This Day In Texas History - June 27

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joe817
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This Day In Texas History - June 27

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1832 - On this date in 1832, the Texas Revolution witnessed its first bloodshed, commonly known as the Anahuac Disturbances. Trouble began brewing between the Mexican government and the growing Anglo-American population following the influx of Anglo-American settlers after the abrogation of the Law of 1830, which had prohibited Anglo-American immigration to Mexico. Skirmishes erupted as Anglo-American immigrants refused to pay taxes to the Mexican government and refused to cede power to the authorities. In response, the Mexican government tried to enforce the measures militarily. [ https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/jca01 ]

1839 - The San Jacinto, a schooner of war originally known as the Viper, was built by the Baltimore firm of Schott and Whitney and on June 27, 1839, was commissioned into the Texas Navy of the Republic of Texas. The sister ship of the San Antonio and the San Bernard was 66 feet long and 21½ feet across the beam and had a draft of 8 feet and a displacement of 170 tons. The ship carried a complement of thirteen officers and sixty-nine sailors and marines and was armed with four twelve-pound medium and one nine-pound long brass pivot cannon.
[ https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/qts04 ]

1874 - On this day in 1874, a party of about 700 Plains Indians, mostly Cheyenne, Comanches, and Kiowas, attacked a buffalo hunters' camp about a mile from the ruins known as Adobe Walls (the scene of a previous encounter between Indians and U.S. troops), in what is now Hutchinson County. The battle and the siege that followed became known as the Second Battle of Adobe Walls. The defenders, twenty-eight men and one woman, gathered in three buildings and repelled the initial charge with a loss of only two men. The Indians continued the siege for four or five days, but, when hunters came to the assistance of the camp, gave up the fight. During the siege, in one of the most famous feats of marksmanship of the Indian wars, William (Billy) Dixon is reported to have shot an Indian off his horse from a distance of seventh-eighths of a mile. The larger significance of this fight is that it led to the Red River War of 1874-75, which resulted in the final relocation of the Southern Plains Indians to reservations in Indian Territory. [ https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/bta01 ]

1878 - Roy Bedichek was born in Cass County, Illinois. In 1884 he moved with his family to Falls County, Texas. Bedichek received a bull (and later an M.A. degree from the University of Texas), where he worked in the office of registrar John A. Lomax, who became a lifelong friend. Bedichek was a dedicated outdoorsman and student of wildlife, especially birds. Urged by his close friends J. Frank Dobie and Walter Prescott Webb, he took a leave of absence for a year beginning in February 1946 and went into seclusion at Webb's Friday Mountain Ranch to write the classic Adventures with a Texas Naturalist (1947). He published two other books, including Karánkaway Country (1950), during his lifetime; a fourth book appeared posthumously.

1899 - For five days in 1899, storms with an average of 17 inches of rain, drench over 7,000 square miles of central Texas causing the worst flooding on the Brazos river on record. Some towns recorded up to 30 inches of rain.

1906 - On June 27-28, 1906, 74 veterans of Hood's Texas Brigade joined in an annual reunion which began in 1872 and continued until 1934. The two day event directed by the association president R A Brantley, Sr, and his daughter Mrs Norton B Wellborn, included speeches, a baseball game, and a grand ball.

1918 - Hortense Sparks Ward became the first woman in Harris County history to register to vote. Born in Matagorda County in 1872, she married Houston lawyer William Henry Ward in 1908. In 1910 she became the first woman admitted to the Texas state bar. Ward worked tirelessly in support of women’s rights and penned moving newspaper essays and pamphlets for that cause. She was instrumental in the passage of the Married Woman’s Property Law of 1913 by the Texas Legislature, and she campaigned with suffragist Minnie Fisher Cunningham for enfranchisement. Texas women won an important victory in 1918 when the legislature permitted them to vote in primary elections. In a short span of less than three weeks, 386,000 women across the state registered to vote, and Hortense Ward led the way. :txflag:

1957 - More than 500 people were killed when Hurricane Audrey hit the coastal area of Louisiana and Texas.
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threoh8
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Re: This Day In Texas History - June 27

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Interesting detail about Adobe Walls: One of the last men killed was William Olds, who died on the fifth day of the fight from a negligent discharge of his own rifle. He was on a ladder in the building, and may have snagged the trigger on something.
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Re: This Day In Texas History - June 27

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threoh8 wrote:Interesting detail about Adobe Walls: One of the last men killed was William Olds, who died on the fifth day of the fight from a negligent discharge of his own rifle. He was on a ladder in the building, and may have snagged the trigger on something.
Thanks for the interesting fact! :tiphat:

Here's another interesting tidbit of information that I didn't know about on the Battle of Adobe Walls...it's about Bat Masterson:

"In the spring of 1874 he(Bat Masterson) accompanied the party of A. C. Myers and Fred Leonard(buffalo hunters) to the Canadian River in the Texas Panhandle and there helped construct the Adobe Walls trading post . Masterson was in the Myers and Leonard store on the morning of June 27, when about 200 Indians charged the post. He ran to Jim Hanrahan's saloon and fought most of the battle from there......"

https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fmacc

That is a VERY good read! :txflag:
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Skiprr
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Re: This Day In Texas History - June 27

Post by Skiprr »

I love the stuff at the Texas State Historical Association website and the Handbook of Texas. I've read some Texas history tomes, but like to get bite-sized info (almost) every day, like this series of Topics.

I know I'm preaching to the choir, but some tiny tidbits of info don't merit their own item listings here. One way to browse what happened in Texas history on a given day is to use a Google advanced search that looks only at the tshaonline.org website. You can copy-and-paste the link below; just substitute the =June+27 with whatever month and day to want to look at:

Code: Select all

https://www.google.com/search?as_q=&as_epq=June+27&as_oq=&as_eq=&as_nlo=&as_nhi=&lr=&cr=&as_qdr=all&as_sitesearch=tshaonline.org&as_occt=any
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joe817
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Re: This Day In Texas History - June 27

Post by joe817 »

Skiprr wrote:I love the stuff at the Texas State Historical Association website and the Handbook of Texas. I've read some Texas history tomes, but like to get bite-sized info (almost) every day, like this series of Topics.

I know I'm preaching to the choir, but some tiny tidbits of info don't merit their own item listings here. One way to browse what happened in Texas history on a given day is to use a Google advanced search that looks only at the tshaonline.org website. You can copy-and-paste the link below; just substitute the =June+27 with whatever month and day to want to look at:

Code: Select all

https://www.google.com/search?as_q=&as_epq=June+27&as_oq=&as_eq=&as_nlo=&as_nhi=&lr=&cr=&as_qdr=all&as_sitesearch=tshaonline.org&as_occt=any
Thanks so much Skiprr! :tiphat: I use a similar technique, but go straight to their search function within the website marked "Basic Search"...simply type in the date( june 27) or whatever, and hit the search function. It's kind of like a "google" within the website:

https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/search

It works on everything....dates, famous people, events, locations(towns, lakes, military installations, etc, etc.), and with each search it gives you 10 pages of stuff. No more but no less. I've spent countless hours searching things that just pop into my mind on a whim, I am never disappointed in what it pulls up.
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