Monday, September 30, 2013

FRONTIER NEIGHBORHOOD NIGHT and FALL HAPPENINGS


YOU ARE INVITED TO HELP RESTORE
THE BRUSH ARBOR SOON

Richard Fadal with TexasScapes has donated new cedar posts to replace old ones and all we need now is FRIENDS to help take down the old and put up the new. 

 BECOME a FRIEND OF THE HOMESTEAD

Send me your name, address, email and phone number so I can contact you with the date and time to "RAISE THE ARBOR and information about other fun events at the Homestead .  




LOOKING BETTER,  HOMESTEAD:  As you stroll around the Homestead grounds, you might observe new window wood and a new addition to the back siding.  The newly installed grayish board and window frame replaced rotten boards when a misguided stream of water from the sprinkling system kept them soggy.  At the same time, the back portion of the metal roof was repaired by Dennis Galleria; no more leaks, alleluia!  Rain is good, but not inside the Homestead. 

Not shown here, but the Bee Barn, which houses artifacts found onsite before the Homestead was restored, also has deteriorating boards.  A new board will be installed before the Girl Scout tour on Sunday, October 6th.  Old stuff teaches many lessons.

Did you know kids love to press sorghum or river cane in the cane press?  The wedge shown above was cracked and is now replaced and ready for the energetic ones to do the job. 


 Recent rains rushed by the Homestead near the above steps, exposing tree roots. A few well placed rocks and additional dirt, makes for a smoother walking path now.

Did you ever see such Okra?  The Homestead summer garden still has some Eagle Pass blossoms that promise good eats.  The fall garden has been planted before the rains came with lettuce, cabbage, cilantro, dill, fennel and more.  As soon as sprouts show themselves, I will paint new plant markers.  Have you seen the painted rock markers for the summer garden?    What do you think of them?

 NEIGHBORHOOD FRONTIER NIGHT -  and HOMESTEAD OPEN HOUSE
 Wednesday, October 23rd 6:30 -8:30 PM
 Community Center 
    
THE TEXAS GENERAL LAND OFFICE presents  Buck Cole  with answers about what was here before Wells Branch with unique maps as prizes.  The Homestead will host an OPEN HOUSE beforehand at 6:30 PM for a walk-thru.  If you want to help greet people at the OPEN HOUSE and own a period costume to wear, please contact me, Virginia Almon at 512-993-7559.  Also, if you have any original documents or pictures of the Homestead restoration or about the beginnings of Wells Branch, consider bringing them too.  I hope to compile and scan them and return them to you as soon as possible.


Tuesday, December 11, 2012



LUMINARIES is coming.  Are you ready?   Check out the St. Nicholas Center.

The Real Santa Claus   www.stnicholascenter.org
Santa & St. Nicholas


Santa Claus is round and plump;
St. Nicholas is tall and thin.
Santa Claus wears a stocking cap;
St. Nicholas wears a bishop's hat.
Santa Claus comes December 25th;
St. Nicholas comes December 6th.
Santa Claus is often seen in stores;
St. Nicholas is often seen in churches.
Santa Claus flies through the air—from the North Pole;
St. Nicholas walked the earth, caring for those in need.
Santa Claus, for some, replaces Jesus at Christmas;
St. Nicholas, for all, points to Jesus at Christmas.
Santa Claus isn't bad;
St. Nicholas is just better!


—C. Myers & J. Rosenthal

http://pinterest.com/stnickcenter/st-nicholas-activities/
http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/kids-map/
http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/ship-game/
http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/draw-st-nicholas0/
http://www.stnicholascenter.org/pages/puzzles/

FIRST Family Tour with Zac Egan (left) and T. Brian (right)

September 15th 2-4 p.m. 

 

 



Wednesday, December 5, 2012

CODE OF THE WEST-ten principles to live by




 While reading the Wall Street Journal, I was delighted to learn about the Center for Cowboy Ethics and Leadership in Austin. You can also check out the article posted in Cowboys & Indians Magazine (cowboyindians.com)and click on the photograph of Roy Rogers to reach the website. When I was five years old, I was in love with Roy Rogers; he's still my favorite actor. He is one of the most trusted Americans who ever lived. What a perfect person to illustrate this article. When I think of "cowboy ethics," I recall watching Roy Rogers on my black and white television. What a wonderful model he was for American children of my generation. To quote the magazine article, "He was as good as they come. He was a straight shooter and could sit on  horse as if he were born in the saddle. He could yodel like nobody's business. He walked the straight and narrow in his hand-tooled boots and lived by a code worthy of his white Stetson."

James P. Owen and the Center for Cowboy Ethics and Leadership focus on the values that are part of our heritage, "values all Americans can share, no matter what our politics, our religion, or our station in life." Cowboys are heroic - not just because they do a dangerous job, but because they stand for something. Principles like honor, loyalty and courage lie at the heart of the Cowboy Way.  Mr. Owen has written a best seller called The Try and has developed a program about cowboy ethics and how kids who use the ten guiding principles called the Code of the West actually can raise their GPA.

The Center for Cowboy Ethics and Leadership promotes the following ten principles to live by - good for students, businesses and nonprofit organizations.

1.  Live each day with courage.
2.  Take pride in your work.
3.  Always finish what you start
4.  Do what has to be done.
5.  Be tough, but fair.
6.  When you make a promise, keep it.
7.  Ride for the brand.
8.  Talk less and say more.
9.  Remember that some things aren't for sale.
10. Know where to draw the line.  

You can check out his website: http://www.cowboyethics.org/ 
Let's put America back on the right track.

Monday, September 24, 2012

The Gault Family History Find





FOUND ON GOOGLE

Subject:

Do you have information about Gaults?  Please contact me.

John McCain GAULT Travis Co., Texas




Post Date:
January 05, 2010 at 05:24:12

Message URL:
http://genforum.genealogy.com/gault/messages/717.html
Forum:
Gault Family Genealogy Forum

Forum URL:
http://genforum.genealogy.com/gault/


http://genforum.genealogy.com/images/indent.gif
John McCain GAULT moved just north of Austin, Travis Co., TX. His log cabin is still standing and has a historical marker. You can see pictures of the cabin here:

http://impactnews.com/northwest-austin/history/703-wells-family-settles-walnut-creek

http://www.flickr.com/photos/texashistoricalmarkers/378565324/

According to the marker, John M. GAULT died here in Travis Co. and was buried at the Merrilltown Cemetery nearby. The cemetery was vandalized and some markers taken in the 90s and John GAULT's stone is assumed to be one of the stolen stones.

One of John M. GAULT's great-grandsons (maybe grandson) was Manny GAULT. Manny was a Texas Ranger and good friend of Frank HAMER and was one of the party that killed Bonnie and Clyde. Manny and Frank are buried next to each other.
 Gahagan, Mrs. R. E.: Gaddis, Eliza: Gaddis, Virgil: Gaddis, Wm. Gault, Effie: Gault , Fannie: Gault, Herbert: Gault, John M. Gault, Sarah I. Gebhart, Austin Gebhart ...


INSTITUTE OF TEXAN CULTURES AMAZING RACE WORKSHOP

Saturday, September 1, 2012

NEW: Homestead Family Tour on third weekend

Are you ready for September? Are you ready for family tours at the Homestead?  That's right! On the third weekend of the cooler months starting this month,  Saturday, September 15th, my husband Brian and I invite you to come to the Homestead from 2-4 p.m to explore what life was like in the 19th century in central Texas.                Registration is required.   
                                                                Contact:      Matt Fuller, Recreation Manager

                                                                Wells Branch Municipal Utility District
                                                               3000 Shoreline Drive, Austin Texas, 78728
                                                               512.251.9814, ext. 107   www.wellsbranchmud.com

At this time of the year in the 1850's, pioneer Texans might be asking:

                                         What's the Fun of September 
"What's the fun September bringeth?                    Granaries almost filled to bursting;
Nature's treasures wide she flingeth!                     By the hill the cider-mill
Pumpkins round and ripe and yellow,                   Turns its wheels and sets us thirsting;
Appples sound and sweet and mellow;                 Corn and beans from far afield;
Stacks of grain, safe from rain,                              Lavish hoards abroad she flingeth---
                                      That's the fun September bringeth!

Did you notice the exclamation points in the poem?   SIDE NOTE: On tour in the Holy Land in June, like pioneers  we would sit on the terrace of the Mount of Beatitudes Hotel next to the Sea of Galilee each night and enjoy the evening sky . On June 7th, we saw a small light from a meteor expand and create a giant exclamation point in the sky.  The moving light first made a horizontal golden straight line then drop from both ends  to make a huge bright, gold triangle.  The movement slowed, then spiraled into a celestial white circle below the triangle completing the Latin word io - which means fullness of joy. We learned the monks of old who transcribed the Bible saved manuscript space by placing letters on top of each other;  the "i" and "o" went vertical to create the exclamation point.

But, what do you think life was like in 1850? What do you know? We know that Merrelltown, Duval, McNeil and Waters Park, the small communities in the area, did not have electricity at this time.  So the pioneers and the Indians would often come out of their hot homes or tepees at night to enjoy the cool evening air under the stars. 

Captain Nelson Merrell founded Merrelltown in 1837 and erected a log cabin at the headspring of a creek branch that flows into Walnut Creek near Waters Park .  By 1851, a post office had been established to serve the town.  Merrilltown was the center of a small farming community that offered residents a steam gristmill, a cotton gin, a general store, and a church (which doubled as a schoolhouse) to serve a population of 35 residents in the 1880s. Merrelltown and Waters Park were the Anglo-American communities in the immediate area.  Merrelltown Cemetery is located along FM1325, adjacent to the Loop 1 extension route. Graves are dated from 1845.Waters Park, located at the junction of Loop 1, FM 1325 and the Union Pacific Railroad, began selling its lots in June, 1882, and had a population of around 30. The small town supported a church, schoolhouse, saloon, store and cotton gin.  Waters Park was viewed as a popular vacation spot.

The predominately African-American community of Duval, settled in 1875,  had about 75 residents and supported a district school, three churches and three stores.  After 1890, the population dropped to around 35.

McNeil, the predominately Hispanic community was named in honor of George McNeil, the section foreman for the Austin and Northwestern Railroad companies; it opened a post office in 1888. The  town became the base of operations for the Austin White Lime Company which was still in business in 1990. By 1890, the community had a a hotel, a general store and a population of 200. McNeil High School was built for the Round Rock district in 1991.

How would you get to these communities in 1850's?  You might ride in a Studebaker.  Do you know what a Studebaker is?  What would you eat, where would you sleep, what would you wear, what chores would you do, what games would you play?  Remember, there was no electricity; no television, no radio, no game boys, no vacuum cleaner, no refrigerator, no air conditioning.  Do you have stories from distant relatives to share about life before electricity?  We would love to learn your story.