Chapter VIII: A History of Jefferson County, Texas
Personal Glimpses
By W. T. Block
A significant part of the social
history of early Jefferson County is the aggregate of the lives
of its pioneers. Whether one raised cattle, exported cotton,
made shingles, or worked for wages; he contributed something to
the development of society in the county. Most of the settlers
were subsistence farmers, destined to live out their lives in
conventional and unheralded mediocrity. A small number, however,
stand out as leaders of industry, government, and agriculture,
and a brief glimpse into their personal lives will remove them
from the category of statistics.
No pioneer was more respected than
Joseph Grigsby, an early cotton planter and legislator. Born in
Virginia in 1771, Grigsby and his wife moved to Kentucky, where
some of their children grew to adulthood. In 1828, financial
reverses caused the family to resettle in Jasper County and
subsequently, at Grigsby’s Bluff, the site of present-day Port
Neches. Their daughter, Frances, married George W. Smyth, a
signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence.
Grigsby served in three of the
first four Texas congresses. His plantation, with its
twenty-five slaves, was the birthplace of the county’s earliest
cotton culture. The planter also operated a primitive,
horse-driven sawmill and built the first horse-driven cotton gin
at Beaumont, a town site in which he owned a one-quarter
interest. Any possibility that a cotton plantation-slave economy
might evolve in Jefferson County ended in August 1841 when
Grigsby died. His estate was of such size that the executor,
George W. Smyth, could not obtain the necessary bond, and an
enabling act was enacted by the Texas legislature to exempt him.1
Born in Tennessee in 1820, J.
Biddle Langham, Grigsby’s protégé and the only other significant
cotton grower in antebellum Jefferson County, came to Texas in
1836. As a youth, he picked cotton on the Grigsby plantation,
and thereafter, lived on numerous farms in the vicinity of
Beaumont. In 1 859, with the help of four slaves, Langham
produced forty-nine of the eighty-four bales of cotton grown in
Jefferson County and 2,000 bushels of corn. Earlier, he had
served an enlistment in the Texas Rangers and was in the Texas
State Troops during the Civil War. Langham’s son, Thomas H.
Langham, and a son-in-law, Ras Landry, held the office of
Jefferson County sheriff continuously from 1876 until 1910.
Biddle Langham quit farming in 1879 and ran a livery stable at
Beaumont until his death about 1900.2
Dr. Niles F. Smith was born in New
York in 1800 and received his medical training there. In 1834,
he migrated from Michigan and settled at Milam on the Brazos
River. Smith’s family, however, remained in Michigan until 1840,
when the physician moved them to Sabine Pass.
Dr. Smith served as an engineer in
the Texas army, and in December 1836, was appointed by President
Houston to serve as banking commissioner. In 1837, he was a
partner with the Allen brothers in the Houston Townsite Company.
Despite his many realty and mercantile ventures, which are
related in other chapters, Dr. Smith continued his medical
practice at Sabine Pass until shortly before his death in 1858.3
Another prominent early settler,
William McFaddin, came to Liberty County with his parents, James
and Elizabeth McFaddin of Louisiana, in 1823. In 1833, he moved
to Beaumont, where he married Rachel Williams in 1837. Besides
service to the Texas Republic, the 43-year-old cattleman entered
the Confederate army and served as a beef buyer for the
Confederacy’s Trans-Mississippi Department during the Civil War.
Perhaps no other Jefferson County
resident foresaw the potential value of land better than William
McFaddin. During the 1870’s, he helped organize the Beaumont
Pasture Company, with the intent to obtain the rangelands of
South Jefferson County and stock them with cattle. Eventually,
he bought out his partners, and the company became known as the
McFaddin ranch, a cattle domain that once exceeded 100,000 acres
in size and included the upper twenty-five miles of the Texas
coast. As of 1880, the ranch owned 900 horses and 3,000 head of
cattle, reaching its peak in numbers after 1900. McFaddin, who
engaged in many business pursuits, died at Beaumont in October
1897. His son, Perry McFaddin, continued the family’s ranching
and business enterprises thereafter.4
George A. Pattillo, born in
Georgia in 1796, left an enviable record of public service
during his lifetime. He married in Louisiana in 1819 and
acquired one of the county’s earliest land grants after he moved
to Texas in 1830. Pattillo, who was en route to San Jacinto when
the battle was fought, later served as representative in 1841
and as senator during the last three sessions of the Congress of
the Texas Republic.
Pattillo was also postmaster at Pattillo’s Station, the first
associate justice of Jefferson County, the first chief justice
of Orange County, and was the assistant United States marshal
who enumerated the Jefferson and Orange County censuses of 1860.
Pattillo sold his headright league in 1855 and settled at Bunn’s
Bluff, on the Neches River north of Beaumont, where he remained
until his death in 1871.5
Charles H. Alexander, a prominent
merchant in early Jefferson County, was born in North Carolina
in 1810. The earliest record of him is in Jasper County, where
in 1839 he purchased the headright league of John Myers. He soon
became a mercantile partner of W. A. Ferguson of Jasper and
founded the firm’s second store at Sabine Pass in 1855.
Alexander kept the store after the partnership dissolved in
1857, eventually becoming the largest merchant and cotton
broker in Jefferson County.
Alexander owned many steamers and
blockade-running schooners during his lifetime, mostly in
partnership with Ruff Brothers of Beaumont. When he died in
1872, he owned the steamer Camargo, a $45,000 store
inventory, a one-third interest in the 307 lots owned by the
Sabine Townsite Company, and several leagues of land in East
Texas. Surviving Confederate currency is overprinted “C. H.
Alexander and Company, Sabine Pass, Texas.”6
Charles, Robert and Otto Ruff were
members of a contingent of German immigrants who arrived in
Jefferson County in 1846. Born in Prussia in 1831, the latter
Ruff’s promising career ended during the yellow fever epidemic
at Beaumont in 1862. Earlier, he had worked as a clerk in the W.
P. Herring store, and in 1854, formed a realty partnership with
his future brother-in-law, John J. Herring. In 1857, Ruff
married Lucinda Calder, a daughter of a prominent Beaumont
family. In 1861, he and Herring reorganized their mercantile
partnership, naming it J. J. Herring and Company, and admitted
Charles Ruff as a third partner. In 1859, Otto Ruff built
Beaumont’s third steam sawmill and cut 1,250,000 feet of lumber
during the succeeding year. When he died, Ruff was a principal
stockholder in the Texas and New Orleans Railroad and was
heavily engaged in cotton-buying and blockade-running
activities.7
McGuire Chaison and his aged
father, Jonas B. Chaison, were residing in Jefferson County by
1838, the year that the younger Chaison was issued a land grant.
About 1854, he purchased the former residence of Stephen L.
Smith, south of Beaumont near the Mobil Oil Company refinery, a
depot and sea freight terminal still known as Chaison, Texas. By
1850, he had acquired a herd of 700 head of cattle. In 1854,
when five school districts were established, McGuire Chaison
became one of the county’s first school trustees. In 1853,
a missionary priest, Father P. F. Parisot, held the county’s
first Catholic services in the Chaison home. The senior Chaison,
born in Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1745, entered the United States
as a soldier in the American Continental Army and died at
Beaumont at age 109 in 1854. McGuire Chaison died there in 1860.8
Robert Kidd was another early
centenarian, who at age 75, migrated to Jefferson County in 1850
with his six children. Born in 1774, he witnessed as a child the
armies of Lord Cornwallis and General Nathaniel Greene surging
across his father’s farm prior to the Battle of Guilford
Courthouse. Kidd lived variously at Aurora, Grigsby’s Bluff,
Smith’s Bluff, and eventually, at Beaumont and farmed actively
until age 100. He died in Sealy, Texas in 1890 at age ll6.9
Christian Hillebrandt was one of the very few European
immigrants who settled in Jefferson County before or during the
era of the Texas Republic. Born in 1793 in Schleswig-Holstein,
then a province of Denmark, Hillebrandt settled at Abbeville,
Louisiana in 1820, where he married Eurasie Blanchette, a French
Acadian. Mrs. Hillebrandt and her brother, Alexis Blanchette,
Sr., were in the vanguard of the Acadian settlement in early-day
Jefferson County.
As a product of land-hungry Europe, Hillebrandt had unlimited
aspirations to acquire property. He obtained a Mexican land
grant of 4,428 acres in 1835, and by 1839, was paying taxes on
more than 21,000 acres. Hillebrandt and his sons greatly
influenced the early cattle industry in Jefferson County.
10
Born in Connecticut in 1800, John
Jay French acquired a land grant on Taylor’s Bayou in 1835. In
1845, he moved to the French Trading Post in the west end of
Beaumont, where he resided for forty years. He operated the
county’s first tannery there, a site chosen because of the
abundance of oak tree bark used in the tanning process. French
was one of Jefferson County’s earliest rice growers. At the time
of his death in 1889, he owned more than 43,000 acres of Texas
land.11
Alexander Calder, a native of New
York, settled at Beaumont in 1838. He soon became the clerk of
the county court, a post that he held continuously during the
1840’s. About 1839, Calder began the study, and later, the
practice of law. After his death in 1853, his widow, Luanza, was
a successful farmer who owned fourteen slaves and 400 head of
cattle in 1860.12
William P. Herring, born in
Georgia in 1816, came to Beaumont in 1838 and began working as a
clerk in Simon Wiess’ store. Within a year, he purchased the
store and operated it until his death in 1859. His widow, Sarah
Herring, died a year later. Herring owned assets worth $4,754 in
1850, but during the prosperous decade that followed, his
property holdings mushroomed to $51,000. His brother, John J.
Herring, was also a well-known merchant who, in the course of
his lifetime, held many county offices, including chief justice
of the county court from 1864 until
1
869.13
During his tenure of office, the title was changed to county
judge.
A native of New Hampshire, Neal
McGaffey was born in 1794 and came to Sabine Pass with his son,
Otis, in 1839. A lawyer by profession, the older McGaffey
purchased in 1846 the league of land granted to his brother,
John McGaffey. Neal McGaffey, Sidney A. Sweet and William M.
Simpson began a realty and industrial partnership at Sabine,
which continued until McGaffey’s death in 1867. In February
1848, Smith, McGaffey, and Sweet furnished the land and lumber
for the first church building in Jefferson County. Otis McGaffey
was a successful Sabine merchant from 1846 until 1878, served as
postmaster, notary public, county commissioner, and justice of
the peace, and died at Houston in 1908.14
William Carr, a native of St.
Landry Parish, Louisiana, came to Jefferson County in 1834 and
obtained a Mexican grant of one league on Taylor’s Bayou. His
family of seventeen children was one of the largest in early-day
Texas. For several decades, Carr was a leading cattleman, his
herds numbering 500 head in 1850, 1,200 head in 1860, and 2,386
head in 1870.15
Joseph Hebert, an early member of
the French Acadian migration, was born in Lafayette Parish,
Louisiana in 1818 and came to Jefferson County in 1842. He
settled on a 1,200-acre farm south of Beaumont and soon became
one of the county’s largest cattlemen, owning 870 head in 1850
and 3,000 head in 1860. He was also one of the earliest rice
planters, growing 1,080 pounds in 1849 and 1,000 pounds in 1859.
He was the county’s lone rice grower in the latter year. In 1859,
Hebert also owned 200 hogs and grew nine bales of cotton,
600 bushels of corn, 200 bushels of sweet potatoes, and forty
bushels of beans. He owned twelve slaves and combined assets
worth $32,000 in 1860.16
In May 1861, Joseph Hebert
enrolled a Beaumont cavalry company, the Jefferson County
Mounted Rangers, organized under the Militia Act of 1858, and
was elected its captain. However, the company was not mustered
into service. Hebert then joined the Texas State Troops, served
at Houston, and died at Beaumont in February, 1865.17
Joseph P. Pulsifer, who was born
in Massachusetts in 1806, came to Beaumont in 1835. Two early
Beaumont firms bore the name of J. P. Pulsifer and Company, the
first being a realty partnership involved in the founding of the
Beaumont Townsite Company. The second firm, beginning in May
1846, was a drug and grocery concern, the successor to one
founded by Henry Millard, in partnership with Dr. D. J. Otho
Millard.
Except for short periods as either
a seafarer or customs collector, Pulsifer was a Beaumont
druggist until his death in 1867. He held numerous county
offices and was the sole survivor of the Beaumont Townsite
proprietors at the time of his death. One of Jefferson County’s
oldest legends, related in Florence Stratton’s Story of
Beaumont, concerns Pulsifer’s and Margaret Grigsby’s
blighted romance in 1839.18
Dr. Frederick W. Ogden, born in
Kentucky in 1808, settled at Beaumont in 1838 and was soon
awarded a grant by the Board of Land Commissioners. Although
trained in medicine and law, he practiced only the legal
profession in early-day Jefferson County. Dr. Ogden served as
district attorney of the Fifth Judicial District of East Texas
from 1839 until 1842 and as representative in the 7th
and 8th congresses of the Texas Republic. He
practiced law at Beaumont for twenty years and died there about
1859.19
Four Millard brothers, Henry, Sidney H., Anthony, and Otho,
lived in early-day Beaumont, but only the latter remained there
until his death. Colonel Henry Millard moved to Galveston in
1841, after which Sidney Millard and his brother-in-law, George
Bryan, operated the family store. In May 1846, the
proprietorship passed to Dr. D. J. Otho Millard, a druggist and
Beaumont’s first physician, and J. P. Pulsifer.
Dr. Millard replaced his brother
Henry as chief justice of Jefferson County in 1840 and died at
Beaumont in 1851. His widow later married William Lewis, a
Beaumont attorney and sawmiller, who held the office of chief
justice during the 1850’s.20
Captain George W. O’Brien, born in
Vermilion Parish, La., in 1833, settled at Beaumont in 1852 and
lived there until his death in 1909. By 1860, he was an alderman
of the town of Beaumont, served conjointly as county and
district clerk, and in 1861 was licensed to practice law. He
soon enlisted in the Confederate Army and served in Virginia for
several months until discharged there due to ill health. In
March, 1862, he mustered Beaumont’s Company E of Spaight’s Texas
Battalion, eventually participating in three battles in
Louisiana and two at or near Sabine Pass.
Captain O’Brien continued the
practice of law until his retirement shortly before his death.
For a brief time after the Civil War, he engaged in shingle
making and subsequently owned and edited the Neches Valley
News and its successor, the Beaumont News-Beacon. In
1892, he joined Patillo Higgins and George W. Carroll in
organizing the Gladys City Oil, Gas, and Manufacturing Company,
and his unfaltering belief in Higgins’ ‘dream’ eventually
resulted in the gusher at Spindletop.21
David H. McFaddin, a cousin of the well-known William McFaddin
of Beaumont, was born in Montgomery County, Tennessee in 1816,
and came to Liberty County with his parents, William and Sarah
Jett McFaddin, in 1828. On March 6, 1836, he joined Captain
Logan’s company and subsequently fought at the Battle of San
Jacinto. Later, his company followed the retreating Mexican
armies to the Rio Grande River, and after returning to Goliad,
McFaddin helped bury the remains of Colonel James Fannin’s
ill-fated volunteers.
 |
GEORGE W. O’BRIEN—An
early Beaumont attorney and county clerk, Captain
O’Brien mustered Co. E, Spaight’s Battalion and fought
in many Civil War battles. Later he was one of three men
who organized the Gladys City Oil, Gas, and
Manufacturing Co. |
 |
SARAH COURTS KING—Sarah
Ann King was reputedly the first white female born at
Sabine-on Feb. 14, 1835. She nursed yellow fever victims
in 1862 and a year later witnessed the Battle of Sabine
Pass from a rooftop. |
 |
JAMES M. LONG—An
early Beaumont sawmiller, Captain Long enlisted in Co.
E, Spaight’s Bn., in 1862. Despite his short life span
and death in 1873, he greatly influenced the growth of
Beaumont’s lumber and shingle industries during the
post-war years. |
 |
FRANK L. CARROLL—With
James Long, Francis Lafayette Carroll purchased the
former Ross and Alexander mill site in 1860, but did not
move to Beaumont permanently until 1866. He was a
leading sawmiller thereafter. |
 |
WILLIAM A. FLETCHER—A
Beaumont youth in 1861, W. A. Fletcher hurried to
complete a roof for fear of missing an opportunity to
enlist. He fought in many major battles and became a
leading East Texas industrialist in later years. |
 |
D. R. WINGATE—As
commissioner of defense, Wingate, a Sabine sawmiller,
supervised Jefferson County’s defense preparations in
1861. He and his family returned to Newton County when
yellow fever broke out in 1862. |
 |
JULIUS G.
KELLERSBERG(ER)—Major Kellersberg, the Confederate
chief engineer for East Texas, built Forts Griffin and
Manhassett at Sabine and Fort Grigsby at Port Neches. He
spent most of the year 1863 in Jefferson County. |
 |
JOSEPH M. CHASTINE—Commanding
Co. F, Griffin’s Battalion, Lt. Chastine won lavish
praise from Col. Smith for having “rushed immediately to
the scene of danger” at the Battle of Sabine Pass. He
subsequently resided at Sabine and Beaumont. |
After settling at Beaumont, David
McFaddin married Jerusha Dyches of Pine Island settlement in
1838, and in 1843 was elected sheriff of Jefferson County. In
1848 he moved to the San Gabriel River, east of Georgetown, and
soon after carried the petition to Austin, which resulted in the
organization of Williamson County. He became a prosperous
cattlemen, miller and slaveholder and died there in October
1896. A son, also named William, was killed in action while
serving in the Confederate Army.22
Born in Georgia in 1813, John
Kelly Robertson settled at Beaumont after completing an army
enlistment during the Mexican War. His arrival in Jefferson
County was an accident, the result of being rescued from the
“oil pond,” offshore from Sabine Pass, where his ship had taken
refuge during a storm. From 1849 until 1855, he served as county
clerk and in 1858 was licensed to practice law. He remained a
prominent Beaumont attorney until his death in November, 1873.23
A native of Virginia, A. N. Vaughn
began the Beaumont Male and Female Academy in 1858, but quit
teaching in January 1860, when he became publisher of the
Beaumont Banner. He was also mayor of Beaumont during
that year. In 1861 he enlisted in Company F, 5th Texas Infantry,
of Hood’s Brigade and saw action during many of the major
battles of the Civil War.
On January 1, 1868, while serving
as Jefferson County’s assessor-collector of taxes, Vaughn was
wed to Allie B. Keith of Sabine Pass. In 1869, he became a
partner in Sabine’s cotton brokerage firm of Keith and Vaughn.
In 1878 he moved to Cairo, Jasper County, to manage the Texas
Tram and Lumber Company’s commissary and died there in 1883.24
Vaughn’s partner and
brother-in-law, K. D. Keith, was born in Georgia in 1831, and in
1856 came to Beaumont to manage a new mercantile firm owned by
W. A. Ferguson. In 1857 he moved to Sabine and bought a
half-interest in the cotton export business owned by his
father-in-law, Otis McGaffey. During the Civil War, Keith
commanded Company B, of Spaight’s Battalion, an artillery unit
that was aboard the gunboat Uncle Ben at
the Battle of Sabine Pass. After the war, he continued as a
Sabine cotton broker until 1871. He eventually settled at
Luling, Texas, where he prospered as a lumber and hardware
dealer until his death in 1911.25
Although David R.
Wingate resided in Jefferson County for only four years, from
1858 until 1862, the pioneer s contribution to Southeast Texas
history certainly accords him a place in this volume. Born in
South Carolina in 1819, he grew up in the Pearl River delta
region of Mississippi, where from 1845 until 1852 he operated a
sash sawmill. In 1852 he moved to Newton County (bringing some
55 slaves with him), where he purchased a cotton plantation
located on the Linnville and Lewis leagues.
In 1858, Wingate bought the
abandoned Spartan Mill Company at Sabine Pass and built it into
the largest sawmill in Texas. In August 1862, he and his family
fled from Sabine when yellow fever broke out, and six weeks
later, the Federals burned most of his property there. During
the first year of the war, he was Jefferson County’s
commissioner of defense, an appointment that resulted in the
building of Fort Sabine and the fourteen cavalry barracks and
stables on the Front Ridge. In December 1861, Wingate was
commissioned colonel of the 2nd Regiment, First
Brigade, of Texas Militia, but an appointment as Confederate
marshal of Southern Texas prevented active military service.
From 1874 until his death in 1899, Wingate remained a prosperous
Orange County sawmiller, merchant, steamboat man, and rice
farmer, despite the fact that four sawmill fires during his
lifetime resulted in $500,000 worth of uninsured losses.26
Born in Kentucky in 1811, James R.
Armstrong moved to Jasper County in 1835 and served in Captain
Chessher’s Jasper Volunteers during the Texas Revolution. A
lawyer by profession, he was the first district attorney of the
Fifth Judicial District and moved to Beaumont in 1840. While
serving two terms in the Republic of Texas Congress, he signed
Texas’ Joint Resolution on annexation and was a member of the
first state constitutional convention in July 1845.
In 1848, Armstrong accompanied a
friend, David McFaddin, to Williamson County, where he was a
prosperous attorney and rancher until 1867, when he returned to
Beaumont. He remained a prominent cattleman and lawyer until his
death at Beaumont in December 1879. He also served in many of
the state legislatures between 1846 and 1873.27
Isaiah Junker, who was born in
Pennsylvania in 1818, settled at Beaumont in the early 1 840’s
and for many years was the community’s only blacksmith. During
the 1850’s he served in the state legislature and as chief
justice of Jefferson County. In 1857 he was one of the promoters
of the Mexican Gulf and Henderson Railroad (subsequently the
Eastern Texas). He became a merchant in 1861 when he purchased a
store owned by James R. and Michael Alexander. A son, Lieutenant
Wilson A. Junker, was executive officer of Beaumont’s Company E,
Spaight’s Battalion, during the Civil War and afterward, was
captain of the Sabine River steamer Pearl Rivers.28
Perhaps no single family
contributed more to the early history of Jefferson County than
that of Bradley Gamer, Sr., a veteran of the Battle of New
Orleans, all of whose children (four sons and four daughters)
settled at Old Jefferson (present-day Bridge City) between 1825
and 1828. David Gamer was twice elected sheriff of Jefferson
County and served in the Fourth Texas Congress. He and two
brothers, Isaac and Jacob Garner, fought at the Battle of San
Antonio, the latter serving three enlistments between 1835 and
1837. A son-in-law, Claiborne West, was a merchant and
postmaster at Jefferson, served as its delegate to the
Consultation of San Felipe, signed the Texas Declaration of
Independence, enlisted in the Texas Army, and was elected to the
First Texas Congress. Another son-in-law, Benjamin Johnson,
served three army enlistments and fought at the battles of San
Antonio and San Jacinto. Still another, John McGaffey, was the
founder of Sabine Pass, where he, Johnson, and Jacob Gamer lived
out their lives. Both West and David Garner were Mexican land
grantees. The survey of McGaffey’s league at Sabine was
completed shortly before the Nacogdoches land office closed in
1835, and the Republic of Texas subsequently issued its patent.
29
A ship carpenter by trade, Peter
D. Stockholm was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., in 1815 and in 1840
settled at Sabine, where he became a boarding inspector and
deputy collector for the Republic of Texas customhouse. In 1847
he married Mary Keith, whose parents, George and Lovenia Keith,
were pioneer Sabine Lake settlers. Stockholm spent more than
thirty years as a steamboat captain and pilot, engaged in
shipbuilding at Sabine Pass and Orange, and held several county
offices, including county commissioner, justice of the peace,
and inspector of cattle and hides. On January 21, 1863, he
participated in the offshore naval battle near Sabine Pass
(where two Union warships subsequently surrendered), as pilot
aboard the Confederate gunboat Josiah H. Bell. About 1880
he became a real estate promoter at Beaumont and died there in
1901.30
Captain James M. Long, who was
born in Georgia in 1837, settled at Beaumont in 1859,
where he and Frank L. Carroll purchased the burned Ross and
Alexander sawmill and repaired it. When Company E, Spaight’s
Battalion, was mustered at Beaumont in 1862, Long was elected
second lieutenant and eventually participated in a number of
Texas and Louisiana battles. In 1865, he and his father, Davis
Long, resumed mill operations and built Long and Company into
Beaumont’s largest post-bellum industry. Despite his short life
span, James Long, more than any single individual, deserves
credit for influencing Beaumont’s industrial growth after the
Civil War. Following his death in June 1873, his family
connections, including his widow, Theresa, and his
brothers-in-law, Frank L. and Joseph A. Carroll, William A.
Fletcher, and John W. Keith, dominated the Beaumont lumber scene
thereafter.31
Personal glimpses into the lives
of a few of the early settlers reveal that some came from
neighboring Louisiana, a few from distant points in the northern
United States, and others from Europe. All of them had one thing
in common; each found a reason to remain and wager his future in
Jefferson County. In frontier fashion, a few of them prospered
and made a mark on the county’s history. The majority of
settlers simply marked time in Jefferson County until either
ensnared by death or by the lure of greener pastures farther
west.
 |
NEAL
McGAFFEY, JR.—The son of Sabine’s founder, John
McGaffey, Neal McGaffey was reputedly the first white
male born at Sabine Pan. He fought 4 years in the
Confederate army and was a successful rancher and
farmer. |
 |
REV. JOHN F. PIPKIN—John
Fletcher Pipkin, a Methodist lay minister, won the
appellation, “father of Beaumont churches,” because he
ministered at the weddings and funeral rites of all
faiths. |
Endnotes
1
Beaumont Journal,
November 12, 1905; Beaumont Enterprise, August 12, 1964;
information excerpted from the G. W. Smyth family Bible and from
Virginia Historical Genealogies (Baltimore: Boddie,
1965), copies owned by the writer; G. White (ed), The 1840
Census of The Republic of Texas (Austin: Pemberton Press,
1966), p. 95; Testament of J. Grigsby, Original Probate, Final,
p. 95, and land grant, George A. Nixon to J. Grigsby, Volume C,
p. 126, Deed Records, Jefferson County, Texas.
2
Beaumont Journal,
November 5, 1905; John H. Brown, Indian Wars and Pioneers of
Texas (Austin: L. E. Daniel, 189?), pp. 530-531; Manuscript
Returns of Jefferson County, Schedule IV, Products of
Agriculture, Eighth Census of the United States, 1860.
3
“Analysis of The 1850 Census,” Texas Gulf Historical and
Biographical Record, VII (May, 1972), pp. 71, 115; Volume I,
pp. 92-93, Deed Records, Jefferson County, Texas; A. W. Williams
and Eugene C. Barker, The Writings of Sam Houston, 1813-1863
(8 volumes; Austin: Pemberton Press, 1970), I, p. 507 and
II, p. 472, and III, p. 492; E. W. Winkler (ed.,), Secret
Journals of The Senate, Republic of Texas, 1836-1845, in
Texas Library and Historical Commission First Biennial Report,
1909-1910 (Austin: Austin Printing Company, 1911), pp. 32,
220, 282, 284, 307: (Houston) Telegraph and Texas Register,
February 6, 13, and July 24, 1839; (Galveston) Civilian
and Galveston Gazette, May 17, 1839 and June 2, 1848; H. P.
N. Gammel (compiler), The Laws of Texas, 1822-1897 (10
volumes; Austin: Gammel Book Company, 1898), I, p. 1135; T. C.
Richardson, East Texas: Its History and Its Makers (3
volumes; New York: Dabney, White, 1840), III, p. 1344; W. P.
Webb and H. B. Carroll, Handbook of Texas (Austin: Texas
State Historical Association, 1952), II, p. 625.
4
Brown, Indian Wars and
Pioneers of Texas, pp. 337-338; Manuscript Returns of
Jefferson County, Texas, Schedules II, Slaves (1860), and IV,
Products of Agriculture, Eighth, Ninth, and Tenth Censuses of
the United States, 1860, 1870, 1880; Beaumont Journal,
April 14 and May 5, 12, 19, 1907; Beaumont Enterprise,
October 4, 1931; “Analysis of The 1850 Census,” Texas Gulf
Historical and Biographical Record, VII (May, 1972), pp. 68,
73, 125. When a century of ranch operations ended about 1950, a
probable 150,000 animals had been marked with the famed
“Mashed-O” brand.
5
Beaumont Journal, October 15, 1905.
6
File 45-B, Estate of C. H. Alexander, 1872, Probate
Records, Jefferson County, Texas; Volumes B, pp. 145-147, 172,
and C, pp. 105-109, Personal Property Record, and M, pp.
132-133, Deed Records, Jefferson County, Texas; Beaumont
Journal, March 5, 1906. Mrs. Willard Doiron of Beaumont owns
the overprinted currency. Until recently the writer owned the
original Myers to Alexander deed, one of many deposited for
safekeeping with the Jefferson County clerk.
7
(Galveston) Weekly News, November 9, 1859; K. D.
Keith, “The Memoirs of Captain K. D. Keith,” unpublished
manuscript, p. 12; File 195, Estate of Otto Ruff, 1863, Probate
Records; Volume B, pp. 98, 105-109, Personal Property Record;
and Volume M, pp. 536, 626, Deed Records, Jefferson County,
Texas; “Analysis of The 1850 Census,” Texas Gulf Historical
and Biographical Record, VII (May, 1972), pp. 127, 129;
Manuscript Returns of Jefferson County, Schedule I, Population,
Eighth Census of the United States, 1860, p. 45, res. 272; and
Schedule V, Products of Industry, 1860; Book A, No. 267,
Marriage Record, Jefferson County, Texas; Beaumont Journal,
April 23, 1905.
8
P. F. Parisot, The
Reminiscences of A Texas Missionary (San Antonio: Johnson
Brothers Printing Company, 1899), p. 7; Standard Blue Book
of Texas, 1908-1909 (Hobston: Peeler Standard Blue Book
Company, 1908), p. 72; “Analysis of The 1850 Census,” Texas
Gulf Historical and Biographical Record, pp. 66, 68, 72,
128-129; White, The 1840 Census, p. 94; Volume B, pp.
112-114, Commissioners’ Court Minutes, and B, pp. 30-31,
Personal Property Record, Jefferson County, Texas; Manuscript
Returns of Jefferson County, Schedule I, Eighth Census of the
United States, 1860, p. 65, residence 406; Schedule III,
Mortality; and Schedule IV, Products of Agriculture, pp. 5-6,
No. 13.
9
Brown, Indian Wars and
Pioneers of Texas, p. 565; Standard Blue Book of Texas,
1908-1909, p. 72; Beaumont Journal, October 21, 1906;
Manuscript Returns of Jefferson County, Eighth Census of the
United States, 1860, Schedule I, p. 82, residence 505.
Throughout the nineteenth century, Smith’s Bluff, the site of
Union Oil of California’s refinery near Nederland, Grigsby’s
Bluff, Taylor’s Bayou Hillebrandt Bayou, Pine Island, and
Sparks’ Settlement were never more than scatterings of farm
houses.
10
Spanish petition,
Hillebrandt to George A. Nixon, Nacogdoches, State of
Coahuila-Texas, August 3, 1835, p. 1, translation by Pedro M.
Duelo, University of Houston, May, 1960, copy owned by the
writer; Volume B, pp. 301-307, Personal Property Record, and
Original Petition, 0. L. Hillebrandt No. 323 Versus Espar
Hillebrandt, December 4, 1858, Jefferson County District Court,
Jefferson County, Texas; Beaumont Journal, February 4,
1906; Frederick L. Olmsted, Journey Through Texas: A
Saddle-Trip on The Southern Frontier (reprint; Austin: Von
Boeckmann-Jones Press, 1962), p. 246.
11
Beaumont Journal,
October 1, 1905; Manuscript Returns of Jefferson County,
Schedule I, 1850, residence 75; Federal Writers’ Project,
Beaumont: A Guide To The City and Its Environs (Houston:
Anson Jones Press, 1939), p. 53;(Galveston) Weekly News,
December 8, 1857;Rosine McFaddin Wilson, “The John Jay French
Trading Post,” East Texas Historical Journal, VIII
(March, 1970), 14-23.
12
Manuscript Returns of
Jefferson County, 1860, Schedule I, Eighth Census of the United
States, p. 44, residence 274; Schedule II; and Schedule IV, p.
5, No. 3; “Analysis of The 1850 Census,” Texas Gulf
Historical and Biographical Record, p. 89; (Galveston)
Weekly News, August 3, 1852. Most of the early archives of
Jefferson County are in Calder’s unique handwriting. In 1859,
Luanza Calder grew four bales of cotton and 700 bushels of corn.
For an account of her farming activities, see court depositions
involving the estate of her father, File 160, Probate Records,
Jefferson County, Texas.
13
Beaumont Enterprise, November 22, 1908; “Analysis
of The 1850 Census,” Texas Gulf Historical and Biographical
Record, p. 127; Manuscript Returns of Jefferson County,
1860, Schedule I, p. 40, residence 251, and p. 46, residence
286; and Schedule II; File 97, Probate Records, Jefferson
County, Texas. Sarah Herring owned nine slaves and 2,308 head of
cattle when she died.
14
Oath of allegiance to Texas,
Neal McGaffey to Judge Henry Millard, Beaumont, December 31,
1839, Texas State Archives, copy owned by the writer; G. W.
McGaffey, Genealogical History of The McGaffey Family
(Bradford, Vermont: Opinion Press, 1904), pp. 30-38; Volumes E,
pp. 301, 354, 372; F, pp. 163, 209; G, pp. 38, 94, 151-153; and
0, p. 453, Deed Records Jefferson County, Texas; Texas
Almanac, 1867 (Galveston: Richardson and Company, 1868), p.
207; Beaumont Journal, January 14, 1906; Port Arthur
News, October 31, 1971.
15
Beaumont Journal,
October 22, 1905; Minutes, Board of Land Commissioners, p. 93,
No. 107, Jefferson County, Texas; Manuscript Returns of
Jefferson County, Schedule IV, Products of Agriculture: for
1850, p. 447; for 1860, pp. 5-6; for 1870, pp. 3.4, Microfilm
Reel No. 9, Texas State Archives; “Analysis of The 1850 Census,”
Texas Gulf Historical and Biographical Record, p.
76; Volume A, p. 87, Commissioners’ Court Minutes, Jefferson
County, Texas.
16
Brown Indian Wars and
Pioneers of Texas, p. 551; “Analysis of The 1850
Census,” Texas Gulf Historical and Biographical Record,
pp. 68, 73, 122; Manuscript Returns of Jefferson County, 1860,
Schedule I, Population, p. 80, residence 499; Schedule II,
Slaves; and Schedule IV, pp. 5-6, No. 39.
17
Brown, Indian Wars and
Pioneers of Texas, p. 551; Muster Roll, Jefferson County
Mounted Rangers, May 4, 1861, Texas State Archives and recorded
in Volume C, pp. 51-52, Personal Property Record, Jefferson
County, Texas.
18
”Analysis of The 1850
Census,” Texas Gulf Historical and Biographical Record,
p. 129; Minutes, Board of Land Commissioners, p. 150; Record of
Retail Licenses, 1839-1851; and Volumes C, p. 364, and D, pp.
40-47, Deed Records, Jefferson County, Texas; Beaumont
Enterprise, November 22, 1908; Florence Stratton, The
Story of Beaumont (Houston: Hercules Printing Company,
1925), pp. 32-35.
19
Beaumont Journal,
June 3, 1906; “Analysis of The 1850 Census,” Texas Gulf
Historical and Biographical Record, p. 125; Minutes, Board
of Land Commissioners, p. 222, Jefferson County, Texas; Winkler,
Secret Journals of The Senate, pp. 136, 139; Nancy N.
Barker (ed.) The French Legation in Texas (2 volumes;
Austin: Texas State Historical Association, 1973), II, p. 494.
20
Beaumont Journal,
June 6, 1908; Record of Retail Licenses, 1838-1851, pages
unnumbered, Minutes, Board of Land Commissioners, pp. 176, 181,
206; and Volume A, pp. 45, 133-134, Commissioners’ Court
Minutes, Jefferson County, Texas; “Analysis of The 1850 Census,”
Texas Gulf Historical and Biographical Record, p. 129;
Sam H. Dixon and Lewis W. Kemp, The Heroes of San Jacinto
(Houston: Anson Jones Press, 1932), pp. 89-90.
21
C. K. Ragan (ed.). The
Diary of Captain George W. O’Brien (reprinted from South
western Historical Quarterly, LXVII. 1963), 4-17;
(Galveston) Ti-Weekly News, May 10, 1872; Beaumont
Enterprise, April 16, 1905; Brown, Indian Wars and
Pioneers of Texas, p. 266.
22
“An Old Hero—D. H. McFaddin,” (Galveston) Daily News,
August 13, 1893; ibid., “Veteran McFaddin Fought at
San Jacinto,” October 17, 1896; Beaumont Enterprise,
November 22, 1908; Dixon and Kemp, Heroes of San Jacinto,
p. 371.
23
Beaumont Journal,
July 25, 1908; “1850 Manuscript Census Schedules for Jefferson
County,” Texas Gulf Historical and Biographical Record,
VII (May, 1972), 89.
24
Beaumont Journal,
June 17, 1906; Sabine Pass Beacon, September 10, 1871;
Manuscript Census Returns, Schedules I, Jefferson County, 1860,
1870.
25
“The Memoirs of Captain
Kaaciusko D. Keith,” Texas Gulf Historical and Biographical
Record, X (November, 1974), 41-64.
26
T. A. Wilson, Some Early
Southeast Families (Houston: Lone Star Press, 1965), pp.
12-13; Brown, Indian Wars and Pioneers of Texas, pp.
760-761; “Among the Lumbermen,” (Galveston) Daily News,
July 11, 1896.
27
Biographical
Directory of the Texan Conventions and Congresses
(Austin: 1941), p. 45; (Galveston)
Weekly News, January 15, 1880.
28
1850 Manuscript Census Schedules for Jefferson County,” Texas
Gulf Historical and Biographical Record, VII (May, 1972),
72, 127; ibid., “Spaight’s Battalion, C. S. A.,” VII
(November, 1972), 36; Beaumont Enterprise, November 6,
1880.
29
Beaumont Journal,
January 14, 28 and February 11, 1906; excerpts from
Garner-Keene Genealogy (Charlottesville, Va.: Jorman
Printing Company, 1952); Biography of David Gamer,
Biographical Directory of the Texas Conventions and Congresses
(Austin: 1941); Port Arthur News, October 31, 1971 and
January 30, 1972; W. T. Block, “Minutemen of 1835-1836:
Southeast Texans in the War for Texas Independence,” Texas
Gulf Historical and Biographical Record, XI (November,
1975), 79-91; Kemp, Signers of the Texas Declaration of
Independence, pp. 361 -364; Minutes, Board of Land
Commissioners of Jefferson County, pp. 24-27, 86, 109, 135, 174.
30
Beaumont Journal,
September 26, 1901; Beaumont Enterprise, September 26,
1901; November 22, 1908;June 1, 1913; W. T. Block, “Stockholm
Dean of East Texas Steam boatmen,” Port Arthur News,
December 23, 1973.
31
Manuscript Census Returns,
Schedules I and V, Jefferson County, Texas, 1860, 1870;
(Galveston) Tri-Weekly News, June 23, 1873; Beaumont
Journal, November 4, 1906; “History of Spaight’s Texas
Regiment,” University of Texas Archives; File 139, Estate of
James Long, Probate Records, Jefferson County, Texas; W. T.
Block (ed.), “Documents of the Early Sawmilling Epoch,” Texas
Gulf Historical and Biographical Record, IX (November,
1973), 54-56.
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