, lived north of Galveston Bay along the Trinity and Colorado rivers and were from time to time associated with the Bidai and Aranama Indians and other groups. TSHA | PERRY, CICERO RUFUS Cicero Rufus (Old Rufe) Perry, Texas Ranger, was born in Alabama on August 23, 1822. In 1833 he moved with his parents to Bastrop, then in Washington County. He participated in the siege of Bexar, served from July 1 to October 1, 1836, in Capt. William W. Hill 's company of Texas Rangers, and was involved in an Indian fight on Yegua Creek.TSHA | MALAKOFF MAN
Malakoff Man. Thomas H. Guderjan General Entry. Malakoff Man. On a terrace of the Trinity River near Malakoff in Henderson County, a mystery in Texas archeology began in the 1930s. In 1929 the first of three apparently carved stone heads was claimed to have been found deeply buried in a gravel deposit near Malakoff by quarry workers. TSHA | LOCKHART, MATILDA Matilda Lockhart, who as a young girl was taken captive by Comanche Indians, was probably born in Illinois around 1825. Her father, Andrew Lockhart, emigrated with his family from Illinois to Texas in 1828 and settled on the Guadalupe River in Green DeWitt's colony. In the fall of 1838, when Matilda was about thirteen years old, she and four children of Mitchell Putnam were captured by TSHA | DICKINSON, ANGELINA ELIZABETH Angelina Dickinson, called the Babe of the Alamo, daughter of Almeron and Susanna (Wilkerson) Dickinson (also spelled Dickerson), was born on December 14, 1834, in Gonzales, Texas. By early 1836 her family had moved to San Antonio. On February 23, as the forces of Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna entered the city, Dickinson reportedly caught up his wife and daughter behind his saddle and TSHA | KENEDY, MIFFLIN Mifflin Kenedy, rancher, the son of John and Sarah (Starr) Kenedy, was born on June 8, 1818, at Downington, Chester County, Pennsylvania. His parents were Quakers, and he was educated in the common schools of the county and spent some time in a boarding school headed by Jonathan Gause, a Quaker educator. TSHA | HANDBOOK OF TEXAS The Handbook of Texas is a digital state encyclopedia developed by the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA) that is free and accessible on the Internet for students, teachers, scholars, and the general public. The Handbook consists of overview, general, and biographical entries focused on the entire history of Texas from the indigenous Native Americans and the Prehistoric Era to the state TSHA | TEXAS AIR TRANSPORT, INC. Texas Air Transport, Inc. (TAT or Texas Air Transport), an early Texas postal and passenger air carrier (see AVIATION), was incorporated on October 13, 1927, in Fort Worth and based at Meacham Field.Initial incorporators were R. C. Bowen, Temple Bowen, and F. G. Lippitt. Amon G. Carter, Sr., was also a financial backer of TAT.The first directors of the company were R. C. Bowen, Temple Bowen, F TSHA | TEXAS REHABILITATION COMMISSION The Texas Rehabilitation Commission began as the State Board of Vocational Education, which was established by the Texas Vocational Rehabilitation Act in 1929. In its first year it had a budget of $12,500 and a staff of two; in 1939 the board, with an increased staff of ten and a budget of $150,000, helped to rehabilitate more than 400people
TSHA | DOOLIN, CHARLES ELMER Doolin, Charles Elmer (1903–1959). Charles Elmer Doolin, founder of the Frito Company, businessman, inventor, farmer, and board member, was born on January 10, 1903, in Kansas City, Kansas. He was the son of Charles Bernard Doolin and Daisy Dean (Stephenson) Doolin. When he was a small child, the family moved to San Antonio. TSHA | FRIESENHAHN CAVE Friesenhahn Cave is a fossil-rich one-room cave, once named Bulverde Cave and Bone Cave, located west of U. S. Highway 281 in north central Bexar County. The cave is a sinkhole formed in the region’s karst topography. The only entrance, as documented since the earliest twentieth-century explorations, is a vertical twenty-eight-foot shaft. TSHA | SPONSORS AND CONTRIBUTORS Sponsors and Contributors The Texas State Historical Association very much appreciates the support of its major sponsors and contributors. TSHA | HANDBOOK OF TEXAS Browse: Music 98 result(s) found within the Handbook of Dallas-Fort Worth, currently viewing page 5 of 5.. Winkler, Rayburn Franklin WRR TSHA | MEYER, ALICE GERTRUDIS KING KLEBERG REYNOLDS Alice Gertrudis King Kleberg Reynolds Meyer, philanthropist, patron of the arts, and civic leader, was born on September 26, 1928, in Corpus Christi, Nueces County, Texas. TSHA | HINES, GERALD DOUGLAS Gerald Douglas Hines, real estate developer, mechanical engineer, and architectural patron, was born on August 15, 1925, in Gary, Indiana, to Gordon Hines and Myrtle (McConnell) Hines. TSHA | HEIDI M. MARTIN Mailing Address: Texas State Historical Association PO Box 5428Austin, TX 78763
TSHA | HOMESEE MORE ON TSHAONLINE.ORGTSHA | SEARCH
Search Use the box below to search the entire TSHA website, including entries from our popular Handbook of Texas, information on TSHA's education programs and teacher resources, our catalog of publications,and more.
TSHA | SOUTHWESTERN HISTORICAL QUARTERLY (SHQ) The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, continuously published since 1897, is the premier source of scholarly information about the history of Texas and the Southwest.Members can log in to the MyTSHA Dashboard to view the first 100 volumes of the Quarterly in our Digital Library. More recent editions are also available to read on MyTSHA thanks to our partners at Project Muse. TSHA | FRANCKLYN LAND AND CATTLE COMPANY The Francklyn Land and Cattle Company was an English syndicate chartered in 1881 to invest in the "Beef Bonanza." It was headed by and named for Charles G. Francklyn, a son-in-law of E. G. Cunard, owner of the Cunard Steamship Line, who helped finance the venture. The syndicate purchased a total of 631,000 acres of land in thePanhandle
TSHA | PERRY, CICERO RUFUS Cicero Rufus (Old Rufe) Perry, Texas Ranger, was born in Alabama on August 23, 1822. In 1833 he moved with his parents to Bastrop, then in Washington County. He participated in the siege of Bexar, served from July 1 to October 1, 1836, in Capt. William W. Hill 's company of Texas Rangers, and was involved in an Indian fight on Yegua Creek.TSHA | JOE
Joe, slave of William B. Travis and one of the few Texan survivors of the battle of the Alamo, was born about 1813.He was listed as a resident of Harrisburg in May 1833. Joe claimed that when Gen. Antonio López deSanta Anna's troops stormed the Alamo on March 6, 1836, he armed himself and followed Travis from his quarters into the battle, fired his gun, then retreated into a building from TSHA | BUFFALO WALLOW FIGHT The Buffalo Wallow Fight was one of the most unusual engagements in the Red River War.On September 10, 1874, Col. Nelson A. Miles, whose command was running short of rations, sent two scouts, Billy Dixon and Amos Chapman, and four enlisted men, Sgt. Z. T. Woodhall and privates Peter Rath, John Harrington, and George W. Smith, from his camp on McClellan Creek with dispatches concerning the TSHA | AUSTIN STATE SCHOOL The Austin State School, in Austin, Texas, is a ninety-five-acre residential and training facility for adults with developmental disabilities. It is administered by the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation. In 1991 the school had a staff of 1,505, more than two-thirds women, which served about 460 individualsat the west
TSHA | LOCKHART, MATILDA Matilda Lockhart, who as a young girl was taken captive by Comanche Indians, was probably born in Illinois around 1825. Her father, Andrew Lockhart, emigrated with his family from Illinois to Texas in 1828 and settled on the Guadalupe River in Green DeWitt's colony. In the fall of 1838, when Matilda was about thirteen years old, she and four children of Mitchell Putnam were captured by TSHA | DICKINSON, ANGELINA ELIZABETH Angelina Dickinson, called the Babe of the Alamo, daughter of Almeron and Susanna (Wilkerson) Dickinson (also spelled Dickerson), was born on December 14, 1834, in Gonzales, Texas. By early 1836 her family had moved to San Antonio. On February 23, as the forces of Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna entered the city, Dickinson reportedly caught up his wife and daughter behind his saddle and TSHA | HOMESEE MORE ON TSHAONLINE.ORGTSHA | SEARCH
Search Use the box below to search the entire TSHA website, including entries from our popular Handbook of Texas, information on TSHA's education programs and teacher resources, our catalog of publications,and more.
TSHA | SOUTHWESTERN HISTORICAL QUARTERLY (SHQ) The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, continuously published since 1897, is the premier source of scholarly information about the history of Texas and the Southwest.Members can log in to the MyTSHA Dashboard to view the first 100 volumes of the Quarterly in our Digital Library. More recent editions are also available to read on MyTSHA thanks to our partners at Project Muse. TSHA | FRANCKLYN LAND AND CATTLE COMPANY The Francklyn Land and Cattle Company was an English syndicate chartered in 1881 to invest in the "Beef Bonanza." It was headed by and named for Charles G. Francklyn, a son-in-law of E. G. Cunard, owner of the Cunard Steamship Line, who helped finance the venture. The syndicate purchased a total of 631,000 acres of land in thePanhandle
TSHA | PERRY, CICERO RUFUS Cicero Rufus (Old Rufe) Perry, Texas Ranger, was born in Alabama on August 23, 1822. In 1833 he moved with his parents to Bastrop, then in Washington County. He participated in the siege of Bexar, served from July 1 to October 1, 1836, in Capt. William W. Hill 's company of Texas Rangers, and was involved in an Indian fight on Yegua Creek.TSHA | JOE
Joe, slave of William B. Travis and one of the few Texan survivors of the battle of the Alamo, was born about 1813.He was listed as a resident of Harrisburg in May 1833. Joe claimed that when Gen. Antonio López deSanta Anna's troops stormed the Alamo on March 6, 1836, he armed himself and followed Travis from his quarters into the battle, fired his gun, then retreated into a building from TSHA | BUFFALO WALLOW FIGHT The Buffalo Wallow Fight was one of the most unusual engagements in the Red River War.On September 10, 1874, Col. Nelson A. Miles, whose command was running short of rations, sent two scouts, Billy Dixon and Amos Chapman, and four enlisted men, Sgt. Z. T. Woodhall and privates Peter Rath, John Harrington, and George W. Smith, from his camp on McClellan Creek with dispatches concerning the TSHA | AUSTIN STATE SCHOOL The Austin State School, in Austin, Texas, is a ninety-five-acre residential and training facility for adults with developmental disabilities. It is administered by the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation. In 1991 the school had a staff of 1,505, more than two-thirds women, which served about 460 individualsat the west
TSHA | LOCKHART, MATILDA Matilda Lockhart, who as a young girl was taken captive by Comanche Indians, was probably born in Illinois around 1825. Her father, Andrew Lockhart, emigrated with his family from Illinois to Texas in 1828 and settled on the Guadalupe River in Green DeWitt's colony. In the fall of 1838, when Matilda was about thirteen years old, she and four children of Mitchell Putnam were captured by TSHA | DICKINSON, ANGELINA ELIZABETH Angelina Dickinson, called the Babe of the Alamo, daughter of Almeron and Susanna (Wilkerson) Dickinson (also spelled Dickerson), was born on December 14, 1834, in Gonzales, Texas. By early 1836 her family had moved to San Antonio. On February 23, as the forces of Gen. Antonio López de Santa Anna entered the city, Dickinson reportedly caught up his wife and daughter behind his saddle and TSHA | HANDBOOK OF TEXAS The Handbook of Texas is a digital state encyclopedia developed by the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA) that is free and accessible on the Internet for students, teachers, scholars, and the general public. The Handbook consists of overview, general, and biographical entries focused on the entire history of Texas from the indigenous Native Americans and the Prehistoric Era to the state TSHA | SAN ANTONIO STATE SCHOOL The San Antonio State School, a long-term residential facility for the intellectually disabled, is operated by the Texas Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation.The establishment of the school was due to the efforts of Bexar County Representative Frank Lombardino and a group of San Antonio citizens, who worked hard to convince the Texas Legislature that a state school for theTSHA | BOLES HOME
Boles Home. Boles Home is one of the largest children's homes supported and maintained by the Church of Christ. The institution, originally Boles Orphans' Home, was funded by William Foster and Mary Barnhart Boles. In 1923 the couple donated 436 acres of land near Quinlan to the Church of Christ and requested that the church makeimprovements
TSHA | BUFFALO WALLOW FIGHT The Buffalo Wallow Fight was one of the most unusual engagements in the Red River War.On September 10, 1874, Col. Nelson A. Miles, whose command was running short of rations, sent two scouts, Billy Dixon and Amos Chapman, and four enlisted men, Sgt. Z. T. Woodhall and privates Peter Rath, John Harrington, and George W. Smith, from his camp on McClellan Creek with dispatches concerning the TSHA | BLACK MEDICAL ORGANIZATION FOUNDED On this day in 1886, the second organization of black medical professionals in the nation was formed in Galveston. Doctors J. H. and L. M. Wilkins, pharmacist J. S. Cameron, and twelve other men established the Lone Star State Medical, Dental, and PharmaceuticalAssociation.
TSHA | FIRST ELECTION IN TEXAS On this day in 1731, Capt. Juan Antonio Pérez de Almazán, the commander of San Antonio de Béxar Presidio, presided over what was probably the first election in Texas history. TSHA | PROVINCIAS INTERNAS DIVIDED INTO THREE SECTORS On this day in 1786, the Provincias Internas were divided into three military regions. The original authorization of the Provincias Internas by Spain occurred in 1776 and comprised a massive, semiautonomous administrative unit that included Texas, Coahuila, Nueva Vizcaya, New Mexico, Sinaloa, Sonora, and the two Californias(Baja and Alta).
TSHA | PEACE--FINALLY!--BETWEEN THE U.S. AND TEXAS On this day in 1866, President Andrew Johnson, declaring that "the insurrection in the State of Texas has been completely and everywhere suppressed and ended," officially ended the Civil War by issuing a proclamation of peace between the United States and Texas. TSHA | TEXAS REVOLUTION PARTICIPANT MARRIES FUTURE MEMOIRIST On this day in 1836, at her home in Alabama, Mary Ann Adams married Samuel Augustus Maverick. The couple divided their time between Alabama and Texas until 1838, when they moved to San Antonio. TSHA | MOB MASSES AT MANSFIELD *This service is supported by the continuing contributions of our TSHA membership community. We are a non-profit 501(c)3 organization that relies upon supporters like you in order to continue promoting the fascinating history of Texas. TSHA | HOMESEE MORE ON TSHAONLINE.ORGTSHA | SEARCH
Search Use the box below to search the entire TSHA website, including entries from our popular Handbook of Texas, information on TSHA's education programs and teacher resources, our catalog of publications,and more.
TSHA | HANDBOOK OF TEXAS The Handbook of Texas is a digital state encyclopedia developed by the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA) that is free and accessible on the Internet for students, teachers, scholars, and the general public. The Handbook consists of overview, general, and biographical entries focused on the entire history of Texas from the indigenous Native Americans and the Prehistoric Era to the state TSHA | SHERMAN RIOT OF 1930 The Sherman riot of 1930 was one of the major incidents of racial violence that occurred in the United States at the onset of the Great Depression, when lynching and other lawless acts increased with economic problems. The incident initiated a flurry of racial violencein Texas.
TSHA | PERRY, CICERO RUFUS Cicero Rufus (Old Rufe) Perry, Texas Ranger, was born in Alabama on August 23, 1822. In 1833 he moved with his parents to Bastrop, then in Washington County. He participated in the siege of Bexar, served from July 1 to October 1, 1836, in Capt. William W. Hill 's company of Texas Rangers, and was involved in an Indian fight on Yegua Creek.TSHA | JOE
Joe, slave of William B. Travis and one of the few Texan survivors of the battle of the Alamo, was born about 1813.He was listed as a resident of Harrisburg in May 1833. Joe claimed that when Gen. Antonio López deSanta Anna's troops stormed the Alamo on March 6, 1836, he armed himself and followed Travis from his quarters into the battle, fired his gun, then retreated into a building from TSHA | SIBLEY'S BRIGADE Thomas Green, a veteran of the battle of San Jacinto and the Mexican War, was placed in command of the Fifth Regiment, and Col. William Steele, like Sibley a veteran of the Second Dragoons, headed the Seventh Regiment. By Christmas 1861 the brigade had set up headquarters at Fort Bliss, where Col. John Robert Baylor 's SecondRegiment of Texas
TSHA | LOCKHART, MATILDA Matilda Lockhart, who as a young girl was taken captive by Comanche Indians, was probably born in Illinois around 1825. Her father, Andrew Lockhart, emigrated with his family from Illinois to Texas in 1828 and settled on the Guadalupe River in Green DeWitt's colony. In the fall of 1838, when Matilda was about thirteen years old, she and four children of Mitchell Putnam were captured byTSHA | MALAKOFF MAN
Malakoff Man. Thomas H. Guderjan General Entry. Malakoff Man. On a terrace of the Trinity River near Malakoff in Henderson County, a mystery in Texas archeology began in the 1930s. In 1929 the first of three apparently carved stone heads was claimed to have been found deeply buried in a gravel deposit near Malakoff by quarry workers. TSHA | YATES, IRA GRIFFITH, JR. Ira Griffith Yates, Jr., rancher and early owner of the Yates oilfield, the son of Martha E. (Voss) and Ira Griffith Yates, Sr., was born in Hopkins County, Texas, on October 29, 1859. After Ira, Sr., was killed in Lamar County in 1865, Martha Yates moved with her six children to Wilson County. When she died in 1871 or 1872, her childrenwere
TSHA | HOMESEE MORE ON TSHAONLINE.ORGTSHA | SEARCH
Search Use the box below to search the entire TSHA website, including entries from our popular Handbook of Texas, information on TSHA's education programs and teacher resources, our catalog of publications,and more.
TSHA | HANDBOOK OF TEXAS The Handbook of Texas is a digital state encyclopedia developed by the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA) that is free and accessible on the Internet for students, teachers, scholars, and the general public. The Handbook consists of overview, general, and biographical entries focused on the entire history of Texas from the indigenous Native Americans and the Prehistoric Era to the state TSHA | SHERMAN RIOT OF 1930 The Sherman riot of 1930 was one of the major incidents of racial violence that occurred in the United States at the onset of the Great Depression, when lynching and other lawless acts increased with economic problems. The incident initiated a flurry of racial violencein Texas.
TSHA | PERRY, CICERO RUFUS Cicero Rufus (Old Rufe) Perry, Texas Ranger, was born in Alabama on August 23, 1822. In 1833 he moved with his parents to Bastrop, then in Washington County. He participated in the siege of Bexar, served from July 1 to October 1, 1836, in Capt. William W. Hill 's company of Texas Rangers, and was involved in an Indian fight on Yegua Creek.TSHA | JOE
Joe, slave of William B. Travis and one of the few Texan survivors of the battle of the Alamo, was born about 1813.He was listed as a resident of Harrisburg in May 1833. Joe claimed that when Gen. Antonio López deSanta Anna's troops stormed the Alamo on March 6, 1836, he armed himself and followed Travis from his quarters into the battle, fired his gun, then retreated into a building from TSHA | SIBLEY'S BRIGADE Thomas Green, a veteran of the battle of San Jacinto and the Mexican War, was placed in command of the Fifth Regiment, and Col. William Steele, like Sibley a veteran of the Second Dragoons, headed the Seventh Regiment. By Christmas 1861 the brigade had set up headquarters at Fort Bliss, where Col. John Robert Baylor 's SecondRegiment of Texas
TSHA | LOCKHART, MATILDA Matilda Lockhart, who as a young girl was taken captive by Comanche Indians, was probably born in Illinois around 1825. Her father, Andrew Lockhart, emigrated with his family from Illinois to Texas in 1828 and settled on the Guadalupe River in Green DeWitt's colony. In the fall of 1838, when Matilda was about thirteen years old, she and four children of Mitchell Putnam were captured byTSHA | MALAKOFF MAN
Malakoff Man. Thomas H. Guderjan General Entry. Malakoff Man. On a terrace of the Trinity River near Malakoff in Henderson County, a mystery in Texas archeology began in the 1930s. In 1929 the first of three apparently carved stone heads was claimed to have been found deeply buried in a gravel deposit near Malakoff by quarry workers. TSHA | YATES, IRA GRIFFITH, JR. Ira Griffith Yates, Jr., rancher and early owner of the Yates oilfield, the son of Martha E. (Voss) and Ira Griffith Yates, Sr., was born in Hopkins County, Texas, on October 29, 1859. After Ira, Sr., was killed in Lamar County in 1865, Martha Yates moved with her six children to Wilson County. When she died in 1871 or 1872, her childrenwere
TSHA | TEXAS DAY BY DAY May 30th, 1871. On this day in 1871, Adelaida Cuellar, founder of the tamale stand that grew into the El Chico restaurant chain, was born in Nuevo León, Mexico. In 1892 she and Macario Cuellar crossed into Texas and were married in Laredo. At the time they spoke no English. TSHA | HOUSTON RIOT OF 1917 In the spring of 1917, shortly after the United States declared war on Germany, the War Department, taking advantage of the temperate climate and newly opened Houston Ship Channel, ordered two military installations built in Harris County—Camp Logan and Ellington Field.The Illinois National Guard was to train at Camp Logan, located on the northwest outskirts of the city.TSHA | BOLES HOME
Boles Home. Boles Home is one of the largest children's homes supported and maintained by the Church of Christ. The institution, originally Boles Orphans' Home, was funded by William Foster and Mary Barnhart Boles. In 1923 the couple donated 436 acres of land near Quinlan to the Church of Christ and requested that the church makeimprovements
TSHA | CHEROKEE WAR
The Cherokee War of 1839 was the culmination of friction between the Cherokee, Kickapoo, and Shawnee Indians and the White settlers in Northeast Texas. The Indians, who had obtained squatters' rights to the land from Spanish authorities, were promised title to the land by the Consultation; and on February 23, 1836, a treaty made by SamHouston
TSHA | BRAZOS INDIAN RESERVATION In the summer of 1854 Gen. Randolph B. Marcy, under orders of the United States Department of War and Interior and in accordance with an act of the Texas legislature of February 6, located two Indian reservations in West Texas.The Brazos Reservation originally comprised four leagues, or 18,576 acres, twelve miles south of Fort Belknap, where the Brazos River makes three big bends. TSHA | BLACK MEDICAL ORGANIZATION FOUNDED On this day in 1886, the second organization of black medical professionals in the nation was formed in Galveston. Doctors J. H. and L. M. Wilkins, pharmacist J. S. Cameron, and twelve other men established the Lone Star State Medical, Dental, and PharmaceuticalAssociation.
TSHA | FIRST ELECTION IN TEXAS On this day in 1731, Capt. Juan Antonio Pérez de Almazán, the commander of San Antonio de Béxar Presidio, presided over what was probably the first election in Texas history.TSHA | ROD KENNEDY
Mailing Address: Texas State Historical Association PO Box 5428Austin, TX 78763
TSHA | MARY MUSE
Mailing Address: Texas State Historical Association PO Box 5428Austin, TX 78763
TSHA | MOB MASSES AT MANSFIELD *This service is supported by the continuing contributions of our TSHA membership community. We are a non-profit 501(c)3 organization that relies upon supporters like you in order to continue promoting the fascinating history of Texas. TSHA | HOMESEE MORE ON TSHAONLINE.ORGTSHA | SEARCH
Search Use the box below to search the entire TSHA website, including entries from our popular Handbook of Texas, information on TSHA's education programs and teacher resources, our catalog of publications,and more.
TSHA | HANDBOOK OF TEXAS The Handbook of Texas is a digital state encyclopedia developed by the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA) that is free and accessible on the Internet for students, teachers, scholars, and the general public. The Handbook consists of overview, general, and biographical entries focused on the entire history of Texas from the indigenous Native Americans and the Prehistoric Era to the state TSHA | SHERMAN RIOT OF 1930 The Sherman riot of 1930 was one of the major incidents of racial violence that occurred in the United States at the onset of the Great Depression, when lynching and other lawless acts increased with economic problems. The incident initiated a flurry of racial violencein Texas.
TSHA | PERRY, CICERO RUFUS Cicero Rufus (Old Rufe) Perry, Texas Ranger, was born in Alabama on August 23, 1822. In 1833 he moved with his parents to Bastrop, then in Washington County. He participated in the siege of Bexar, served from July 1 to October 1, 1836, in Capt. William W. Hill 's company of Texas Rangers, and was involved in an Indian fight on Yegua Creek.TSHA | JOE
Joe, slave of William B. Travis and one of the few Texan survivors of the battle of the Alamo, was born about 1813.He was listed as a resident of Harrisburg in May 1833. Joe claimed that when Gen. Antonio López deSanta Anna's troops stormed the Alamo on March 6, 1836, he armed himself and followed Travis from his quarters into the battle, fired his gun, then retreated into a building from TSHA | SIBLEY'S BRIGADE Thomas Green, a veteran of the battle of San Jacinto and the Mexican War, was placed in command of the Fifth Regiment, and Col. William Steele, like Sibley a veteran of the Second Dragoons, headed the Seventh Regiment. By Christmas 1861 the brigade had set up headquarters at Fort Bliss, where Col. John Robert Baylor 's SecondRegiment of Texas
TSHA | LOCKHART, MATILDA Matilda Lockhart, who as a young girl was taken captive by Comanche Indians, was probably born in Illinois around 1825. Her father, Andrew Lockhart, emigrated with his family from Illinois to Texas in 1828 and settled on the Guadalupe River in Green DeWitt's colony. In the fall of 1838, when Matilda was about thirteen years old, she and four children of Mitchell Putnam were captured by TSHA | MALAKOFF MANTRULIA MALAKOFF TEXASCITY OF MALAKOFF TEXASHOMES FOR SALE MALAKOFF TEXASMALAKOFF TEXAS MAPMALAKOFF TEXAS NEWS Malakoff Man. Thomas H. Guderjan General Entry. Malakoff Man. On a terrace of the Trinity River near Malakoff in Henderson County, a mystery in Texas archeology began in the 1930s. In 1929 the first of three apparently carved stone heads was claimed to have been found deeply buried in a gravel deposit near Malakoff by quarry workers. TSHA | YATES, IRA GRIFFITH, JR. Ira Griffith Yates, Jr., rancher and early owner of the Yates oilfield, the son of Martha E. (Voss) and Ira Griffith Yates, Sr., was born in Hopkins County, Texas, on October 29, 1859. After Ira, Sr., was killed in Lamar County in 1865, Martha Yates moved with her six children to Wilson County. When she died in 1871 or 1872, her childrenwere
TSHA | HOMESEE MORE ON TSHAONLINE.ORGTSHA | SEARCH
Search Use the box below to search the entire TSHA website, including entries from our popular Handbook of Texas, information on TSHA's education programs and teacher resources, our catalog of publications,and more.
TSHA | HANDBOOK OF TEXAS The Handbook of Texas is a digital state encyclopedia developed by the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA) that is free and accessible on the Internet for students, teachers, scholars, and the general public. The Handbook consists of overview, general, and biographical entries focused on the entire history of Texas from the indigenous Native Americans and the Prehistoric Era to the state TSHA | SHERMAN RIOT OF 1930 The Sherman riot of 1930 was one of the major incidents of racial violence that occurred in the United States at the onset of the Great Depression, when lynching and other lawless acts increased with economic problems. The incident initiated a flurry of racial violencein Texas.
TSHA | PERRY, CICERO RUFUS Cicero Rufus (Old Rufe) Perry, Texas Ranger, was born in Alabama on August 23, 1822. In 1833 he moved with his parents to Bastrop, then in Washington County. He participated in the siege of Bexar, served from July 1 to October 1, 1836, in Capt. William W. Hill 's company of Texas Rangers, and was involved in an Indian fight on Yegua Creek.TSHA | JOE
Joe, slave of William B. Travis and one of the few Texan survivors of the battle of the Alamo, was born about 1813.He was listed as a resident of Harrisburg in May 1833. Joe claimed that when Gen. Antonio López deSanta Anna's troops stormed the Alamo on March 6, 1836, he armed himself and followed Travis from his quarters into the battle, fired his gun, then retreated into a building from TSHA | SIBLEY'S BRIGADE Thomas Green, a veteran of the battle of San Jacinto and the Mexican War, was placed in command of the Fifth Regiment, and Col. William Steele, like Sibley a veteran of the Second Dragoons, headed the Seventh Regiment. By Christmas 1861 the brigade had set up headquarters at Fort Bliss, where Col. John Robert Baylor 's SecondRegiment of Texas
TSHA | LOCKHART, MATILDA Matilda Lockhart, who as a young girl was taken captive by Comanche Indians, was probably born in Illinois around 1825. Her father, Andrew Lockhart, emigrated with his family from Illinois to Texas in 1828 and settled on the Guadalupe River in Green DeWitt's colony. In the fall of 1838, when Matilda was about thirteen years old, she and four children of Mitchell Putnam were captured by TSHA | MALAKOFF MANTRULIA MALAKOFF TEXASCITY OF MALAKOFF TEXASHOMES FOR SALE MALAKOFF TEXASMALAKOFF TEXAS MAPMALAKOFF TEXAS NEWS Malakoff Man. Thomas H. Guderjan General Entry. Malakoff Man. On a terrace of the Trinity River near Malakoff in Henderson County, a mystery in Texas archeology began in the 1930s. In 1929 the first of three apparently carved stone heads was claimed to have been found deeply buried in a gravel deposit near Malakoff by quarry workers. TSHA | YATES, IRA GRIFFITH, JR. Ira Griffith Yates, Jr., rancher and early owner of the Yates oilfield, the son of Martha E. (Voss) and Ira Griffith Yates, Sr., was born in Hopkins County, Texas, on October 29, 1859. After Ira, Sr., was killed in Lamar County in 1865, Martha Yates moved with her six children to Wilson County. When she died in 1871 or 1872, her childrenwere
TSHA | TEXAS DAY BY DAY May 30th, 1871. On this day in 1871, Adelaida Cuellar, founder of the tamale stand that grew into the El Chico restaurant chain, was born in Nuevo León, Mexico. In 1892 she and Macario Cuellar crossed into Texas and were married in Laredo. At the time they spoke no English. TSHA | BLACK MEDICAL ORGANIZATION FOUNDED On this day in 1886, the second organization of black medical professionals in the nation was formed in Galveston. Doctors J. H. and L. M. Wilkins, pharmacist J. S. Cameron, and twelve other men established the Lone Star State Medical, Dental, and PharmaceuticalAssociation.
TSHA | BOLES HOME
Boles Home. Boles Home is one of the largest children's homes supported and maintained by the Church of Christ. The institution, originally Boles Orphans' Home, was funded by William Foster and Mary Barnhart Boles. In 1923 the couple donated 436 acres of land near Quinlan to the Church of Christ and requested that the church makeimprovements
TSHA | CHEROKEE WAR
The Cherokee War of 1839 was the culmination of friction between the Cherokee, Kickapoo, and Shawnee Indians and the White settlers in Northeast Texas. The Indians, who had obtained squatters' rights to the land from Spanish authorities, were promised title to the land by the Consultation; and on February 23, 1836, a treaty made by SamHouston
TSHA | FIRST ELECTION IN TEXAS On this day in 1731, Capt. Juan Antonio Pérez de Almazán, the commander of San Antonio de Béxar Presidio, presided over what was probably the first election in Texas history. TSHA | PEACE--FINALLY!--BETWEEN THE U.S. AND TEXAS On this day in 1866, President Andrew Johnson, declaring that "the insurrection in the State of Texas has been completely and everywhere suppressed and ended," officially ended the Civil War by issuing a proclamation of peace between the United States and Texas. TSHA | BUFFALO WALLOW FIGHT The Buffalo Wallow Fight was one of the most unusual engagements in the Red River War.On September 10, 1874, Col. Nelson A. Miles, whose command was running short of rations, sent two scouts, Billy Dixon and Amos Chapman, and four enlisted men, Sgt. Z. T. Woodhall and privates Peter Rath, John Harrington, and George W. Smith, from his camp on McClellan Creek with dispatches concerning the TSHA | PROVINCIAS INTERNAS DIVIDED INTO THREE SECTORS On this day in 1786, the Provincias Internas were divided into three military regions. The original authorization of the Provincias Internas by Spain occurred in 1776 and comprised a massive, semiautonomous administrative unit that included Texas, Coahuila, Nueva Vizcaya, New Mexico, Sinaloa, Sonora, and the two Californias(Baja and Alta).
TSHA | BRAZOS INDIAN RESERVATION In the summer of 1854 Gen. Randolph B. Marcy, under orders of the United States Department of War and Interior and in accordance with an act of the Texas legislature of February 6, located two Indian reservations in West Texas.The Brazos Reservation originally comprised four leagues, or 18,576 acres, twelve miles south of Fort Belknap, where the Brazos River makes three big bends. TSHA | TAOVAYA INDIANS Taovaya Indians. The Taovaya (Towash, Tawehash, Teguayos, Toayas, Taouaizes, Tahuayases, Aijados), a Wichita group probably originally from Kansas and southern Nebraska, was forced by Osage and Comanche pressure into southern Oklahoma and northern Texas in the eighteenth century. In 1719 Jean Baptiste Bénard de la Harpe found Taovaya,Tawakoni
TSHA | HOMESEE MORE ON TSHAONLINE.ORGTSHA | SEARCH
Search Use the box below to search the entire TSHA website, including entries from our popular Handbook of Texas, information on TSHA's education programs and teacher resources, our catalog of publications,and more.
TSHA | HANDBOOK OF TEXAS The Handbook of Texas is a digital state encyclopedia developed by the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA) that is free and accessible on the Internet for students, teachers, scholars, and the general public. The Handbook consists of overview, general, and biographical entries focused on the entire history of Texas from the indigenous Native Americans and the Prehistoric Era to the state TSHA | SHERMAN RIOT OF 1930 The Sherman riot of 1930 was one of the major incidents of racial violence that occurred in the United States at the onset of the Great Depression, when lynching and other lawless acts increased with economic problems. The incident initiated a flurry of racial violencein Texas.
TSHA | PERRY, CICERO RUFUS Cicero Rufus (Old Rufe) Perry, Texas Ranger, was born in Alabama on August 23, 1822. In 1833 he moved with his parents to Bastrop, then inWashington County.
TSHA | JOE
Joe, slave of William B. Travis and one of the few Texan survivors of the battle of the Alamo, was born about 1813.He was listed as a resident of Harrisburg in May 1833. Joe claimed that when Gen. Antonio López deSanta Anna's troops stormed the Alamo on March 6, 1836, he armed himself and followed Travis from his quarters into the battle, fired his gun, then retreated into a building fromTSHA | MALAKOFF MAN
Athens Weekly Review, February 20, 1930.Thomas H. Guderjan, "Malakoff Man Revisited: An Examination of Heads #1 and #3," Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society 62 (1991). E. H. Sellards, "Stone Images from Henderson County, Texas," American Antiquity 7 (July 1941). TSHA | VILLAGE CREEK, BATTLE OF The battle of Village Creek, fought on May 24, 1841, was a running gunfight along the banks of Village Creek, a major tributary of the Trinity River, in eastern Tarrant County. TSHA | LOCKHART, MATILDA Matilda Lockhart, who as a young girl was taken captive by Comanche Indians, was probably born in Illinois around 1825. Her father, Andrew Lockhart, emigrated with his family from Illinois to Texas in 1828 and settled on the Guadalupe River in Green DeWitt's colony. In the fall of 1838, when Matilda was about thirteen years old, she and four children of Mitchell Putnam were captured by TSHA | YATES, IRA GRIFFITH, JR. Ira Griffith Yates, Jr., rancher and early owner of the Yates oilfield, the son of Martha E. (Voss) and Ira Griffith Yates, Sr., was born in Hopkins County, Texas, on October 29, 1859.After Ira, Sr., was killed in Lamar County in 1865, Martha Yates moved with her six children to Wilson County. TSHA | HOMESEE MORE ON TSHAONLINE.ORGTSHA | SEARCH
Search Use the box below to search the entire TSHA website, including entries from our popular Handbook of Texas, information on TSHA's education programs and teacher resources, our catalog of publications,and more.
TSHA | HANDBOOK OF TEXAS The Handbook of Texas is a digital state encyclopedia developed by the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA) that is free and accessible on the Internet for students, teachers, scholars, and the general public. The Handbook consists of overview, general, and biographical entries focused on the entire history of Texas from the indigenous Native Americans and the Prehistoric Era to the state TSHA | SHERMAN RIOT OF 1930 The Sherman riot of 1930 was one of the major incidents of racial violence that occurred in the United States at the onset of the Great Depression, when lynching and other lawless acts increased with economic problems. The incident initiated a flurry of racial violencein Texas.
TSHA | PERRY, CICERO RUFUS Cicero Rufus (Old Rufe) Perry, Texas Ranger, was born in Alabama on August 23, 1822. In 1833 he moved with his parents to Bastrop, then inWashington County.
TSHA | JOE
Joe, slave of William B. Travis and one of the few Texan survivors of the battle of the Alamo, was born about 1813.He was listed as a resident of Harrisburg in May 1833. Joe claimed that when Gen. Antonio López deSanta Anna's troops stormed the Alamo on March 6, 1836, he armed himself and followed Travis from his quarters into the battle, fired his gun, then retreated into a building fromTSHA | MALAKOFF MAN
Athens Weekly Review, February 20, 1930.Thomas H. Guderjan, "Malakoff Man Revisited: An Examination of Heads #1 and #3," Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society 62 (1991). E. H. Sellards, "Stone Images from Henderson County, Texas," American Antiquity 7 (July 1941). TSHA | VILLAGE CREEK, BATTLE OF The battle of Village Creek, fought on May 24, 1841, was a running gunfight along the banks of Village Creek, a major tributary of the Trinity River, in eastern Tarrant County. TSHA | LOCKHART, MATILDA Matilda Lockhart, who as a young girl was taken captive by Comanche Indians, was probably born in Illinois around 1825. Her father, Andrew Lockhart, emigrated with his family from Illinois to Texas in 1828 and settled on the Guadalupe River in Green DeWitt's colony. In the fall of 1838, when Matilda was about thirteen years old, she and four children of Mitchell Putnam were captured by TSHA | YATES, IRA GRIFFITH, JR. Ira Griffith Yates, Jr., rancher and early owner of the Yates oilfield, the son of Martha E. (Voss) and Ira Griffith Yates, Sr., was born in Hopkins County, Texas, on October 29, 1859.After Ira, Sr., was killed in Lamar County in 1865, Martha Yates moved with her six children to Wilson County. TSHA | TEXAS DAY BY DAY On this day in 1911, Carry Nation, perhaps the most famous prohibitionist in American history, died in Kansas. Born in Kentucky in 1846, she lived in Texas for several years as a child in the 1860s and again as an adult from 1879 to 1889. TSHA | AGUAYO EXPEDITION The Aguayo expedition, a project of the Marqués de Aguayo, resulted from the French invasion of 1719, which caused the Spanish to retreat from East Texas.In response to Aguayo's offer, the viceroy commissioned him to reoccupy the area. Aguayo gathered together a force of about 500 men, organized as a mounted infantry, which he called the Battalion of San Miguel de Aragón.TSHA | BOLES HOME
Boles Home is one of the largest children's homes supported and maintained by the Church of Christ. The institution, originally Boles Orphans' Home, was funded by William Foster and Mary Barnhart Boles. TSHA | TAOVAYA INDIANS The Taovaya (Towash, Tawehash, Teguayos, Toayas, Taouaizes, Tahuayases, Aijados), a Wichita group probably originally from Kansas and southern Nebraska, was forced by Osage and Comanche pressure into southern Oklahoma and northern Texas in the eighteenth century.TSHA | CONTACT
Did we miss something that you feel is important to this entry? Please let us know about your suggestions for how we can improve this entry. The Handbook's editor will review your suggestions and make corrections to both the online edition and future print editions. TSHA | BROWSE ENTRIES Refinements To refine the browse results, choose one or more refinements below and press the update button once you are ready. TSHA | BOYKIN, OTIS FRANK Otis Boykin, African American engineer and inventor, was born on August 29, 1920, in Dallas, Texas. He was the seventh of eight children of Walter Benjamin and Sarah Jane (Cox) Boykin. TSHA | HERSHEY, TERESE TARLTON Terese “Terry” Tarlton Hershey, longtime environmental activist and organizer in Houston, Texas, was born on January 19, 1923, in FortWorth, Texas.
TSHA | EMMONS, MARTHA LENA Folklorist Martha Lena Emmons was born in Mansfield, Texas, on January 21, 1894. She was the youngest of five children born to Elijah Simeon Emmons and Sarah Cornelia (Goodnight) Emmons.TSHA | W. R. ESTEP
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Southwestern Historical Quarterly The _Southwestern Historical Quarterly_, continuously published since 1897, is the premier source of scholarly information about the history of Texas and the Southwest. The first 100 volumes of the _Quarterly_ are now available Online with searchable Tables of Contents. Printed copies of the _Quarterly_ are a benefit of membership in the Texas State Historical Association and are widely available in public and private libraries. * __ 2015 AWARD FOR BEST ARTICLE ON STATE, PROVINCIAL, OR TERRITORIAL HISTORY IN NORTH AMERICAMore SHQ
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