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A Story of the Loyal Germans of the Texas Hill Country During the
Civil War The town of Fredericksburg, located in the Texas Hill
Country near the center of the State, was settled by the German
Immigration Society in 1846. The town was a hundred miles past the
frontier so the Germans made their own peace treaty with the
Camanche Indians who were at war with the Texas at that time.
During the next fifteen years German settlers continued to arrive,
spreading out to cover a large part of the surrounding country.
They learned to farm local crops that suited the local soil and
learned to be stockmen as well. In general they prospered. In 1861
the Germans watched Texas succeed from the Union and join the
Confederacy with a great deal of dismay. They, like the rest of the
frontier settlements, depended on the U.S. Army for protection from
the Indians and Mexican bandits. The U.S. Army was rounded up by
the Confederates and shipped north by boat leaving many of the
frontier forts abandoned. None of the Germans owned slaves or
believed in slavery so they did not want to participate with the
South in what they saw as a fight for slavery. Most of the Germans
had been through the process of becoming United States citizens so
they had recently sworn their allegiance to the United States of
America and they intended to honor that oath. In June of 1861 the
Germans in the Texas Hill Country formed a Union League to express
their support for the North in the war that had started at Ft.
Sumter two months earlier. This alerted the Confederates to the
problem that they had in their midst. While staying true to the
history of this time and the historical timeline we shall move to
the sping and summer of 1862, place characters in our story and let
it move forward from there.
Francis Smith, Oil Finder, is a novel situated in the petroleum
industry in New Orleans in the early 1960's. Francis returns to New
Orleans from a period of duty as a geologist in Libya with the
intentions of finding a wife. He quickly meets a student at Tulane
University and a romance begins. He reports for his new assignment
with Stumble Oil Company and is handed the task of evaluating a new
lease that covers a half million acres of south Louisiana
marshland. The program to explore this acreage results in a wildcat
well that is drilled into a deep, dangerous, abnormal pressure
section in the search for gas. Francis discovers that a number of
employees are stealing from Stumble Oil and has to make a decision
as to what to do about this. Each of these themes is followed to
its conclusion against the background of New Orleans and its
surrounding area.
This is a personal account of rural life on a ranch in central
Texas from 1926 to 1944. Voy Ernst Althaus, a fourth generation
rancher, describes early ranching in Texas, including controlling
factors and limitations. The Great Depression and the advent of
technology impacted aspects of daily family life from food, hygiene
and recreations to the schools they attended. Enjoy this glimpse
into the past from the family photo album and Voy's perspective.
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