Legend of Indian Emily

There is a considerable amount of legend and folklore connected to the Fort Davis and Big Bend area. Whether it is fact or fiction, the tale of “Indian Emily” is an interesting one. The story supposedly originated in the mid to late 1800s at Fort Davis. According to the National Park Service, it first appeared in print in a 1919 book called “The Romance of Davis Mountains and Big Bend Country” written by Carlysle Raht. About ten years later, the story reappeared in a Texas newspaper and southwestern periodical with more detail. It was essentially the same narrative but with slight variations.

Image credit: Old Fort Davis from the Beaumont Enterprise, February 19, 1933

The core of the legend: She is portrayed as a young Native American woman who is discovered suffering from a serious wound around the time of an Apache attack in the vicinity of Fort Davis. On a routine patrol, the woman is found with an arrow in her side by an officer named Easton, a member of the Eighth Infantry. In the story, ill and delirious, she is brought back to the fort and treated by the camp surgeon for her injuries. Given the name of Emily, the woman begins to recover and is offered a place to live in the residence of the Easton family, the parents of Lieutenant Thomas Easton. Over time, Emily recovers and remains with the Easton family as a servant or companion. While living with them, she is said to have fallen in love with the Lieutenant, but he is engaged to a southern woman by the last name of Davenport. Disappointed and depressed, one night Emily slips away from the fort and residence and returns to her tribe.

Once those in the fort discover that Emily is missing, search parties are sent out to look for her, since she has become a favorite of the whole camp. The searches are fruitless, and she is not found. A few know of her affection for Easton, but Easton’s romantic relationship is still with his absent fiance Miss Davenport.

The legend continues with Emily’s return to the fort one night as normal evening activities continue, including the marriage celebration of Easton and his bride. As Emily approaches the fort in the darkness, she is mistaken by a sentry to be a raider moving outside the stone walls of the fort. The sentry fires one shot from his rifle, striking Emily. Hearing the shot, the celebration comes to an abrupt halt. The inhabitants go to the fort’s wall to find the sentry bending over Emily, now mortally wounded. She sees the face of Easton and his bride and just before she dies, she tells those gathered around that her tribe is planning an imminent attack and that she has escaped their camp to warn Easton and the others. Forewarned of the attack, those in the fort are able to prepare and successfully defend the camp when it occurs. Thanks to Emily’s sacrifice and warning, no lives are lost among the inhabitants and the attack is routed. Emily’s remains are taken to the mountains where she is interred.

The story was repeated in print from time to time. Variations of it refer to the tribe as Comanche. The officer’s name is sometimes said to be Esson. The fiance’s name is sometimes called Nelson. Emily is also sometimes referred to as the daughter of a tribal chief, a princess.

The National Park Service website notes that over the years, research has been attempted. Their findings were that they could not determine that there was a documented Apache or Comanche raid or attack on the fort, except perhaps when the fort was unoccupied during the Civil War. The NPS also notes that Texas Rangers had occupied area forts and camps and reported activity in the general area. From time to time Native Americans, either captured or found injured, were brought to various outposts. One supposedly tells of a young woman who was killed by unknown assailants while she was detained before her planned transport to the Mescalero Apache reservation in New Mexico. However, none of the accounts closely resemble the Indian Emily story.

The May 26, 1935 issue of the San Angelo Standard-Times noted in an article by Barry Scobee that in 1891 some three hundred military graves were exhumed at Fort Davis and transferred to Arlington Cemetery in Virginia. At the time some 44 years earlier, Scobee says, two graves were left untouched. One was that of a soldier who had committed suicide and the other was Indian Emily. On May 30, 1935 in celebration of Decoration Day (today’s Memorial Day), her grave was to be remembered. The author dramatizes the story by adding that the Lieutanant’s mother had spread the word to visitors and stage coach personnel to be on the lookout for Emily but she is never found until the fatal night in which she was mistakenly shot. Scobee refers to the location of her grave as having been identified by Warren D. Bloys and Herbert D. Bloys, sons of W. D. Bloys (a name familiar to Big Bend residents as the founder of the cowboy camp revival meetings). According to his account, the Bloys family was aware of the grave’s location because it was marked with a wooden headstone once bearing the painted words “Indian Squaw, Died By Accident.” It was later fenced in with barbed wire and net wire. Scobee ended his article by noting that over the years people would return to the grave site and leave flowers, long after the crude marker was gone. The Associated Press repeated the story in other newspapers.


Image credit: Sarah Reveley

In connection with the Texas Centennial, a granite marker was placed to commemorate the story. This is the wording, “Here lies Indian Emily, an Apache girl whose love for a young officer induced her to give warning of an Indian attack. Mistaken for an enemy she was shot by a sentry, but saved the garrison from massacre.”


The NPS page: https://www.nps.gov/foda/learn/historyculture/indian-emily.htm

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Don Williams, Country Vocalist

Donald Ray Williams was born in Floydada, Texas May 27, 1939 to James Andrew Williams and Loveta Mae Lambert Williams. His grandfather on the Williams side was Emory Rains Williams who was also the grandson of Emory Rains, namesake of Rains County. Don’s father was a carpenter and the family moved from time to time. Don was the youngest of three sons of James and Loveta Mae. By the time Don reached high school age, the parents had either separated or divorced. James remained in West Texas. Don was living with his mother in Portland, Texas where he graduated from Gregory-Portland High School in 1958.

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Isaac Parker, Legislator

Isaac Duke Parker was a son of John and Sarah White Parker. He was born in Georgia on April 7, 1793 and came to Texas as an adult with his family, finally settling in a stockade fort near the current town of Groesbeck in the early 1830s. The circumstances of the raid are probably familiar to many. To summarize, the Parker family consisted of about two dozen people and there were numerous others living in the compound. Many names are similar, adding to the confusion, but below is a rough listing of the family members and close relatives in or near the fort at the time of the attack:

  • John Parker (“Elder John Parker”) – a widower
  • Silas Mercer Parker, Sr. – husband of Lucinda Duty Parker
  • Lucinda Duty Parker – wife of Silas Mercer Parker, Sr.
  • James W. Parker – son of Silas, Sr. and Lucinda
  • Cynthia Ann Parker – daughter of Silas, Sr. and Lucinda
  • John Richard Parker – son of Silas, Sr. and Lucinda
  • Silas Mercer Parker Jr. – son of Silas, Sr. and Lucinda
  • Orlena Parker – daughter of Silas, Sr. and Lucinda
  • Sarah Pinson Duty (“Granny Parker”) – mother of Lucinda and Clara Elizabeth
  • Clara Elizabeth Duty Kellogg – sister of Lucinda and recently widowed
  • Benjamin Franklin W. Parker – brother of Elder John
  • Isaac Parker – brother of Elder John
  • Sarah Parker Nixon – daughter of James William
  • Lorenzo Dow Nixon – husband of Sarah Parker Nixon
  • Luther Martin Thomas (“L. T. M.”) Plummer – husband of Rachel
  • Rachel Parker Plummer – wife of Luther, daughter of James William Parker
  • James Pratt Plummer – son of Luther and Rachel
  • James William Parker – father of Rachel
  • Abigail Parker – sister of Elder John
  • Daniel Parker – brother of Elder John
  • Martha “Patsy” Dixon Parker – wife of Daniel
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Ferdinand Jakob Lindheimer

Perhaps less known than others of his time, botanist and naturalist Ferdinand Jakob Lindheimer is called the Father of Texas Botany. Lindheimer was born May 21, 1801 in Frankfurt, Germany. He received his early education in Germany and was teaching there before he was 30 years old. According to accounts, he held political views that were controversial and unpopular for the day in Germany and around 1833, he decided to leave Germany. At that time the prevailing form of government was described as being a loose union of 39 states, dominated by Austria. It is presumed that Lindheimer held to a minority opinion favoring liberalism and democracy. Lindheimer relocated to the United States, living for a while in Illinois and for a year and several months in Mexico with other German expatriates until around 1836. About this time, articles note, he served in the Texas army. Some say that he fought in the Battle of San Jacinto while others hold that he joined soon after the battle.

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Two Early Bullfighters, George Doak & Junior Meek

It’s been said that in rodeo, eight seconds can seem like an eternity. In the early days of rodeo, the role of rodeo clowns began. Initially they provided entertainment by dressing up with face paint and garish costumes. Between events, they would sometimes do stunts, tell jokes and the like. They also stayed in the arena most of the time and during bull riding events, they attempted to distract the bulls after the rider either completed the timed event or got bucked off. As American rodeo expanded and professional organizations developed, the need for specialized protection for the contestants increased.

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