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John Coffee Hays helped to forge the legend of what a Texas Ranger
was. Arriving in Texas in 1836 but just missing the famous battles
of the Texas Revolution, nineteen-year-old Hays soon had Sam
Houston urging him to join a new group of Rangers. Once out on the
frontier, Hays's careful planning and bold-indeed,
sensational-forays against the Comanches soon earned him a colorful
reputation and a host of nicknames. At twenty-three Hays was
commissioned a captain, and between skirmishes and battles his
survey party marked out much of the area around San Antonio. Hays
was pivotal in the ultimate defeat of the Comanches and led the
Rangers during the Mexican War. Historian James Kimmins Greer lives
in Waco, Texas, home of the Texas Ranger Museum.
Although Jim Bowie and Davy Crockett were more celebrated, Buck
Barry did as much or more to tame the Old Southwest. During a long
and useful life he was a professional soldier, stock farmer,
sheriff, and member of the legislature. His memoirs are never dull,
and no wonder. In 1845 young James Buckner Barry joined the newly
formed Texas Rangers and for the next twenty years his life was one
of unremitting activity and danger. These pages show him fighting
outlaws and Indians from the Red River to the Rio Grande. He served
in the Mexican and Civil wars, coming out as a lieutenant colonel.
Then he confronted the daily perils of ranching in Bosque County,
Texas. Peace officer, legislator, "he served his people well even
to the neglect of his private advantage." Such is the tribute of
the historian James K. Greer, who edited Buck Barry's private
papers and reminiscences and shaped them into this book.
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