HomeMy WebLinkAboutHood's Brigade - Bryan CentennialLt. General John Bell Hood, C.S.A
Hood's Brigade Bryan Centennial 1862 1962
U - TOTEM FOOD STORES
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BRYAN, TEXAS
The Early History
of Bryan
And The Surrounding Area
Narrative Prepared By
Joseph Milton Nance
Hood's Brigade -Bryan Centennial Committee
June 1962
ROBERT L. AYERS
Treasurer
Hood's Brigade - Bryan Centennial Committee
Insurance
Dick Haddox
Dr. R. H. Benbow - President
Mrs. J. C. Culpepper
Mrs. R. E. Callender
Miss Lucy Harrison
Travis Bryan, Jr.
Henry Clay
Rowland Vannoy
BROTHERS OF THE BRUSH:
J. W. Hamilton
HATS AND TIES:
Jesse Burditt
PROMENADES AND CARAVANS:
Mrs. Jerry Allard - Co- Chairman
Mrs. Sam Curl - Co- Chairman
J. C. Nevill
Jerry Barton
Jake Cangelose
Douglas R. Norcross
Ellis H. Smith
ADVANCE SALES
Joe Ferreri (Chairman)
Mrs. John M. Barron - Nominations
Mrs. James T. Hannigan
Mrs. Kay Halsell
Mrs.. A. Krenek
Mrs. Lewis Newman
Mrs. E. B. Sale
RALPH D. McCORMICK
General Chairman
Headquarters Operating Capital
Miss Lucy Harrison Mrs. M. L. Parker, Jr.
Fireworks
Jud Rogers
Men's Chairman
James L. Glenn
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Robert Ayers - Treasurer
Ralpd D. McCormick
Dr. J. M. Nance
Dr. Richard H. Harrison, III
J. T. Duncan
W. S. Barron
Dr. S. J. Enloe
PARTICIPATION DIVISION
�r.1W r14 SAL BELLES
Mrs. W. T. McDonald
Mrs. John E. Hutchinson
SUNBONNETS AND DRESSES
Mrs. A. T. Chisholm
SPECTACLE TICKET DIVISION
Henry Clay (Chairman)
AWARDS
Mrs. Charles Edge
Mrs. Mackin Jones
Mrs. Don Young
Women's Chairman
Mrs. W. A. Zieren
Decorations
Emily Lyne
JIMMY DILLON
Secretary
Jimmy Dillon - Secretary
Barzos Varisco
Ford Albritton
H. E. Burgess
John Brayton
Abs. J. W. Batts, Jr.
KANGAROO KOURT
Johnny Johnson - Chairman
M. L. (Red) Cashion
Jo Ella Lanoux
Alice Clairy
Mary Lu Newport
Alta Johnson
Betty Grimes
Etta Beal
Virginia Jones
Lee Gilber
Barbara Angonia
Mildred Christain
Alice Fickey
CASHIERS & GATES
Louis E. Nedbalek - Chairman
Frank Nedbalek
Bob McCorquodale
Charles Zikes
John Darby
Jim Holloway
Geo. T. Blazek
Bob Davidson
Roy Simmons
Leo Moon
Harris Wright
SCENARION & TITLE
Dr. J. M. Nance
PROPERTIES
C. B. McGown - Chairman
Kent Potts
Doug McBride
Clyde Bounds
Guy Davis
Steve Pearce
Walter Bell
W. B. Davis
William Byrd
PRESS RELEASE
Mrs. Thomas C. Blake
RADIO AND TELEVISION
Robert Huffaker, Jr.
MERCHANTS PROMOTION
Joe Faulk - Chairman
Gene Hart
W. E. Stickley
Marshall Massey
W. A. Morgan
Saturday, June 23rd
GREATER BRAZOS VALLEY DAY
John R. Naylor - Chairman
Monday, June 25th
PIONEER & HOM DAY
Perry Carlton - Chairman
Tuesday, June 26th
AGRICULTURE DAY
Tom Sistrunk - Chairman
L. L. KarIi
J. A. King
A. L. Giesenschlag
Freddie Wolters
Bob Robert
Herbert Wilson
Gene Frairson
Lucian Krose
Jimmy Weedon
Dr. J. F. Sousares
Emily Ritter
HISTORICAL PROGRAM
Dr. J. M. Nance
CONCESSIONS
Whit Moore
SPECTACLE DIVISION
Alton Bowen - Chairman
SOUND SYSTEM
Lee Piraino
PUBLICITY DIVISION
H. E. Connor - Chairmn
SPECIAL EVENTS DIVISION
Dr. R. C. Patterson - Chairman
Rueben Bond - Co- Chairman
PARADES
J. 0. Ashworth - Chairman
Geo. A. Adams, Jr. (Trail Rideg)
Co- Chairman
SPECIAL DAYS
Wednesday, June 27th
VETERANS & FRATERNAL DAY
Greene Buchanan - Chairman
Sam Crenshaw
0. A. Ashworth
John Stasny
Mrs'. R. E. Callender
James P. Hannigan
Thursday, June 28th
- LADIES DAY
MrS. Joe L. Daisa - Chairman
Mrs. Frank Kahn
Mrs. Henry Young
Rr. * x u DIVISION
Lewis Fair - Chairman
TRAFFIC AND SAFETY
Joe Ellisor
HOSPITALITY CENTER
Mrs. Charles Myers
CAST
Mrs F. I. Dahlberg
CONSTRUCTION
James McAdams - Chairman
Ed Sims
W. M. Sparks
GROUNDS COMMITTEE
A &M College Maintenance
COSTUME & MAKE -UP
Dorothy Goodman
DISTRIBUTIVE
Jerry Birdwell
SPECIAL PROJECTS
Don Cain
HISTORICAL WINDOWS
R. E. Glidden, Chairman
MUSIC
Jack Briggs Chairman
Sunday, June 24th
FAITH OF OUR FATHERS DAY
Dr. Karl 0. Bayer
Bryan Pastors Ass'n.
Friday, Julie 29th
INTERNATIONAL DAY
Mrs. Jack Dean Co- Chairman
Royce Hudson - Co- Chairman
Saturday, June 30th
YOUNG AMERICA DAY
Ronald Hale - Co- Chairman
E. L. Harrell - Co- Chairman
Gerald Hobbs
Wayne Lacy
-E: -E. Burns
Bryan Hatten
Al Sunday
Donnie Douglas
Mrs. John Hillman
NOVELTIES
Jerry Walker - Chairman
Horace Knight
CELEBRATION BALL
lie Aft 19
r ig 11401
Vick Lindley
This page is dedicated to the memory of the late Vick Lindley,
managing editor of The Bryan Daily Eagle and vice president of the
Hood's Brigade -Bryan Centennial at the time of his death Aug. 1,
1961.
Mr. Lindley, an amateur historian, was one of the primary motiva-
ting forces in the creation of the Hood's Brigade -Bryan Centennial. His
unstinting work and dedication to the project was instrumental
in making the Centennial possible.
Citizens - Friends - Supporters of
Hood's Brigade -Bryan Centennial
>1 i4(O O
John B. Hood's Brigade - Bryan- College!Station
The year 1962 marks the hundredth anniversary of
the participation of men recruited from the Bryan area
in one of the first major battles of the Civil War, as
well as the approximate centennial of the founding of
the City of Bryan. It was also one hundred years ago
that the United States Congress under the terms of the
Morrill Act gave assistance to the states in establishing
colleges (commonly known as land grant colleges and
universities) to give instruction in agriculture and the
mechanical arts, not to the exclusion of the liberal arts.
The state of Texas accepted the terms of this law on
April 17, 1871, and provided for the establishment of
the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas in
Brazos County, adjacent to Bryan, and thus upon the
opening of its doors in 1876 the college became the
first state institution of higher learning in Texas.
The history of Bryan is interwoven with the history
of the surrounding areas, rich in their heritage from
the days when the first •Spaniard trod the soil of what
is now Brazos County. While there is some agreement
among historians that Luis de Moscoso de Alvarado,
after the death of Hernando de Soto near the mouth of
the Arkansas River in 1542, in attempting to lead the
remnants of the expedition overland to the Spanish
settlements in northern Mexico, penetrated as far as
the Brazos River before turning back to the Mississippi,
the historians do not agree upon what point Moscoso
reached the Brazos, even though some are so bold as to
say that it was near where El 'Camino Real later crossed
the Brazos.
For nearly three centuries after Moscoso, the greater
Bryan area was known only to the Indians and a few
Spaniards. The native Indian tribes were the Tonkawa,
Towakoni and Waco. These tribes were semi - nomadic,
lived in huts of straw, which were described as of good
size, clean, and well shaped; and the Tawakonies built
granaries underground for the preservation of seeds
for two years. These Indians cultivated corn, squash,
beans, and a few other crops, but depended to a great
extent for their livelihood upon the chase, and toward
the end of the eighteenth century were constantly having
trouble with the aggresive Comanches from the West;
and after 1820 with the Cherokees from the East, who
began to invade their buffalo hunting grounds in what
is now Brazos, Robertson, Milam, Limestone, and
Grimes counties. Toward the close of the eighteenth
century wild horses and wild cattle were found in
appreciable number in these counties, along with the
usual native game of deer, bear, javelina, turkey, quail,
and prairie chicken. As late as the early 1840's men
from the settlements below often entered Brazos County
in search of bear, turkey, and prairie chicken, and at
least one man from Washington County referred to
Brazos County as his poultry yard. During the days of
the Republic James Dunn, one of the early settlers of
Robertson County, built a large pen with wings to it
near the Navasota River for the purpose of capturing
wild cattle. On one occasion, according to W. W. Burton,
an old Texian whose memory went back to the days of
the Republic, Dunn caught some fifty calves in his
pen, and attempted to raise and gentle them by letting
them nurse gentle cows, but the instinct of the wild
was too stong for them to ever become domesticated.
The Spaniards passed along El Camino Real (vari-
ously known as the King's Highway, Royal Highway, or
Old San Antonio Road) blazed in 1691 by Domingo
Teran de los Rios, first provincial governor of Texas,
as a direct route from Monclova, then capital of the
province, to the missions established in 1690 in East
Texas. El Camino Real, now forming the northern boun-
dary of Brazos County, was probably used by the
French trader Louis Juchereau de St. Denis, from Nat-
chitoches who visited the Rio Grande in 1714. It, too,
was the route used by Moses Austin in 1820 when he
visited the Spanish governor in 'San Antonio to request
permission to establish a colony in Texas, and this same
route was used the following year by his son Stephen
F. Austin, when he entered Texas to request permission to
carry out the contract of his father who had died shortly
after the latter's return to Missouri. Later, many of the
Anglo- American colonists entering Texas by way of
Gaines' Ferry on the Sabine arrived at Nacogdoches and
the interior of Texas over the Old San Antonio Road
and its trails.
Under these circumstances, it was only natural then
that the middle Brazos Should play an important role
in the early Anglo- American settlement of Texas.
Among the first settlers in Austin's; colony in 1821 was
the Millican family from Missouri. Robert Millican his
wife, Nancy, and nine children (eight sons and one
daughter) in December settled three miles south of
the present Millican community, and thereby became the
first Anglo- Americans to erect a permanent home
within the present limits of Brazos County. Their nearest
neighbors were four families on the west bank of the
Brazos at the crossing of the La Bahia (Goliad) road,
near the present site of Washington. The first of these
to arrive was Andrew Robinson's; the others were those
of three brothers, Abner, Joseph, and Robert Kuykendall.
During December several other families joined them.
Near Christmas Joseph and Robert Kuykendall and
Daniel Gilleland moved to the La Bahia crossing of the
Colorado and planted the first settlement on that river,
near present Columbus. Abner Kuykendall and Thomas
Boatright moved a few days later to a point some ten
miles west of the Brazos on New Year's Creek, and
about the same time Josiah H. Bell settled on the Brazos
some five miles below the La Bahia road. In late De-
cember the Garret and Hibbings families located at a
point above the mouth of Little Brazos where El 'Camino
Real crossed the Brazos, and on January 1, 1822, William
B. DeWees with four other families joined them. During
the months of January and February, 1822, many new
settlers arrived, for these were the months to move,
being the interval between the harvesting of crops back
in the states and the beginning of planting in the wilder-
ness for another season.
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Some delay in issuing land titles was caused by
the achievement of Mexican independence from Spain
in 1821 and the unsettled condition of government in
Mexico for several years. Finally, on July 10, 1824,
James Hope received the first title to land in what is
now Brazos County; and on July 16, 1824, Robert Mil -
lican received a grant of two and a half leagues of
land, and his sons William T. and James D. Millican
on the same date each received a league (or 4,428 acres)
of land within the present limits of Brazos County. Also
on the 16th James Whitesides, on the 19th William Mat-
his and John Kelly, and on the 21st Samuel Davidson
received their titles. A month later other members of
Austin's first colony — James Curtis, Jr., Thomas S.
Haynes, Walter Sutherland, Thomas F. Mckinney, and
Henry and Roland Whitesides — received titles to the
land on which they had located. All of the foregoing
persons were members of Austin's first colony and the
only ones of the Old Three Hundred who received titles
to land in Brazos County. The Whitesides property lay
both in Grimes and Brazos Counties. By 1830 J. H.
Jones (1829) and J. P. Cole were living in Brazos Coun-
ty. Eight families from Tennessee arrived at the junction
of the Little Brazos and Brazos rivers on November
25, 1830, to find John Williams, James Christian, and
William Mathis already living at that point.
Richard Carter and his wife, Elizabeth, and four
children (Wiley, Elizabeth, Mary Ann, and Eve line)
arrived in April 1831, from Morgan Point, Alabama, and
settled on Carter's Creek, at a point some three miles
southeast of Bryan, For several years their nearest
neighbors were the settlers near the mouth of the Little
Brazos and the Millicans to the southwest.
By the early part of 1832 several families had lo
cated near the Old San Antonio Road in Robertson
County. Among these was the William Crain Sparks
family, whose headlight was east of the present Wjhee-
lock community, and ultimately lay within the boun-
daries of Brazos County. Captain Thomas H. Barron
settled in the same general vicinity. In 1827 the
northern boundary of Austin's First Colony (the Old
Three Hundred) was fixed at El Camino Real (the
King's Highway).
In order to stem the swelling tide of Anglo- American
immigration to Texas and ensure better control of affairs
in Texas, the Mexican Congress enacted the Law of
April 6, 1830. The law came as a result of a compre-
hensive report on Texas by General Manuel de Mier y
Teran who visited Texas in 1828, and, among other
things recommended the promotion of counter coloni-
zation of Texas by Mexicans and Europeans and the
establishment of additional military posts to protect the
settlers and to secure their obedience to Mexican laws.
The Congress prohibited further immigration from the
United States to Texas, voided those colonization con-
tracts where the minimum conditions had not been met,
and provided for the strengthening of the garrisons at
Bexar, Goliad, and Nacogdoches, and for the establish-
ment of five additional military posts, one of which came
to be located near the intersection of El Camino Real
with the Brazos. Late in July 1830, Lieutenant - Colonel
Jose Francisco Ruiz established Fort Tenoxtitlan at a
point a quarter of a league below the Old San Antonio
Road on the east bank of the Brazos, but on October 17
of that year moved the post across the river to some
springs in what is now Burleson County, just above
where the Robertson- Brazos county line strikes the
Brazos river. As long as the fort was maintained, it
gave some protection against the Indians.
Among the colonization contracts annulled by the
Law of April 6, 1830, was that of the Nashville Com-
pany (or Robertson Colony). There had been formed in
February 1822, at Nashville, Tennessee, the Texas As-
sociation, or Nashville Company, of which Dr. Felix
Robertson was president and Sterling C. Robertson, his
cousin, and Sam Houston were members. Since the
Mexican proceedure in granting colonization contracts
was to grant them to individuals rather than to com-
panies, the contract was issued in the name of Robert
Leftwich, the company's agent in Mexico, and was for the
purpose of settling 800 families in Texas. Leftwich
transferred the contract to the Association on condition
that the area be referred to as Leftwich's Grant. In
1827 the Mexican government approved the transfer and
extended the boundaries to run as follows: beginning on
the west bank of the Navasota River at the point where
the Upper Road (El Camino Real) crossed on the way
from Nacogdoches to Bexar; thence west along the said
road to the Brazos - Colorado watershed; thence northwest
along the said watershed too the extreme headwaters of
Little River; thence in a straight line to the Cross Tim-
bers above the Waco Indian Village; thence southeast
along the Brazos - Trinity watershed to the headwaters of
the Navasota, and thence downstream to the paint of be-
ginning. This area, roughly one hundred miles wide and
two hundred miles long, covered all or part of thirty
present Texas counties. Through an error in translation,
the contract was confirmed to the Nashville Company
rather than to the Texas Association of Nashville.
In the fall of 1825 Major Sterling C. Robertson and
Felix Robertson, as agents of the company, visited
Texas with a party of thirty men to explore the grant.
They established a permanent camp at the mouth of
Little River, and explored the country along the courses
of the Brazos, Little River, Leon, Lampasas, Salado,
and San Gabriel rivers; and did some surveying along
Cow Bayou and the Brazos River. Felix Robertson re-
turned to Tennessee in April 1826, but Sterling C.
Robertson stayed on in Texas to select the areas to be
settled. For himself he selected a piece of land occupied
by a squatter named Early, whom he requested John
P. Cole, alcalde of the adjacent district of Bravo in
Austin's colony, to remove. Early defied any one to re-
move him, and Kole became anxious for Austin to tell
him what to do about squatter Early. Robertson was
soon back in Tennessee. In the fall of 1826 the Nashville
Company sent out Benjamin F. Foster, W. R. Winn,
"and three of four other young men of worth" to begin
settlement. Upon arrival, Foster and his companions
were discouraged from making a settlement owing to
the confusion growing out of the Fredonian Rebellion
in December at Nacogdoches; consequently, very few
families entered the bounds' of the colony. The Fredonian
Rebellion was by no means the sole cause of discourage-
ment. Several years of internal difficulties within the
company, coupled with financial losses, also adversely
affected colonization.
Two months after the enactment of the Law of April
6, 1830, the company authorized Sterling C. Robertson
to settle two hundred families in the colony. In October
1830, Robertson again arrived in Texas with five fami
lies, and with six companions reported to Colonel Ruiz
at Tenoxtitlan on October 25, and then set about ex-
ploring the country. On November 12, he returned to
Tenoxtitlan to inform Ruiz that nine families were ,en-
camped at the crossing below and that a number of
others were expected in a few days. Only two of these
families — Dr. Thomas J. Wootton and Isaiah Curd —
built homes within the present boundaries of Brazos
County. Ruiz, however, told Robertson that the contract
had been abrogated and that he and those who had
come with him must leave the country. Robertson ap-
pealed for help to Stephen F. Austin, who had befriended
him on other occasions, but Austin could make no
headway against the Law of April 6, 1830. Austin did
succeed, however, in getting an exception to the law
for his and Green Dewitt's Colony so as to permit
continued Anglo- American immigration into their colo-
nies for almost two years on the grounds that they had
fulfilled before April 1830, the minimum conditions in
respect to the settlement of families within the limits
of their grant. Immigrants thus came in increasing num-
ber to Austin's and DeWitt's colonies in 1830 -1832.
Furthermore, while endeavoring to help Robertson, Aus-
tin learned that the Nashville Company's grant was
about to be re -let to a French company, and to prevent
that he applied for and obtained and additional areas
for himself and his secretary, Sam May Williams. It
was held that the Nashville Company had not settled
100 families prior to the enactment of the law and
that according to the general colonization law under which
the contract had been issued, as well as the one of April
6. 1830, that unless at least 100 families were settled
within six years from the date of the contract, the
contract became void.
It was thus that Austin and Williams had applied
for and obtained the area embraced in the Nashville
Company grant for the purpose of colonizing Mexican,
Irish, Scotch, German, Swiss, and French Immigrants.
Williams claimed in February 1834, that 20 -30 Mexican
families were settled in the colony, mostly around
Tenoxtitlan, and that there were enough German and
Swiss families in the colony to make up a hundred; and,
he also stated he expected 125 more German, Swiss,
and Irish families. He was probably exaggerating. When
a land commissioner was finally designated for the
colony, 88 titles were issued in •October 1835, and ,78 in
January and February of the following year, but there
were very few foreign names among those receiving
grants. Robertson went to Saltillo, the state capitol, and
presented his claims to the governor claiming that the
company had settled 100 families within the required
time. The Austin and Williams contract was now can-
celled on May 12, 1834, and the grant was restored, with
Robertson being designated empresario, and the colony
thereafter came to be known as the Robertson Colony.
The anti - immigration feature of the Law of April 6,
1830, was repealed in 1834 and immigration into the
Robertson Colony increased in late 1834 and through-
out 1835. With the exception of contracts issued in
the latter part of 1833 to Jose Francisco Ruiz, Antonio
Menchaca, M. C. Rejon, Maria de la Concepcion Marques,
Pedro Pereira, Jose de la Jesus', and Mariano Grande,
all contracts in the Robertson Colony date from 1834 -
1835. A number of the contracts issued in 1834 -1835 were
eleven league contracts, which according to the state
colonization law of March 24, 1825, were to be issued
only to Mexicans. Among the early settlers was Robert
Henry and his family. Originally from Ireland, the
Henry's immigrated to Texas from South Carolina
overland through Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and
Louisiana to settle long the Brazos in 1829, and received
on December 22, 1834, a headright east of the present .
town of Hearne. A week earlier Wilson Reed received
a grant to land in the southeast part of present Robert-
On the east bank' of the Brazos River, at the I
sing of the Comanche Trail about two miles below
mouth of little River in present Milam county, Rnhel
I
son County on which the present community of Benchley
is located, and 'near where the Eli . Seale family had
located in 1832.
On October 18, 1833, Mrs. Robert Henry, whose
husband was away from home, was informed by a mes-
senger that the dreaded Comanches had killed several
persons on the North Yegua and were advancing to-
ward her cabin. Mrs. Henry, like most frontier women
of that day, was quite resourceful. Quickly hitching a
team of horses to a wagon, she loaded up her four
children and hurried eastward along the Old San An-
tonio Road. At the crossing on the Navasota she found
the river in -flood and several persons waiting for the
waters to subside. Surveying the situation briefly, Mrs.
Henry declared: "If we remain here, we shall be killed
by the .Indians. I am going to cross the river." So
saying, she unhitched the horses, mounted one of them,
and taking one child at a time she transferred the four
children to the east bank of the raging stream, and
proceeded on her way, only to learn later that those
who had remained on the West bank had been murdered
by the Indians.
In the meantime, following the disturbances at Ana-
huac, most of the newly established military posts in
Texas were abandoned in the summer of 1832. The
garrison at Tenoxtitlan was withdrawn on August 22,
1832, although Lieutenant- Colonel Ruiz stayed in Texas,
and later joined the Texans in their fight for indepen-
dence. The Indian trading post at Tenoxtitlan however,
remained in operation and the small settlement that
had grown up around the post continued. The abandoned
buildings of the fort were used by families immigrating
to Robertson's Colony.
From that portion of Texas lying between the
Nueces and Medina rivers and the Trinity which, since
January 31, 1831, had been known as the Department
of Bexar, the legislature of Coahuila and Texas created
on March 18,1834, the Department of the Brazos and
designated San Felipe de Austin as the capital of the
new department, bounded on the east roughly by the
Trinity and on the west by the Lavaca River.
Not long after the establishment of Tenoxtitlan, a
settlement, initially consisting principally of Irish fam-
ilies, grew up around Stagger's Point (Red Top), or
better known today as Benchley; and about the same
time, at the Navasota crossing of El Camino Real, the
community of Tinnanville, named after Jeremiah Tin -
nan, was begun. In 1832 James Dunn and his wife Isa-
bella (Crawford) arrived in Texs from Alabama, and
early in 1833 reached the vicinity of Stagger's Point.
Dunn located his headright in 1834 on what later was
called the "Old Cobb Prairie" by some and by others
"Wheelock 'Prairie," but the grant of title to the land
he had selected bears date of July 31, 1835. Dunn
proceeded to build a house which might serve as a home
as well as a small fort against Indian attacks, for with
the abandonment of the fort at Tenoxtitlan, the Indians
were becoming even more troublesome, and well migh
the Red Man be concerned as he witnessed an increasing
number of white men encroaching upon his hunting
preserve. In 1837 Dunn built the first gristmill in the
area.
founded in 1835 the town of Nashville, which became
the headquarters for the Robertson Colony, and from
1837 to 1846 served as the county seat of Milam County.
Following the annexation of Texas to the United States
it was considered as a possible site for the state
capitol. In September 1837, it had an estimated popu-
lation of 100. With Cameron designated as the county
seat in 1846, Nashville began to decline, and the post
office there was discontinued in 1868. Years later with
the assistance of Milam County, the Sarah McCalls Chap-
ter of the Daughters of the American Revolution ac-
quired a part of the old Nashville site and deeded it
to the state for a memorial .park.
Settlement in the area of what came to be known as
Washington -on- the - Brazos began in November 1821,
when the Andrew Robinson family crossed the Brazos,
and camped west of the river near the La Bahia road.
In 1822 Robinson began the operation of a ferry across
the Brazos River just below the mouth of the Navasota
River. In 1830 John W. Hall, son -in -law of Andrew
Robinson, laid out a townsite on the west bank of
the Brazos, and sold several lots, but it was not until
1833 that John W. Kinney constructed the first house.
Hall, Thomas Gray, Asa Hoxey, and others organized
the Washington Townsite Company. The town was
named Washington, probably at Hoxey's suggestion,
who was from Washington, Georgia. In response to a
petition from citizens of the area, Washington in July
1835, was created a separate municipality, and Joshua
Hadley became the first alcalde in July 1835. By 1836
Washington had a population of about one hundred, and
boasted two hotels and fifty houses. It was at Washing -
ton -on- the - Brazos that the Texan Declaration of In-
dependence was voted on March 2, 1836, and that the
constitution of the Texas Republic was drafted. By
March 20, 1836, Washington was pretty well evacuated
owing to the approach of the Mexican army from San
Antonio following the fall of the Alamo on March 6.
After the war the citizens returned, on December 14,
1837, Washington County was organized, and for a
brief spell, in the Fall of 1843 and 1844 Washington -on-
the- Brazos was the temporary capitol of the Republic.
Independence had its beginnings when John P. Cole
with his wife, Mary Eleanor (Owen), immigrated to
Texas as one of Austin's Old Three Hundred, reaching
the Brazos in the Spring of 1822, and settled at the
present site of Independence, which until 1836 was
known as Cole's Settlement. Nestor Clay and John Mc-
Neese were among the early settlers in the area. Samuel
Seward came to Texas from Illinois in 1828 and built
a one -room log cabin in Cole's Settlement after which
he returned to Illinois in 1834 with his wife, two sons
and two daughters. In 1836 Dr. Asa Hoxey suggested
the name be changed to Independence. Thomas Scrog-
gins organized a Baptist Church there in 1839, into
which Sam Houston was baptised after he moved to
Independence in 1853. Baylor College was chartered on
February 1, 1845, and by the 'Congress of the Republic
of Texas, and opened its doors as a co- educational in-
stitution at Independence in 1846; in 1866 the female
department became Baylor Female College at Inde-
pendence.
Sarahville de Viesca, named in honor of Mrs. Sarah
(Maclin) Robertson, mother of Sterling C. Robertson,
and Augustin Viesca, the newly elected (September
9, 1834) governor of Coahuila y Texas, was founded
by Robertson in 1834 at the western end of the falls
of the Brazos six miles west of the present city of
Marlin in Falls County. Sarahville de Viesca was the
site of the Robertson Colony land office until the out-
break of Indian hostilities in 1836 forced its aband-
onment. Its inhabitants fell back to Nashville and Whee-
lock. After the founding of Sarahville de Viesca, Robert-
son's Colony was referred to as the 1Vlunicipality of
Viesca until the name was changed to Milam on Decem-
ber 26, 1835; in honor of Benjamin R. Milam who lost
his life in the storming of San Antonio de Bexar in
December 1835. During the days of the republic it
was known as "Fort Milam," and the First Congress
of the Republic of Texas made it the county seat.
The district of Viesca was represented in the con-
sultation, October 16 -Nov. 14, 18315, by Samuel T. Allen,
Joseph L. Hood, James W. Parker, Albert G. Perry, John
Goodloe Warren Pierson, Alexander Thompson, and the
Washington District was represented in the Consultation
by Philip H. Coe, Elijah S. Collard, Jesse Grimes, Joseph
L. Hood, Asa Hoxey, William T. Millican, Asa Mitchell,
and William M. Shepherd.
Eleazer Louis R. Wheelock, son of Eleazer Whee-
lock, the first president of Dartmouth College, was born
on March 31,1793, in Hanover, New Hampshire. He
attended the United States Military Academy at West
Point served in the War of 1812 and in the Black Hawk
War, and for a while in 1822 was stationed in Arkansas.
He resigned from the U. S. Army, and became a mer-
chant in Ohio and Illinois While on a business trip to
Mexico in 1824, he visited Texas, and in 1833 moved
to Texas and settled in the Robertson Colony in 4835,
where he laid out the town of Wheelock, in what is now
the south central part of Robertson County about a
mile and a half from the present county line; and built
Courtesy of Mr. H. Sellers Rogers, Navasota, Texas
Robinson's Ferry, Washington -on- the- Brazos
a block house, known as Wheelock's Fort, for protection
against the Indians. He joined the Texan army in 1835,
escorted and protected families during the Runaway
Scrape in the spring of 1836, and reached the Texan
army, for duty, the day after the battle of San Jacinto.
Wheelock was the county seat of Robertson County
between 1850 and 1856. Until the courthouse was com-
pleted in 1851, the court met under an oak tree. A
postoffice was established in 1847, and is still operating.
Wheelock Academy operated during the 1850's.
Port Sullivan on the Brazos River above the mouth
of Little River and at the head of steam navigation on
the Brazos, in eastern present Milam County near the
Robertson County line, was founded by and named in
honor of Augustus W. Sullivan, who located there in
1835. It was near the site of Fort Sullivan, founded by
Augustus W. Sullivan in 1835 as a trading post. Two
years later Joseph Harlan built his home across the
Brazos from Sullivan's Bluff, and his brother, Alpheus,
built his home at Sullivan's Bluff. Fort Sullivan Female
Institute, was founded here in the 1850's by the Metho-
dist church and operated under the direction of Joseph
P. Sneed to 1877.
In 1834 Henry Fanthrop, established himself at the
present site of Anderson, Texas, on the road from Nacog-
doches to San Felipe de Austin, and in the year following
converted his home into a hotel, and its owner became
in that year also the first postmaster and the operator
of the first merchantile establishment. The community
which developed around the inn, came to be referred to
as Fanthrop, but Fanthrop succeeded in having the
village name changed to Alta Mira, because of the
view of the valley of Holland Creek, January 18, 1842,
Moseley's Ferry on the Brazos began operation 1856.
the Texas Congress provided for the establishment of a
mail route from Fanthrop's, in what was then Mont-
gomery County, to Dunn's Post Office in Robertson
County.
In 1846 Grimes Cnunty was organized, and Fanthrop
offered land for a county seat, formally laid off a town,
and the name was changed to Anderson in honor of
Kenneth L. Andersen, Vice - President of the Republic
of Texas, who had died on July 3, 1845, at the inn.
St. Paul's College was established in 1852 at Anderson.
A private fort or stockade was built in 1834 at the
headwaters of the Navasota, in present Limestone Coun-
ty, by Silas M. Parker and James W. Parker, and other
members of the family of Elder John Parker. The fort
was some distance beyond the frontier of settlement, and
was occasionally attacked by hostile Indians. In 1835
Captain Robert M. Williamson led an expedition from
Tenoxtitlan from below against the Indians who had
been raiding the settlements in the Robertson Colony,
and marched to the aid of Captain R. M. Coleman at
Parker's Fort.
During the Revolution the settlers experienced the
horrors of the "runaway scrape," following the advance
of Santa Anna from San Antonio. Families in the north-
ern part of the county fled eastward, but those who
took a "wait- and -gee" attitude congregated at the var-
ious small forts and stockades, such as Dunn's Fort,
Wheelock's Fort, and Parker's Fort for mutual protec-
tion against the Indians who were showing increasing
restlessness. Many of those in the southern part of the
county toward Washington fled eastward. In fleeing
some were stricken down by disease and exposure. After
the war several individuals, including Peter Norton,
Rev. Robert Crawford, Willis L. Ellis, James H. Evetts,
James Mitchell, Albert E. Gallatin, William Hill, and
Thomas Yates, received land bounties for serving in
the Texan revolution, and located their land in Brazos
County.
On May 19, 1836, Parker's Fort was surprised and
attacked again by the Indians. This time several hundred
Comanche and Caddo Indians made the attack, killing
several members of the Parker family and carrying
others into captivity, including the nine year old Cyn-
thia Ann Parker, who later became the wife of Chief
Peta Nocona and the mother of the famous Comanche
Chief, Quanah Parker. A replica of the original fort
was constructed n 1936 on the original site during the
Texas centennial celebration.
Following the massacre of the whites at Fort Parker
in May, Wheelock was instrumental in organizing a
ranger company for the protection of the people of
Robertson Colony. -
With the increase in Indian difficulties in the spring
and summer of 1836, Dunn probably strengthened his
residence, and by 1837 it was being referred to as Dunn's
Fort. Located on the eastern edge of what is known
today as the "Pryor Treasure Hunt Ranch," Dunn's
Fort was built of cedar logs. After some eighty years,
a portion of the structure was moved to the Seale prop-
erties. The fort was laid out in the form of a square.
A trench was dug, and heavy logs were stood on end,
side by side. An outer trench paralleled the first and
the intervening space was filled with dirt. Heavy logs
were laid across the top and covered over with a layer
of dirt. Later a ten -foot stockade, enclosing about three
acres, was built around the fortification.
Some time early in Sam Houston's first term as
President of Texas, Sterling C. Robertson went to the
City of Houston, then the national capital, to request
the Government to assist in protecting the frontier
from the Indians. President Houston is alleged to have
replied: "God eternally d —n you —I wish the Indians
had the whole of your scalps."
Difficulties with the Indians lasted well into the 1840's
In 1840 a band of Comanches raided into the settlements,
killing members of several families along Big Cedar
Creek. They were pursued by a company of "minute
men" who overtook them at Horn Hill in present Lime-
stone County. In the ensuing engagement six Texans
and twenty Indians were killed. Shortly after this en-
gagement a block house (called Fort Boggy) was built
on Boggy Creek about two and a half miles north of
Leona to give protection to settlers extending into that
part of Robertson County. In May 1841, a company of
surveyors discovered an Indian encampment on the
headwaters of the Navasota thought to be that of some
200 Cherokees, possibly some of those who had been
expelled from Texas in 1839 and returned to plant corn.
The alarm was immediately given and from the settle-
ments in Robertson and Navasota Counties a company
of Minute Men under Captain Eli Chandler formed, ad-
vanced against the Indian camp, attacked it and put the
Indians to flight, leaving five Indians dead upon the
ground. In the camp were found various farming tools,
including some two dozen Collins' axes. The presence of
the axes seem to indicate that ` the Indians were pre-
paring to make a permanent settlement, at least for the
growing season; that they were Northern Indians, which
was even more apparent since they were dressed in citi-
zen's clothing. Taken from the Indians were fifty Amer-
ican horses, and various items of clothing and equipment,
all of which was sold at auction a few days later in
Franklin. The only Texas casualty was Colonel Thomas
S. Smith, who was slightly wounded in the hand.
After the seizure of San Antonio in March 1842, by
a Mexican force under General Rafael Vasquez, Cap-
tain Eli Chandler of Franklin was commissioned to
raise a company of men for frontier defense and for
participation in the planned invasion of Mexico in the
summer of 1842. President Sam Houston informed
Chandler on May 13, 1842: "You are entitled to the
honor of having made the first returns to the (War)
Department, of an organized company to commence the
great work which we have before us. This fact speaks
loudly for your activity and energy — and for the
honorable subordinate disposition of your men. May
Heaven speed yourself and command through all the
perils and achievements of tale future; and may all of
Courtesy of Mrs. Roy K. Blilier of Houston, Texas
William Berry Smith, veteran of the Texas Revolution,
participant in the "Surveyor's Fight" in Navarro Coun-
ty, who lived at various times in Bell, Bosque, Milam,
and Washington counties. He died June 11, 1877, and
is buried near Iredell, Texas,
you strike many a hard and effective blow for liberty
and independence." A regiment was created for the
Robertson - Brazos County area. The First Battalion was
made up of Brazos County men and the Second Bat-
talion was composed of Robertson County men.
In late September and early October 1842, Captain
Chandler headed a force of seventeen men to constitute
a guard for the Texan 'Commissioners signed to nego-
tiate at Waco Village with the various Indian tribes
on the border of Texas.
About 1835 several families began to settle around
the headwaters of Mud Creek, about ten miles to the
east of the present town of Calvert on land that had
orginally belonged to Edwin McMillan. The Congress
of Texas created the county of Robertson on December
14, 1837, from that portion of Milam County lying east
of the Brazos River, and on the same day Washington
County was created with the county seat at Mt. Vernon.
Robertson County was reduced to its present boundaries
in 1846 when Dallas, Leon, Limestone, and Navarro
were created out of it. When Robertson County was
created, Franklin was designated the county seat. Rivalry
in the county resulted in the removal of the county seat
"uster Roll of Ca caia L. J. Wilson i_or.onaY, la i:hu 1st Regiment (Carter's Brigade) of Texas Lancers
Volunteers, commanded by Colonel G. :i. Cnrter calleu into the service of the Confederate States, in the Pro-
visional Army, under the orovis ions `of the Act o' Co.i;_-rocs, passed February 1861 by Secretary of War from the
Seventeenth day of A7ril 1362 for the tern of three years or during the war unless some discharged.
No. of each ' iames Rank Age Joined for Duty
grade Present and absent -
°rivates _Z alpha-
betical order. When ?There
1062 Boonville
1 Wilson, L. J. Capt. 48 ;tar. 8 ^lrazos Co.
1 Bowman, Wm. II. ( 1st Lieut.
2' Walker, James 2nd " 44 :Aar. 13 Boonville
Brazos Co.
3
Walker, John 3rd " 42 Mar. 15
Hudsoeth, Robt. 1st Sorgt. 33 Mar. 13 tlheolock
McIntosh, David
Martin, James F.
Connally, Jones
Zimmerman, James M.
McDonald, William
Arnett, H.
Graves,'Jares 3rd "
2nd "• .114
3rd " 26
4th " 36
5th 4o
I '1st Corpl. 32
2nd " 31
Valuation in Dollars of Remarks
and _;nrolled brses, Horse Equipment; Arms
:Iar. 0
Mar. 16
Liar. 15
,.ar. 8
:jar. 13
28 i:ar. 13
in 1850 to Wheelock and from there in 1856 to a new
location, five miles north of Franklin, which had been
laid out in 1855 and where an academy had been estab-
lished. The new location was the town of Owensville,
named in honor of Harrison Owen, the first county clerk.
At Owensville a two -story courthouse and jail was con-
structed, but after the Civil War the county records
were moved to Calvert, founded in June 1869 on the
route of the Houston and Texas Central Railroad, and
named in honor of Robert Calvert, a lawyer from
Arkansas. Although no courthouse was ever built there.
Calvert continued as the county seat, supported in 1870
by legislature enactment. Owensville declined rapidly
and is little more than a memory today.
As the Houston and Texas Central Railroad pushed
northward the town of Morgan was founded in 1871 and
in 1879 Morgan won the county seat from Calvert. When
a post office was designated for Morgan in 1879 its
name was changed to Franklin, and the settlement at
the head of Mud Creek thereafter became known as Old
Franklin. At "Old Franklin" in 1838 was established
Franklin Academy.
Washington County included the area between the
Brazos and Navasota rivers as far north as the Old San
Antonio Road (El 'Camino Real); however, on January
Robertson
Boonville
"
9
u
1t
Wheelock
Robertson
Co :R25
;140
4140
.$140
°;150
$150
$180
Co,
0250 330
;':225 338
:' >30
ti25
324
.333
339
339
3170 $35
3137.50 ----
$ 45.00
2.5o
3 4o.00
$ 3.00
$142.50
13, 1841, the inhabitants in the area between these
two rivers petitioned Congress for the creation of that
area into a new county. As a result, Congress on Janu-
ary 30, 1841, created the county of Navasota to which
it added some 15,000 acres of land taken from Robertson
County. The name of the county was changed the next
year when James A. Head, representative from Nava-
sota County, introduced a bill in the House of Repre-
sentatives of the Congress of Texas on January 17,
1842. The bill passed the Senate the next day, and
was approved by President Houston on January 28. The
boundaries of the county remained the same. Bounded
on three sides by the Brazos and ,Navasota rivers, the
county had for its northern boundary the Old San An-
tonio Road.
At the time of its creation Navasota (Brazos) Coun-
ty had neither a jail, a courthouse, a ,post office, nor a
mail route, but the children were taught by Harvey
Mitchell in the home of Richard Carter in 1841. Its
settlers lived in log cabins and were primarily engaged
in subsistence farming and the raising of livestock.
Considerable reliance in the early days was placed upon
hunting.
No. of each
grade
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
Names
,Present and absent -
Privats in alpha -
lreticat order.
Daniell, Geo. t7.
Brown, J. W.
Adir, James
Wallace, John
Urban, John
1 Arnold, George P.
2 Arnold, I. N.
Allen, Thomas
Brown, J. D.
Bowman, H. D.
Bond, J. M.
Botim<^.n, Leonidas
Bowman, WL 'd.
Barrlet, D. U.
Bynum, 'i. H.
Bell
Cole, Hugh
Collins, J. K.
C0000r, James
Rank Age Ja.ncd for Duty
and. ;:nrolled
'.lien
'There
Lath Coml. 30 Mar. 15 Boonville
'.r,azos Co.
Ensign 25 � ..
Bugler 29 'Mar. C
Farrier 31 Iar. l
Blacksmith
i'rivates 2h .:^r. G Oaoaville
38 :D 7r. 22 n
18 ,: r. 25 heelock
Eob. Co.
26 ;mar. 18 Boonville
23 71ar. 26
23 :Jar. 26 "
27 Ha.r. 15
21 liar. 22
32 Mar. 8 I:or.ville
15 liar. 15 Boonville
The tax rolls of Navasota County for 1841, as
kept by Hiram Hanover, showed 95,795 acres of land
had been Surveyed, and 43,395 surveyed but not yet
patented. There were in the county 1,161 head of cattle,
127 horses and mules, 76 Negro slaves, 7 silver watches,
2 gold watches, and 3 clocks (one of metal and two of
wood). A sum of $1,850.00 was on loan for interest. at
the time of its creation in 1841, Navasota County con-
tained some forty -five families. The number of men
over 21 years of age was 113, and included:
Holly Arnold
A. G. Braden
Shepard 'P. Bailey
J. A. Barker
Mordicia Boon, Sr.
Mordicia Boon, Jr.
Robert Bart
George Bond
Thomas Bowman
James I. Bowman
Richard Carter
Wiley Carter
William Dunlap
Martin Ellison
I. G. Garlett
Eli Chandler
Newton Cook
Stephen Cooley
Isaac W. G. Curd
Ezekial Curd
Mohale Duncan
Charles Duncan
Thomas Duncan
Green Duncan
Newton Duncan
Mathew Dunn
Daniel Millican
Diadem Millican
Valtatton in Dollars.of
Horses, Morse ._'ga.oment, Arms
"160 35
3 8o• $52
^ 300 350
`.225 324
$140
""l65 °20
155 ?18
'no `30
175 20
50.00
3.00
40. oo
2.5o
8.00
8.00
,r
5.00
10.00
3 33
Remarks
df Sae 70
Bryan -Hoods Brigade Centennial
7rom
AtINCO
m
Member of
J•ALUMINUM• �
D
D T 1 c
I-
U
W `
U
n
1
C
m
< • ASSOCIATION • N
�nodu.c�s
ALBRITTON ENGINEERING CORPORATION - BRYAN, TEXAS
15
16
17
10
19
20
21
22
23
24
2
26
Jesse Ellison John Millican
W. L. Ellis Elliot McNiel Millican
James Evetts Lytle Millican
Joseph Ferguson Groves Millican
Robert N. Ferguson G. W. Morgan
Ray Fitch Charles Namiel
Wiliam Forguhar John Needham
James Forguhar John Newton
Albert Gholson Wiley Newberry
John A. Gilbreath Harden Neville
James N. Hamm J. D. Overton
Hiram Hanover William Owens
Charles Harveson Griffin Payne
James A. Head William G. Payne
Jesse Head William C. Price
Ezra Head James N. Price
Robert Henry Henry Pruitt
Hugh Henry Wilson Reed
George Higgs Micheal Reed
H. G. Hudson William Reed
S. E. W. Hudson Jefferson Reed
Leonard Hudson W. W. Roberts
Bot Hunt J. T. Robinson
Samuel Johnson William Robinson
Robert Johnson Alf Robinson
Gabriel Johnson Moses Scott
Downing, Josiah
Davis, James C.
Debusb, William
Ector, John
Frellerton, Geor :e H.
Frellerton, Edward
Foley, John C.
Foster, M. C.
Freestone, 1',. H.
Greer, Willie s - C.
Dale, L. B.
Henry, Alexander
27 Henry, William'Jr.
23 Holden, T. J.
29 Hanover, Hiram
30 Jenderson, Jamas U.
31 Hardy, H111i.aei E.
32 Hoelsh, ?hill?
33 King, Rich-rd.
Privates 27
16
29
31
27
26
25
36
2e
38
i 22 ?:razos Co.
Mar. 22 "oonville
Mar. 15
l- r . 15
H:ar. 15
hr. 6
32 0
23 Ilea, 3
27
34 Her. 13
! & :ar. 13
10 Mar. 15 Boonville
3o filar. 26
20 Mar. 26 "
John H. Jones
Allen C. Jones
Robert Johnson
Harvey Mitchell
William Millican
J. D. Millican
Willis Millican
J . - n H. Millican
Andrew Walker
William C. Walker
Sanders Walkers
S. Walker
Thomas Webb
Edmond Webb
Joseph Webb
Morris Webb
John White
Eli Seale
C. C. Seale
J. A. Seale
Joshua Seale
Lee C. Smith
William S. Stuart
Gideon Walker
Thomas Walker
Barnabas Wickson
Cyrus Wickson
Byrum Wickson
Elo Wickson
Frank Wickson
John Williams
Jonathan Williams
William Young
In providing for the creation of Navasota County,
the Congress designated a committee of five (Captain
J. H. Jones, Major Eli Seale, William T. Millican,
Joseph Ferguson, and Mordecia Boon, Sr.) to select a
suitable site for a permanent county seat. The com-
mittee picked a site of land owned by Mrs. Elizabeth E.
Parrot, wife of the late John Austin and future Mrs.
. of each Hares Rank 'Age Joined for Duty Valuation in Dollars of Item:arks
grade Present and absent- and inrolled horses, Horse Equipment, Arms
Privates in alpha-
betical order. Heen More
l ar. 19 Toonville 150 '-29
Mar. 26 1 1 � )40
Mar. U
Mar. '24 1.Dcelock 150
nob.
11
II
"
11
n
Deelock
1 1,0
0225 "30
$ 58
}30 " 40
:1250 ` 25 $ 70
:;;150 25
+160 .25
;`200 1 44
"250 x`34 $ 40
,. 175 30
: 739 $ 56
'150 ;27 " 40
i75 $24 C 42
on furlough
Magness & Sons
Poultry Processing Co.
.Sawed
Hood's Brigade Bra ii
Ccntcn nia I
On Its 100th Anniversary
. leuptc 014,04 `l'aee, 7uyeil
William Pierpont, situated about three miles east
of the center of the present City of Bryan, and the
town was named Boonville in honor of Mordecia Boon.
Mrs. Parrot agreed to sell 150 acres for the town site
at one dollar an acre to be paid out of the first money
derived from the sale of lots.
The first officials of Navasota County were desig-
nated by Congress, and were as follows: Gideon Walker,
Chief Justice; James D. Overton, District Clerk; James
I. Bowman, County Clerk; Elliott Mc Niel Millican,
Sheriff; Thomas Bowman, Coroner; and Hiram Hanover,
Tax Assessor and Collector. William C. Price, William
L. Millican, James A. Head, Robert Henry, and Joshua
Seale received commissions as justices of the peace.
Until a county seat could be laid out and ;buildings con-
structed, the District Court, held it sessions according
to law in the home of Joseph Ferguson, under cotton-
wood trees at Ferguson Springs, near the Ferguson
Crossing on the Navasota. The first term of court met
on March 29, 1841, with Judge Robert E. R. Baylor
of the third Judicial District presiding and Henry J.
Jewett as District Attorney. The first grand jury as-
No. of each Naves
grade Present and ahsent—
Privates in alpha—
betical order.
34 King, Peter
35 King, William
36 Kiefer, ,To seoh
37 Mowbray, Aaron
38 McLeod, Rodrick
39 McCulloch, Stephen E.
140 Marsh, G. W.
41 Morrison, H.
h2 Nail
1:3 Phelan, Rh. Riley
44 Phelan, U. E.
115 Prestidge, Johli R.
46 Prestidge, Rufus
47 Payne, IMarshall
48 Pace, J. L.
49 Presley, 3eore A.
50 Pollock, H. B.
Rank Age Joined for Duty
ariil &rolled
Privates 35 Mar..26 Boonville
When ;;".Tare
38
33 Mar. 22
13 Isar. 15
17 :Tr. 21
23 I Mar. 8
26 1.1ar.
17 I Aar. U
19 1:^r. 15
33 Ear. 15
31 tsar. 20
51 Reed, rrestiss 17 hr. 15 R:oonville :150 5
52 Shultz, Wilhelm I 29 "150 ','
sembled in the county consisted of Eli Seale, foreman;
George Bond, Wiley Carter, Eli Chandler, Stephen
Cooley, Isaac W. F. Curd, Jessie Ellison, John Millican
Hardin Neville, Robert Pruitt, William Reed, and Byrum
Wickson. The first grand jury made no indictments and
was dismissed.
The civil docket of the court was then called. There
was only one case, and that was a suit brought by
John F. Graves against Eli Chandler for the collection
of a debt, but since the plaintiff did not appear, the
defendent, and his counsiel asked the court to dismiss the
case, which the court proceeded to do, and granted
Chandler the right to recover from Graves the costs to
which he had been put.
At the July 1841, turn of the District Court Richard
Carter, John H. Jones, and Hiram Hanover were ap-
pointed to survey the town of Boonville according to a
plan that had been suggested to the Court, and to serve
as a board of Commissioners to auction off the lots.
During the late summer the 150 acres tract site sur-
n
n
0
n
u
n
Aalua•,ion 6n Dollars o Remarks
;iorses, Horse Equipment, Arms
$1140
:,15o w30
( A.75
225 837 M 35
x'.razos Co. `%125 $45
$150 "38 $ 30
3oonville $ 80 , "30
;.150 ;:39 42.50
iTh.celock "150 "24 '' 30.00
has et s'1Gbifl,
furlough
in thought to
he n deserter
Farewell
To The
Last
100 Years
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
from
Hotard's
Cafeteria
Hotards, of Texas, Inc.
2025 Texas Ave.
BRYAN, TEXAS
"Where The Art Of
Cooking Is Not Lost"
We confidently look forward to the future —
we plan to play a large part in the progress
of our area. Let us help you with your invest-
ment and /or loan problems.
COMMUNITY SAVINGS &
LOAN ASSOCIATION
North Gate Business Area
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS
Feature Values
In
Fine Furniture
Most Complete Line Of
Early American Furniture
In This Area.
Furniture & Appliances
"Quality Is Our Trade Mark"
26th & Bryan St.
BRYAN, TEXAS
Milton Franklin
In the hands of people who know
to provide with care and under-
standing.
to all faith
THE ORDER
OF THE
GOLDEN
RULE
service
Our
44th
Year
with equal devotion
"Our Service A Sacred Trust"
I 6L LIE R.
TAylor / t home
CHAS. F. HILL C. RUSSELL HILLIER
1
2 1 57 1 1 502 W. 26th STREET
veyed by Hiram Hanover, and the lots were then ad-
vertised in the newspaper Tarantula (Washington)
several times, and auctioned off on September 13, 1841,
and another auction was held on April 18, 1842.
The following persons bought lots on September
13, 1841:
Gideon Walker - Lot No. 1 in Block No. 2 at $21.00
William Young - Lot No. 3 in Block No. 1 at $31.68
William Young - Lot No. 3 in Block No. 6 at $21.00
William Young - Lot No. 3 in Block No. 9 at $36.00
James D. Overton - Lot No. 3 in Block No. 9 at $26.00
Eliot M. Millican - Lot No. 1 in Block No. 3 at $27.00
Eliot M. Millican - Lot No. 2 in Block No. 3 at $2
Sanders Walker - Lot No. 1 in Block No. 4 at $22.00
William E. Walker - Lot No. 2 in Block No. 3 at $20.00
William E. Walker - Lot No. 1 in Block No. 5 at $27.12
James M. Price - Lot No. 3 in Block No. 5 at $21.00
Ephraim W. Jackson - Lot No. 3 in Blk No. 12 at $50.00
Ephraim W. Jackson - Lot No. 1 in Blk No. 9 at $62.50
George Bond - Lot No. 3 in Block No. 8 at $35.00
John F. Crawford - Lot No. 2 in Block No. 9 at $32.00
John F. Crawford - Lot No. 1 in Block No. 8 at $2
?o. of each Names
grade Present and absent -
"i i ates in alpha -
betical order.
53
5h
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
Smith *pick, T. A. J.
Seale, E. T.
Smith, G. B.
Thomas, Craig
Thompson, Harrison
Williams, James
Weeks, Robert
:h;ite, R. 11.
Welch, R.
Welch, J. L.
Zerbst, Care
Reed, William,
Welch, David
Recd. A & IGO July 25/62
Date April 16, 1862
Station Carip Carter near Hempstead
Rank .._e Joined for Duty
and Dirollod
l Ehen Where
T i tin 33 i ..r. 15 Boonville
29 Mar. 15
1 24 . 15
_26 Mar. 15
John F. Crawford - Lot No. 2 in Block No. & at $!20.00
John F. Crawford - Lot No. 1 in Block No. 6 at $32.50
John F. Crawford - Lot No. 2 in Block No. 6 at $29.00
Hiram Hanover - Lot No. 2 in Block No. 2 at $20.00
James I. Bowman - Lot No. 3 in Block No. 3 at $30.50
James Evetts - Lot No. 2 in Block No. 11 at $30.00
James S. Vaughn - Lot No. 3 in Block No. 10 at $21.00
The following persons bought lots on April 18, 1842:
William Boyles - Lot No. 1 in Block No. 12 at $22.00
William Boyles - Lot No. 2 in Block No. 12 at $20.00
Samuel R. Moss - Lot No. 1 in Block No. 10 at $20.00
Samuel R. Moss - Lot No. 1 in Block No. 11 at $20.00
The first United States census taken in Texas was
in 1850, and it showed that the County of Brazos had
a population of 614 persons, including 148 negro slaves.
The county had four common schools, which enrolled a
total of 75 students. The total state taxes for the year
was $740, county taxes were $370, and the special school
tax brought in another $111.
The need of a courthouse in the new county was
urgent, and it was decided to build one before the
u
u
Vnluat'.on in Dollars of
Horses, "orse sau:_nnent, arms
200
"220 :39
%140 32
"'160 25
X> 63
Remarks
$ 58
4 Furloughed
18.;ar. 6 1
fi 11 a )15
34 Bar. 22 n • 25
"150 ',25 Died in hospital
Sick in hospital
27 Mar. 19
30 Mar. 15
Co. °N
21st Regt. Texas Cavalry
April 16, 1862
275 "")39 ?A 35
1.75 "25
eeo 6,44 „
Growing With
Brazos Counts,
Bryan Public Utilities
MUNICIPAL AND RURAL DIVISION
. eve &ttea &&eee'u xd4 . .
Banks of Brazos County
Clearing House Association
Member Banks:
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
COLLEGE STATION STATE BANK
FIRST STATE BANK & TRUST CO.
CITY NATIONAL BANK
" Member F. D. I. C."
Courtesy of Miss Lucy Harrison,
First Brazos County Courthouse
Picture is of the structure after it
its original location. Door is in front
at left was not a part of the original
height of the original building was at
lag above door.
Bryan, Texas
at Boonville
was removed from
of building. Shed
structure, and the
second hand hewn
October term of 1841 rolled round. Since the county had
no funds, and money was extremely scarce, it was de-
termined to have a log- rolling; it was customary on the
frontier in building a home. On the day before the desig-
nated date for building the courthouse, twenty men,
representing the several precincts in the county, as-
sembled at Boonville with wagons, mules, horses, axes,
and other tools, and the next day commenced and com-
pleted the construction of a courthouse. It was a small
one room log building without a floor or windows, and
only one door. The roof was constructed of crudely fash-
ioned boards held down and in place by eight log poles.
There was a complete absence of nails. Seats were
fashioned of split logs, with the flat side up, supported
on round legs approximately two feet long. When Court
was to be held a table and two chairs were borrowed
from a nearby residence to accomodate the judge and
clerk.
This courthouse was replaced after Texas became a
state in the American union by a new structure. In
1846 the county court contracted with Harvey Mitchell
to build a new courthouse for one hundred and fifty
dollars. The new structure was eighteen feet wide by
twenty -six feet long. Its walls and roof were made ;of
fashioned oak timbers, and the flooring and seats were
of hand -sawed cedar planks. The building was weather -
boarded and its roof was of river oak boards; and, hence,
was commonly referred to as "the board shanty." Since
there was no church building or other public structure,
besides the jail, in the county, the courthouse served as
a meeting house for political rallies, for church services,
for masonic meetings, dances, and other social gather-
ings. It also served as a school house, and as a place
where dancing and singing were taught on occasion.
Gillespie Lodge No. 55, the first Masonic lodge north
of Washington County, was organized in the first court-
house at Boonville.
As the population of the county increased and the
duties of the county officials multiplied, the one -room
"board shanty," soon proved to be inadequate. It had
never been considered safe to keep the county records in
the building, and they had been kept in the respective
homes of each official or deposited at the home of Har-
vey Mitchell, who served the county in some capacity
or other throughout the 1840's and 1850's. Consequently,
in 1854, the County Commissioners Court, again hired
Harvey Mitchell, who at the time was county judge, to
build a new courthouse. The building was to be twenty -
five feet long and of two stories, constructed of lumber
from the saw mills in Grimes County hauled to the site
by wagons, and was to have glass windows. upon its
completion the courthouse was painted. On the lower
floor of the building were four rooms for the use of
the county officials, and the upper floor constituted a
courtroom for the holding of sessions of the county
and district courts. In the large courtroom were tables,
chairs, a bar, and a jury box. From its completion, the
building served as the county's courthouse until the seat
of government was moved to Bryan late in 1866.
Late in November 1841, sixty -eight citizens
of Navasota County sent a petition to the Congress of
Texas calling attention to the need of a mail route and
a post office in the area. Six months later, July 1, 1842,
Hiram Hanover was appointed postmaster, but held the
position only briefly for he was elected a few months
later to the House of Representatives of the Seventh
Courtesy of Miss Lucy Harrison, Bryan, Texas
Interior view of Brazos County's First Courthouse at
Boonville. Picture shows "chinking" missing and light
reflected from holes in roof, but original beams still
fitted in place.
Congress (called Session- November 14, 1842 - December 4,
1842; and Regular Session, December 5, 1842 - January
16, 1843.
The early settlers believed in the need for some
regulation of the medical profession. These demands were
not so much for the improvement of the quality of
training of such persons, but, of concern for the charges
made by the doctors. The Texas Congress was petitioned
on January 1, 1843, by fifty -one citizens of the county
to regulate the fees to be charged by physicians prac-
ticing in the county.
A contract for the building of a jail was awarded
on September 13, 1842, to John F. Crawford, the only
purchaser of lots at the initial auction sale who was
not required to put up security to guarantee payment.
The contract was for one thousand dollars. The quality
of the jail built by Crawford left something to be de-
sired. "In consequence of the corners of . (the) Jail
not being filled in a workmanlike manner," declared the
Board of Commissioners, we "have decided to receive
the Jail only on the said Crawford having given bond to
weatherboard the walls of the same which the board
conceive would make the building as valuable as if built
according to contract." The jail was a two -story struc-
ture built on a foundation hewn postoak logs one foot
square and two logs thick. An oak plank floor was laid
over the log foundation and held tight by spikes. The
walls were constructed of timber similar to that used
in the foundation and rose to a height of ten feet. An-
other wall was built inside of the structure at a distance
of eight inches from the outside wall, and the inter-
vening space between the two was filled with oak tim-
bers placed perpendicularly. The lower room was twelve
feet square and ten feet high with a ceiling or second
floor fashioned from six -in- square logs. The roof was
constructed of smaller logs. The roof and gable ends of
the building (or as we would say "the attic ") formed
a room for female prisoners. Entrance to the jail was
through a door in one of the gables which was reached
by an outside stairway connecting it with the ground.
The lower room, reserved for male prisoners, was reached
through a trap door thirty inches square cut in the mid-
dle of the second floor. A stepladder had to be let down
from the second story in order to enter or leave the
first room. The jail was described as being the strongest
in the Republic.
In his "Memoirs" Harvey Mitchell, an early and
long time resident of the county, reports that from the
completion of the jail to its sale by the County Com-
missioners Court in 1868, only five Brazos County men
were incarcerated in ,it. Four of these men were accused
of murder, but each case got a change of venue, escaped,
or died before he was tried.
After the annexation of Texas to the United States,
settlement of Texas progressed rapidly, and many new-
comers entered the county. In the early 1850's Henry
Kurten, on a three months furlough from the German
army, visited Galveston, Texas, overstayed his leave
and decided to settle in Texas rather than face trial
back home for desertion. He settled in Brazos County
northeast of Bryan and engaged in freighting cotton to
Mexico during the Civil War, and after the Civil War
became an agent of the North German Lloyd Steamship
Company in promoting German immigration to Texas.
The immigrants paid their passage to Texas by working
on Kurten's farm. Later Kurten donated land for a
community, and constructed a building for a school at his
own expense.
Some idea of the population growth of the county
and its crops and livestock may be shown by quoting
from the United States census figures.
Total Population
Negroes
Land in cultivation (acres)
Value of farms
Number of horses
Number of mules
Number of work oxen
Number of other cattle
Number of sheep
Year 1850 • Year 1860
614 2,776
148 1,063
1,916 14,499
$79,732 $1,280,238
460 1,161
72 364
71 959
3,713 22,532
479 9,314
In 1858 the county's population represented 268
white males between ages 18 -45; 331 who were unde
18 years of age; and 49 who gave their ages as eve
45 years. As for white women, 248 admitted to being
over 18 years of age. There were in the county 272
children under 6 years of age and 394 between the
ages of 6 and 18. The number of slaves was 598, and
there were no free persons of color. The number of
qualified voters was 285. There were only 31 town
lots in the county and these were valued at $5,415. In
1859 Boonville was the official post office for the
county.
Courtesy of Miss Lucy Harrison, Bryan, Texas
Another view of Brazos County's First Courthous
Mr. O. Lee Andrews, 72, one of Harvey's oldest citi
stands on the south side of the courthouse which
moved, piece by piece, from Boonville to the H
community area about -1866.
Although Texas was isolated from the main fight-
ing fronts and few military events of significance took
plase in Texas during the war besides the battles of
Galveston and Sabine Pass, it does not mean that Texans
did not play a prominent role in the war. Some 60,000
Texans saw service in the war, and 20,000 of these
served east of the Mississippi River. The men from the
counties of Brazos, Milam, and Robertson readily volun-
teered for duty and served with distinction.
Courtesy of Mr: 0. M. Taylor of Bryan, Texas
Descendants of early English family that settled in Brazos., County:
From left to right: Robert Taylor, born March 17, 1E40, in East Allington, Devonshire, England, the third child
of William and Elizabeth (Townsend) Taylor who came to Galveston in 1849 directly front England and shortly
thereafter settled in Brazos County; second from the left is Henry A. Taylor (Nov. 24, 1874 -Nov. 17, 1937), third
son of Robert Taylor and second son of Robert Taylor's second wife, Margaret, and father of 0. M. Taylor, now
living in Bryan; Lee (A. L.) Taylor, fourth son of Robert Taylor, born March. 23, 187 -; Margaret (Disrens Taylor,
second wife of Robert Taylor and mother of Henry, Lee, and J. W. (Will) Taylor, was born December 19, 1850,
and died December 25, 1919; John R. Taylor, son of Robert Taylor and his first wife Lucina (Stucky), born Decem-
ber 27, 1866, and died in December 1925; Margaret Taylor, daughter of John R. Taylor; Nora Taylor, daughter
of John R. Taylor; Helen (Burney) Taylor,. April 18 1870 -March 11, 1908, wife of John R. Taylor; Winnie Taylor,
daughter of John R. and Helen Taylor; J. W. (Will) Taylor, d. May 15, 1955, son of Robert and Margaret Taylor,
Carrie (Goodson) Taylor, wife of J. W. (Will) Taylor, and sister of Mrs. Lena Crenshaw and aunt of ,Sam Cren-
%haw, both of Bryan; Herbert C. Taylor, eldest son of J. W. (Will) and Carrie Taylor and co -owner of the Taylor
Publishing Company, Dallas, Texas.
"The Bonnie Blue Flag"
By Harry Macarthy
We are a band of brothers, and native to the soil,
Fighting for our liberty, with treasure, blood and toil;
And when our rights were threatened,
the cry rose near and far,
Hurrah for the Bonnie Blue Flag,
that bears a single star!
Happy Birthday From .. . Happy Birthday Bryan .. .
Acme Glass Company
Corner of 28th and Main St.
BRYAN, TEXAS
Bruce and Leonard Morehead
Phone TA 2 -1577
If It's Glass, We Have It . . .
Mirrors Hufcor Folding Doors
Auto Glass Store Front Construction
Window Glass Jalousie Windows and Doors
CUSTOM MADE ALUMINUM
SCREENS AND DOORS
Congratulations . . .
TO BRYAN ON ITS 100th
BIRTHDAY
Hanson's
Food Service
2701 Texas Avenue
BRYAN, TEXAS
Ham - Sausage -Bacon
109 N. Main
LEARN TO FLY
Texas
Airmotive Co.
Phone VI 6 -6217
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS
Rental — Training
and Charter
Best Wishes . . .
HOOD'S BRIGADE -BRYAN
CENTENNIAL
Our business is entering it's 31st year of
continuous selling of fine footwear and
accessories.
We thank our customers for their loyalty
and patronage.
We are looking forward to serving them
for many years to come.
Robertson's, Inc.
BRYAN, TEXAS
TA 2 -5749
Chorus — Hurrah! Hurrah!
for Southern Rights, Hurrah!
Hurrah! for the Bonnie Blue Flag
that bears a Single Star!
As long as the Union was faithful to her trust,
Like friends and like brethren kind were we and just;
But now when Northern treachery
attempts our rights to mar,
We hoist on high the Bonnie Blue Flag
that bears a Single Star.
First, gallant South Carolina nobly made the stand ;,
Then came Alabama, who took her by the hand;
Next, quickly Mississippi, Georgia and Florida,
All raised on high the Bonnie Blue Flag
that bears a Single Star.
Ye men of valor, gather round the banner of the right,
Texas and fair Louisiana, join us in the fight;
Davis, our loved President, and Stephens, statesman rare,
Now rally round the Bonnie Blue Flag
that bears a Single Star.
Chorus — Hurrah! Hurrah!
for Southern Rights, Hurrah!
Hurrah! for the Bonnie Blue Flag
has gained the Eleventh Star!
— Chorus
— Chorus
— Chorus
And here's to brave Virginia! the old Dominion state,
With the young Confederacy
at length has linked her fate;
Impelled by her example, now other states prepare,
To hoist on high the Bonnie Blue Flag
that bears a Single Star.
— Chorus
Then cheer, boys, raise the joyous shout,
For Arkansas and North Carolina
now have both gone out;
And let another rousing cheer for Tennessee be given,
The Single Star of the Bonnie Blue Flag
has grown to be Eleven.
— Chorus
Then here's to our Confederacy,
strong we are and brave,
Like patriots of old, we'll fight our heritage to save,
And rather than submit to shame, to die we would prefer,
So cheer for the Bonnie Blue Flag
that bears a Single Star.
"The Southern Cross"
By St. George Tucker, of Virginia
Oh! say can you see, through the gloom and the storms,
More bright for the darkness,
that pure constellation?
Like the symbol of love and redemption its form,
As it points to the haven of hope for the nation.
How radiant each star, as the beacon afar,
Giving promise of peace, or assurance in war!
Chorus — 'Tis the Cross of the South,
which shall ever remain
To light us to freedom and glory again!
How peaceful and blest was America's soil,
'Till betrayed by the guile of the Puritan demon,
Which lurks under virtue, and springs from its coil
To fasten its fangs in the life -blood of freemen.
Then boldly appeal to each heart that can feel,
And &rush the foul viper 'neath Liberty's heel!
Chorus — And the Cross of the South
shall triumphantly wave
As the flag of the free
or the pall of the brave.
— Chorus
'Tis the emblem of peace, 'tis the day -star of hope,
Like the sacred Labarum that guided the Roman,
From the shores of the Gulf to the Delaware's slope,
'Tis the trust of the free and the terror of foeman.
Fling its folds to the air, while we boldly declare
The rights we demand or the deeds that we dare!
— Chorus
And if peace should be hopeless and justice denied,
And war's bloody vulture should flap its black pinions,
Then gladly "To arms," while we hurl, in our pride,
Defiance to tyrants and death to their minions!
With our front to the field, swearing never to yield,
Or return, like the Spartan, in death on our shield!
A meeting at Owensville in the Spring of 1862, re-
sulted in a detemination to fit out a company under
Captain L. J. Wilson for service in the Confederacy.
This company was enrolled in March 1862, at Boonville'
and Wheelock, and was composed primarily of Brazos.
County men and a few volunteers from Robertson Coun-
ty. In April the men moved from their rendezvous point
near Boonville to Millioan, where the then and horses
K elly's
TOYLAN E
TOWNSHIRE BRYAN, TEXAS
Congratulations From . . .
J. A. Williams & Sons
and
Williams Mortgage Co.
2909 Texas Ave.
BRYAN, TEXAS
Insurance
Home Loans
Real Estate
Congratulations . . .
HOOD'S
BRIGADE -BRYAN
CENTENNIAL
Allen & Stone
CLOTHIERS
Men's Shoes
Florsheim Boy's Shoes
Crosby- Square Buster Brown
Red Wing
114 N. Main St. Box 986
BRYAN, TEXAS
Congratulations .
BRYAN ON YOUR 100th
BIRTHDAY
0
A
were transferred by rail to Camp Carter, near Hemp-
stead, Texas, where the unit was mustered into service
on April 16 as Compay I of the 21st Texas Calvary
Regiment (Carter's Brigade) commanded by Colonel
G. W. Carter, also known as the 1st Regiment of Texas
Volunteer Lancers. From Hempstead the Company
was moved by rail to Shreveport, Louisiana, where they
joined the Brigade. Soon, however, Company "I" was
assigned to the front of the line between Arkansas and
Missouri, where it saw service to the end of the war.
Its losses were slight. T. J. Mawhinney was killed in
a running fight with the enemy; W. H. Bowman was
severely wounded while scouting near Desark (Des Arc),
Arkansas, and two men died in service. At the end
of the war the Company returned to Texas and dis-
banded at Moseley's Ferry on the Brazos.
Soon after the beginning of the Civil War, the
authorities of Robertson County authorized William P.
Townsend, a veteran of the Mexican War, and Joseph
McDonald to purchase $2,500 in arms to equip troops.
Four companies were organized in the county and were
commanded respectively by N. P. Richardson, Dr. Bel-
vedere Brooks, W. P. Townsend, and K. Smith. Town -
send's Company of 70 men was' composed largely of
men from the western portion of the county and Dr.
Brooks' Company of 95 men came largely from Whee-
lock and the eastern part of the county. Townsend's
Company went into camp at Block House Springs, on
the west side of the Brazos, and began to drill, later
moving to Millican from which point they proceeded by
rail for the Confederate front in Virginia. In Virginia,
Townsend's Company became Company "C" of the
Fourth .Texas Regiment. The names and subsequent fate
of the men of this company were as follows:
Commissioned Officers:
W. P. Townsend, Captain, promoted to Major, lost a
foot at 2nd Manassas.
Decimus et Ultimus Barziza, First Lieutenant, wounded
at Gettysburg, promoted to Captain.
B. F. Turner, 2nd Lieutenant.
B. S. Wood, 3rd Lieutenant, mortally wounded at
Gaines' Mill.
Non - Commissioned Officers
J. P. Grizzle, 1st Sergeant, elected Lieutenant, killed
at Darbytown.
H. W. Davis, 2nd Sergeant, wounded at Gettysburg.
J. H. Simmons, 5th Sergeant, killed at Chickamauga.
A. P. Streetman, 1st Corporal, killed at Gaines' Mill.
M. L. Livingston, 2nd Corporal, Lieutenant; and Captain,
wounded at Chickamauga and Gettysburg.
J. C. Roberts, 3rd Sergeant, lost arm at Gaines' Mill.
J. I. Galloway, 4th Sergeant, lost leg at 2nd Manassas.
J. W. Hill, 3rd Corporal, lost arm at Gaines' Mill.
J. 0. Adams, 4th Corporal, killed at Malvern Hill.
Privates:
J. M. Adams, wounded at Battle of Wilderness.
Alexander, killed at Sharpsburg (Antietam).
P. J. Alexander, wounded at Sharpsburg.
Peter Allday
W. L. Bailey, wounded at Gaines' Mill.
Frank Barton, wounded at Gaines' Mill and Chicka-
mauga.
John Barton, lost ,right arm at Sharpsburg.
Lem Barton, lost right arm at Sharpsburg.
P. J. Barziza, wounded at Sharpsburg
M. Beavers, wounded at Gettysburg
T. B. Beavers, wounded at Gaines' Mill, killed at
Wilderness
Green Blackburn, killed at Wilderness
J. B. Boyd, elected Lieutenant, wounded at Wilderness
and before Richmond
Courtesy of Mr. H. Sellers Rogers, Navasota, Texas
Colonel William Harvey Sellers, one of the boy pri-
soners of the famed Texan Mier Expedition of 1842,
was born on September 20, 1827, at Trenton, Tenn., and
died April 10, 1874, at Galveston, Texas. Sellers fought
in the Mexican War, 1846 -48, and served as Adjutant -
General of Hood's Brigade during the Civil War. Sellers
was the first president of the Galveston Cotton Ex-
change.
P. A. Brown, killed at Gaines' Mill
Joe Burns
G. J. Chambers, killed at Sharpsburg
E. N. Coe
Wilks Corley, killed at Petersburg
J. H. Cosgrove, wounded at Wilderness
Riley Davidson, killed at , Sharpsburg
Louis Davis
J. H. Drake, wounded at Cold Harbor
J. H. Drennan, wounded at Gaines' Mill and Cold Harbor
M .L. Easter, killed at Sharpsburg
H. F. Eddington, killed at Darbytown
George Elder
F'. L. Field, killed at Gettysburg
H. Foster, lost arm at Gaines' Mill
R. Foster, wounded at Malvern Hill
H. Frost, mortally wounded at Wilderness
J. M. Garrett
W. Gary
W. E. Gear
J. Goodman, wounded at Gaines' Mill and Wilderness
W. H. Hamman
Bazley Harris
Richard Haynes
William Hearne
J. S. Henderson, killed in action
A. Herndon, killed at Petersburg
E. D. Herndon
Jacob Herndon, killed at Gettysburg
G. M. Hixson, killed at Darbytown
W. R. Hunter, killed at Gaines' Mill
Hyson, killed at Petersburg
John January
D. C. Jones
J. J. Jones, killed at Chickamauga
W. A. Jones
D. Kensey, killed at Chickamauga
L. D. Keith, wounded at Richmond
W. S. Kirk, killed at 2nd Manassas
Jesse Livingston, wounded at 2nd Manassas and
Gettysburg
Ogle Love
Silas Lufton
James McClinton, killed in action
B. F. McVoiman
J. M. Marsh
Ben Marshall
W. H. Marshall
W. W. Marshall, wounded at Gaines' Mill
B. F. Merriman, wounded at Gaines' Mill and
Wilderness
S. J. Mitchell, wounded at Chickamauga
Whit Montgomery, wounded at Spottsylvania
Court House
M. C. Moore, killed at Pe`ersburg
R. E. Moore, wounded at Petersburg
J. Noble
W. Norton, killed at Chickamauga
Alexander Norwood, killed at Wilderness
J. Olive, killed at Sharpsburg
Y. B. Ray
Ashley Reed
W. Reese, killed at Chickamauga
J. C. Roberts, promoted
B Robertson
Frank Robertson
J. R. Robertson, killed at Gaines' Mill
Robert Rutherford
B. W. Rymes
J. Smiley, wounded at Wilderness
J. R. Smiley, killed at Gaines' Mill
W. J. Smiley, killed at Gaines' Mill
J. R. Smith, mortally wounded at Chickamauga
J. W. Sneed, wounded at Gaines' Mill
W. C. Steel
Y. 0. Talbot
0. H. Tindall, lost foot at Wilderness
Augustine Talbot
W. Vandusen, wounded at Gettysburg
Courtesy of Mrs. Manley Jones, Bryan, Texas
Captain A. T. Rainey of Palestine, Company H, First
Texas Infantry Regiment, Hood's Texas Brigade.
s
Courtesy of Mrs. Sally Weston Bird, Caldwell, Texas
George M. Weston, volunteered from Alabama at age
16 for service in the Confederate Army, Hood's Brigade,
Company G. After the war he settled in Bryan for a
while, later moving to Caldwell, Texas, where he died
June 23, 1921, at the age of 77.
P. H. Vaughn
E. Webster, wounded before Richmond
Lon Wells
W. G. Whiddon, killed at 2nd Manassas
E. Wilkins
J. M. Wilson, killed at 2nd Manassas
Bennett Wood, wounded at Gaines' Mill, 2nd Manassas
and Wilderness
E. O. Wood, wounded at 2nd Manassas, killed at Chicka-
mauga
J. Wood
One of the most famous fighting units in the Con-
federate service was the Texas Brigade, which fought
largely in northern Virginia as a part of General James
Langstreet's Second Corps'. The Texas Brigade received
repeatedly high praise from President Jefferson Davis
and General Robert E. Lee, who on one occasion even
requested permission to lead the Brigade personally for
a brief period during the Wilderness campaign.
The Texas Brigade made its reputation as a stand
up fighting unit under the leadership of a native Ken -
tuckian, who adopted Texas as his state, since his state
did not secede and rejected his tender of services. Dis-
appointed in his state's attitude, the Kentuckian vol-
unteered for Confederate service at Montgomery, Ala -
bama, where he received a commission as First Lieu-
tenant, and gave Texas as his place of residence, hav-
ing been stationed in Texas as a Second, and later as
a First Lieutenant, from 18156 to 1861 in the Second
United States Cavalry. Son of Dr. John W. and Theo -
docia (French) Hood, John Bell Hood was born at
Owingsville, Bath County, Kentucky, on June 1, 1831.
The son of a medical doctor and a 1853 graduate of the
United States Military Academy at West Point, John
Courtesy of Mr. Hood Boone Barry, Navasota, Texas
Captain W. E. Barry, Company G, Hood's Texas Bri-
gade. Barry settled at Navasota in 1860, and volunteered
for service in the Confederacy soon after war began.
He was wounded four times during the war — once at
Gaines' Mill, once at Chattanooga, and twice in the
Wilderness campaign. He gave the memorial address at
the unveiling of Hood's Texas Brigade Monument in
Austin in 1910.
SEARS
ROEBUCK AND CO.
Congratulations . . .
Bryan On Your
100th Birthday
44 Salte
'Motel
Downtown Bryan
Allen Academy
(Founded In 1886)
Oldest Boys Boarding
College Preparatory
School In The State
Salutes
BRYAN'S HOOD'S
BRIGADE
Sears In Townshire Welcomes
You To The Bryan Centennial
Hood Is Brigade4Bry n Cent
Or r mit' tee
Presents
The Civil War Commemoration
And
Historical Spectacle
'Gallant Men of Texas"
A JOHN B. ROGERS PRODUCTION
Produced and Directed by
Gene T. Montefiore
Costumes, Lighting, and Scenery furnished by
The John B. Rogers Producing Co., Fostoria, Ohio
"Gallant Men of Texas" is based on historical outline
and slight changes have been made to meet the demands
of staging and dramatic effects.
Trial
KYLE FIELD, A &M COLLEGE OF TEXAS
JUNE 25 - 29, 1962
Spectacle Division Chairman: Mr. Alton Bowen
Scenario & Title: Dr. J. M. Nance
Cast: Mrs. F. I. Dahlberg
Costumes: Mrs. Dorothy Goodman
Properties: Mr. C. B. McGown
Construction: Mr. James McAdams
Sound: Mr. Lee Piranio
Dance Assistant: Mrs. Jane Lee
program ..
PROLOGUE:
This spectacular and colorful scene is dedicated
to Bryan's Centennial Queen and her Royal Court
of Honor. It features the Youth of our community
in a dramatic salute to Bryan's Centennial Cele-
bration.
INTRODUCTION: FROM SWORDS TO ATOMS
In comparative battle vignettes we announce our
dedication to the fighting men of Texas.
EPISODE ONE: LAND OF THE REDMEN
Our story beging with the historic Tonkawa Indians,
who lived in the Brazos County area long before
the arrival of the White Man.
INDIAN BRAVES. Members of Bryan's Boys Club.
EPISODE THREE: BRAZOS COUNTY IS CREATED
INDIAN MAIDENS: Darlene Nichols, Suzan Lee,
Kathy Blackburn, Susan Garrett, Sammy Kay
Tullous, Rita Carole Brooks, Kay Kincannon, Jan
Orsak, Margaret Bush, Bonnie Bowers, Diane Hud-
son, Barbara Cook, Peggy Geppert, Laura Jean
Allen.
THE DANCE OF THE INDIAN MAIDENS
EPISODE TWO: EARLY TERRITORIAL DAYS
Following the early arrival of the Spanish and
French, came the first Anglo- Americans. Their
wagons rolled along the Texas wilderness despite
the frequent war raids' of the Indians.
PONEERS: WAGON MASTER, Raymond Fickey,
Mrs. Raymond Fickey, Melissa Ann Fickey, GRAN-
NY, Mrs. Raymond Sneath. Mr. Raymond Sneath,
Joe Merka, Sr., Tommy Riley, Albert Newcomb,
Mrs. Dorothy Newcomb, Johnny Newcomb, Janet
Newcomb, Tommy Airrington, Mrs. Clara Faye
Airrington, Ronny Airrington, Nathan Airrington,
Cathy Airrington, Ernest Fickey, Mrs. Ernest
Fickey, Jerry Fickey, Timmy Fickey, Donny Fickey,
Laura Newland, Johnny Bowman, Mrs. Dorothy
Bowman, Jennie Bowman, Clyde Sides,
Mrs. Clyde Sides, Sharon Sides, Buddy Riley,
Mrs. Buddy Riley, James Fickey, Mrs. Ja es Fickey,
James Fickey, Jr., Webb Riley, Mrs. Webb Riley,
Shawn Riley, Penny Riley, Mike Riley, Tommy
Baxter, Mrs. Tommy Baxter, Gregory Baxter, Mor-
ris Endler, Mm. Morris Endler, George Moran, Mrs.
Blanch Moran, Patty Moran, Mike Moran, James
Cargill, Mrs. Ella Mae Cargill, Bob Cargill, Bar-
bara Cargill, Brad Cargill, Luke Centaeni, Mrs.
Lucille Centaeni, Lucille Ann Centaeni, Bernadette
Centaeni, Mary Jane , Centaeni, Wayne McDonald.
Eddy Ilschner, Mrs. Eddy Ilschner, Mary Ilschner,
Ethel Ilschner.
SQUARE DANCE: Mrs. Jeanette Gibson's Dancers.
In 1841, the Congress of the Republic of Texas
created the county of Navasota, which was re-
named a year later to Brazos County. Hiram Han-
over was selected to survey the land, the Towns -
folks built the Court House.
EPISODE FOUR: FAITH OF OUR FATHERS
The various worshipping groups used the County
Court House for their religious services.
EPISODE FIVE: THE THREE R'S
Even in the early days of our town, the children
were brought up with the high standards of readin',
'ritin', and 'rithmetic.
r
EPISODE SIX: THE WAR BETWEEN THE STATES
In one of the most gruelling wars of all time, the
gallant fighting men of Texas, namely Hood's Bri-
gade, fought gloriously under the Bonnie Blue
Flag. Inspired by the words of General Robert E.
Lee, the South looked forward to the future with
proud, full, hearts.
SOLDIERS: Portrayed by the Men of the A &M
College of Texas.
GENERAL ROBERT E. LEE: 'Cread A. McCollom.
Intermission
EPISODE SEVEN: BRYAN RISES
The Battle -weary troops return to Bryan. These
were peaceful days that saw the coming of the
Iron Horse to our town.
WXLLIAM J. BRYAN: Allen Brunk.
THE VIRGINIA REEL
The Founding of A &M College of Texas.
EPISODE EIGHT THE GAY NINETIES
Here we are at the Couny Fair at the turn of the
century, when the town and its inhabitants pros-
pered. . . and everyone had FUN!!
GAY 90 PEOPLE: Mrs. Roland A. Bell, Mabel
Bradley, Avis Crenshaw, Mrs. Terrill Crenshaw,
Jams Stark, Mrs. Carol Stark, Judy Stark, Dennis
Stark, Dianne Stark, Connie Stark, Dieth Stark,
Tom Barker, Mrs. Ina Mae Barker, Barbara Bar-
ker, Tobie Barker, Shirley Barker, Donald
Barker, Tony Karoneka, Mrs Bobbie Karo-
neka, Jerry Shelton, Jimmy Shelton, David Shelton,
Danny Shelton, Vadia Bell, Suzzette Goode, Mary
Harris, Donna Sue Lunsford, Betty Ann Lunsford.
BATHING BEAUUTIES: Lida Shelton, Nora Lee
Wasson, Jane Watson, Beth Brunk, Lunette Fraz-
zino, Lulu Frazzino, Sarah Mathis.
MEDICINE MAN: Johnny Johnson.
STRONG MAN: Raymond Fickey
POLKA
BATHING BEAUTY DANCE
NATIVE DANCES of the International Club
Dancers
JITTERBUG
NATIONAL ANTHEM
FIREWORKS DISPLAY
...cast
EPISODE NINE: IN MEMORIAM
In 1914, our men were off to the far off reaches
of Europe enbattled in a "war to end all wars."
WALTZ
CAN -CAN
CAN -CAN DANCERS: Barbara Cook, Laura Jean
Allen, Peggy Geppert, Carol Ann Kincannon, Jan
Orsak, Margaret Bush, Bonnie Bowers, Darlene
Nichols.
EPISODE TEN: THE ROARING TWENTIES
This was really the era of FUN . what with
"homemade hooch" . movie matinee idols . . .
and the thrill of the day . the Charleston.
MEN OF INDUSTRY: Johnny Johnson, Walter
Wilcox, Billy Burkhalter.
CHARLESTON DANCERS: Barbara Cook, Peggy
Geppert, Laura Jean Allen, Suzan Lee, Kathy
Blackburn, Susan Garrett, Diane Hudson, Sammy
Kay Tullous, Rita Carol Brooks, Carol Ann Kin -
Kannon, Kay Kincannon.
THE CHARLESTON
EPISODE ELEVEN: THE DEPRESSION
The stock market crashed ... unemployment sky -
rocketed . . . and the WPA gave work to many.
EPISODE TWELVE: WORLD WAR TWO
The tragedy at Pearl Harbor set the fuse for an-
other global conflict which saw the flag of the
United States gloriously raised in Iwo Jima for all
the world to see.
EPISODE THIRTEEN TODAY
We now live in a peaceful, though troubled world
and everybody seems to be doing . . .
THE TWIST
FINALE
We applaud the entire cast of tonight's' perfor-
mance.
Bell Hood, six- foot -three tall, blond, and long- faced,
served for a time in the army in Missouri, and in Cal-
ifornia before he saw service in Texas at 'Fort Mason,
where he arrived on January 14, 1856. He was later
stationed at Camps Colorado, Cooper, and Wood, and for
a time served in Texas under the command of Lieu-
tenant- Colonel Robert E. Lee and Brevet Major Earl
Van Dorn at Camp Colorado. In October 1861, he helped
to organize in northern Virginia the 4th Texas Regi-
ment composed of ten companies. Many of the men who
served in the 4th Regiment were from Milam and Rob-
ertson counties. Those from Robertson County were
primarily from the towns of Franklin, Wheelock, and
their vicinity and west. These were "the Fire Eaters"
and were enrolled in Company "C ", under Captain Wil-
liam P. Townsend and First Lieutenant Decimus et
Ultimus i(Tenth and Last) Barziza. The principal group
(95 men) from Wheelock was under Dr. Belvedere
Brooks and did not fight on the Virginia front, or in
the famed Texas Brigade (or Hood's Brigade as it came
to be known), but saw service in the Army of Western
Tennessee and fought at Shiloh and other places.
Hood was Colonel of the 4th Texas Regiment and
John Marshall served as Lieutenant Colonel; but, before
he could lead his men into battle, Hood was promoted
to Brigadier General on March 7, 1862, and placed in
command of the Texas Brigade, replacing Louis T.
Wigfall, who resigned on February 20, 1862, to became
one of the senators from. Texas in the Confederate
Congress. Wigfall had organized the 1st Texas Regi-
ment in Virginia in the winter of 1861, and in October
1861, the 4th and 5th Texas had been formed, and these
with the 18th Georgia Regiment and Wade Hampton's
South Carolina Legion( the latter two being replaced in
October 1862, by the 3rd Arkansas Regiment) made up
the Texas Brigade. The 5th Texas was commanded by
Colonel James J. Archer and Lieutenant Colonel Jerome
B. Robertson.
Hood led the Brigade first in the battle of Eltham's.
Landing (Chickahominy), May 1862, where, near the
York River, Hood's unit ran into a Union force which
it chased for a mile and a half through a dense forest,
taking forty prisoners; but the first principal battle in
which his unit fought was the Battle of Gaines' Mill,
June 27, 1862, in which the Texas Brigade received rec-
ognition for its splendid
to the Confederate fo hces onthat occasion. It ensured captured
fourteen Union artillery pieces and took prisoners near-
ly an entire enemy regiment, but the 4th Texas lost all
of its field grade officers and the brigade suffered 570
casualties.
Major General E. M. Law of the Confederate Army,
observing the action of some of Hood's men at Gaines'
Mill wrote:
"General Hood at the head of the Fourth Texas
Regiment swept into position and broke into a trot down
a slope toward the Federal works. Men fell like leaves
in the autumn wind; the Federal artillery tore gaps in
the ranks at every step. The ground in the rear of the
advancing column was strewn thickly with the dead and
wounded.
"But not a gun was fired in reply. There was no
confusion. Not a step faltered as the grey lines swept
silently and swiftly on. The pace became more rapid
every moment. When they were within thirty yards of
the ravine, and could see the desperate nature of the
work in hand, a wild yell answered the Federal mus-
ketry and they rushed for the works. When the Con-
federates were within ten paces of them, the Federals
in the front line broke cover and leaving their log
breastworks swarmed up the hill in their rear, carrying
away with them in their rout their whole second line.
Courtesy of Mrs.. M. Tungate, Bryan, Texas and Mrs. F. L. Gilbert, Houston„ Texas
Hood's Brigade Reunion, Navasota, Texas, June 27 -28, 1907.
OLD TOWNS SETTLEMENrs, FORTS • OLD ROADS, TRAILS, STAGE LINES
PRESENT DAY TOWNS SNOW N 0 FERRIES, RIVER CROSSINGS
11
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"Then we had our `innings.' As the blue mass surg-
ed up the hill in our front, fire was poured into them
with terrible effect. The target was large, the range
was short. Hardly a shot fired into that living mass
could fail of its errand."
In all, the brigade participated in no less than
twenty -four battles, including besides those already
mentioned, Second Manassas (Bull Run), August 29 -30,
1862; Sharpsburg (Antietam), September 17, 1862;
Gettysburg, July 1 -3, 1863, where the casualties among
Hood's men numbered over 400; Chickamauga, Sept. 19,
1863; Franklin, Tenn., November 1864; and Nashville,
December 15 -16, 1864. The rear -guard fighting
of the Texans saved the Confederate army from
almost certain annihilation at Antietam, and at the
close of the campaign only a fraction of the command
could be classed as "effectives." Out of 854 men of the
Texas Brigade who had participated in the battle, the
Brigade lost 660. Over 82% of the 226 in the 1st Texas
Regiment had been lost, 53% of the Fourth, and 75%
of the Fifth. Colonel Garnet Wolseley, later Field
Marshall Lord Wolseley of the British army who observed
the Texans as they marched along •after the battle, re-
marked to General Robert E. Lee on the appearance of
the Texans and of their tattered clothing. Said General
Courtesy of Mrs. Manley Jones, Bryan, Texas, and also of Mr. John C. Roberts, Bremond, Texas
Gen. John Bell Hood's Children, 1879.
Following the death of General Hood, Mrs Hood, and their eldest daughter, Lydia, in the summer of 1879 from
yellow fever in New Orleans, the Hood Relief Committee was formed in the city to raise a Permanent Fund for
the Education and Support of the "Wards of the South," as the orphans of the noted General were called. The two
little girls on the left, Odile Musson and Ida Richardson (twins), three years old; Odile is on the extreme left
in the act of trundling a doll's carriage, while Ida is near seated with the doll in her arms. Little Ida looks
pale and like an invalid, having only recently recovered from the fever when her picture was taken; the third from
the left is Duncan Norbet, seven years old, and next to him stands with one hand on Duncan's shoulder, John Bell.,
Jr., eight years old; both of these boys have bright bea »tiful faces, the latter resembling his father. Next to John
Bell sits cunning little Oswald, thirteen months old. Next in the order in which they are named are Ethel Gene-
vieve and Anabel (twins), nine years old, in whose sweet faces the features of the mother are plainly discerned.
Next are Lillian Marie and Marion Maude (twins), six years old, in the order named. In front of the group, and
reclining on a miniature sofa, is the little baby fast asleep, Anna Gertrude, only two months old. A vacant chair
on the extreme right is for the missing Lydia, the eldest of the children, who, taken sick just before her father,
died a few hours after he passed away. The portrait of the General is on the left, and that of Mrs. Hood on the wall.
Lee: "Never mind their raggedness, Colonel, the enemy
never sees the backs of my Texans." And to Lee's
query: "General, where is that fine division you had
this morning ?" Hood is said to have replied: "They are
lying on the field where you sent them, sir. My division
has been almost wiped out!" On October 11, 1862, after
the Battle of Antietam, Hood was named Major General
of the largest division in General James Longstreet's
Second Corps in which the Texas Brigade operated, and
on November 1, 1862, Brigadier General Jerome B. Rob -
ertson, son of Sterling C. Robertson, the empresario,
became brigade commander, replacing Hood. After the
sieges of Chattanooga and Knoxville, the Texas Brigade
returned to Virginia in April 1864, where General John
Gregg, who had organized the 7th Regiment of Texas
Volunteers in September 1861, became its commander.
When Gregg was killed on October 7, 1864, while lead-
ing a division on the. New Market Road near Fort Har-
rison, the command of the brigade passed temporarily to
Colonel Clinton Winkler and then to Colonel F. T. Bass.
At the surrender of at Appomattox on April 10, 1865,
Colonel F. M. Powell commanded the brigade.
General Hood was considered the hero of the Battle
of Chickamauga, where he lost his right leg. Hood built
for himself the reputation of being a "fighting general ",
but time proved that he was not a master strategist.
After several days of fighting at Chickamauga, one
company of the First Texas Regiment had only one of-
ficer and no men as survivors, and the First and Fifth
Texas had fewer than one hundred men each unscathed.
He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant general on
February 1, 1864, and on July 18, 1864, succeeded Gen-
eral Joseph E. Johnston in command of the Confederate
Army of Tennessee. Rated as a good leader on the of-
fensive and the attack, he proved less effective when it
came to fighting on the defensive; and, therefore, has
been criticized for his defense of Atlanta. After the
evacuation of Atlanta, Hood moved up into Tennessee,
where in the battle of Nashville on December 15 -16,
1864, he suffered a crushing defeat, and was relieved of
his command on January 23, 1865.
The Texas Brigade suffered heavy casualties during
the war. At the beginning of the war it was estimated
that the 1gxas regiments contained some 3,500 men
and that recruits during the war increased the number
to about 4,480 men. At its surrender it numbered about
557 officers and men. Only six of Company "M" of the
original First Texas Regiment of 125 men were present
at the surrender.
After the Civil War, Hood moved to New Orleans,
where in 1868 he married Anna Marie Hennen. They
became the parents of three sons and eight daughters.
The children, from eldest to youngest, were: Lydia;
Ethel Genevieve and Annabel (twins); John Bell, Jr.;
Duncan Norbet; Lillian Marie and Marion Maude
(twins); Odile Musson and Ida Richardson (twins);
Oswald; and Anna Gertrude, less than two months of
age at the time of her parents' death. Hood only re-
turned to Texas once after the war, where he visited
with many of the Texas survivors of his famed brigade.
He died in New Orleans of yellow fever on August 30,
1879, his wife having preceded him in death on August
24 from the same disease and his eldest daughter, Lydia,
died of the same cause a few hours after he ceased to
be.
Hood's Last Charge
By Mary Hunt McCaleb Odom
The twilight of life is beginning to fall,
Death's shadows are creeping high up on the wall;
Eternity's waters are plashing
So close I can hear the wild waves as they roar
And suddenly break on the surf- beaten shore,
Monument to Hood's Texas Brigade on Capitol
Grounds, Austin, Texas, erected March 1910.
Their silver spray over me dashing.
The old camp is fading away from my view;
I hear the last stroke of life's beating tatoo,-
The sounds wear the muffle of sorrow.
My campaigns are ended, my battles are o'er,
My heroes will follow my lead never more,
No roll -call shall break on my morrow.
But now I am fighting them over again;
On fields that are gory, `mid heaps of the slain,
The enemy swiftly are flying;
The shrieking of shell and the cannon's deep boom
Are thundering still at the gate of the tomb,
The rattle of grape -shot replying.
But ahl the last enemy conquers tonight,
And death is (the., victor —in vain is the fight
Whe God and his creature have striven;
The struggle is over; life's colors are furled -
Are lost in the dark of the vanishng world;
The bonds of the spirit are riven.
But ere 1 go down 'neath the conquerors tread,
And lie white and still in the ranks of the dead
Through silence forever unbroken, '
To you, my old heroes, my TEXAS BRIGADE,
From, the dimness of death, from the cold of its shade,
One last solemn charge must be spoken:
`My faithful old followers, steady and true,
My children are orphans, -I give them to you,
A trust for your sacredest keeping.
By the shades of the heroes who fought at your side,
By the few who have lived, and the many who died,
By the brave array silently sleeping.
"By the charges I led, where you followed so true,
When the soldiers in gray and the soldiers in blue,
And the blood of the bravest was flowing,
Be true to this last and this holiest trust,
Tho' the heart of your leader has crumbled to dust,
And grasses above him are growing."
"Greeting To Hood's Brigade"
By Maud J. Young
Not with the tramp of martial train
And the stirring roll of drum,
Not with the trumpet's proud refrain
Do you, our heroes, come.
But we greet you with a gladsome pride,
In your pure and spotless fame,
No victor's crown could add a ray
To the lustre of the name.
Of Hood's Brigade. Its falchion's light
Streams far o're land and sea;
The dead bivouac,ed on a hundred fields —
The sentinel's now with Lee.
Courtesy of the L. S. Ross Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy.
Hood's Brigade Reunion, Bryan, Texas, June 26, 1924, showing some of the veterans, their families and friends,
'sncluding John Bell Hood, III (the little boy).
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Phone TA 2 -1333
BRYAN, TEXAS
Serving The Brazos Valley
For Forty -Six Years
1962
Your own true hearts and dauntless arms
Have covered it with glory,
And while a Southerner treads the soil
It will live in song and story.
Peace has her victories, too, and these
You have most nobly won —
The heritage of ages pure,
Bequeathed from sire to son.
The principles of seventy -six,
Though lost upon the field,
Are yet sustained in faith by you,
Who cannot, will not yield.
The mounds that strew our native land
Are watched by Heaven above,
From Sharps burg to the Rio Grande,
They've shrined in endless love.
We think of them — thought can't be bound:
We wept —tears can't be stayed:
But Glory keeps her sentinel -watch
Above each bloody grave.
We pledge them now, in their warriors' rest,
And again we pledge each other;
Thank God! so many live today
To say: "God bless you, brother!"
Uncover all! Up to your feet
We've guests ye cannot see;
The dead have heard our long roll call,
And answered it with Lee.
They're here;. soul cries it unto soul:
They see and love us yet;
Living and dead together stand,
And neither can forget.
The Conquered Banner
By the Rev. J. A. Ryan, Catholic Priest of Knoxville,
Diocese of Nashville, Tenn.
Furl that banner, for 'tis weary;
Round its staff `is drooping dreary;
Furl it, fold it, it is best;
For there's not a man to wave it,
And there's not a sword to save it,
And there's not one left to lave it
In the blood which heroes gave it;
And its foes now scorn and brave it,—
Furl it, hide it, let it rest.
Take that banner down —`tis tattered,
Broken is its staff and shattered,
Awl the valiant hosts are scattered
Over whom it floated high.
Oh! 'tis hard for us to fold it,
Hard to think there's none to hold it,
Hard that those who once unrolled it
Now must furl it with a sigh.
Furl that banner, furl it sadly— •
Once ten thousands hailed it gladly,
And ten thousands, wildly, madly,
Swore it should forever wave,
Swore that foema's sword could never
Hearts like their's entwined dissever,
`Till that flag would float forever
Furl that banner! softly, slowly,
Treat it gently --it is holy —
For its people's hopes are dead.
Touch it not, unfold it never;,
Let it droop there, furled forever,
For its people's hopes are dead.
O'er- their freedom or their grave.
Furl it! for the hands that grasped it,
And the hearts that fondly clasped it,
Cold and dead are lying low;
And the banner, it is trailing
While aroud it sounds the wailing
Of its people in their woe.
For, though conquered, they adore it,
Love the cold, dead hands that bore it,
Weep for those who fell before it,
Pardon those who trailed and tore it,
And oh! wildly they deplore it,
Now to furl and fold it so.
Furl that banner! true 'tis gory,
Yet, `tie wreathed around with glory,
And `twill live in song and story,
Though its folds are in the dust;
For its fame on brightest pages,
Penned by poets and by sages,
Shall go sounding down the ages,
Furl its folds though now we must.
Fold It Up Carefully
A Reply to "The Conquered Banner," by Sir Henry
Houghton, Bart., of England
Gallant nation, foiled by numbers,
Say not that your hopes are fled;
Keep that glorious flag which slumbers,
One day to avenge your dead.
First National Bank
Caldwells Jewelers
Varner Jewelers
Sankey Park
Edges
Beverly Braley
Franklins
Joyces
Real Hat Shop
Pennys
Guarantee Store
Collegiate Shoppe
K. Wolens
Early Bird
Curry Furs'
Midway Corral
Milady Beauty Shop
Woodard Beauty Shop
Lady Fair Beauty Shop
Junes Beauty Shop
House of Beauty
CONTRIBUTORS FOR QUEENS AWARDS:
Contribution Towards Queens Expense Money, All Banks of Bryan & College Station
Country Club Beauty Shop
Scribe Shop
Mink Artctlft
Memorial Student Center
News Office Supply
A & M Exchange Store
Stacy's Furniture
Joe's Furniture
Stickley's Furniture
Milton Franklin's Furniture
United Furniture
Goodyear
Wood Furniture
Western Auto
Firestone
Central Texas Hardware
Parker -Astin Hardware
Stuart Hardware
Aggieland Photosl
Van Dyke Studio
College Station State Bank City National Bank
Bryan Coca -Cola Bottling Co.
TA 3 -6000
Bryan Studio
Dr. G. A. Smith
Dr. Carleton Lee
T. S. 0.
Jarrots Pharmacy
Ellison Pharmacy
Romans Pharmacy
Black Pharmacy
Madeley Pharmacy
Vicks Pharmacy
Margolis
Austin Shoe Stores
Singer Sewing Center
Sew 'n Sew
Fabric Shop
World Book Encyclopedia
Taylors Variety Store
Shaffer's Book Store
Bryan Amusement Co.
First State Bank & Trust Co.
Be Sure
To Visit
THE,
SCRIBE
SHOP
211 W. 25th
Bryan, Texas
TA 3 -6705
Printing
Souvenirs - Gifts
c l 4 HOOD'S BRIGADE
BRYAN CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION
1862 196'<
BRYAN CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION
1862 1962
Keep it, widowed, sonless mothers,
Keep it, sisters, mourning brothers,
Furl it with an iron will;
Furl it now, but —keep it still,
Think not that its work is done.
Keep it `till your children take it,
Once again to hail and make it
All their sires have bled and fought for,
All their noble hearts have sought for,
Bled and fought for all alone.
All alone! aye, shame the story,
Millions here deplore the stain,
Shame, alas! for England's glory,
Freedom called, and called in vain.
Furl that banner, sadly, slowly,
Treat it gently, for 'tis holy:
`Till that day -yes, furl it sadly,
Then once more unfurl it gladly —
Conquered banner —keep it still!
The survivors of Hood's Brigade formed on May
24, 1872, the Reunion Association of Hood's Texas Bri-
gade, and held their first annual meeting in Houston,
Texas. Through the efforts of the Association a mon-
ument in memory of the brigade was erected on the
capitol grounds in Austin and dedicated on October 27,
1910. During World War II, Camp Hood (later Fort
Hood) was established near Killeen, Texas, and named in
honor of Lieutenant General John Bell Hood.
After the first reunion in Houston, the survivors
of Hood's Texas Brigade held their annual meetings in
various towns in Central and East Texas'. Their first
meeting in Bryan was in 1876, but beginning in 1919
they made Bryan their regular place of reunion, and
met annually through 1933. John Bell Hood, Jr., from
Mississippi attended the 1924 reunion accompanied by
his son, John Bell Hood, III. At that time, he addressed
the veterans of his father's Texas Brigade, as he was
to do at several subsequent reunions. The last survivor
of Hood's Texas Brigade was John H. Roberts who died
March 10, 1934. In June 1934, the descendants of mem-
bers of the brigade met in Bryan for a special memor-
ial service, but there have been no meetings since that
date.
Besides military service, the citizens of Brazos and
surrounding counties contributed in other ways toward
the war effort. Cattle were purchased for the Confed-
erate Army through various agents including Captain
Geoge H. Dunn, son of James Dunn and a well -known
cattleman of Central and East Texas.
In 1$63 the Confederate War Department undertook
to foster the establishment of a combination cotton,
woolen, and flour mill in Robertson County. As a means
of financing the building of the factory, the Brazos
Manufacturing Company, a joint stock company, was
chartered by the state legislature, in which the leading
cotton planters of the area subscribed a certain number
of bales of cotton, for which privilege they would be
permitted to export through Mexico an equal number
of bales of cotton. Cotton was selling at that time at
$1.00 a pound on the world market, but owing to the
Union blockade of the coast could only be exported
through Mexico. The subscribers of cotton to the Brazos
Manufacturing Company were:
Dr B F Hammond 100 bales
The Talbots 100 bales
Captain Charles P. Slater 100 bales
Aaron Woods 50 bales
Judge Robert Calvert 100 bales
William Burnet 50 bales
Courtesy of Mrs. F. L. Gilbert, Houston, Texas
E. K. Goree, Huntsville, Texas, member Company H,
Fifth Regiment, Hood's Texas Brigade, Army of North-
ern Virginia. A president of Hood's Texas Brigade As-
sociation and its Secretary and Treasurer for life.
Our OF BACK OF Boon' "N BRA205 CotIvey
DEED RECORDS. / y✓o-L�,�„
COQNT CLERK BRAZOS CO. TEX
2 - 22 -/936
c5o
MAP
of Tkc
CiTy of f3 rya'?
Brn:oa C Terns
V
J. E. Herndon 100 bales
T. S. Hanna 50 bales
C. 0. Barton 100 bales
Thomas Anderson 100 bales
Horatio R. Hearne 100 bales
Charles Lewis 100 bales
Volney Cavitt 50 bales
Christopher Columbus' Hearne 50 bales
Coleman Garrett 50 bales
J. T. Garrett 100 bales
Mrs. Mitchell 50 bales
J. C. Roberts 50 bales
W. P. Townsend 50 bales
The machinery for the factory was imported from
Europe by way of Matamoros, and brought by ox wagon
to the factory site in the Easterwood pasture about five
miles east of the present town of Hearne. Millstones
for the mill were purchased in France for $2,000 each.
It had been expected that the factory would be adjacent
to the line that had been surveyed as the proposed route
of the Houston and Texas Central Railroad extension
from Millican. Captain Charles P. 'Slater was sent by
the Confederate government to help get the factory in
operation. He requisitioned every tenth slave from the
nearby plantations and set them to making bricks and
quarrying rock. The completion of the factory came too
late to do the Confederacy much good, and after the
war when the railroad went five miles to the west, the
factory was dismantled and its brick and lumber hauled
away, and only portions of its foundations may be seen.
One of the two pistol factories in Texas during
the war was that of the Dance Brothers and Park at
'Old Columbia which is said to have been the first ma-
chine shop operated in Texas. The plant turned out both
Army and Navy revolvers on the Colt model. When the
Federal troops moved to capture the factory, the firm
had time to move the pistol- making machinery to An-
derson, Texas, where it continued to produce small arms,
cannon balls, and other munitions for the Confederacy.
The approach of the Houston and Texas Central Rail-
road was the occasion for the founding of the town of
Bryan. Chartered on March 11, 1848, by the Republic
of Texas, the railroad began to build northward from
Houston in 185 in 1856 it had reached Cypress; and
in 1860 it reached Millican, and had built an extension
from there to Brenham. Elliot Mc Niel Millican on De-
cember 14, 1859, sold the land on which Millican is now
located to the Houston and Texas Central Railroad.
The town was quickly surveyed and the first lots were
sold on January 11, 1860, to G. W. Daniel. In 1864 the
town was incorporated by a vote of 14 to 1. In 1867
Wellborn had its birth from a construction camp along
the route of the Houston and Texas Central Railroad.
A right of way had been given to the railroad by
William Joel Bryan, nephew of Stephen F. Austin,
through his land in the northern part of Brazos County,
and the route had been surveyed and graded as far as
Hearne, but the coming of the Civil War altered any fur-
ther construction beyond Millican until after the war.
Having previously made a preliminary survey, William
J. Bryan, in 1859 laid out, surveyed, and platted along
the route of this railroad a townsite of 640 acres which
was named Bryan in his honor. Land was set aside for
a courthouse, a school, and a lot was given to the Meth-
odist Church. The lots were rendered for taxation in
1859. The following year on April 9, William J. Bryan
sold his interest in the town lots for $3,200 to Abram
Groesbeeck and W. R. Baker, both members of the board
of directors of the Houston and Texas Central Railroad
Company.
Although persons began to settle in Bryan before
the end of the war as an extension of settlement from
the adjacent town of Boonville and from other areas,
more rapid settlement began in 1866.
The Houston and Texas Central Railroad was the
first of the Texas railroads to begin construction after
the war. In 1866 it began to build northward from Milli-
can, reached Bryan in August 1867, Hearne in 1868,
Bremond in 1870, and Corsicana and Dallas, respectively
in 1871 and 1872. The first train from Millican came
into Bryan on August 29, 1867, at which time there was
a gala celebration.
It would be difficult to assign a particular date to
the founding of Bryan, but when a townsite is surveyed,
platted, and its lots rendered for taxation, there seems
an indication of its founding. Its successful establish-
ment depends upon settlement, and this came with the
Civil War period and the extension of the railroad from
Millican. As the railroad approached Bryan, an election
was held in the county on October 15, 1866 to determine
the future location of the county seat, and, by a vote
of 190 to 42 it was decided to move the seat of county
administration from Boonville to Bryan. The courthouse
at Boonville, built in 1854, was soon thereafter sold by
order of the Commissioner's Court to W. H. Bowman.
In the meantime, however, in Bryan speculators had
gained control of the lots surrounding the site of the
new county courthouse in anticipation of profiteering
off of businessmen who might be expected to develop
a business district around the courthouse. The business-
men were not to be taken -in, and instead of paying the
exhorbitant prices demanded for lots, in an era when
money was very scarce, purchased lots on the west side
of the tracks along what came to be known as Main and
Bryan Streets, and in the end large fine two -story frame
houses came to be built around the courthouse, which
contrasted sharply with the usual procedure in town
development. The merchants backed their stores up to
the railroad tracks to facilitate loading and unloading,
and Main Street was laid out wide so that ox teams of
three to five yokes hooked to a wagon would have suf-
ficient room to turn around. From the front as well as
from the rear the merchant could take freight directly
into his store and send it on by rail wagon, or ox -cart.
Mrs. Sara A. Dobson writing from Bryan Station,
Brazos County, Texas, November 21, 1866, pictured con-
ditions in Bryan as follows:
"Brazos County is superior to Leon (County) —the
BEST WISHES
for a
Happy Birthday
Howell Lumber
Company
Bryan, Texas
CONGRATULATIONS
To The
100th ANNIVERSARY OF
HOOD'S BRIGADE
R. B. Butler, Inc.
One Hour Cleaning — One Day Laundry
2 Convenient Locations
1315 Texas+ Ave. — 313 Main in College Station
"Tips His Hat"
Hood's Brigade -Bryan Centennial
Let Us All Go Forward In The
Next Hundred Years .. .
y$STEADRY•g DIGNITY
W. L. Ayers
One Hour Martinizing
And Laundry
TODAY
One Grows If One Builds
On Integrity
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Bryan S. College at Dellwood College Station
one I have just been describing —in some respects, but
the moral atmosphere is bad here. Stores are open on the
Sabbath, country people come in and buy the same as on
other days, wagons loaded with cotton and other goods
are passing and repassing all the time; drinking,
gambling, stealing, shouting, and horse racing fill up
the picture. But I hope a better day is dawning, for last
Sabbath, a Baptist church was organized here; and six-
teen members united with it. If we had churches, schools,
and good society, Bryan would be a very pleasant little
village; for it is situated in the edge of a beautiful, high,
rolling prairie, dotted here and there with a clump of
trees, and abounding with cattle, horses, sheep, and
goats as far as the eye can reach. Occasionally, a mule -
eared rabbit crosses your path, and a bird of paradise,
a wild goose, or blue crane flies over your head. At
every step, curious pebbles and pieces of petrified wood
meet your gaze . .. . The town is six miles west (east)
of the Brazos river, and one hundred north of the city
of Houston. Wpe will only stay here until Mr. Dodson
completes the building of two houses ... This is a very
healthy place, and the main rason why we came here.
Cholera is in various parts of the country, but has not
reached here yet. We are boarding at a hotel at fifty
dollars per month; including everything except wash-
ing."
For approximately a year and a half Bryan was the
terminus of the Houston and Texas Central Railroad,
and enjoyed a great deal of business resulting from
railroad construction and a wide sphere of trade activ-
ity. During this time Bryan had a floating population
of between 300 and 500 persons. Many of the business-
men of Millican moved to Bryan between 1860 and 1837
and shortly thereafter. Among these were Milton Parker,
president of the Millican Bank, being the oldest bank
in the county; George T. Haswell businessman and one
of the organizers of the Episcopal Church at Millican
in 1864; J. Allen Myers; Major J. W. Tabor; and Colonel
Henry Bates Stoddard.
A jail seems to be a fundamental ingredient of an
orderly society. The removal of the functions of county
government to Bryan and the beginning of military rule
during the days of reconstruction following the Civil
War necessitated the construction of a jail. As a result,
a single -room jail structure, ten by twelve feet square,
commonly referred to as the "Bryan Sky Parlor" was
constructed on the courthouse square in 1867 fifteen
feet above the ground upon four logs stuck upright in
the ground. The door to the room was reached by means
of a removable ladder. Reluctant guests of the "Bryan
Sky Parlor" included Isaiah Curd, B. South, I. L. Royd-
er, and Jim Cooper. Following the race riots of July
1868, at Millican, in which a number of Bryan citizens
became involved, Federal troops were dispatched to Mil-
lican, Bryan, and Calvert to maintan law and order.
No doubt the jail saw considerable use during these
troublesome times. The troops serving in the Fifth Mil-
itary District (Texas and Louisiana), on November 21,
1868, at Bryan 'Station were commanded by Brevet
Major James Gillette, Captain of Company "K ", 15th
Infantry.
For ten years the "Bryan Sky Parlor" served as the
county jail. Finally, in July 1877, a contract for the
building of a more commodious jail was awarded
P. Willman for $10,558. Upon completion it was
to be the best jail in the state, if not
was described as being supplied with
with a file."
"that cannot be
cut
Once more Harvey Mitchell was awarded a con-
tract to build a new courthouse. In 1868 the contract
called for the building of a courthouse in Bryan, the
designated new county seat. Until the building could be
completed Mitchell agreed to furnish to the county a
courtroom free of charge. The two -story courthouse was
constructed of brick, and was completed in 1871. Al-
through possessing all of the modern conveniences of that
day, surmounted by a large town clock, which cost
about $900, the building was poorly constructed, owing
to A.
said
in the South, and
eight steel cages,
Courtesy of Mr. Travis B. Bryan, .Sr., Bryan, Texas
William Joel Bryan, nephew of Stephen F. Austin
and original owner of the townsite of Bryan, was born
in Sainte Genevieve, Missouri, December 14, 1815, and
died March 13, 1903. The town that he projected is
named in his honor.
to the lack of skill on the part of the superintending
architect and workmen. Its foundation soon began to give
way and its walls, made of soft brick, cracked; but by
constant repairs and re- enforcement it was made to last
twenty years, and was finally torn down in 1892. In 1891
Mitchell explained that he had contracted during the
Democratic administration to build a $30,000 building
and, after having made many necessary purchases of
material, the Republican Carpet- bag- scalawag administra-
tion of Governor Edmund J. Davis came into office and
"repudiated the courthouse contract in toto." After some
time Mitchell was able to make an arrangement with the
Republicans to erect the building, which he completed
at a cost of $16,000 for which he only realized $6,500.
In 1891 the County Commissioners sold the court-
house to J. W. Johnson nd G. W. Morrell for the sum
of $75.00, and made plans for the construction of a
courthouse of stone. Ths courthouse was completed on
November 1, 1892. The architect was Eugene T Hainer
of Houston a. nd the contractor was .1. 1Vi. Brown of I,ittl
Rock, Arkansas. The white sandstone used in its con -
struction was brought from Comanche County and the
red stone used in the trimming came from Pecos Coun-
ty. Its total cost was $65,000. Finally, it was replaced
by the completion in 1956 of the present multi - dollar
large, modern, air - conditioned structure.
Main Street, Bryan, Texas, 1867
The cedar on the courthouse lawn links the present
history of Bryan to its past. The cedar was no more
than a small sprout under the big hickory tree where
court was first held in the county in 1841 at Ferguson
Springs. The sprout was moved to Boonville when the
county seat was located there, and later this same
cedar was moved to the county courthouse square in
Bryan when landscaping was being done for the 1892
courthouse.
The State Legislature, by an act approved by the
Governor on November 29, 1871, provided for the organ-
ization of "the town of Bryan, in Brazos County, Tex-
as," and the incorporation of "said town as the City of
Bryan." The town was formally incorporated in 1872.
The first city officials were appointed by the Republican
controlled state legislature and were Alexander Ander-
son, mayor, and A. B. Forman, Lemmel Preston, A. B.
Bowman, Thomas Hall, and William Hoverman, aldermen.
A visitor to Bryan in 1878 referred to the community
as "the beautiful little city of Bryan." "The society of
the city is excellent," wrote Mrs. Bella French, "and
a most interesting social and literary feature of the city
is the Library Association, which has a hall neatly
furnished and supplied with a piano and a large and
well selected library." 'Since the war and the coming
1
of the railroad the city had made considerable progress.
It had two substantial private banks "; approximately
fifty business houses; two lumber and grist mills; one
gin and mill; one oil factory; two carriage and buggy
factories; four hotels, and numerous boarding houses.
There were two brick warehouses in 1878 for the stor-
age of cotton; two public halls or opera houses; and
four livery stables. Although the past year's cotton pro-
duction was poor, on account of the worms, 11,500 bales
of cotton were shipped from Bryan, and it was expected
that the year 1878 would see some 18,000- 20,000 bales
shipped from the railway station in the city. During
the past year twelve cars of grain and thirty of live-
stock had been shipped from Bryan, as well as 52,000
pounds of wool, 65,000 pounds of hides, and "other
promiscuous freight (of) 4,446,800 pounds." Bryan was
the trade center for the surrounding counties whose in-
habitants found it convenient to sell their produce to
merchants and commission agents in Bryan.
Mrs. French, in the American Sketch Book, listed
the following in 1878 as the most popular businessmen
and firms of Bryan:
J. P. Ayers, attorney -at -law, office over Parker
& Flippen's bank.
J. G. Anderson, life insurance agent.
M. Bonneville, wholesale and retail dealer in liquors,
groceries, dry goods, boots, shoes, hats, caps, etc.
Buckholts & Gardiner, attorneys -at -law, and general
land agents.
W. R. Cavitt, attorney -at -law, office in brick build-
ing southwest corner of courthouse square.
Frank Clarke, cotton and wool factor, grocer and
commission merchant.
R. K. Chatham, cotton gin and mill factory.
Dr. J. Cameron, physician.
J. R. Cole, general merchandise.
Charles Davis, cotton factor and commission ,mer-
chant, office at Fulkerson & Davis' old stand.
J. S. Fowlkes & Co., bankers, commission merchants
and dealers in exchange.
W. 11. Flippen, banker, successor to Parker and
Flippen.
Drs. Hall & Adams, physicians and surgeons.
S. J. Howell, dealer in staple and fancy dry goods,
notions, etc., postoffice block, Main street.
Will A. Haswell, with Sam Hoffman, dry goods.
J. W. Johnson, dealer in staple and fancy groceries,
tobacco, cigars, etc., Main street.
M. W. McCraw, attorney -at -law.
David McIntosh, oil factory.
A. D. McCormick postmaster.
Dr. J. P. Mitchell, physician and surgeon.
Male and Female Institute, W. W. James, principal
of male department; W. H. Colman, A. B., principal of
female department; Miss Sue McLelland, music depart-
ment; Miss Fannie Rogers, painting and drawing.
G. W. Norrell, druggist.
P. D. Page, attorney -at -law.
L. Spring with Julus Paris, dealer
fancy dry goods, Main street.
George W. Smith, grocery and commission house.
C. L. Trigg, dealer in staple and fancy dry goods.
E. L. Ward, dealer in dry goods, notions, boots, shoes,
clothing, crockery and general merchandise.
in staple and
The American Sketch Book carries an interesting
note on the newly established Agricultural and Mechan-
ical College of Texas, which its author visited in 1878
and described as follows:
"The pride of Texas, in an educational point, is the
Agricultural and Mechanical College, which is situat-
ed in this county, four miles from the city of Bryan.
This College is the only State Institution of learning in
Texas, and Brazos county was selected for its location
as the most desirable portion of the State. The institu-
tion is largely endowed by appropriations from both
the National and State government. The College build-
ings are models of architectural beauty, large and com-
modious. The second session of the Institution opened
in October with two hundred and eighty students in
attendance. The faculty is composed of eight professors
of the highest standard of excellence as scholars and
tutors. Altogether, there is not a more superior college
in the South. The entire expenses for a term of nine
months, are covered by the sum of nineteen dollars,
embracing two suits of uniform. The discipline is mil-
itary and gives admirable satisfaction to all concerned.
"The following gentlemen compose the faculty and
officers:
"Thos, S. Gathright, A. M., President and Professor
Courtesy of Miss Lucy Harrison, Bryan, Texas
Brazos County Courthouse, 1892 -1954.
1
Brazos Motor Company
YOUR
Studebaker Dealer
Serving Bryan and the Brazos County Area
Since 1924
CONGRATULATES
Hood's Brigade
On Their
100th Anniversary
Congratulations and
Best Wishes
from
Woodson Lumber
Company
BRYAN
COMPLETE HOME
Happy Birthday . .
H. L. Whitley, Sr. from
Culpepper
Realty
Builders and Insurance
Bryan - College Station
Developers Since
1937 — 1962
25 Years
Congratulations .. .
HOOD'S BRIGADE -BRYAN
CENTENNIAL
TOWNSHIRE
SHOPPING
CENTER
of Mental and Moral Philosophy; Alexander Hogg, A.
M., Professor of Pure Mathematics; R. P. W. Morris,
Professor of Natural and Experimental Philosophy and
Engineering; John T. Hand, A. M., Professor of Ancient
Languages; C. P. B. Martin, D. D., Professor of Prac-
tical Agriculture, Chemistry and Natural Sciences; Wil-
liam A. Banks, A. M., Professor of Modern Languages;
Capt. Geo. T. Olmsted, Jr., U. S. A., Commandant and
Professor of Military Tactics; Louis L. McInnis, A. M.,
Adjunct Professor; Capt. James E. Binkley, Assistant
Commandant and Adjunct Professor; D. Port Smythe,
M. D., Surgeon; Gen. Hamilton P. Bee, Steward; Treas-
urer, Prof. ;Morris; Secretary, Prof. McInnis."
A Chronology Of Early Events
In Bryan
1866
Post office moved from Boonville to Bryan.
First Christian Church organized.
First Baptist Church organized in a building that had
been a tenpin alley and a saloon at the corner of
South Tabor and East 27th Street; temporary
seats were made by placing twelve -inch planks
upon beer kegs.
First general merchandise store established in Bryan
at corner of 26th Street and Tabor Avenue by
Hill and Mosley.
First rooming house opened by Mrs. Sara Shaw.
Houston and Texas Central Railroad reached Bryan.
First telegraph line reached Bryan.
Bryan News Letter began publication by Lambden
Cunningham as a weekly and semi - weekly, and
was described as "conservative" in politics.
St. Andrews Episcopal Church organized in Bryan as
a Parish, its members having been members of the
Episcopal Mission at Millican who moved to Bryan
because of the yellow fever epidemic at that place.
First Presbyterian Church organized, and services were
held bi- monthly in a warehouse until a church
could be built.
First Methodist Church organized.
Harvey Mitchell commenced the operation of a small
planing mill.
Courtesy of Mrs. Lillian Brown, Wellborn, Texas Main Street Scene, Bryan, Texas, 1900
PLAN OF TOWN OF BOONVIL.LE
SURVEYED BY RICI -1ARD CARTER,
TOWN N. JONES AND WIRAM HANOVER
1 84-1
1868
First Christian Church built on corner of 27th and Texas
Avenue.
St. Andrews Episcopal Church constructed at corner
of Parker Avenue and West 25th Street and known
as "the Old Church." Present structure built in
1905.
1869
Chatham Gin Factory organized and located about one
and a half miles north of Bryan.
Bryan Appeal successor to the Bryan News Letter com-
menced publication.
First Presbyterian Church built on corner of Tabor and
29th Streets.
First Methodist Church built on two lots donated by
the Houston and Texas Central Railroad to the
Methodist Episcopal Church, South in 1868.
1870
First oil mill in Brazos County established in Bryan in
1870 by William McIntosh and others and operated
to 1885 when dismantled.
1871
Bryan Male and Female Seminary founded under charter
from the State.
Bryan Bridge Company incorporated to construct a
bridge over Navasota River at a point of 20 miles
northeast of Bryan. Officers of the company were
W. L. Sanders, President; P. R. Smith, Secretary;
and J. S. McLendon, T. T. Smothers, H. T. Dow -
nard, J. S. Folks, C. H. Randolph, and J. N. Cole,
directors.
Carriage and buggy factory established in Bryan by
D. D. Williamson; operated to 1880 when northern
competition forced its closing.
Central Texas Agricultural and Mechanical Association
of Bryan, Texas, was formed with Harvey Mitchell,
President; Spence Ford, Vice - President; R. E.
Blandford, Secretary; Horatio M. Moore, Treasur-
er; and J. S. Folks, O. P. Bowles B. H. Davis, C.
A. Sterne, C. G. Moore, William B. Foreman, M. W.
McCraw, and H. A. Moore, directors. The associa-
tion was required to hold at least one fair a
year in Bryan.
Site for The Agricultural and Mechanical College of
Texas was picked adjacent to Bryan after Harvey
Mitchell met with the locating Committee in Gal-
veston and personally pledged 2,000 acres of land
and $50,000 in cash to be raised within 48 hours
which was endorsed in a subsequent meeting of
prominent citizens of Bryan and Brazos County.
May 25—the Bryan Real Estate and Building Association
was incorporated to buy and sell real and person-
al property. R. M. Moore, W. G. Bunger, C. F.
Moore, 'Spence Ford, S. A. Conger, Frank Clark,
11. W. MdCraw, C. W. Gardiner, W. H. Flippen,
and T. T. Smothers were charter members.
Nov. 25 —the Bryan Real Estate, Building and Joinnt
Stock Association was incorporated with 11. T.
Downard E. L. Ward, T. J. Deering, and D. C.
Barmore as organizers.
Brazos County issued $3,000 in bonds to build
a new jail.
Nov. 29— Legislature provides for the incorporation of
the City of Bryan.
Dec. 1 —Bryan Manufacturing Company chartered to
own, build, purchase, and erect buildings and ma-
chinery of all kinds necessary for the •manufactur-
ing process.
Dec. 1 —Odd Fellows Hall Association of Bryan, Texas,
was incorporated.
Oil mill established. This was the second oil mill to be
erected in Bryan. The principal original stock-
holders were J. C. Burroughs, J. W. English, D.
D. McComonico, J. N. Cole, J. L. Chance, and
J. N. Cole.
Texas Odd Fellows University and Orphan's Home open-
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1872
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608 S. College
"Old Style Service"
BURGESS
CASHION
HADDOX
INSURANCE
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS
"New Style Coverage"
We have enjoyed doing business in
Bryan for the past 16 years, and we
are happy to be a part of this com-
munity.
Complete Departments
Maternity, Infants
Boys — 1 thru 18
Girls — 1 thru 14,
ISubteens, Juniors, Misses
BRYAN, TEXAS
TA 2 -2864
VI 6 -6412
Home of Fine Photography
AGGIELAND
STUDIO
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS
WE SALUTE
HOOD'S BRIGADE
from
MADE LEY
PHARMACY
Southside College Station
Prescriptions — Cosmetics
Sundries
and Fountain Service
i
ed and operated for three years.
1873
Nov. 29— Legislature provides for the reorganization of
the City of Bryan.
Money lending office established by Guy M. Bryan, Jr.,
who represented his father William Joel Bryan.
1875
Bryan Academy founded utilizing the facilities of the
Texas Odd Fellows University and Orphan's Horne
which its founders had bought.
1876
Brazos Pilot began publication as a weekly newspaper.
First resident 'Catholic Priest came to Bryan.
1877
New County jail built under contract awarded to A. P.
Williams for $10,558.
Bryan Appeal ceased publication.
Citizens of Bryan vote to establish a public school sys-
tem and to levy an annual property tax for its
support.
1878
St. Joseph's Catholic Church built.
1879
Harvey community begun six miles north of Bryan, and
named in honor of Harvey Mitchell.
1880
U. S. Post Office building at corner of 24th and Main
streets burned.
First tax - supported public school in Bryan opened under
the name of the Bryan Graded School.
1882
First Baptist Church moved to its present location at
East 27th and Washington Streets.
1883
Tabor community, named in honor of John J. Tabor,
was founded in the northern part of Brazos Coun-
ty about ten miles from Bryan.
1884
First class graduated from the Bryan public schools
upon completion of the tenth grade.
1886
1887
Bryan Compress Company organized and commenced
operations.
1889
Bryan Water, Inc., and Electric Light Company, Inc.,
contracted to furnish water for the ci.y.
Merchants and Planters National Bank chartered.
Bryan Weekly Eagle commenced publication on Oct. 29.
1890
Compress of the Bryan Compress Company destroyed
by fire; and a new compress was constructed.
Bryan Water, Ice, and Electric Light Company, Inc.,
began to furnish water to the City of Bryan.
1891
Courthouse built in 1871 sold for $75.00.
1892
Brazos county's sixth courthouse completed.
Bryan Telephone Exchange established and sold out to
Southwestern States Telephone Co. about 1925.
1893
Bryan Morning Eagle begins publication.
1894
Free Will Baptist Church organized.
1895
Bryan's Woman's Club first organized as the Mutual
Improvement Society.
1896
St. Anthony's Catholic Church built.
1897
United Daughters of the Confederacy organized.
1899
Smallpox epidemic in Brazos' county; a two -room "pest
house" was built outside of Bryan for the use of
all smallpox patients who could not be safely
quarantined at home.
Allen Academy, founded at Madisonville, Texas, in 1886
by John R. and Rivers Allen as The Allen High
School for Boys, was moved to Bryan.
1900
International and Great Northern Railroad reached
Bryan.
First National Bank of Bryan chartered. Poultry packing plant established by Allen Smith.
Bryan
214 S. Main
TA 2 -1584
Serving
Six
Counties
201 Main - College Station
VI 6 -5115
74te Davey Potaduce4
S an/tar '-
FARM DAIRIES
1962
Serving All South - Central Texas
1928
Houston
2613 Texas Ave.
TA 2 -4434
3502 Texas Ave.
VI 6 -5114
Business League of Bryan formed by businessmen of
Bryan— forerunner of modern Chamber of Com-
merce.
1901
First automobile in Bryan owned by M. Boneville; it was
an Oldsmobile (or a "Locomobile" as some said).
Villa Maria Ursuline Academy, a Catholic school for
girls, was transferred to Bryan after the Galves-
ton hurricane of 1900 had badly damaged the
academy's buildings there.
1902
Carnegie Library founded.. The Carnegie Endowment
Fund contributed $10,000 for its construction upon
land donated by the city.
City National Bank successor to reorganized Merchants
and Planters National Bank.
New First Methodist Church built.
1903
Brazos County Bulletin commenced publication on April
12.
Brazos County Signal commenced publication on October
3 as a prohibitionist newspaper.
Texas Woman's College founded by the Bapists of Bryan.
1906
Compress of the Bryan Compress Company again des-
troyed by fire; but rebuilt during the year.
City ordinance prescribes a speed limit of 8 m.p.h.
First Methodist Church destroyed by fire, March 19.
New church built immediately upon the old foun-
dations.
1907
Rural free delivery mail service established out of Bryan.
1908
Board of Health created for the city.
First Christian Church builds new church building on
site of their first building.
First county school superintendent (William Parker)
elected.
1909
Bryan's second city hall burned; the Bryan Fire De-
partment was in the same building and it burned
too. All City Minutes prior to 1889 were destroyed by
the fire.
Brazos Pilot and Bryan Weekly Eagle merged to form
Eagle and Pilot.
Sewer system with septic tank installed by the City to
serve the business district.
First State Bank and Trust Company founded.
Bryan Baptist Academy, formerly Texas Woman's Col-
lege, organized and operated by the Baptist Gen-
eral Convention.
Mutual Improvement Society changes name to Bryan
Woman's Club.
1910
Commercial Club formed as successor to Business League
of Bryan; 1931 -46 known as Bryan- Brazos County
Chamber of Commerce; 1947 -49 name changed to
Bryan and College Station Chamber of Commerce;
1950 -,59 called the Bryan Chamber of Commerce;
and since 1960 has been the Bryan- College Station
Chamber of Commerce.
Bryan - College Interurban, Inc., commenced operation be-
tween Bryan and The A. & M. College of Texas,
a distance of five miles.
Bryan Eagle successor to Eagle and Pilot.
1911
City purchased electric distribution system from the
Bryan Wiater, Ice, and Electric Light Company
for $7,650.
Reading Club of Bryan organized.
An eleventh grade added to the Bryan Public School
System.
1913
Modern sewage disposal plant installed in the western
part of the city.
First auto truck bought for the fire department.
Bryan Daily Eagle successor to Bryan Eagle.
1,914
City ordinance required registration of all automobiles
operated within the limits of the city and set the
registration fee at 25c each.
Speed limit changed to 15 m.p.h in downtown districts
and to 18 m.p.h in other districts of the city; and
a speed limit of 6 m.p.h at intersections; unlawful
for person under age 16 to drive unless accompan-
ied by the owner of the machine.
4 -H Clubs first organized in the county.
Present St. Andrews Episcopal Church building com-
pleted.
Bryan Baptist Academy discontinued operations; its
buildings were sold and are currently used as
apartment houses.
1915
First Federal owned building constructed in Bryan.
Free city delivery of mail commenced in Bryan.
1916
Knights of Columbus organized.
Daughters of American Revolution organized.
1917
Allen Academy became a military school.
Red Cross Chapter founded in Bryan.
Bryan adopted the Commission- Manager form of city
government.
1918
Sewage disposal system extended to east side of city
and another disposal plant constructed.
First telephones installed.
Bryan - College Interurban abandoned.
1919
City electric power plant and generating station and
equipment from Bryan Power Company for $75,000.
Rotary Club organized.
1921
1924
Elks Club formed.
Lions Club formed.
Bryan - College Interurban rails removed.
1925
East side sewage disposal system extended.
1.929
Villa Maria Ursuline Academy discontinued.
Bryan City Officials
Mayors
June 1868
Nov. 1, 1869 -Jan. 1870 Thurmond, J. M.
Jan. 1870 -Jan. 1872 Downard H. T.
April 15, 1873 McLelland, Jas. B.
Dec. 1874- Dec.1876 Ervin, L.
Aug. 1874 Williamson, D. T. (acting)
March 1876 -April 1877 Evans, J. R.
March 1877 -Nov. 1883 Robinson, J. M.
Nov. 1883 -Jan. 1885 Tabor, J. W.
April 9, 1889 -Aug. 28, 1899 Adams, Cliff A. (resigned)
Aug. 28, 1899 -Sept. 12, 1899 Tabor, R. G. (pro - tempore)
Sept. 12, 1899 -April 1900 Harrison, R. H. (resigned)
April 1900 -April 14, 1902 Mooring, J. S.
Anderson, Alexander
Aril 14, 1902 -April 3, 1906 Harrison, R. H.
April 3, 1906 -April 6, 1908 Butler, J. E.
April 6, 1908 -Nov. 8, 1912 Maloney, J. T. (resigned)
Nov. 8, 1912 -Jan. 1, 1913 .,..Walker, G.C.S. (pro tempore)
Jan. 1, 1913-April 20, 1917 Harris, W. W.
April 20, 1917 -April 5, 1921 Lawrence, J. M.
April 5, 1921- April 8, 1927 Haswell Tyler
April 8, 1927 -April 12, 1929 Bradley, Wilson
April 12, 1929 -April 10, 1931 Jenkins, E. J.
April 10, 1931 -April 14, 1933 Jones, Forrest
April 14, 1933-April 12, 1935 Stewart, N. A.
April 12, 1935 -April 9, 1937 Johnson, 0. S.
April 9, 1937 -April 14, 1939 Yeager, E. E.
April 14, 1939- April 13, 1945 Langford, Ivan
Nov. 13, 1942 -April 13, 1945 Yeager, E. E.
April 13, 1945 -April 11, 1947 Langford, Ivan
April 11, 1947 -April 1949 Vick, Roy M.
April 1949 -April 13, 19!51 Dansby, Roland C.
April 13, 1951 -May 1, 1954 Adams, Geo. E.
May 1, 1954 -April 1955 Bernath, R. I., Jr.
April 1955 -April 1957 Dishman, H. C.
April 1957 -Died July 5, 1957 Vance, B. F.
July 1957 -April 1961 Donaho, 0. B.
April 1961 Naylor, John R.
City Secretaries
1889 -1897 Carr, A. B.
1897 -1900 Rhodes, H. G.
1900 -1907 Spell, C. M.
1907 -1909 Clarke, Frank
1909 -1911 Hines, J. B.
1911 -1913 Derden Ed. S.
1913 Wicker, E. R.
1913 -1915 Moore, John
1915 -1917 Smith, Robert T.
1917 -1945 Bittle, Guy P.
1945- Dansby, Noah W.
Brazos County Officials
County Judges
Jan. 30 -March 1841 Walker, Gideon
(appointed by Congress)
March 1841 -1844 Middleton, Samuel W.
1844 -1845 Spence, Isaac C.
1845 Prendergast, William M. D.
1845 -1848 Walker Skeaugh
1848 -1851 Head, Jame& A.
1851 -1854 Mitchell, Harvey
1854 -1866 Reed, Gillespie B.
1866 -1867 Perry James S.
1867 -1869 Anderson, Alexander
1869-1870 Thurmond, J' (VI.
1870 -1876 Downard, J. T.
1876 -1888 Barmore, D. C.
Sept. 25, 1888 -Nov. 12, 1888 Brietz, A. C.
(appointed to fill unexpired term of
D. C. Barmore, deceased)
Nov. 12, 1888 -1890 Buckholts, J. A.
1890 -1894 Harmon, W. H.
1894 -1896 Hudson, V. B.
1896 -1898 Harmon, W. H.
1898 -1912 Board, A. G.
1912 -1920 Maloney, J. T.
1920 -1928 Ferguson, H. 0.
1928-1934 MicSwain, A. S.
1934 -1938 Ferguson, John Marion
1938 -1958 Ware, A. S.
1958— Davis, W. C.
1841 -1844 Millican, Elliott McNeil
1844 -1847 Vess, William
18474850 Hudson, Leonard
1850 Johnson, Robert Johnson
1850 -Feb. 1852 Boyles, William C.
Feb. -Aug. 18152 Robinson, Joseph T.
Aug. 1852 -1854 Boyles, William C.
1854 -1856 Riley, James I.
1856 -1859 Hudson, S. E. W. (resigned)
1869 -May 1861 Hudson, Leonard
May 1861 -Aug. 19, 1861 Mullins, A. B.
Aug. 19, 1861 -1864 Hudson, S. E. W.
1864 -1865 Zimmerman, J. M.
1865 -1866 Hardy, Henderson
1866 -1868 Heill, John H.
1868 -1869 Erwin, L.
1869 Farrow, George W.
1870 -1880 Forman, W. B. (resigned)
June 28, 1880 -Nov. 15, 1880 Dawson, D. D.
Nov. 15, 1880 -Dec. 7, 1882 Mays, J. L.
Dec. 7, 1882 -Nov. 13, 1890 Dawson, D. D.
Nov. 13, 1890 -Nov. 26, 1904 Nunn, T. C.
Nov. 26, 1904 -1908 Nall, R. M.
1908-1914 ■Conlee, Jno. D.
1914 -1918 Nunn, T. C.
1918 -1924 Morehead, L. E.
April 1 -Nov. 19, 1924 Morehead, Mrs. L. E.
(appointed)
Conlee, Jess (resigned)
Reed, Jim H.
Nunn, Roy
Reed, Horace
Koontz, Henry
Hamilton, J. W.
Sheriff
1924 -Nov. 1, 1926
Nov. 1, 1926 -1934
1934 -1938
1938 -1941
Aug. 4, 1941 -1946
1946—
Tax Assessor - Collector — 1
1841 Hanover, Hiram
(Appointed Tax Assessor and Collector)
1841 Hanover, Hiram
(elected Tax Assessor)
1844 Prendergast, Luke B.
1846 Callicoat, John B.
1847 Burton, Samuel
(appointed Tax Assessor and Collector)
1848 Seale, C. C.
(appointed to fill vacancy of Tax Assessor & Collector)
1865 -1866 Mitchell, H.
1866 -1869 Montgomery, S. W.
1869 Breal, Walter T.
1869 Moore, Frank
19344938 Harris, Guy
1938 -1942 Tatum, Earl (Preacher)
1942 -1952 Weedon, I. M.
1952 -1954 Burkhalter, Norton
1954 -1958 Burkhalter, Mrs. Marjorie E.
1958- Buchanan, Raymond
1 —See "Tax Assessor"
Tax Assessor — 2
1841 -1844 Hanover, Hiram (elected)
1844 -1846 Prendergast, Luke B.
1846 Wood, John (appointed)
1876-1882 Harmon, W. H.
1882 -1884 Roberts, W. T.
1884 -1890 Peverly, H. E.
1890- 1892 Closs, J. T.
1892 -1894 Peverly, H. E.
1894 -1904 Nall„ R. M.
1904 -1912 McCollough, John H.
19124918 Smith, J. Sidney
1918 -1922 Darwin, J. M.
1922 -1930 Goen, Clyde F.
19304934 Worsham, James Frank
2 —See "Tax Assessor- Collector"
Tax Collector — 3
1841 Millican, Elliott McNeil
(Sheriff and Tax Collector)
Johnson, Robert
(Sheriff and Tax Collector)
Callicoat, J. B. (Tax Collector)
Forman, W. B.
Dawson, D. D.
Adams, James J.
Payne, George F.
(died in office)
1891 -1903 Adams, J. J. (appointed)
1844
1846
1872 -1880
1880
1880 -1890
Nov. 13, 1890 -1891
1903 -1904 Adams, George A. (appointed)
1904 -1914 Wipprecht, W.
1914 -1918 McCulloch, W. I.
19204929 Hudspeth, Roy
1929 -1932 Ferguson, J. M.
1932 -1934 Harris, Guy
3 —See "Sheriff"
County Attorneys
Jan. 7, 1868 -March 12, 1870 Brietz, A. C.
March 12, 1870 -Sept. 26, 1870 Neale, W. T.
Sept. 26, 1870- Cunningham, A. J.
(did not serve)
Sept. 26, 1870 -Sept. 30, 1870 Broaddus, A. L.
(pro tempore for 5 days)
Sept. 30, 1870 -1878 Cunningham, A. J.
1878 -1880 Cavitt, William R.
1880 -1882 Clark, L. W.
March 1, 1882 -Nov. 20, 1882 Thomas, J. D.
Nov. 20, 1882 -Nov. 24, 1884 Cavitt, William R.
1884 -1886 Hudson, V. B.
1886 -1888 Jones, Kit P.
1888 -1894 Hudson, V. B.
1894 -1898 Board, A. G.
1898-1900 Gainer, Charles) S.
1900 -1906 Nagle, M.
1906 -1918 Bethea, Lamar
1918 -1922 Minkert, J. G.
1922 -1926 McKenzie, Oak
1926-1930 Neeley, W. E.
1930 Ware, A. S. (appointed)
1931 -1937 McKenzie, Oak
1937 -1939 Allen, W. R.
1939 -1945 Bethea, Lamar
1945 -1947 Minkert, J. G.
1947 -1955 Grant, Davis
1955 -1961 Barron, John M.
1961- Cofer, David Brooks, Jr.
1841 -1845 Bowman, James I.
1845 -1846 Boyles, William
1846 -1850 Mitchell, Harvey
1850 -1854 Johnson, Robert
1854 -1859 McIntosh, David
1859 -1861 Floyd, Joseph T. Dec.
1861 -1862 McIntosh, David 1894
May 1862 Guest, James N. 1897
(clerk pro tempore) 1902
18624865 Wooten, Thomas 1904
1865 -1866 Cooper, Samuel 1910
1866 -1869 11NcIntos'h, David 1912
1869 -1870 Glasenapp, George N. 1915
1870 -1876 Moore, C. Frank 1917
County Clerks
1876 -1884 Hardy, Hammett
1884 -1886 Derden, S. M.
1886 -1890 Myers, J. Allen
1890 -1896 Barron, J. E.
1896 -1904 McMichael, G. W.
1904 -1910 Boyett, W. C.
1910 -1916 Higgs, W. S.
1916 -1920 Ferguson, H. 0.
1920 -1928 McSwain, A. Stewart
1928 -1932 McGee, Jesse B.
1932 -1934 Goen, Clyde F.
1934 -1940 Worsham, Frank
1940- Syptak, A. B.
District Clerk
1841 -1850 Overton, James
1850-1862 Edwards, Arthur
1861-1865 Hudson, Leonard
1866 Perry, James
1865 -1866 Hubert, Beniamin
1866 -1867 Martin, G. W. H.
1867 Hardy, Hammett
1868 Martin, George
1869 Waldrop, J. C.
1869 Glasenapp, George W.
1869 -1875 Moore, C. Frank
1875 -1876 Hardy, H.
1876 -1880 Gillespie, J. C.
1880 -1882 Robinson, Jno. A.
1882 -1884 Adams, F. J.
1884 -1888 Buchanan, A. J. (elected)
1888 -1895 Board, A. G.
1895 -1899 Williams, J. C.
1899 -1904 Batts, J. W.
1904 -1905 Crouch, Frank
1905 -1906 Board, Guy M.
1906 -1908 Jones, H. 0.
1908 -1909 Suber, J. H., Jr.
1909 -1910 Boyett, C. E.
1910 -1928 Barron, J. W.
1929 -1933 Cobb, J. L.
1933- Cole, F. Thurston
County Health Officers
16. 1891 Hall, Dr. F. M.
Appleby, A. L.
Tabor, Dr. G. R.
Oliver, Dr. W. H.
Harrison, Dr. R. H.
Oliver, Dr. WL H.
Sims, Dr. B. U.
Harrisbn, Dr. R. H.
Mondriek, Dr. A. L.
1918 Raysor, Dr. P. M.
1919 Mize, Dr. T. J.
1919 Mondrick, Dr. A. L.
(filled unexpired term of T. J. Mize)
1923 Mondrick, Dr. A. L.
1924 Searcy, Dr. C. A.
1927 Harrison, Dr. R. H.
1933 Searcy, .Dr. R. M.
1939 Hunnicutt, Dr. R. J.
1942 -1945
U. S. Public Health Service
Directors of Local Health Unit
acted as City and County Health officers
1947 -1948 Waller, Dr. Alvin L.
1949 -1952 Brown, Dr. David E.
1952 -Dec. 1960 Harrison, Dr. R. Henry
_ 1961- No one
County Superintendent of Schools
1884 -1888 Barmore, D. C.
1888 Brietz, A. C.
(appointed to fill unexpired term
of D. C. Barmore, deceased)
1888 -1890 Buckholts, J. A.
1890 -1894 Harmon, W. H.
1894 -1896 Hudson, V. D.
1896 -1898 Harmon, W. H.
1898 -1907 Board, A. G.
(served as County School Supt.
until T. W. Parker was appointed)
Aug. 12, 1907 Parker, T. W. (appointed)
1908- March 13, 1916 Parker, T. W. (elected)
March 13, 1916 Williams, E. R. (appointed)
19164920 Powers, Wm. L. (elected)
1920 -1922 Smith, Eck
1922 -1928 McDonald, D. J.
1928 -1930 Vance, Frank M.
1930 -1932 McDonald, D. J.
May 28, 1932 McDonald, Mrs. D. J.
(appointed to fill unexpired term of D. J. McDonald)
1932 -1943 Neeley, Mrs'. W. E. (elected)
1943 -1947 Pearson, Luther (elected)
1947- Bunting, W. D.
4— County Judge served as County Superintendent of
Schools, 1884 -1907.
Brazos County Surveyors
1841 Tyas, Robert H.
1844 Love, William M.
1848 Seale, Joshua
1856 Hines, Bennett J.
1858 Mitchell, Harvey
1862 McIntosh, William
1864 Thompson, Frances A.
1866 Thompson, Frances A.
1868 Pierce, W. J.
1870 Purdy, Judson
1871 Thomas, J. B.
1873 . Thomas, J. B.
1876 Mitchell, Jeff P.
1878 Mitchell, Jeff P.
1884 Thomas, J. B.
1885 Mitchell, Jeff P.
1886 Mitchell, Jeff P.
1887 Thomas, J. B. (resigned)
1888 Mitchell, J. P.
1890 Camp, Ira S.
1892 Henderson, Sam R.
1892 Mitchell, Jeff P.
1894 Jones, Tom
1896 Lowery, F. S.
1898 Carson, A. B.
1899 Nagle, M.
1900 Jones, Dick
1902 Minkert, J. G.
1904 Bethea, Lamar
1906 Minkert, J. P.
1908 Edge, Monroe
1910 -1923 Jones, H. 0. (resigned)
May 14, 1923 Minkert, J. G. (appointed)
1924 Endler, H. A.
1926 -1944 Minkert, J. G.
1944 -1946 Bittle, T. C.
1946 -1948 Minkert, J. G.
1949- Public surveyor hired when needed
County Treasurer
1841 Reed, Wilson (elected)
1844 -1845 Burton, Samuel
1845 -1846 Rogers, William S. (appointed)
1846 -1847 Burton, Samuel (appointed)
1847 -1848 Johnson, Robert (appointed)
1848 -1852 Burton, Samuel (appointed)
1852-1861 Bowman, James I.
1861 -1867 McIntosh, William
1867 -1868 Gardner, Charles W.
1868 -1870 Farrow, George W.
(died in office)
1870 Mordicie, Henry
(died in office)
1870 -1871 Hall, Thomas J.
1871-1872 Ferrell, S. H.
1872 -1873 Downard, H. T.
1873 -1876 Banger, W. G.
1876 -1880 McLelland, James B.
(died in office)
1880 -1884 Fulkerson, Isaac
1884 -1898 Carr, R. W.
1898 -1900 Buchanan, Amos W.
1900 -1912 Lawrence, J. M.
1912 -1918 Priddy, James B.
1918 -1920 Taylor, Tom E.
1920 -1926 Wilson, Mrs. Dova Elliot
1926 -1946 Montgomery, Roy
1946 -1952 Montgomery, Mrs. Jewel M.
1952- Elkins, B. V.
In Remembrance of ...
In honor of
the members of L. S. Ross Chapter,
U. D. C. and in memory of
their ancestors who were members of
the Confederate States Army
In remembrance of Virginia (Jennie)
Evetts Harrison (1866- 1940). Member
of L. S. Ross Chapter, U. D. C., and her
father, Samuel Givens Evetts (1833-
1893), Member of Co. F, 10th Regiment
Texas Infantry, Confederate States
Army.
In remembrance of Robert Henry
Chapter, Daughters of the Republic of
Texas. "In memory of the pioneer
families who settled in the Brazos Coun-
ty Area before and during the Republic
of Texas."
Congratulations Bryan On
100 Years Of Progress
Lee's Radio and TV, Bryan
Shaffer's Book Store, College Station
Joe Faulk Auto Parts, Bryan
Jones Pharmacy, College Station
Brazos Office Equipment, Bryan
Lady Fair Beauty Salon, Bryan
McCormick Sign Co.
The Sheriff
7 -up Bottling Co.
Royal Crown Bottling Co.
McCormick - Coffer Outdoor Adv. Co.
Bryan
A. C. "Jack" Dean, 304 Grove,
College Station, Rep. Brazos Adv.,
Inc., Waco, Texas
Bailey's Dist. Co.
Distributor for Lone Star Beer
M. B. GOUGH
1111 S. College Ave.
BRYAN, TEXAS
dram (` ,a
I ran -C allrge Stathnt
unh
on ' S Tariga:br (utcnnii1
LAWRENCE M. BEAL
408 S. College Ave.
BRYAN, TEXAS
L. H. COURTNEY
701 Sulphur Springs Rd.
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS
L. E. McCALL
815 Highway 6 S.
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS
Iltimblc
VISIT THE FOLLOWING HUMBLE PRODUCTS
SERVICE STATIONS IN BRYAN AND COLLEGE
STATION FOR . . .
• Quality Enco Products
• Unexcelled Service
• Cleanliness
W. F. DAVIS, Bulk Agent
1206 S. College Ave.
BRYAN, TEXAS
SAM MALAZZO
3404 S. College Ave.
BRYAN, TEXAS
CARL RAHNERT
700 N. College Ave.
BRYAN, TEXAS
EDDIE RICHARDS
601 W. 25th St.
BRYAN, TEXAS
LOUIS TRICE
1900 Texas Ave.
BRYAN, TEXAS
3ryanCo ege Station
Claimer of Commerce
Salutes The
Hood's Brigade -Bryan
Centennial
The Bryan - College Station Chamber of Commerce represents
dedicated men and women who give time, talent and financial
assistance to improve and build the economy and civic well-
being of this community and Brazos County.
They had no insurance ..
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In the face of tremendous risk and peril, our Hood's Brigade displayed daring leadership
and courage during the Civil War strife. Now, 100 years later, General Security Life In-
surance Company is pleased to join with the citizens of Bryan and surrounding areas in
their centennial observance of the War Between the States.
TODAY'S CITIZENS CAN ENJOY SECURITY AND PROTECTION . . .
Unlik9 our brave pioneers, you can have the best possible insurance coverage for you and
your family. General Security Life Insurance Company is young but enthusiastic in its
responsibility to the people it serves. Its personnel are conscientious and hard working.
The company itself is on a solid foundation and is growing. You can look far and wide,
but you'll always find that General Security Life Insurance policies compare favorably
with any offered by competitive groups. The home office is in Bryan, but there are gen-
eral agents located throughout Texas. Backed up by intensive training and experience,
these men stand ready to advise and serve you.
GENERAL SECURITY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY is honored to take part in
commemorating this 100th anniversary of the Civil War. It pledges to serve you faith-
fully and well through the years ahead.
1506 South College Avenue
Bryan. Texas
P. O. Box 1153
TA 3 -3700