This Day In Texas History - July 13

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joe817
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This Day In Texas History - July 13

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1824 - The Coushatta Trace was a road from Louisiana into Texas that was used by the Coushatta Indians in their hunting and trading activities. It was an important middle road between the better-known and Spanish-patrolled Atascosito Road along the Texas coast and the Old San Antonio Road farther inland. In the field notes for a survey of a tract of land now in Polk County a Mexican surveyor called a section of this trail a sendal or footpath. It led to the best crossings of streams or rivers and proceeded straight across the country. Gen. Sam Houston chose the route at its crossing of the Brazos in his retreat in 1836. There is no indication that the Coushatta Trace was ever patrolled by Spanish or Mexican military units, and it probably was a favorite route for contraband traders. Also, the trail was used by several early settlers coming into Stephen F. Austin's colony. The deed records of Austin County for July 13, 1824, show that land about a quarter league above the Coushatta crossing of the Brazos was granted to William Smeathers. Although the Coushatta Trace and the Atascosito Road were the most important roads through Austin's colony, the actual route of the Coushatta Trace has been discovered only generally and recently. This trail became so traveled that the Mexican government erected Fort Teran in 1831 at the Coushatta Trace crossing of the Neches River as a means of controlling the movement of settlers into Texas.
[ https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/exc05 ]

1830 - On June 25, 1830, Lt. Col. José Francisco Ruiz was dispatched from Bexar in command of 100 cavalrymen of the presidial company of Álamo de Parras, with orders from Gen. Manuel de Mier y Terán to establish a fort at the strategic point halfway down the Old San Antonio Road, where the thoroughfare crossed the Brazos River en route to Nacogdoches. Ruiz reached the Brazos on July 13 and established temporary headquarters on the east bank about a half mile below the Old San Antonio Road.

1846 - Philip Minor Cuney was elected brigadier general of the First Brigade of the Fourth Division of the Texas Militia. Also in 1846 he was elected to the state Senate and represented Austin and Fort Bend counties in the First and Second legislatures until 1848.

1846 - The first county elections for Comal county were held on July 13, 1846. It is estimated that by 1850 New Braunfels was the fourth largest city in Texas.

1859 - Juan Nepomuceno Cortina shot Brownsville city marshal Robert Shears, who had brutally arrested a former employee of Cortina's, and set off what became known as the first Cortina War.[ https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fco73 ]

1882 - John Peters Ringold, also known as "Johnny Ringo" was found dead in Morse's Canyon, Arizona, leaning against a tree with a bullet in his head. Some say Buckskin Frank Leslie killed him, others believe he shot himself as his deeds in Mason County finally took their toll on him. In November 1876, Johnny Ringo, Scott Cooley, John Baird and George Gladden were major instigators in the Mason County HooDoo Wars of 1875. Gladden was convicted of Murder and pardoned in 1884. Cooley, who died at the age of 21 in a Fredericksburg restaurant, had served several years in jail before his release. John Baird fled to New Mexico where he was killed. Johnny Ringo was aquitted and headed for Arizona, where he participated in a famous shootout with the Earp brothers at Tombstone.[ https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fri51 ]

1919 – Oil was discovered at the Hart Ranch in Palo Pinto County. The discovery lead to the creation of a boom town, which was named Jerehart in honor of the ranch’s owner.

1919 - On this date in 1919, Governor William P. Hobby ordered Texas Rangers and Guardsmen to Longview to secure Longview County, a small, rural cotton and lumber community in Northeast Texas after several days of racial unrest and arson in the county. Tension arose after two local black leaders, Samuel L. Jones and Dr. Calvin P. Davis, advised black farmers to sell directly to buyers in Galveston, eliminating white middlemen in the process. This collective act of commercial protest, coupled with the recent murder of Lemuel Walters, a young black man, heightened African American frustration in Longview.
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 13

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Note: The following is taken among many others, an article found in New Orleans Daily Picayune, July 13, 1869. It's a fascinating read I knew nothing about.

REFRIGERATION. Texas engineers did much of the early experimental work in the development of commercial refrigeration in the United States, although it was from Europeans (notably Scots, English, and French) that their theories were obtained. The development of mass production of artificial ice was pioneered in Texas and Louisiana. The most interesting refrigeration history related to Texas dates from 1861 to 1885. When the natural ice supply from the North was cut off by the Civil War, men of ingenuity in Texas and Louisiana came forth with inventiveness in mechanical ice making and food preservation. Around 1865 Daniel Livingston Holden installed a Carré machine in San Antonio and made several improvements on it. He equipped the machine with steam coils and used distilled water to produce clear ice. By 1867 three companies were manufacturing artificial ice in San Antonio. At that time there were only five other ice plants in the entire United States. For the full article:
[ https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/dqr01 ]
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 13

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I've always been baffled--and a bit cowed--how my ancestors survived, particularly in south Texas, in the mid-1800s without ice or any form of refrigeration. Can't say after one 1850 summer in Duval County I wouldn't have packed up and started moving north. :???:
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Re: This Day In Texas History - July 13

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Skiprr wrote:I've always been baffled--and a bit cowed--how my ancestors survived, particularly in south Texas, in the mid-1800s without ice or any form of refrigeration. Can't say after one 1850 summer in Duval County I wouldn't have packed up and started moving north. :???:

Not long after I moved back here from Coronado, I made a comment to my sister, "How did people live in these uninsulated, unair-conditioned, unheated tin-roofed houses?" She said, "Well, you did!"

I remember picnics summer Sunday afternoons in Hermann Park, or out at San Jacinto, the men in suits, shirts and ties, women in Sunday gear. They must have been used to misery and very tough.

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