Memoirs of Mary A. Maverick

Texas History Tales, #2

Nonfiction, History, Americas, Native American, United States
Cover of the book Memoirs of Mary A. Maverick by Mary A. Maverick, Maine Book Barn Publishing
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Author: Mary A. Maverick ISBN: 9781501452260
Publisher: Maine Book Barn Publishing Publication: November 20, 2013
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Mary A. Maverick
ISBN: 9781501452260
Publisher: Maine Book Barn Publishing
Publication: November 20, 2013
Imprint:
Language: English

"Texas Pioneers: Memoirs of Mary A. Maverick" by Mary A. Maverick is an eyewitness look at the harshness, dangers, and problems, as well as the joys and eventual accomplishments of frontier Texas life by an early settler. Unlike a typical Hollywood "oat burner", Mary's memoirs show what fortitude the frontier settler needed just to survive, let alone prosper. Mary's memoirs cover her Texas experiences from 1837---when she, Sam, and their 5 month old child arrived on the frontier--- to 1859 with the looming of the Civil War.

Mary's husband Sam was an early settler in 1830's Texas and by luck survived the Alamo Massacre as he was sent with dispatches from the Alamo a few days before Santa Ana's army arrived to start the famous siege. Sam also provided the name "maverick" as the term for an unbranded cow or calf. It seems that Sam's major fortune building occupation during the 1830s to 1865 was in land speculation. As part of that speculation, he acquired a ranch and herd of cattle. Being busy with his land deals, he gave the management of this ranch and cattle to Jack, one of his slaves. Jack, however, was not overly ambitious and did not brand many of the Maverick calves. Since ranch land was not fenced in those days, any unbranded cow was fair game for anyone who could rope and brand it. As a result, around 1867, the term "maverick" began to be used in the part of Texas where Sam's ranch was for any unbranded cow, especially a calf. The term rapidly spread throughout the cattle country and eventually came into the English language.

Mary's account of early pre Civil War frontier Texas is a great portrait of her times and enlightening regarding the history of Texas. A must read for the student of Texas history for historical background material of what frontier life was really like in those long vanished days.

There are approximately 47,150+ words and approximately 157+ pages at 300 words per page in this e-book.

NOTE: This book has been scanned then OCR (Optical Character Recognition) has been applied to turn the scanned page images back into editable text. Then every effort has been made to correct typos, spelling, and to eliminate stray marks picked up by the OCR program. The original and/or extra period images, if any, were then placed in the appropriate place and, finally, the file was formatted for the e-book criteria of the site. This means that the text CAN be re-sized, searches performed, & bookmarks added, unlike some other e-books that are only scanned---errors, stray marks, and all.

We have added an Interactive Table of Contents & an Interactive List of Illustrations if any were present in the original. This means that the reader can click on the links in the Table of Contents or the List of Illustrations & be instantly transported to that chapter or illustration.

Our aim is to provide the reader AND the collector with long out-of-print (OOP) classic books at realistic prices. If you load your mobile device(s) with our books, not only will you have fingertip access to a large library of antiquarian and out-of-print material at reasonable prices, but you can mark them up electronically & always have them for immediate reference without worrying about damage or loss to expensive bound copies.

We will be adding to our titles regularly, look for our offerings on your favorite e-book site.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

"Texas Pioneers: Memoirs of Mary A. Maverick" by Mary A. Maverick is an eyewitness look at the harshness, dangers, and problems, as well as the joys and eventual accomplishments of frontier Texas life by an early settler. Unlike a typical Hollywood "oat burner", Mary's memoirs show what fortitude the frontier settler needed just to survive, let alone prosper. Mary's memoirs cover her Texas experiences from 1837---when she, Sam, and their 5 month old child arrived on the frontier--- to 1859 with the looming of the Civil War.

Mary's husband Sam was an early settler in 1830's Texas and by luck survived the Alamo Massacre as he was sent with dispatches from the Alamo a few days before Santa Ana's army arrived to start the famous siege. Sam also provided the name "maverick" as the term for an unbranded cow or calf. It seems that Sam's major fortune building occupation during the 1830s to 1865 was in land speculation. As part of that speculation, he acquired a ranch and herd of cattle. Being busy with his land deals, he gave the management of this ranch and cattle to Jack, one of his slaves. Jack, however, was not overly ambitious and did not brand many of the Maverick calves. Since ranch land was not fenced in those days, any unbranded cow was fair game for anyone who could rope and brand it. As a result, around 1867, the term "maverick" began to be used in the part of Texas where Sam's ranch was for any unbranded cow, especially a calf. The term rapidly spread throughout the cattle country and eventually came into the English language.

Mary's account of early pre Civil War frontier Texas is a great portrait of her times and enlightening regarding the history of Texas. A must read for the student of Texas history for historical background material of what frontier life was really like in those long vanished days.

There are approximately 47,150+ words and approximately 157+ pages at 300 words per page in this e-book.

NOTE: This book has been scanned then OCR (Optical Character Recognition) has been applied to turn the scanned page images back into editable text. Then every effort has been made to correct typos, spelling, and to eliminate stray marks picked up by the OCR program. The original and/or extra period images, if any, were then placed in the appropriate place and, finally, the file was formatted for the e-book criteria of the site. This means that the text CAN be re-sized, searches performed, & bookmarks added, unlike some other e-books that are only scanned---errors, stray marks, and all.

We have added an Interactive Table of Contents & an Interactive List of Illustrations if any were present in the original. This means that the reader can click on the links in the Table of Contents or the List of Illustrations & be instantly transported to that chapter or illustration.

Our aim is to provide the reader AND the collector with long out-of-print (OOP) classic books at realistic prices. If you load your mobile device(s) with our books, not only will you have fingertip access to a large library of antiquarian and out-of-print material at reasonable prices, but you can mark them up electronically & always have them for immediate reference without worrying about damage or loss to expensive bound copies.

We will be adding to our titles regularly, look for our offerings on your favorite e-book site.

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