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TEXAS LEGENDS
The Texas Rangers - Order Out of Chaos |
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When at
the age of sixteen, I joined a jolly band.
We
marched from San Antonio down to the Rio Grande.
Our
captain he informed us, perhaps he thought it right,
"Before
we reach the station, we''ll surely have to fight."
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Texas Rangers.
This image available for
photographic prints
and downloads
HERE!
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The
oldest law enforcement agency in the United States, the
Texas Rangers got their start in
1823 only two years after white settlement in
Texas
formally began. Following the Mexican War of Independence some 600
to 700 families moved to
Texas;
however it had no regular army to protect its new citizens. New Empresario Stephen F. Austin soon began to organize experienced
frontiersmen as “rangers” in informal groups to protect the settlers
against
Indian attacks and other criminal elements.
It
was not until November 24, 1835 that
Texas
lawmakers officially organized the force that has since been known as the
Texas Rangers.
Beginning with a
complement of fifty-six men in three companies, the Rangers
grew quickly as their numbers increased to more than 300 by 1837. Though officially sanctioned and their numbers increased, the
Rangers
served sparingly in their first few years.
During
Texas'
fight for independence from Mexico, the Rangers
sometimes served as scouts and couriers. Other menial tasks were also
assigned to them such as retrieving cattle, escorting refugees, and
destroying supplies and equipment left behind by the Mexicans.
Once independence was
gained and the land became the Republic of
Texas,
the lawmen continued to see very little duty under President Sam
Houston. However, when Mirabeau B. Lamar became President in
1838, he rejected Houston's frontier policies of friendship with the
Indians and engaged the Rangers
in war against the tribes. Congress allowed him to recruit eight
companies of mounted volunteers and maintain a company of fifty-six
Rangers. A month later, he then provided for five similar companies in Central
and South
Texas.
Over the next three years the Rangers
waged all-out war against the
Indians, successfully participating in a number of battles
including the Council House Fight in San Antonio, the raid on Linnvile,
and the Battle of Plum Creek. By the time that Lamar's
administration was over, the end of the Lamar administration,
Texans
had severely damaged the strength of the most powerful tribes.
When
Sam Houston was reelected to the presidency in December, 1841 he saw
the effectiveness of the Rangers and on January 29, 1842 approved a
law that officially provided for a company of mounted men to "act as
Rangers." As a result, 150 Rangers
under Captain
John Coffee "Jack" Hays, were assigned to protect the
southern and western portions of the
Texas
frontier. Houston's foresight in this decision proved successful
in helping to repel the Mexican invasions of 1842, as well as
shielding the white settlers against
Indian attacks over the next three years.
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Hays
was also responsible for improving the quality of recruitments and
initiating tough training programs for the new Rangers, as
well as initiating an "esprit de corps" within his command. From
this group came a number of celebrated ranger captains including W. A. A.
"Big Foot" Wallace, Ben and Henry McCulloch, Samuel H. Walker, and Robert
Addison "Ad" Gillespie.
Texas
officially became part of the United States in 1846, which also started
the Mexican War when the U.S. attempting to establish the boundary at the
Rio Grande River. During the two year affair, the
Texas Rangers were called on to
assist the American Army and soon achieved worldwide fame as a fighting
force. Superbly mounted with a large assortment of weapons the
Rangers were found to be so successful against Mexican guerillas, that
they soon earned the name "los diablos Tejanos" or the " Texas
Devils."
When the Mexican War
ended on February 2, 1848, the United States assumed responsibility for
protecting the
Texas
frontier. Having no official function, the Rangers
soon lost a number of its famous captains and frontier defenders. A
decade later in the Spring of 1858, they briefly saw combat again when
they were sent north to the Red River to settle a band of
Comanche
Indians.
After
Texas
seceded from the United States during the
Civil War in 1861, an
organization was orgainzed in Houston, called Terry's
Texas Rangers. Under the
leadership of Colonel Benjamin Franklin Terry, many of the former Rangers
enlisted under his command.
During the reconstruction
period of 1865-1873, the Rangers were
designated as state police. A dark period in their history, they were
charged with enforcing unpopular new laws that came with rejoining the
United States. Among the war weary Texans, the Rangers
fell into disrepute. During
this period, the
Rangers acted as a military type police unit when enforce the new laws
or fighting
Indians
or Mexicans. However, when hunting down
outlaws, they functioned more as lawmen and
posses.
Their role changed once again in May, 1874,
when the state Democrats returned to power and Governor Richard Coke,
along with the Legislature, appropriated $75,000 to organize six companies
of 75 Rangers each. By this time,
Texas
was overrun with
outlaws,
Indians
ravaging the western frontier, and Mexican bandits pillaging and murdering
along the Rio Grande River.
The new troops were stationed at strategic
points over the state and were known as the Frontier Battalion. During
this era, the Ranger Service held a place somewhere between that of an
army and a police force.
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Painting of a
Texas Ranger
by Hermon Adams |
In 1877, the
Texas Rangers found themselves on
the outlaw
trail, pursuing
John Wesley Hardin.
Hardin, who had killed Charles Webb, a deputy sheriff in Brown County
in 1874, left the state when he began to be relentlessly pursued. However, one
Texas Ranger by the named John Barclay Armstrong, better known as
“McNelly’s Bulldog,” received permission to pursue Hardin across state
lines. Finally catching up with the notorious outlaw on a train in
Pensacola, Florida, the inevitable shoot out occurred. When the smoke
cleared, Hardin had been knocked unconscious, one of his gang members
killed and the rest were arrested on July 23, 1877.
Continued Next
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Great American Bars and Saloons
By
Kathy Weiser
Owner/Editor of Legends of America
Kathy Weiser's first venture into the publishing world takes you into the
many watering holes of America's past, particularly the numerous
saloons
that sprouted up during our nation's
Wild West
days. This great
photographic review displays hundreds of
vintage photographs from
California
to
Arizona, the mining camps of
Colorado, all the way to New
York and its turbulent days of
Prohibition.
Hardcover, 2006, 224 Pages.
Signed by the author!!
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