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The history of the Old West has deep roots in South Texas where the
Wild Horse Desert was a lawless land controlled by no authority.
The western region of South Texas, from San Antonio to Corpus
Christi, stretching west and south to the Rio Grande, was the
birthplace of the big cattle ranches, the cattle barons, rustlers,
hide thieves, outlaws, and bad men operating on both sides of the
border. Murphy Givens brings the stories of the Old West to life in
"Great Tales From the History of South Texas"
Adventurers, outlaws, settlers, cowboys, ranchers, and
entrepreneurs from the United States, Europe, and Mexico all came
to the coastal bend of Texas, struggling against nature and their
fellow man to make their homes and livelihoods. Corpus Christi
nearly disappeared during two wars, but grew and prospered in
another. In this account, the tales of its growth are combined with
the stories of its residents to reveal its intriguing history.
Recollections Of Other Days is a compilation of memoirs of early
settlers of Corpus Christi and the Nueces Valley of South Texas.
The great value of their accounts, both written down and told-to,
lies in the fact that they lived through the times they recalled.
Some had first-hand knowledge of Corpus Christi in the 1850s when
it was a struggling frontier outpost. Robert and William Adams
tended their flocks in the early years of the great sheep industry
of South Texas. Anna Moore Schwien, daughter of a slave, Andrew
Anderson, son of a bay pilot, and Eli Merriman, a doctor's son,
shed light on "what it was like" during the dark times of the Civil
War. Thomas Noakes wrote about the famous Noakes Raid of 1875 while
he retained a vivid memory of the sight of his burning store. E. H.
Caldwell, W. S. Rankin, Annie Marie Kelly, Mrs. Delmas Givens, and
Roy Terrell provide unique accounts of Corpus Christi at the end of
the 19th Century and early years of the 20th Century. Ruth Dodson
and J. Frank Dobie offer fascinating pictures of their own ranch
lives in the valley watered by the Nueces River. Louis Rawalt
describes the long white island where he came to die but found a
new life. They bore the heat and burden and violence of the
frontier. They endured hard times. Their legacy is the Texas we
know today. Their stories are part of our history. And part of
ourselves.
Neither rich, famous, nor notorious, Whiting was a loyal officer in
the U.S. Army for three decades during the middle of the 19th
century. His career began in the time of Daniel Webster and John C.
Calhoun and coincided with a period in American history when the
country was moving West in those tumultuous years of Manifest
Destiny.
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