Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Meixner Family History #13 - Another Move for the Meixner Family

Before I get started on the next chapter of this family's life I'm taking a short side trip.


Texas Highway Map

If you take a close look at the map above Robertson County is on the far right and is outlined in orange.  Milam County is just west of Robertson and outlined in green.  Just to the northwest of Milam is Bell County (outlined in blue) and to the west of Milam is Williamson County (outlined in pink).

These four counties played important roles in my family history.  The Meixners origiinally settled in Robertson Co. and then moved to Bell Co.  Bell County is where my grandmother's family, the Armisteads, settled after they left Florida.  My mother's family, the Galbreaths, settled in Milam Co.  Later on the Galbreaths would move next door to Williamson County.  Mom and dad met and fell in love in Georgetown in Williamson Co. My dad came there from Concho County, where he grew up, and was attending Southwestern University. Mom was working for a professor at Southwestern.  I hope to cover all this in future posts but I wanted to point out the significance of these four counties in my family's history.

Now back to the story.

When did the Meixner Family make their next move?  If family stories are correct about the location and timing of the tragic deaths of the two little girls, that it happened in Robertson Co. on Good Friday, then the Meixner family's next move occurred some time between Easter 1882 and the year 1884.  I base this on the above information and the fact that I found a copy of the Bell County Tax List for 1884 showing Frank Meixner's name.

Where did they move to?  My cousin Claudia told me they moved about 60 miles northwest and settled near a little community called Little River in Bell County.  Bell County was originally a part of Robertson's Colony just as Robertson County was.  The first Anglo settlements in this area began in the 1830s.  The area was abandoned and resettled a couple times before  peace treaties were signed in 1843-44 with the Indians.  The treaties resulted in a decrease in Indian raids into the county and helped stabilize the area.  The county was formed on Jan. 22, 1850 and named for Peter H. Bell.  Belton was made the county seat.  In 1880 Bell County had a population of 20,517.  (1)

Little River, Texas is about 9 miles south of Temple and about 9 miles a little southeast of Belton.  It is just north of the Little River, which gave the town its name.   It is one of the earliest settlements in Bell County.  Families settled here after a fort was built  along the river in 1836 to guard against Indian attacks.  The community only had a population of 25 in 1890.  (2)


Google Earth Map

You can see the farm land in the picture above.  I noted the names of the town of Little River, center right, and the river, Little River, lower left, and then the Leon River, which flows into the Little River, is on the upper left.  Somewhere in this picture, where all this farm land is pictured, is where I would speculate the Meixner family settled.  Some where between Little River, TX and the Leon River, or possibly more to the north and close to the Leon River.  I will develop this thought a little more later.

So why did they move yet again?  I don't know.  My speculation would be that Frank may have heard of a better opportunity as a tenant farmer in Bell County.  At this time nearly all of Bell County was divided into farm land and was not a part of the plantation economy.  Over 41 percent of the county's farms were worked by tenants.  Tenant farming may have offered a better opportunity or at least sounded better than what the plantation life offered.  Possibly, with the death of his two children, Frank wanted to get away from the unhealthy living conditions of the plantation and the Brazos River bottoms.

How did Frank make a living?  I believe Frank must have been working for someone else when he moved to Bell County.  Here are the 1884 and 1885 Bell County Tax Rolls.


1884 Bell County Tax Roll (3)


1885 Bell County Tax Roll (3)

On the 1884 tax roll Frank is listed at the very top.  He showed no land, no carriage or buggy, no horse or mule, and no cattle.  In 1885 he is the last name on the list and he showed one horse worth $10.  Clearly this would suggest either he was working for someone or he was a tenant farmer using the owners equipment because he did not list any equipment or live stock that he could have been using to make a living.

Over the next several years there were some good times in Bell County.  On Sep 23, 1884 a daughter, Minnie May, was born and on July 10, 1887 a son, Henry, was born.

My dad (Robert Harmon Meixner) had an account in his book about his father that must have taken place sometime around 1886 or 87 and involves the Leon River.  This is one reason I said the family must have lived close to this river.  Here is my dad's story:  "I remember Dad (Harmon Meixner) telling a few things that happened during his boyhood.  He said that one time his dad had set some trot lines in the Leon River.  Grandfather became ill and was resting in bed.  Dad said that he felt called upon to run the trot lines.  Dad was a little boy about seven years of age.  He took it upon himself to go down to the river, get into the little make-shift boat they had, and go out to run the trot lines.  The river was rising and as he made his way down the lines he discovered that a very large yellow catfish was on he trot line.  He went on toward the big fish and attempted to take it off the line.  The fish gave a tremendous flounce and turned the boat over with my Dad holding on to the fish.  I don't know how he got the fish out and on the bank, but he did - regardless of the rising river and the swift water.  He took his fish to the house and his father was very disturbed because of what he had done.  He told my Dad never to attempt a fete like that again.  My Dad sad that grandmother cleaned the catfish and they had a huge dishpan full of yellow catfish meat to eat.  I am sure that my grandfather enjoyed the fish and was proud of his little son."

One story that may not have been a happy story is one my Aunt Peaches tells of Frank Meixner, Jr.  She said Frank Jr. left home at an early age, possibly around 1885.  He would have been around 13 or 14.  The story goes that he traveled north to Waco and had to cross a toll bridge to get across the Brazos River.  He did not have the 10 cents to pay the toll so he asked a stranger driving a covered wagon if he could get in to the wagon and in that way was able to cross the Brazos.  She also said, "He got a job for room and board grubbing stumps (that means digging them out by hand with a shovel and a pick or hoe) and milking cows.  He told of having to wear a woman's bonnet because the cows were only used to a woman milking them."  He also plowed the fields with a yolk of oxen (see below).  In my dad's book he said Frank left home and no one in the family knew where he was until he was a grown man.


Picture I found on the internet of a yolk of oxen.

Image Source Page: http://www.wvpics.com/cattle.htm

In 1887 my grandfather took what I think must have been a very happy and rewarding step.  He applied for citizenship of the United States of America.


This is a copy of the application my cousin Claudia Brown located in the courthouse in Belton, TX.

I can only imagine the pride Frank must have felt when he went down to the courthouse in Belton, TX and made the application.  He had taken a great risk to leave his homeland and come to America.  Now, as stated in the application above, he would  "renounce forever all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign Prince, Potentate, State or Sovereignty whatsoever, and particularly any and all allegiance to the Emperor Osterich of the Osterich Empire (Austria) and that he will bear true allegiance to the United States, and support the Constitution of the same."  This statement was sworn to and subscribed before the county clerk on July 4, 1887.  Quite a nice 4th of July celebration I think!

Next time:  More Difficult Times for the Meixner Family

References:
(1)  Seymour V. Connor and Mark Odintz, "BELL COUNTY," Handbook of Texas Online(http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hcb06), accessed October 09, 2012. Published by the Texas State Historical Association.

(2)  Mark Odintz, "LITTLE RIVER ACADEMY, TX," Handbook of Texas Online(http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hjl10), accessed October 09, 2012. Published by the Texas State Historical Association.

(3)  "Texas, County Tax Rolls, 1846-1910," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1/VBMJ-BSR : accessed 20 Sep 2012), Frank Meixner 1884 & 1885.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

Meixner Family History #12 - Texas: Their New Home

The Meixner family probably arrived in Texas sometime in Sep. 1881.

On Oct. 26, 1881 at 3:00 in the afternoon a gunfight broke out in Tombstone, Arizona Territory, with Marshall Wyatt Earp, Morgan Earp, Virgil Earp and Doc Holliday on one side and the Clanton brothers and Mclaury brothers on the other side.  This gunfight would later be known as the "Gunfight at the OK Corral". (1)


Tombstone, Arizona Territory (2)

On Dec 25, 1881 in Waco, TX, The Waco Daily Examiner published a newspaper where Sanger Brothers was advertising clothes, boots, shoes, and carpet for sale and R.S. Mills advertised "Staple and Fancy Groceries".  (Sanger Brothers was started by Isaac Sanger in 1857 in McKinney, TX and later was joined by his brothers to open stores along major railroad lines in Texas.  Sanger Brothers would later become Sanger-Harris a prominent part of Dallas business and Texas history. (3))


The Waco Daily Examiner. (Waco, TX), Sunday, Dec. 25, 1881. (4)

"The Meixner family settled on the Brazos River bottoms.  I am sure that they were very poor and that they had to live in impoverished quarters.  Dad said that the water snakes, perhaps some of the poisonous, would slither round on the rafters and often fall down on the beds.  It makes one shudder to think of such uncomfortable conditions."  This quote is what my dad wrote in his unpublished book titled "Memoirs of Robert Harmon Meixner, Sr., July 10, 1910 - June 13, 1994" describing what his dad had told him about living on the Brazos River bottoms.  One article I read about Robertson County confirmed there were ..."numerous snake species, including the poisonous copperhead, cottonmouth, coral snake, and rattlesnake"... (5)

I would think living conditions were very bad  for the farm laborers on the plantation. This thought is basesd on the fact the plantation owners first used slave labor, then ex-slaves and convict labor.  I can't imagine the working conditions were much better for immigrants and other workers in the 1880s.  Wages were $12 to $15 per month plus "keep". (6)

Rasche Hearne's home was located in the community of Sutton 5 miles south of Hearne, TX.  (7)  Hearne traveled from his home to the several farms located in the bottom lands.  I assume the Meixners lived in the bottoms near the area where they worked.  I don't know for sure that Frank Meixner worked as a farm laborer.  Claudia suggested he might have worked as a butcher for the plantation, since that is the occupation listed in the ship's records when he came to the U.S.

As you look at the map below, Hearne is located in the center of the map.  The light area from upper left toward the lower right is part of the Brazos River bottom lands.  I'm guessing that somewhere to the left of Hearne and Sutton would be where the Meixner family lived.


Google Earth Maps.

Up to this point it seems to me the Meixner family's new life in America had been pretty difficult.  Unfortunately it would get worse.

In the 1800's typhoid was very prevalent.  Typhoid fever is an acute illness associated with fever that  is most often caused by the Salmonella typhi bacteria.  The bacteria are deposited in water or food by a human carrier and are then spread to other people in the area.  Symptoms include:  confusion, abdominal pain, generalized aches and pain, fever (often up to 104 degrees), intestinal bleeding, diarrhea, etc.  Death occurred from overwhelming infection, pneumonia, and intestinal bleeding.  Prior to antibiotics the fatality rate was 20% or more.  From 1880 to 1920 typhoid killed an estimated one million people.  (8)

On Good Friday, April 7, 1882, all the family was sick with typhoid fever.  The two little girls, 6 year old Herminia and 7 year old Theresia, died.  (9)

Claudia said her mother "heard it was raining the day they tried to bury them and the little coffins floated up in the graves".  "Frank was ill with the fever and kept calling for one of them to bring him some water, not knowing that they were dead."  My dad wrote in his book:  "All of the Meixner family were in bed with the smallpox."  (He remembered hearing it was smallpox though typhoid seems to me to be more likely the cause.)  "Two of the girls died.  There was no help to be had so grandfather Meixner had to bury his own daughters."

In two weeks:  Another Move for the Meixner Family

References:
1) & 2)  Wikipedia.org, wikipedia/gunfight_at_the_O.K._corral.
3)  Diana J. Kleiner, "SANGER BROTHERS," Handbook of Texas Online (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/ijsqi), accessed September 22, 2012.  Published by the Texas State Historical Association.
4)  The Waco Daily Examiner. (Waco,Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 249, Ed. 1, Sunday, December 25, 1881, Newspaper; digital images, (http://texashistory.unt.edu/ ark:/67531/metapth112235/ : accessed August 23, 2012), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, http://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries, Denton, Texas.
5)  James L. Hailey and Christoher Long, "ROBERTSON COUNTY," Handbook of Texas Online (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hcr09), accessed August 20,2012. Published by the Texas State Historical Associaton.
6)  http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~txrober2/Carson_Thesis/ CarsonChapterV.html
7)  Richard Allen Burns, "Sutton, TX", Handbook of Texas online (http://www.tshaoline.org/handbook/online/articles/hvsdf), accessed September 09, 2012.  Published by the Texas State Historical Association.
8)  www.medicinenet.com
9)  Family sources said the girls died on Good Friday in 1882.  According to www.timeanddate.com Good Friday fell on April 7 in 1882.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Colorado Vacation

In July Kay and I were so excited to have all our family with us on a trip to Breckenridge, Colorado.  Wes, Jeoffrey, and Maggie from California and Kristina, Dan, Connor, and Caleb from Texas.  It was a fantastic trip!  Seeing the 3 grand kids play together was a great treat for us.


We went trout fishing but were shut out.  We still had fun trying our hand at it.  I had not been trout fishing since I was in high school.  Connor stuck with it longer than I did.  He is quite the fisherman.






We also went hiking on the side of a very steep mountain.  (Which I must add scared PaPa greatly).











We visited a local gold mine.











Went up the mountain in the gondola (also scared PaPa).



Visited the theme park and some rode the rides (yep, that bob sled thing scared me as well, no I didn't ride it, just watched Kristina, Dan, Connor, and Caleb ride it).  (I have now also seen Brice's scars from when he crashed riding this ride.)



Toured the town.




Had breakfast outside with a view of the mountains.


Saw the sled dogs with Connor.







And much more.







Kay and I loved every minute.  Thank you to our children for letting us share a great time with them and our grand children on vacation.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Meixner Family History #11 - The Journey (Part 6)

Frank Meixner was able to turn a disastrous situation at Castle Garden, where he was swindled out of his money, into a workable situation of having a job in Texas and transportation to get there.  I wonder if he and Theresia were able to stay excited abut being in a new country?  Were they looking forward to Texas or dreading it?  Were they already second guessing their decision to come to America or were they pushing forward with hope and optimism?



I don't know how long it took to ride the train 1650 miles to Waco, Texas.  I'm sure they didn't take the same route Google prescribes (as shown in this picture) and I would think the distance was most likely longer than the 1650 miles shown on this map.

Google Map

How many train changes did they have to make?  In late August it would have been hot.  It couldn't have been a pleasant ride.  Hot, dirty, crowded, poor accommodations all come to mind though I do not know that as a fact.

In 1880 Texas had a population of 1,591,749.  Hearne, Texas had a population of 1,421.  Located in the south west section of Robertson County (pop. in 1880 22,383), Hearne is some 90 miles north east of Austin and 65 miles south east of Waco.  Robertson County is named after Sterling Robertson.  In the 1830s Robertson received a contract for colonization from Mexico to bring colonists into Texas.  He worked diligently for many years to bring settlers into a part of Texas that became known as Robertson's Colony.  The first Texas Congress established Roberson County in 1837.  The present limits were set by The Texas Legislature in 1846. (2)


In 1852 the Hearne family, led by their patriarch Christopher Columbus Hearne, settled in Robertson County.  Hearne, Texas was named for the elder Hearne.  They owned 10,000 acres of land and operated large cotton plantations on this very fertile Brazos River bottom land.  Horatio "Rasche" Hearne's plantation consisted of 3600 acres of land. (3)

Cotton was a major crop in the mid 1800's.  Crop production was limited by how long it took to get the crops to market.  In 1869 the railroad line made it's way in to Hearne.  This momentous event set off a significant change in the way the plantation owners would work their plantations.  Bales of cotton could now be shipped the 50 miles to the nearest market in one day instead of the two weeks it took 1000 ox carts to get the same amount of cotton to market before.  This development meant the owners could plant more acres of cotton, however there was one small hitch, they had to have laborers to work these additional acres.   The plantation owners tried working local convicts but this practice didn't last long before it was stopped. (4)

In the early 1870's Rasche Hearne and other owners solved their labor problem by traveling to North Carolina to hire laborers to transport back to Texas to work the plantations.  This worked well until the North Carolina plantation owners started running short of laborers.  One source said this practice stopped when Mr. Hearne was "escorted" out of the state. (5)  We know that by 1881 Rasche Hearne had found a new source for labor:  immigrants.  So Rasche Hearne ended up at Castle Garden on Aug 26, 1881 and hired my great grandfather to come to Texas to work.

The Meixner family got off the train in Texas after 35 days of traveling.  This time frame came from my cousin Henry Meixner who said he heard the story from his father Frank, Jr. I'm assuming this is the time from their homeland to Texas.

Finally the Meixner family was ready to settle down in Texas and their long journey was over.

Next:  Texas, Their New Home

References:

1) Google Maps

2) James L Hailey and Christopher Long, "Robertson County," Handbook of Texas Online (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hcr09), accessed August 20, 2012.  Published by the Texas State Historical Association.

3) James L. Hailey, "Hearne, TX: Handbook of Texas Online (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hfho2), accessed August 27, 2012.  Published by the Texas State Historical Association.

4) Robertson County books, Masters Theses -  Early Development of Robertson County, by Ivory Freeman Carson, 1954, North Texas State College Master's Thesis, taken from U.S. GenWeb Project - hosted by Roots Web an Ancestry.com community.

5) Hearne, by Melissa Freeman, Copyright 2012, Published by Arcadia Publishing, Charleston, S.C.