Category: Centuries of History

  • 1914 Tivy High School Graduating Class

    1914 Tivy High School Kerrville Kerr County Texas
    Tivy High School 1914 Graduating Class – back row, Howard Butt, first one on left; Gussie May Brown, sixth from left; Harry Dietert, front row fifth from left.

    My grandmother, Gussie May Brown (Mrs. Dan Auld, Sr.) graduated from Tivy High School on Friday, May 29, 1914, in Kerrville, Texas.  She describes many events in her leather covered diary, embossed in gold, “The Girl Graduate and Her Own Book”, which was designed and illustrated by Louise Perrett and Sarah K. Smith and published by The Reilly and Britton Co., Chicago.  It is written on the cover page as a gift from a friend.

    The Baccalaureate Sermon was performed by Bishop Johnson.

    The class flower was as written, Marschel Neil Rose, and class colors, black and old gold and the class motto, “Either find a way or make one”.

    The page titled, Class Autographs have the following:

    E. Doyle Grinstead

    Lyla Courtney

    Annie Mae Morriss

    Florence Cade

    Gerald J. Walther

    Lela B. Douglas

    William Ed Allen

    Lucille Williamson

    Oscar Strockbein

    Howard Butt

    Amye Thalman

    Mary McKay

    Agnes Kane

    Winona Moore

    Cliff Freeman

    Jack Phillips

    Jessie Phillips

     

    Class President

    Samuel Frances Drake

    Secretary and Treasurer

    Gussie May Brown

     

    The Teachers:

    Miss Maude Hart

    Latin and History

    Miss Louise McCormick

    Domestic  Science

    Miss Valeska Rabke

    German teacher

    Mr. Alvin Dille

    Physics and Chemistry

    On the Social Events page, Gussie wrote:

    Thursday, May 21st, the social events should have begun with a party at Lucille’s but on account of a heavy rain, much to the disappointment of all, the party was called off.

    Friday, May 22nd, Mr. and Mrs. Dille were to entertain the class at a tacky party but owing to Mrs. Dille’s illness that was also called off.

    Saturday night after a very hot and tiresome dress rehearsal Mr. and Mrs. Dille surprised the troupe and escorts with ice cream and cake the class colors being represented by the dark and yellow cake.  The Grammar School Commencement was Monday night and Gussie went and had a most enjoyable time.

    Tuesday night the Juniors gave “Us Seniors” a reception in the auditorium and though it was not quite as great as success as we feel the one they had planned to give us at the park should have been, it was quite nice and we had a very delightful time.

    Punch was served all during the evening and also sandwiches, salad and cake.

    Wednesday night, we gave our play and it was fairly good success.

    Thursday night an alumni banquet was well attended and enjoyed by the old and new graduates of Tivy High.  The end to our high school days came Sunday night when we received our diplomas and incidentally a few flowers.

    The Presents

    Miss Kate Remschel – blue silk crepe Teddy Bears

    Miss Elsie A. Johnston – hand embroidered Teddy Bears

    Miss Kate Hamilton – gold bar pin with pearls

    Jokes and Frolics

    The biggest joke and frolic of the year was playing hooky on April fool’s Day.  We went to Lakeside Park all except Oscar and Florence and had one more good time.  We went swimming and boating and did lots of other things.

    But believe me, when we got back to town lo and behold we found we were suspended from school for the rest of the week and that we’d have to be awfully good for the rest of the year.

    One afternoon armed with such weapons as hoes, rakes and cement we (the whole class) took ourselves to Tivy Mountain and made some repairs.  After which we took some pictures and ate fruit and went home.

    Miscellaneous

    Athletics

    Basketball, football, baseball and track game were taken great interest in this year.

    The boys basketball team won one game from Center Point and lost one to them.

    They were not quite so fortunate however in football as they lost all the games except one and they tied in this with the All-Stars.

    Jim Guinn, Dan Auld, Harry Dietert and Emmett Henke were representatives of Kerrville in the tract meet at Austin.

    Our basketball team won one game from Center Point but owing to… a sort of misunderstanding!!! we didn’t play with them anymore.  We won all the other games that we played at school.

    The school track meet was quite a success, Dan Auld winning the Senior Medal and Joe Williams the Junior Medal.

     

     

    1914 Tivy High School Invitation cover page

     

     

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  • Battle of Flowers Parade now Fiesta San Antonio

    Lamar Wilkinson center row outside; Fiesta float of the Peacock School for Boys in front of Menger Hotel San Antonio, Texas

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    FIESTA SAN ANTONIO.

    Fiesta San Antonio, previously called Fiesta San Jacinto, is a ten-day festival held every spring in San Antonio. It originated in the 1891 flower parade conceived by Ellen Maury Slayden, wife of Congressman James L. Slayden, as an April 21 salute to the heroes of the battles of the Alamo and San Jacinto. A group of San Antonio women formed the Battle of Flowers Association. The first parade was moved a day ahead to accommodate the schedule of visiting President Benjamin Harrison, but it was then delayed for four days by bad weather. With the arrival of fair weather, participants in carriages pelted one another with flowers as they rounded Alamo Plaza. By 1895 an elaborate week long celebration surrounded the Battle of Flowers Parade, and the first queen was chosen. In 1909 the Order of the Alamo was organized, with John B. Carrington as president, to oversee some features of the carnival, including the election of the queen and her coronation. The Battle of Flowers Association continued to coordinate the parade, as well as a children’s fete and a band competition, the forerunner of today’s Band Festival. The parade tradition lapsed briefly during World War I, but another tradition was started-the Pilgrimage to the Alamo. By the 1980s the Daughters of the Republic of Texas were sponsoring this event, in which participants march from the city’s Municipal Auditorium to the Alamo to hear the names of Texas men who died in the battle of the Alamo. The fiesta was not very old before the crowning of a king was added to the week’s activities. Before a King Antonio line was established in 1916, kings were chosen by the Spring Carnival Association, the Downtown Business Club, and the Chamber of Commerce. Early monarchs were dubbed Selamat (tamales spelled backward), Omala (Alamo backward), King Cotton, Zeus, and Rex. In 1926, when the Texas Cavaliers were organized by Carrington, the king began to be named from their ranks. In the same year Mrs. Alfred Ward of the Battle of Flowers Association founded the Oratorical Contest for college students, to encourage writing on some phase of Texas history.

    The celebration continued to grow, and by 1945 the San Antonio Conservation Society was playing a substantial role with its popular Night in Old San Antonio, held in picturesque La Villita. In the mid-1980s the Night in Old San Antonio, held on four successive evenings, continued to be one of the most popular and highly successful additions to the gala week. It is an authentically costumed recreation of San Antonio’s early life under six flags, held in La Villita, an internationally recognized historic restoration of the little village that existed at the site before the time of the Alamo. By 1959 Fiesta Week had grown to the point that the San Antonio Chamber of Commerce formed a coordinating agency called the Fiesta San Antonio Commission, and the event became officially known as Fiesta San Antonio. In 1980 Fiesta royalty was expanded when the League of United Latin American Citizens Council No. 2 began the Paseo del Rey Feo (Ugly King Parade). By the mid-1980s the Fiesta San Antonio Committee was underwriting some twenty-five events, including the four major parades. The Battle of Flowers Parade continued to be the only major parade in the United States that was conceived, organized, and presented by a women’s group. The Texas Cavaliers sponsored the annual River Parade, and their King Antonio attended nearly 120 Fiesta-related functions. Fiesta activities included art shows, sports tournaments, and tours of local historical areas and military bases. The final event of the festival had become the Fiesta Night Parade or “Fiesta Flambeau,” sponsored by the San Antonio Jaycees and lit by torchlight and fireworks. In the early 1990s some 50,000 volunteers from the military, the general public, and more than eighty nonprofit organizations helped to put on the Fiesta events, which were estimated by organizers to generate more than $100 million for the community each year.

    BIBLIOGRAPHY:

    Marlene Gordon, “Fiesta,” San Antonio, April 1984. Humble Way (publication of the Humble Oil and Refining Company, Houston), May-June 1946. Ann Moore, “The Fiesta de San Antonio,” Junior Historian, May 1959. Tommie Pinkard, “Fiesta,” Texas Highways, April 1985.

    Mrs. Willard E. Simpson, Jr.

    Citation

    The following, adapted from the Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition, is the preferred citation for this article.

    Mrs. Willard E. Simpson, Jr., “FIESTA SAN ANTONIO,” Handbook of Texas Online (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/lkf02), accessed April 05, 2011. Published by the Texas State Historical Association.

  • Obituary of Nancy Mires Wilkinson

    Pioneer Ranch Woman Dies at Her Menard County Home

    As published in the Fort Worth Star Telegram

    MENARD, July 16, 1955— Mrs. W. J. Wilkinson, Sr., 95 a pioneer Menard County ranch woman, who died at 4 a.m. Friday at her Clear Creek Ranch home eight miles west of Menard, was buried Saturday in Pioneer Rest Cemetery here.

    Funeral Services were held at the First Presbyterian Church.

    Mrs. Wilkinson and her husband were credited with introducing sheep-raising into Menard County.  After his death in 1919, she operated the ranch herself for many years.

    She was one of the most enthusiastic of the thousands of West Texas visitors who drove to Fort Worth for the Casa Manana and other Texas Centennial attractions in 1936.

    The former Nancy Mires, Mrs. Wilkinson was born in Henderson, February 7, 1860, and came with her parents as a young girl to a farm on the San Saba River, near here.

    She is survived by seven sons, Lamar, Ernest, Frank, Arch, Charlie and W. J. Wilkinson, all Menard County ranch men, and Edgar Wilkinson of San Angelo; a daughter, Mrs. Ed L. Mears, Sr. of Menard; a sister, Mrs. Fannie Fury of Christoval; 16 grandchildren, 22 great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren.

    From 1936 photo:

     

    Mrs. W. J. Wilkinson, Sr.

     

  • Various Wilkinson’s photos

    Four generations of Wilkinson’s taken at the Wilkinson Clear Creek Ranch, Menard County, Texas in 1949.

    Four generations: left to right: Lamar; his mother, Nancy; his son, Francis Lamar and baby Louise Wilkinson

     

     

    Nancy Mires Wilkinson

    Young Nancy Mires Wilkinson

     

     

    William Jackson Montgomery Wilkinson taken at Clear Creek.

    William Jackson Montgomery Wilkinson
  • Centuries of History

    Centuries of History

    By John Hallowell Mon, Oct 18, 2010

    Menard has a century more history than most Hill Country towns, since the Spanish built a presidio here in the mid-1700s.

    Menard has a longer history than most Hill Country towns; as far back as 1753, an expedition sent to explore the Apache territory found two excellent sites for a presidio near the San Saba River, and in 1755, another expedition searched for evidence of mineral wealth in the Menard area.

    The first European settlement in the Menard area occurred in 1757, when an expedition financed by Don Pedro de Terreros, one of the richest men in Mexico, arrived April 19 to build a fort and a mission. The soldiers in the party were under the command of Don Diego Ortiz de la Parrilla; the priests were led by Father Alonso Giraldo de Terreros, cousin to the financier.

    The fort (or presidio) was built on the north side of the San Saba River, just west of the present townsite. It was called the Presidio San Luis de Las Amarillas. About three miles downstream, on the opposite side of the river, the priests built the Santa Cruz de San Saba Mission.

    The 300 Spanish settlers were very diligent in establishing their new home in the wilderness. Along with all the buildings, they built a dam on the San Saba River, and dug an irrigation ditch which diverted water from above the dam to the wide, fertile valley where the town of Menard now stands.

    The land was inhabited largely by Apaches, and it was they who were the focus of Father Terreros’ mission. But unbeknownst to the Spaniards, a fierce tribe of invaders from the north, called Comanches, were about to descend upon central Texas, and the mission would bear the brunt of their invasion.

    Less than a year after the establishment of the mission, 2,000 Comanche warriors surrounded it and burned it to the ground, killing Father Terreros and several others in the attack. The Presidio was not overrun, but its soldiers were helpless to come to the mission’s aid. Don Pedro de Terreros commissioned a mural to be painted in honor of his cousin, the martyred priest. It is the first known painting of a historical event in Texas.

    Without a mission, the presidio was pointless, and although the Spanish replaced the original wood stockade with massive stone walls in 1761, it was abandoned in 1768. Over the next sixty years, only an adventurous few Europeans ever saw the impressive ruins.

    One of those adventurous few was James Bowie, who visited the fort with his brother Rezin in 1829, and carved his name on the rock doorpost. Bowie’s curiosity had been aroused by a Lipan Apache chief named Xolic, who would bring considerable amounts of silver to trade at San Antonio once or twice a year. It seemed obvious to the enterprising young Bowie that there was a rich silver mine somewhere near Menard, and he was determined to find it.

    Even though Bowie was newly married to Ursula Veramendi, daughter of the vice-governor, he joined the Apache tribe about 1830, presented Xolic with a silver-plated rifle, and led Apache fighting-parties against their enemies. According to legend, the chief showed Bowie the mine in 1831.

    Bowie immediately deserted the tribe, returning to San Antonio to gather a force to seize the treasure. This aroused the enmity of a young Apache chief named Tres Manos (three hands wore an enemy’s severed hand on a cord around his neck), who led an attack on Bowie’s treasure-hunters on November 21, 1831. While Bowie had been warned by a friendly Comanche, and was able to hold off the attack, he retreated to San Antonio without any treasure.

    Bowie’s family died during an epidemic while he was away, and the heart-broken adventurer turned to drink before famously dying at the Alamo. No one has ever discovered the fabled mines.

    There wasn’t much activity in the Menard area during Texas’ time as an independent republic (1836-1845), but when the Adelsverein purchased land for German settlers, their Fisher-Miller grant included the southern half of Menard County. Few, if any, of the original German settlers ever made it to Menard.

    One German who did visit the Menard area was Dr. Frederick Roemer. In his 1849 book called “Texas”, Dr. Roemer described his surprise at finding the ruins of quite an extensive building in the wilderness many days journey from the abode of civilized man. He was one of many who used the old presidio as a campsite in the century after it was abandoned.

    William Huff was one of many Texans who headed for California during the gold rush of 1849. In his diary, Huff describes a stop at the site of the old Spanish mission, when his party stumbled across part of the old ditch and found artifacts left by the retreating Spaniards. He was well aware of the “lost mine” legends, having heard stories from a son of one of the original Spanish settlers.

    In 1852, after Texas had joined the United States, the army established Camp San Saba in what is now western Menard County. It was soon renamed Fort McKavett after a hero of the Mexican War, and more than thirty limestone-and-cypress buildings were erected to accommodate several hundred soldiers. A town grew up around the fort, which provided protection from Indian attacks.

    A new county named for Michel Branamour Menard (the founder of Galveston), was formed from part of Bexar County in 1858, and the county seat was a new town called Menardville, near the site of the old presidio. Threats of civil war interrupted the new county’s growth, and Indian attacks increased dramatically after Federal soldiers were withdrawn from Fort McKavett in 1859.

    After the Civil War, Fort McKavett was staffed by the famous “buffalo soldiers”, and, mostly due to their presence, the county’s 1870 population of only 667 was nearly sixty percent black. They brought peace to the surrounding area, and Menard County began to grow during the 1870s. Menardville became the major commercial center for the area ranches and an overnight stop on several of the north and west cattle drive trails, including the Great Western Trail to Dodge City, Kansas.

    In 1874, William J. Vaughan and a few partners rebuilt and expanded the old Spanish irrigation ditch beginning about five miles above the town and ending at a point about two miles below the town. In 1886, an engineer named Gus Noyes came from Maine, and bought the majority of shares in the project. He built a dam in 1890, and extended the ditch, watering the whole valley even in times of drought, and making Menard a major center of Texas agriculture.

    By that time, the threat of Indian attacks was slight, and dozens of treasure-hunters devoted their lives to searching the hills and valleys around Menard County for the lost mines of the San Saba mission. Some tantalizing discoveries were made, but the mines were not found. N.H. Pierce, who wrote a history called The Free State of Menard in 1946, describes the search this way: “Men have disemboweled mountains, drained lakes and turned rivers out of their courses, hunting for the elusive silver.”

    In 1884, a boy who would later become famous as the publisher of Frontier Times arrived with his family in Menardville. J. Marvin Hunter’s father taught schoolchildren in a two-story lumber building. Hunter later recalled living in a one-room rock house near the downtown area, which consisted of several stores, hotels and saloons. The First Baptist Church was a small lumber building with split-log benches. A race track was out near the cemetery.

    Mrs. Luda Avery Johnston was a cultured southern belle from Alabama who married an army sergeant named Will Johnston in 1875, at the age of 16. They were stationed at Fort McKavett in 1879, and moved to Menardville in 1881, where Sgt. Johnston opened the Rock Saloon and became one of the town’s leading citizens. She recalled dances every Friday night in the second floor of the old courthouse, (later the Luckenbach Hardware store). Usually the music was from a lone violinist, but sometimes the band from Fort McKavett would perform.

    N.H. Pierce eloquently recalled Menard’s early years in the foreword of the Menard history book: “Deeds of valor were so commonplace in those days as to go practically unnoticed; loyalty and sacrifices were routine and expected from all. Every day was a chapter, and every citizen was a maker, of history.”

    The town’s first newspaper, the Menardville Monitor, was founded in the late 1880s, but as Menardville grew into a civilized little town, it was rocked again by the forces of nature. A terrible flood swept through the town in June of 1899, washing away bridges, stores, offices and homes. A photographer named Noah Rose, who had taken a hilltop picture of the town’s business district the previous New Year’s Eve, took another picture from the same vantage point during the flood; the contrast was horrifying.

    But the town came back stronger than ever; the Bevans National Bank was founded in 1903, and the arrival of the railroad in 1911 turned Menard into a boomtown (the name was shortened around that time). The widow of famous Texas Ranger Captain Dan Roberts attended a reunion of Texas Rangers in Menard in 1924. She was much impressed with the changes in the town she remembered from years before. “We traveled from Austin to Menard by auto in a few hours, she recalled later. A trip that in the old days would require four days.”  She discovered a town of twenty-five hundred to three thousand inhabitants, with beautiful modern homes. During the 1930s, Menard continued to prosper despite the depression that affected much of the country, and the Civilian Conservation Corps rebuilt some of the walls at the ruins of the old presidio to create a tourist attraction at the historic site. Growth continued until Menard reached a peak population of 4,521 in 1940.

    In the meantime, the search for silver went on. One of the most famous prospectors was Frank “Old Man” Mullins; he arrived at Menard in 1913, and spent the rest of his life (he died in 1945) hunting for the lost mine. Judge J.R. Norton, from San Antonio, was another. He retired from a successful legal career to search for silver in Menard County; his partner was Princess Wenonah, the descendant of a Comanche chief and friend of Will Rogers, who had toured the world as an actress, performer and snake charmer. The pair spent several years and thousands of dollars tracking leads from old stories. They, too discovered some tantalizing clues, including a Bowie knife, a gun barrel and a man’s skeleton (presumed to be one of Jim Bowie’s force who was killed by Tres Manos).

    When the town was founded in 1858, Menard was originally known as Menardville. The town was a trading post and overnight stop on north and west cattle trails. In 1899, the San Saba River flooded the town but the community rebuilt. The town changed its name to Menard and built a new railroad depot when the Fort Worth and Rio Grande Railroad companies made plans to come to town in 1911. The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway discontinued its service to Menard in 1972 but donated the old depot to the county for use as a history museum.

    A Chamber of Commerce brochure published around 1940 called Menard, a thriving little city surrounded by scenic wonders. At the time, Menard County was a major agricultural center, home to more than 300,000 sheep, 80,000 goats, 23,000 cattle and 2,000 horses and mules. The Santa Fe Railroad ran daily passenger trains and thrice-weekly freight service to handle the large livestock shipments from this point. The brochure boasted of broad, paved streets, and an abundance of shade and water, a beautiful, 2,000-seat athletic field fully equipped with lights, and the modern four-story, 60-room Hotel Bevans, widely known as a tourist’s and vacationer’s headquarters.

    Menard has always been a very patriotic town. During World War II, it was reportedly second in the nation, percentage-wise, in the number of locals volunteering for military service. Agriculture saw a general decline in the long drought of the 1950s, but oil and gas were discovered during that time, and oil production reached a peak of 270,000 barrels annually during the 1960s.

    While the legends of long-ago battles and lost silver mines were never completely forgotten, the exact location of the old Spanish mission had become a mystery during the middle of the 20th century. Numerous excavations failed to produce any conclusive evidence before 1993, when Mark Wolf, a San Antonio architect and a seventh-generation descendant of a Spanish servant named Juan Leal, who survived sacking of the mission, enticed a team of archaeologists from Texas Tech University to join in the search. The team found pieces of a Spanish olive jar in a recently-plowed alfalfa field, and began a large-scale excavation (led by professor Grant Hall) which turned up hundreds of artifacts. The team was able to pinpoint the locations of the walls of the old mission by finding soil stains left by wooden posts.

    Two big events on Menard’s social calendar are the “Around the Campfire” event in April, where hundreds gather at the old “stock pens crossing” for a chuck wagon dinner and all sorts of western entertainment, and “Jim Bowie Days” in September, when the whole town (plus visitors) turn out for a community party to honor Menard’s most famous visitor under the pecan trees by the San Saba River bridge.   (Update: Jim Bowie Days is in May.)

    In 2007, the town held a 250th-anniversary procession from the site of the old mission to the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Menard, where notable guests (including the Spanish ambassador, the bishop of the San Angelo diocese and archaeologist Grant Hall) addressed a huge crowd at a memorial service for the martyred priests. While Menard has matured into a quiet, stable rural community, it still celebrates its storied past.

    By John Hallowell

    John Hallowell is the past editor of several Hill Country publications. He has been exploring the Texas Hill Country for almost 20 years.

    Originally published online at the http://texas-hill-country.com website.

  • W. J. Wilkinson Family Portrait

    About 1890, portrait of only part of the W. J. and Nancy Mires Wilkinson family.

    Top row: Carrie and Emma standing; second row: Frank, W. J. and Nancy and Willie; Third row: Alice, Arch (W. J.’s lap), Charlie (baby Nancy’s lap) and Lamar; missing Ernest Grover born in 1891 and Edgar Bryan born in 1896

     

     

  • First Sheep in Menard County, Texas in 1876

    Here is the San Angelo Standard Times article about the first sheep in Menard, Texas in 1876.  This is an interview of Nancy Mires Wilkinson in her later years of such an important event in her life and the new frontier.

    Nancy Wilkinson recalls W. J. bringing the first sheep to Menard County
  • Wilkinson’s – Pioneers of Menard County, Texas

     

    Nancy Rosary Mires Wilkinson was born in Athens, Henderson County, Texas on 6 February 1860, to Patrick Henry “Paddy” Mires and Vianna Tidwell.  Nancy lost her mother in 1864.  In 1865, Mr. Mires brought his family to the new frontier and Menardville, Texas. In 1867, Mr. Mires married Miss Louisa Matilda Miller [Update: married on 28 Nov 1867 in Menardville, Menard County, Texas] and Paddy and Louisa raised eleven children.  He and his family ended up in Christoval.

    It is said about Paddy in The Standard, San Angelo, Texas, 20 February 1897, that he was famous as the owner of the finest fishing preserve on the Concho and for his watercress, which he sold in San Angelo for over 20-years.

    In the “Free State of Menard” published in 1946, by N. H. Pierce, it states, Paddy Mires built a log house which was the first building to be erected in Menardville.  Mr. Mires and his partner Tull Smith operated a store in that log house.  Paddy Mires was the first settler to act as postmaster for the village, with Mr. Smith second.  The post office was not officially established until June 16, 1868, when Lee C. Blake was named postmaster, but mail was brought here before that date.

    Nancy married William Jackson Montgomery Wilkinson on 22 December 1875 and they made their home at Peg Leg Ranch in eastern Menard County. He was a widower after the death of his first wife, Mary Caroline Spiller and they had two children, William Neille Buie Wilkinson and Martha Caroline “Carrie” Wilkinson.

    Below is their marriage certificate and a link to their beginning story and the first sheep in Menard County.

    In 1878, Nancy and W. J. established their headquarters ranch at the head of Clear Creek Springs which contained approximately 15,000 acres. Nancy and W. J. were parents of nine children. You can see some of the family in an 1890’s photo.

     

     

     

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    Honeymooning Couple was Menard’s First Wool Family

    Honeymooning Couple was Menard’s First Wool Family Nancy Wilkinson San Angelo Standard Times

  • Hello and Welcome

    Thank you for visiting my blog and I hope you enjoy looking Out My Kitchen Window.  Please look at the Blog Archive to see the interesting and informative history, genealogy and photography about our ancestors. I may also include anything else I see along the way!

    I am the great-great granddaughter of Joshua D. Brown, the first settler and founder of Kerrville, Kerr County, Texas in 1856. My husband’s great-grandfather was William Jackson Montgomery Wilkinson, originally from Mississippi and pioneer to Menard County, Texas in late 1860’s.

    I welcome your comments and feedback. You may send them to [email protected]. Thanks for stopping by for a while.  You might enjoy visiting our Facebook Wilkinson Ranch page or our website https://wilkinsonranch.com.