Friday, October 25, 2019

Oldest Historical Marker in Travis County?

Sometimes historical markers themselves become historical. In 1935/1936 the State of Texas Legislature created a commission to celebrate the 100th anniversary of Texas independence from Mexico. Part of this consisted of placing granite and bronze markers around Texas. These Texas Centennial Markers are in a way themselves historical [1].

But what is the oldest historic marker in Travis County? That distinction likely goes to the marker about the scalping of Josiah Wilbarger (https://www.hmdb.org/Marker.asp?Marker=135942) [2]:

Josiah Pugh Wilbarger
In Memoriam

Marking the spot where
Josiah Pugh Wilbarger
of Austin's Colony was stabbed
and scalped by the Indians in 1832
while locating lands for the Colonies.

Born in Bourbon Co. Ky. Sept. 10, 1801
Died in Bastrop Co. Tex. April 11, 1845

A true Pioneer and Patriot.
We honor the spirit of sacrifice.
Reverenced and erected by his descendants.


While the Texas Historical Commission's site atlas has this marker listed as one of the 1936 Texas Centennial Markers, it doesn't look like the other markers, and evidence indicates it is older, and quite possibly the oldest in Travis County. Here's a story from The Austin American, 12 Aug 1966, p.40:
Wilbarger Marker 1st in Travis

Josiah Pugh Wilbarger's ghost is still strong. At least, feeling for the location of his marker, dedicated to the day he was scalped out near Pecan Springs, is still strong.

So it appeared a couple of weeks ago when the Austin City Council voted to let the marker remain where it is, on the old Manor Road, near its intersection with East 51st.

That was when the Travis County Historical Survey Committee requested that the marker be moved from its present obscure location over to the Mueller Municipal Airport building, where more people could see it and appreciate the fact that wild Indians used to roam where jet aircraft now zoom into the sky.

The committee's request was made to aviation director Vance E. Murphy, who took it to the council for decision.

Murphy wrote of the scalping incident when he outlined the history of Austin’s aviation in the May, 1965, issue of the city’s newsletter, “City Perspective.”

Mrs. Jessie McIlroy Smith, chairman of the survey committee, said the Wilbarger marker was set up in the late 1920s, and as such was probably the first historical marker in Travis County. Spur for the county survey committee’s concern is History Appreciation Month, July 24-Aug. 23.

The story of Wilbarger has been recounted in almost all historical summaries of Austin and vicinage, and a dramatic dream incident which led to the saving of Wilbarger's life, so that he could live another 12 years in Central Texas, was the basis for a ballet composed by Barbara Carson and performed by the Austin Ballet Society in 1964.

Wilbarger and four other men, members of Austin’s Colony, were scouting for colonial lands near Pecan Springs about four miles east of present-day Austin in August, 1832 when they were attacked by Indians. Two men, Thomas Christian and William Strother, were killed. Wilbarger was stabbed and scalped and left for dead under a cedar tree. And the other two men evaded historical immorality by escaping.

Mrs. Ruben Hornsby, a pioneer’s wife, had a dream in which she saw Wilbarger still alive. Her near-hysteria prompted her husband and some other men to go find Wilbarger and bring him back to the Hornsby home.

Wilbarger, who had been born in Bourbon County, Ky. in 1801, did not die until 1845, in Bastrop county ... [Wilbarger County] across the Red River from Oklahoma was named for him.

His family later erected the marker, on property recently acquired by the city of Austin for navigation easements in the glide zone near the airport.

Another article from the Austin American-Statesman, 12 Aug 1931, p.45 confirms the marker was in place before 1931. In the article, simply titled "Historical Markers", the author wrote:
Not long ago the spot where a man named Wilbarger was scalped by Indian raiders was marked on the road between Austin and Manor by a monument. Each time I pass there I want to pause and read the Inscription. I call up in my mind a picture of Wilbarger's suf­fering—scalped, crawling half a mile for water, his life saved, and living 13 years without being able to wear a hat. A small item, and a romantic one.

 

1973 Pecan Springs School Marker; 1985 Wilbarger Marker Moved

In 1973 another marker was erected near the old Wilbarger marker at the original site of Pecan Springs School; that marker referenced the scalping of Wilbarger:

Site of Pecan Springs School

In community where scalping and dramatic rescue of Josiah Wilbarger occurred in 1833. By 1875 area had developed so much that a schoolhouse was built at this site. Original 30 x 40 – foot structure was set on 4.68 acres of land. A Mr. Goodnight was the first teacher; he had 85 pupils in one-room school.

Later, under county system, this became District Number 61. Its southern boundary was the Colorado River. By 1943 it had six teachers. It was annexed to Austin in 1951; closed in 1956.


Both the Wilbarger and Pecan Springs School markers are what I call "It happened here" markers: markers placed at the site of a historic event or location. While it had escaped being moved in 1966, the progress of development finally caught up with the old Wilbarger marker and in 1985 it was moved to its current location. From the Austin American-Statesman, 3 Oct 1985, p.55:
Marker moved

Possibly the best known historical marker in the area marks the story of Wilbarger, the man who was scalped and lived to tell about it.

Recently the historical marker was moved to a new home in Bartholomew Park near the intersection of Berkman Drive and 51st Street. This places it where more people can see it and also keeps it in the same area where the scalping and miraculous recovery occurred.

The Wilbarger incident is a fascinating part of local and Texas history which is now easier to find.

Lei Hawkins, John Herndon, and Austin Parks and Recreation Department staff member Donald Spence got the move accomplished.

Ironically, while the 1985 relocation was intent on making the marker easier to find, the marker's location today in a remote corner of Bartholomew Park just feet from the very busy intersection of Berkman Drive and 51 Street makes pedestrian access to the marker difficult. From inside the park the marker is largely hidden from view by bushes with no indication of its presence. The closest parking with the marker in view is a convenience store / gas-station across Berkman; even with a cross-walk, traffic here makes for an unpleasant crossing at the intersection.

Maybe this old marker is ready for a new location!

Photos, Maps


The marker today sits inside Bartholomew Park all but hidden from view.

1954 USGS map showing original location of marker and Pecan Springs School

1952 aerial photo showing original locations of marker, Pecan Springs School. Compare to USGS map.
Original marker location on today's roads. The marker was originally at the intersection of 51st and Manor Rd. That section of Manor Rd. is now Old Manor Rd, and 51st. has been re-routed. Correction: Image incorrectly calls it a 1936 marker; it is listed as such in the THC site atlas but likely dates to late 1920s.

Footnotes

[1] More here https://www.thc.texas.gov/preserve/projects-and-programs/state-historical-markers/1936-texas-centennial-markers

[2] Josiah's brother John W. Wilbarger in his book Indians Depredations in Texas puts the date at 1833.



Thursday, October 24, 2019

Edward H. Rogers Homestead. A Hidden Historic Gem, ca. 1861

The Rogers Homestead is a hidden (literally!) gem in Austin, Texas along the MoPac (old I&GN) railroad tracks, hidden from view by the surrounding modern business development.

The property is located at lat/long may be the easiest way to find it on Google Maps:  30°23′53″N, 97°43′44″W


Rogers Homestead is located next to the MoPac rails hidden from view. Click to enlarge.

Register of National Historic Places.

The property is on the Register of Historic Places Inventory of the U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service. Below is quoted from the nomination form, October 29, 1974, and describes the property before restoration.
"The buildings were most probably constructed by Edward H. Rogers at the time of his marriage to Sallie A. Moss in January of 1861 making the structure one of the very few constructed in the Austin area between 1861 and 1865. Rogers and his wife first occupied the house, followed by their son Edward H. Rogers [Jr.] who lived there until his death in 1937. The house appears to have been vacant since that time.

The major significance of the complex lies in its representation of a mid-nineteenth century farm complex. Agriculturally, it is a good example of the many small farmsteads once common in the rural areas around Austin. The significance of the complex in relation to communications is associated with its location on a principal road from Austin to Duval and Bagdad. This road served as a main artery to Burnet and at a later date the Austin and North West and the Illinois (sic; they meant International) and Great Northern Railroad followed the road from Llano to Austin carrying granite for the present state capitol. The farm apparently served as a watering stop for wagons using the road.

The site consists of a three room stone house having a collapsed front porch, two log cribs and open board barn, two cisterns, the remains of a windmill, a recent shed and ruins of a small outbuilding and an addition to the house. It is fenced with a steel stake and barbed wire fence. Horses are presently kept on the property.

The joists are sawn juniper logs supported by plank and limestone sleepers. The floor consists of sawn planks possibly from the Jones and Rogers Mill. Doors are vertical planks held together with a pair of screwed-on wooden muntins. The roof is pine plank on a simple pitched frame on which the ridged metal is nailed.

The house plan consists of three rooms in a line with the middle room having exits to the front and back (closed “dog trot”). Side rooms open to the middle one.

The barn consists of two log crib enclosures and four plank enclosures separated by an open passage. The cisterns are bottle shaped and dry. The windmill frame has collapsed.

The father of Edward H. Rogers was James Burleson Rogers, one of the original settlers of Austin’s Little Colony. Rogers received his grant in 1831 at the mouth of Shoal Creek [where it empties into the Colorado River] and moved it shortly thereafter to its location north of the headwaters of Shoal Creek. Rogers served as an election judge for the Mina [Bastrop] district. Rogers’ brother Joseph was a member of the militia and was killed by Indians in 1837 at Rogers Hill beginning a cemetery at that spot.

Edward H. Rogers married Sallie A. Moss and received a tract from his father from Rogers’ grant, which he inherited officially in 1867 at Rogers death. E. H. and Sallie Rogers had a son Edward H., Jr. who died in 1937.

The house site is located on an abandoned segment of the Bagdad Road opened in the 1840s or 1850s between Austin and Bagdad in Williamson County. This road was a principal road northwest for a considerable time, probably until the 1930s.

The house is in reasonably good condition and is a stone variation of the Texas dog trot cabin, thereby being unique architecturally. The barn is in unusually good condition as are the cisterns. The house is a variation of the two room and hall frontier log cabin common in early Texas having two chimneys. Its style is unlike the early Anglo cabins in its construction and enclosed dog trot and considerably different in its plan from the German settlements. (See Alexander, D.B., 1966, Texas Homes of the Nineteenth Century.)"

 

Renovation of the Property, ca. 2001

The following expands on the property history, and its restoration ( taken from CarrAmerica Development Preserves Piece of Texas History, retrieved 10/3/2019 from https://www.dpr.com/media/review/fall-2001/carramerica-development-preserves-piece-of-texas-history )

CarrAmerica Development Preserves Piece of Texas History

Historic Homestead Restored on Site of Multi-Use Braker Pointe Project in Austin

"The historic E.H. Rogers Homestead in once rural Travis County has endured the rise of the Republic of Texas, native attacks, statehood, secession, war, recession and the coming of the railroads since it was established in the late 1830s. Today, rather than sharing the fate of numerous other historical sites that have been razed to make way for new development, this slice of history is being preserved and restored even as a new commercial development is constructed adjacent to it.

The careful blending of old and new is the overriding theme on the 40-acre Braker Pointe development in Austin, where DPR is constructing a new nine-story, 220,000-sq.-ft. office building, for CarrAmerica Realty, while also helping restore the old house and barn that comprise the original historic homestead. The multi-use development, as master-planned by Austin planners Richardson Verdoorn, is set in an area known as the “Silicon Hills,” where the high-tech market has generated a new development that now surrounds the old homestead. Braker Pointe will ultimately contain three Class A office buildings with about 365,000 sq. ft. of office space, as well as a hotel and motel.

Although for the last 70 years the property has been largely left to weekend horsemen and ranchers, the E.H. Rogers Homestead is thought to have once been a wagon train stopover and supply outpost for Austin travelers and cattle drives headed north. As part of the Braker Pointe development, approximately 1.5 acres of the original farm has been set aside for the restoration project and will provide a park-like setting for workers and visitors to enjoy, while also experiencing a bit of local history.

Driving the historic preservation efforts at Braker Pointe is Will Shepherd, AIA, vice president and senior project manager for CarrAmerica’s Austin division, a former Heritage Society of Austin president. Shepherd is also the force behind another historic preservation project in which DPR has been involved, the Pioneer Farms Living History Museum in Austin.

CarrAmerica has worked closely with Austin-based restoration consultant Gregory Free & Associates to develop a master plan for the homestead site that would preserve its history and allow new development to take place. According to Free’s document outlining the site’s history and its preservation plan, “The overriding themes of the site’s interpretation are continuity, progress, accommodation, sensitivity, and the blending of old and new, rather than just dwelling on the past.”

The interpretative period on which the historic restoration is based is the “era of railroads,” the decade of 1877-1887. That was a time in which E.H. Rogers became involved in negotiations with the International and Great Northern Railroad as it began to acquire right-of-way through the property. Ultimately, the railroad was built just in front of the Rogers property. A dramatic and functional new feature of the site plan is the reinstatement of the farm road leading from the MOPAC railroad. The reconstructed road aligns with the still existing gates on either side of the railroad. The road will lead from an outdoor dining area planned for the office tower through the center of the site to parking on the southeast, ending in a trailhead that will include interpretive and directional signage. Landscaping will feature informal native plantings along the paths, roses along fences, abundant wildflowers and strategically placed shade trees.

Restoring the site’s two historic, but dilapidated, buildings has involved shoring up their foundations, as well as restoring the original porch and roofs. A primary construction challenge for the DPR team has been locating certain materials used more than 100 years ago that were required for the restoration, such as the original shingles, siding and rough sawn lumber."

 

More ...

Read more about the death of Joseph Rogers by Indians on the "Path of the Pioneers" here:
https://traviscountyhistorical.blogspot.com/2015/04/path-of-pioneers-bastrop-to-austin-part_27.html

Photos

Photos of the house, one of two wells, and barn. Click to enlarge.


 








 

Aerials from 1954, 1964

The following aerial photos provide a look at the property as it was before Austin's explosive growth.

1964 aerial illustrating features of the homestead. Click to enlarge.


1954 aerial overlaid on Google Earth provides context for places, roads and rails