RANDOM PICTURE THREAD - Post ANY of your favorite pictures here to share with Tnet...

Tejaas

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RANDOM PICTURE THREAD - Post ANY of your favorite pictures here to share with...

Cool thread, i'll play along.

I really enjoy images pertaining to Texas History. These are all widely distributed, but i find them interesting. A lot of these tie into my family history.

Enlisted men of Company C, 8th Texas Cavalry (Terry's Texas Rangers):
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PVT. Simeon Crews, Company F ("Victoria County Rangers") - 7th Texas Mounted Volunteers:
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Kerrville-based artist Roy Andersen's depiction of the Confederate advancement at Pigeon's Ranch during the battle of Glorieta, New Mexico. Confederate elements of the 2nd, 4th, 5th & 7th Texas Mounted Volunteers (Sibley's Brigade) faced heavy opposition by Chivington's 1st Colorado Cavalry. A few years later, Chivington would come under federal review for war crimes committed at the 1864 Sand Creek Massacre:
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A Confederate victory that came too late - This photograph was taken on the grounds of the last battle of the American Civil War. The fighting at Palmito Ranch (Cameron County, TX) took place 34 days after Lee surrendered at Appomattox:
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Longhorn Caverns (Burnet County, TX). During the Civil War, Confederate soldiers utilized the caverns as a powder mill. The cave system provided an abundant supply of bat guano, from which they would extract saltpetre. I found a document years ago in the state archives that stated the cavern mill could steadily produce 80-100 pounds of saltpetre a day... With 100 pounds of guano yielding 4 pounds of saltpetre:
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The Treue Der Union Monument (Kendall County, TX). Unique due to the fact that it is the only Union monument located on formerly-Confederate soil, it was erected in 1866 over the mass grave of 36 Union-sympathetic german "Home Guards" that were massacred along the Nueces River by McRae's Confederate Partisans:
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The Gault Site (Bell County, TX).
First recorded by Dr. Michael Collins (Pictured) and Dr. Thomas Hester, the Gault Site was ground zero for studying Clovis culture in North America... Until they dug too deep and realized there was something older! North America's inhabited history effectively jumped from 13,000 to 15,500 years old, and the term "Pre-Clovis" has come to use in North America because of published findings out of the BCC. Hopefully the sister-sites located in the other 8 states turn up similar findings!
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Swordsman's Gauntlet (Floydada, TX).
As Coronado moved up thru Texas, he utilized Blanco Canyon as a strategic encampment. In the 1950's, a farmer discovered the gauntlet while plowing a field and added it to his indian artifact collection where it stayed until the 60's when he had it identified by scholars. Fast forward to the 90's, a hobby detectorist is hunting nearby and discovers copper crossbow bolt points. An excavation ensues, and Coronado's path thru Texas is largely discovered.
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The French occupation of Texas - the last 20 years have expanded the French portion of Texas history by tenfold due to two discoveries, both revolving around the famous explorer Robert Cavelier de La Salle.
1995 saw the discovery of La Salle's flagship 'La Belle' in Matagorda Bay... And the subsequent excavation marked the first use of a cofferdam in North America to recover a shipwreck. 1996 saw the discovery of Fort St. Louis, built by La Salle's exploration party. Both sites are still actively being studied.
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Billy Dixon - Second Battle of Adobe Walls.
Along with Bat Masterson and 26 other buffalo hunters, they spent three days besieged by hundreds of indians led by Quanah Parker. On day three, Dixon borrowed a .50-90 Sharps and tumbled a respected tribal elder backwards off his horse - from over 1500 yards away - which quickly ended the hostilities. Dixon always claimed it was a lucky shot, but modesty ran rampant back then... Yea, Chris Kyle bested him by 560 yards... But it was also 134 years later, and with a McMillan Tac-338. I'd bet they are arguing about it right now.
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~Tejaas~
 

Last edited:

Enginefitter

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Great thread AARC, thanks for starting.
You have the knack for starting some interesting threads.
Keep it up buddy.

Engine
 

Tejaas

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Johnny Ringo - (Mason County, TX)
His ending up in Arizona and in the history books as part of the Wyatt Earp legend was directly related to the old saying - "You can't outrun your past." In what would become known as the "Hoodoo War", Ringo aligned himself with the Cooley faction and began a string of reckless (and often erroneous) vengeance killings... Two years after things had somewhat cooled off, he was still getting death threats and fled to Arizona... And everyone knows the rest of the story... Except who actually killed him.
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Theodore Roosevelt - (San Antonio, TX)
A really cool photo of Roosevelt at a Rough Riders Reunion in front of the Spanish Mission Nuestra Señora de la Purísima Concepción de Acuña (Mission Concepción) in San Antonio. Roosevelt mustered in his volunteers in the Menger Hotel (which sits directly adjacent to the Alamo) and they spent May 1898 drilling in the area before heading to Cuba.
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~Tejaas~
 

Tejaas

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RANDOM PICTURE THREAD - Post ANY of your favorite pictures here to share with...

Jefferson Davis Hospital - (Houston, TX)

The hospital was built in the 1920's on the former grounds of a municipal cemetery that was active from the 1850s-90s, and was estimated to have had over 5000 graves.
During the Civil War, the site also contained a CSA field hospital. One of my ancestors, who fought with the 7th Texas Mounted Volunteers in New Mexico, and then later at the Second Battle of Galveston - was shot while capturing the federal revenue cutter-turned gunship 'Harriet Lane' (yes, you read that correctly... they utilized cavalry troopers to act as marines and seize a gunship at shallow anchor!) They evacuated the wounded to the makeshift field hospital in Houston where many, including my ancestor, would later die. As was customary, they promptly buried them on-site in hastily marked and sometimes mass graves.
By the 1890s, the cemetery had practically disappeared due to neglect and the like.
In the 1920's they decided to build the Jefferson Davis Hospital on the site with only 2 stipulations... The city had to relocate as many graves as possible, and the hospital must have an above-ground basement so as not to disturb any burials they missed. Very few military burials were noted as being discovered/relocated during the construction that followed.

Jump ahead to 1986... There has been a total of 30 sets of remains discovered in the 60 years since the hospitals construction. As they were found, they were stored locally at the University of Houston while arrangements were being introduced/planned/etc.

Just across from the Jefferson Davis Hospital there was/is an AMTRAK station and a Fire Department. One day, while the city was working on some water lines behind the FD's equipment shed, a burial trench containing the remains of an additional 32 confederate soldiers was discovered. They end up fencing in the tiny little grass lot and dedicating a marker over the remains... Finally, in 2006 the additional 30 sets of remains being stored at the university are interred with them, and the marker is centered over both burials... Still stating "32" and not the proper total of 62.

Ive been working on this for a few years now, and I'm making progress... I find it enjoyable to do the research and put feet to pavement. While i was on active duty the S1 shop would see me coming and ask if i was there about MY personnel records or trying to get something expedited to DA concerning my ancestor.

Ultimately I'd like to see a state-sanctioned TSHC monument erected, and the NPRC award 62 Civil War Campaign Ribbons.

Jefferson Davis Hospital (circa 1928):
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Jefferson Davis Hospital (present day, now loft apartments):
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Confederate Burial Site located on the grounds of the Fire Department:
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Burial Marker Close Up:
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Anyways, thanks for reading my story, and hope the photos are worthy of posting in this thread!




~Tejaas~
 

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pepperj

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Tejaas

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Almost forgot another great Texas-themed photo sequence... The 1896 "Crash at Crush".

Pure destruction as a publicity stunt.

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~Tejaas~
 

Captain Caveman

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Wow! And I thought some of my ideas were dumb.
 

Terry Soloman

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The View from Brooklyn in 1993

I took this photo from Brooklyn Bridge Park, in Brooklyn, during the first "Brooklyn Beer Festival" in the Spring of 1993.
 

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