The Sutton-Taylor Feud of DeWitt, Gonzales, Karnes, and surrounding counties began shortly after the Civil War ended. The blood feud continued into the 1890s when the final court case was settled with a governmental pardon. Of all the Texas feuds, the one between the Sutton and Taylor forces lasted longer and covered more ground than any other. William E. Sutton was the only Sutton involved, but he had many friends to wage warfare against the large Taylor family. The causes are still shrouded in mystery and legend, as both sides argued they were just and right. In April 1868 Charles Taylor and James Sharp were shot down in Bastrop County, alleged horse thieves attempting to escape. During this period many men were killed "while attempting to escape." The killing on Christmas Eve 1868 of Buck Taylor and Dick Chisholm was perhaps the final spark that turned hard feelings into fighting with bullets and knives. William Sutton was involved in both killings. "Who sheds a Taylor's blood, by a Taylor's hand must fall" became a fact of life in South Texas. Violent acts between the two groups now followed. The military reacted against the killing of two of their soldiers in Mason County by Taylors. The State Police committed acts that were not condoned by their superiors in Austin. Mobs formed in Comanche County in retaliation for John Wesley Hardin's killing of a Brown County deputy sheriff. One mob "liberated" three prisoners from the DeWitt County jail, thoughtfully hanging them close to the cemetery for the convenience of their relatives. An ambush party killed James Cox, slashing his throat from ear to ear—as if the buckshot in him was not sufficient. A doctor and his son were called from their home and brutally shot down. Texas Rangers attempted to quell the violence, but when they were called away, the killing began again. In this definitive study of the Sutton-Taylor Feud, Chuck Parsons demonstrates that the violence between the two sides was in the tradition of the family blood feud, similar to so many other nineteenth-century American feuds. His study is well augmented with numerous illustrations and appendices detailing the feudists, their attempts at treaties, and their victims.
Delony's article is a reprint of a short book he privately published in 1937. ... History (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2001); James McPherson, "Southern Comfort," New York Times Review of Books 48 (April 12, 2001): 28, 30-31.
This story of Texas during the years of Reconstruction will be of interest to the reader encountering it for the first time, to students and historians interested in the old regular troubles will find new material here as well as many ...
... Frances Cherry, Assistant Clerk—Wilson County Court, Floresville, TX; Marc Coker, Independent Historian; Caddo Mills, TX; Ron DeLord, Founder, CLEAT (Combined Law Enforcement Association of Texas), Georgetown, TX; Mickey Dennison, ...
Judge A. K. Foster, Lavaca County, to AAAG Lt. Louis V. Carsiac, February 6, 1869, Lt. Canfield to AAAG, April 4, 1869, SheriffW. H. Coleman to AG, February 5, 1869, LR, Box 23, DT, 5MD, RG 393, NA. 2. Foster to Carsiac, February 6, ...
The âSutton-Taylor Feudâ erupted from this tinderbox in DeWitt County, Texas.Written by a descendant of a feudist, this book is not a traditional family account.
Dallas: Curtis Media Corp., 1986. Askins, Charles. Texans, Guns and History. New York: Winchester Press, 1970. Baker, T. Lindsay. Ghost Towns of Texas. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1986. . The Polish Texans.
Porter , Jack . “ For Knowledge and Character : Goodnight Baptist College Training Launched in 1898. ” Amarillo ( Tex . ) Sunday News- Globe , 14 August 1966 , sec . D , p . 16 . Porter , Millie Jones . Memory Cups of Panhandle Pioneers ...
CU 1OO O OUT 2 This man was also Dutch Henry . Dutch Henry ' s voice was unmistakable . So was his horse – the big chestnut with the white crescent moon on its forehead , that had led the herd out of the outlaw corral , then pivoted ...
"Book is a biography of Texas Ranger Lee Hall, born in North Carolina in 1849 and died in Texas in 1911. His career ranged all over Texas but mainly in South Texas and the Panhandle"--
Bill O'Neal uses the tried and true approach of C.L. Sonnichsen, but his in-depth understanding of the family dynamics involved in the story gives the finished product greater than usual strength.