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The mention of Wilbarger Creek in Tex n Cal's thread about the gator reminded me of this story:

In August of 1833, Josiah Wilbarger and three companions were surveying land in central Texas in what is now within the limits of the city of Austin. But these were the days before Austin had been established, and the line of Anglo settlements ended at the Colorado River. The men were land speculators who had spent the previous night eight miles down the river at the home of Reuben and Sarah Hornsby at what was known as Hornsby’s Bend. This was the extreme frontier of the Texas of the 1830s, and Wilbarger and his friends were taking a risk venturing so far behind the settlement line.

Wilbarger and his brother Mathias had come to Texas in December 1826. For a year, Josiah taught school at Matagorda before moving north to La Grange in Fayette County. Later, Josiah and his wife Margaret moved farther up the Colorado River to a site ten miles up the river from Bastrop. Margaret was only nineteen years old when Josiah sent for her to come to Texas. Unwilling to give up all of the luxuries of the life she was leaving, Margaret had come to Texas on horseback with her feather mattress rolled up and tied behind her saddle.

On this day in August, Josiah and his three companions had stopped in the middle of the day for lunch in a grove of trees at Pecan Springs in what is now east Austin. They had just finished their noon meal when they were attacked by Indians. One of the surveyors, a man named Strother, was killed immediately, but two members of the party managed to reach their horses.

Wilbarger had unsaddled his horse when the men had stopped for lunch, so he attempted to climb on behind one of the two men who had been able to mount. Just as he reached for the back of the saddle to swing himself on, an arrow grazed his neck, and he fell to the ground still conscious but unable to move.

Believing Wilbarger to be dead, the two men who had survived the initial attack rode away. Wilbarger, paralyzed by the arrow, watched helplessly as the Indians took off Strother’s clothes and scalped him.

One can only imagine the terror Wilbarger must have felt as he was approached the Indians. The Indians pulled off Wilbarger’s clothes and prepared to scalp him. Scalping was a two-step process. First a cut was made around the top if the head, and then the scalp was removed by grabbing the hair and jerking. When the Indian jerked to remove Wilbarger’s scalp, Wilbarger later remembered that he “heard a sound like thunder” and lost consciousness.

Later that afternoon, Wilbarger regained consciousness. All was quiet on the banks of the springs. The Indians had left, and his friends were no where to be seen. Wilbarger was not certain how long he had been unconscious. He had been on the ground long enough for maggots to get into the top of his head, and the sun had burned his exposed skin. Weak but very thirsty, Wilbarger crawled to the nearby creek for water. To protect his head, he packed mud on his wound.

Wilbarger’s two companions, Haynie and Christian, made their way back to Hornsby’s Bend, where they reported the attack and what they believed to be the death of Strother and Wilbarger. It was too late in the day to safely return to the scene of the attack, and plans were made to return the next day to retrieve the bodies of the two men.

Meanwhile, Wilbarger realized that he was too weak from the loss of blood to make it back to Hornsby’s, so he propped himself against a large tree, and for several hours, he lapsed in and out of consciousness. During the long night, Wilbarger’s sister, Margaret Clifton, who lived in Missouri, appeared to him in a dream and said to him, “Josiah, stay where you are and your friends will come and get you.”

That night back at the Hornsby’s Bend, Sarah Hornsby was also dreaming. She dreamed that Wilbarger was wounded and bleeding but alive. She awoke Reuben to tell him what she had seen in her dream, but he replied, “it is just a dream, Sarah, go back to sleep.” Sarah did go back to sleep, but again the dream came to her, so she got up and prepared breakfast, determined to send her husband and the other men off at first light to find Wilbarger.

Retracing their path back to the scene of attack, the men found Wilbarger propped against the tree at the edge of the creek. He was so covered with blood that at first the men did not recognize him, but Wilbarger called out to them. Cleaning the wound as best that circumstances would allow, the men then took Wilbarger back to Hornsby’s Bend, where Sarah cared of him.

A messenger was sent down the Colorado to Wilbarger’s wife to tell her of the tragedy that had befallen her husband and his friends, and Margaret went to the Hornsby place to care for her husband. After Josiah had recovered sufficiently, Margaret had a wagon packed with feather mattresses and took Josiah home. News of the attack and Josiah’s dream was sent to his sister in Missouri. Word came back several weeks later that his sister had died the day of the Indian attack.

Josiah Wilbarger lived for several years after the attack at Pecan Springs. He never fully recovered from his wounds, and he wore a greased sock over the top of his head for protection. When a new doctor came to the area, Josiah was among the first to seek treatment in hopes of gaining some relief from the constant pain.

Josiah and Margaret continued to live on the Colorado River, where Josiah was a cotton farmer. One morning he was entering his gin house and struck his head going in the small door. The blow caused his wound to rupture, and he died on April 11, 1844. Josiah was survived by his wife and five children. Wilbarger County in West Texas is named for Josiah and his brother.

Unreal. Great post.

A premature death, so easily now preventable by todays technologically advanced lawyers.
History of this country is very much fun. Thanks for the post.
Originally Posted By kaywoodie
Ben,

I had two old maid cousins that lived in the Wilbarger house in Bastrop.

The original settlers here in the bottom land where I live were the Rogers. They as well as the Barton's, Browns(!!!) and Wilbargers all lived in this area. This area is refered to as either Utley (still on the map that way). Or Rogers Park.

One of the Rogers boys was killed and scalped as he cut firewood down on Wilbarger creek Mebbe 1/2 mile from the house here. He was about 16 or 17 at the time. Another massacre occurred to the Coleman family about 5 miles from here between us and Webberville.
https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fco18
The colonel has a marker up on the highway here too!
One bit of trivia: the Hornsbys mentioned in the story were the ancestors of Rogers Hornsby, a Hall of Fame baseball player, who played early in the 20th century.
The Wilbarger marker is at the corner of E.51st and Berkman drive just east of IH 35 in Austin. However the actual location of where the incident occurred is about a 1/2 mile further east behind the Austin Travis county Combined Traffic and Emergency Commuications Center. Down but the old Pecan Spring.
The old Hornsby cemetery was vandalized several years ago. Shame!
Originally Posted by Ringman
History of this country is very much fun. Thanks for the post.


What is your definition of fun?
I mentioned the Coleman family above. In John W. Wilbarger's (Josiah's brother) book "Indian Depredations In Texas" he mentions that during the Coleman fight several of the children were abLe to escape thru a trapdoor in The floor due the the quick thinking of the eldest Coleman son. He kept the Indians occupied by calling back and forth to imaginary fellow combatants to dupe the Indians into thinking there were more in the cabin than really was.
He also mentioned the lad used a "Jaeger" rifle. Now any of us who have been in the muzzleloading fraternity have a pretty good idea of what is now refered to as a Jaeger. But Wilbarger went on to describe the rifle as being an early form of breech loader. Remember the incident occurred in 1839. So it's anyone's guess as to what type of continental European firearm that kid may have had. There were many different renditions of many different little gunsmiths ideas to choose from!!!
The story can also be found in J. Frank Dobie's "Tales of Old-Time Texas", with this opening:

One cold night soon after he came to Texas, Bigfoot Wallace was sitting in the warm cabin of a settler down the Colorado River when a stranger wearing a strange-looking fur cap entered, stood bent over the fire for a few minutes, and then removed his headgear. At the sight of the raw-looking, hairless scalp thus exposed, Bigfoot Wallace broke the social code against asking questions.

“My friend, “ he ventured, “excuse me, but what is the matter with your head

“I have been scalped by Indians,” the stranger replied.

He was Josiah Wilbarger. He customarily wore his hat, even at the dinner table, from the pre-dawn hour of rising until bedtime when he put on a nightcap. The story of his scalping and of the dream that saved his life has been told in homes of old-time Texans and kept alive in print for more than a hundred years. It is one of the best known historical legends of the land.
That "greased sock" quote has me wondering whether he used a rendered fat, or actual "Axle Grease" from Pennsylvania,....honest to God bitumen crude.
A common "remedy", as was kerosene.

I can sympathize with the folks who relieved him of his scalp, being somewhat disenchanted with the average "real estate" / property pimp type from the get go.

GTC
Originally Posted by crossfireoops
That "greased sock" quote has me wondering whether he used a rendered fat, or actual "Axle Grease" from Pennsylvania,....honest to God bitumen crude.
A common "remedy", as was kerosene.

I can sympathize with the folks who relieved him of his scalp, being somewhat disenchanted with the average "real estate" / property pimp type from the get go.

GTC

I'd bet that it was bear grease. Bears were very abundant in Texas in the early days of settlement, especially east of the Balcones fault. My old friends, Joe Truett and Dan Lay, titled their book about the natural history of eastern Texas, "The Land of Bears and Honey".
That dang kaywoodie beat me to it again. The Wilbarger
monument is indeed about 6 blocks down the road here.
Hidden in plain sight.
Originally Posted by poboy
That dang kaywoodie beat me to it again. The Wilbarger
monument is indeed about 6 blocks down the road here.
Hidden in plain sight.


LOL! Yeah Mike. Down there at Bartholemew Park!!! Young son was playing disc golf there with friends a while back and said they saw this Messkin in the park with a Daisy 880 BB gun and one of them metal clip fish stringers full of Whitewings. Said he look like some homeless guy! LOL!
Quote
titled their book about the natural history of eastern Texas, "The Land of Bears and Honey".


Which brings to mind that since the honey bee is European, how quickly did they become widespread in the US? miles
Pretty quick Miles!!! Didn't take them long. Even in colonial time bees were quite prevalent!!! Natives took to them quickly too. There's the old Story of the younger twins brothers of Tecumseh. One may have died from anaphylactic shock from bee stings when they where robbing a hive. Don't really know the validity of the story.
Concerning the grease. In his epic "The Conquest of New Spain", Bernal Diaz mentions rendering the fat of some Indians killed so they had grease to "dress their wounds" with after a big battle!
I've read many places critter grease chewed or pounded into pemmican renders good dental health 'round the world.

Gator, bear, coon, baby seal, whale, you name it.

Dunno 'bout injungrease, I'm not a nurse. Guessing it's squaw, bucks are too lean.

Also reminds me of them cooked taters that David Crockett talked about during the Creek Indian Wars! :p
That was a great read. Thanks for sharing.

Jordan
Originally Posted by milespatton
Quote
titled their book about the natural history of eastern Texas, "The Land of Bears and Honey".


Which brings to mind that since the honey bee is European, how quickly did they become widespread in the US? miles




10 Spectacular Bees Native To The U.S. | Popular Science
www.popsci.com/science/.../10-spectacular-native-bees
Popular Science
Jun 19, 2013 - Honeybees aren't native to U.S., but these other amazing bees are. And they contribute to pollinating delicious American crops such as ...
great thread
Yes, it is.
good stuff mudhen smile
If you want to read more of this stuff reference the text I mentioned earlier by John Wesley Wilbarger; "Indian Depredations In Texas". State House Books did a reprint back in the 80's. Big thick book and all stories are pre 1845 stuff! Worth a look!!!
Now I gotta research cooked taters and Davy Crockett. Thanks a lot!

Wonder if they bothered to skalp us baldies.
Up in the Austin area in 1833, they were pushing their luck. That was Comanche land.
The Comanche had lots worse things for a prisoner than a scalping, had they taken a white boy back to their camp and let the squaws get hold of them, it would have taken a while to die.
Many such stories in Wilbargers book. Like the brother and sis taken in about 39 or 40 down by the old capital building in Austin. Which was a dog run cabin about 6th and Congress. They were found in NE New Mexico. Best I remember least the boy was several years later.
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