Elizabeth Powell

As San Jacinto Day, April 21, approaches it is interesting to reflect on the events of those days and the people who participated in them. Author Gregg J. Dimmick has written several books about that time. In his recent volume, “Sea of Mud: The Retreat of the Mexican Army After San Jacinto, An Archaeological Investigation,” he described the days that followed April 21, 1836 as they pertained to the Mexican Army. The author noted that General Vicente Filisola was second in command to Santa Anna when the Mexican leader was captured. Filisola was camped elsewhere, to the west and near the current community of Thompsons, near the Brazos in Fort Bend County. Thompsons got its name from a crossing and ferry that once was operated by a Thompson family there. Filisola’s forces were to serve as a rear guard for Santa Anna. The General had just been informed of Santa Anna’s defeat, though the whereabouts of Santa Anna were yet unknown. Filisola decided to gather his troops even further west near the current community of Kendleton, more than half the distance between Richmond and Wharton.

There were still thousands of Mexican troops in the area under several commanders, many times more than those involved in the San Jacinto battle. The forces under Filisola alone were numerous, amounting to around 2,500 soldiers with their wagons, mules and supplies along with another 1,500 women and children. They gathered on the property of Elizabeth Powell as they waited to receive further instructions from the Mexican government.

Relatively little is known about Mrs. Powell. She is sometimes associated with the Old 300 of Austin’s Colony. Although there is one family unit with the last name of Powell, they do not appear to be related to her in any way. Most likely, Mrs. Powell settled within the boundaries of the colony but was not an original colonist. She may have been a part of a second wave of Austin’s colonists.

In some biographical comments, Mrs. Powell was said to have come originally from Pennsylvania. By 1836 she was a widowed woman with five children. She is believed to have been born about 1800 and came to Fort Bend County around 1828 after having formerly been the operator of a boarding house in New Orleans, Louisiana. Mrs. Powell may have occasionally rented out part of her small Texas home to passersby from time to time.

When the above Mexican “occupation” took place, Mrs. Powell was probably not at her residence, having escaped with others during the weeks leading up to the San Jacinto clash. There was at least one account in which another person said that Mrs. Powell claimed to have been in residence during Filisola’s presence there, that she earlier witnessed Mexican troops pass by, including General Santa Anna.

Mr. Dimmick’s volume “General Vicente Filosola’s Analysis of José Urrea’s Military Diary” placed her residence on the bank of Gaujolata (Turkey Creek), one of the many streams that feed into the “San Bernardo” (San Bernard) River which finally empties into the Gulf near Cedar Lake in Matagorda County.

Filisola’s account described the small Powell house as made of wood with two rooms separated by a corridor or “dog trot” open space. It had a garden in the back with several jacales or mud huts that possibly functioned as housing, a kitchen or some other use. He further described the surroundings as including groves of oak trees. Filisola instructed his troops to set up there. Another author, attorney and Texas history authority Clarence R. Wharton, remarked in a 1936 series of centennial newspaper columns that the Powell house was the point at which Santa Anna and Almonte had reached some 10 days earlier before turning back to San Jacinto. He added that General Urrea also came to it before veering to the south towards Columbia only a day before the famous battle.

Filisola, having learned of Santa Anna’s defeat, called his officers together at Mrs. Powell’s to formulate their plans to withdraw and regroup while forces elsewhere serving under General Urrea were planning to go on the offensive. However, as Filisola’s troups were preparing to leave and cross the San Bernard River, a heavy rainstorm began. They were able to traverse the San Bernard but were prevented them by conditions from crossing the flooded West Bernard creek (or river) in the area above where the West Bernard joins the San Bernard. Filosola tried to find an alternate route but became unable to regroup into any kind of a force due to the aftereffects of the storm, the “sea of mud.” The author relates that Filisola had reported that they walked through mud up to their thighs.

During those same few days, Sam Houston was suffering from his wounded foot as he was writing his official account of the battle and dealing with Santa Anna, after the Mexican leader was captured. The Mexican troops reportedly left the Powell property on April 26 and burned the house to the ground as they were leaving.

Mrs. Powell eventually returned to her home site. No structure remains today, but she is believed to have rebuilt a home there. There are also references to Mrs. Powell petitioning for the reimbursement of her losses due to the destruction of her home, but there is no record that she collected on it.

There was rarely, if ever, any reference to the ethnicity of Elizabeth Powell until more recently. A newspaper article by Charles De Mangin in the June 14, 1995 issue of the Houston Chronicle reported the dedication of a historical marker at Powell Point School, sponsored by the Fort Bend Historical Commission and the Kendleton Heritage Society. It celebrated the Powell Point School and how it had served the city’s African-American community for more than 100 years. It stated that the school was named for Elizabeth Powell, and that she was a Haitian immigrant who settled in the area in 1831. It also noted area residents’ contention that she was the legendary Yellow Rose of Texas and added that she is buried somewhere in Kendleton, though the location of her grave was unknown. Kendleton itself was named for William E. Kendall who after emancipation was the law in Texas, sold land to formerly enslaved people for as little as 50 cents per acre.

An article by DSP Rosen in the September 30, 2003 issue of the Houston Chronicle also celebrates Mrs. Powell, noting that she helped more than 100 slaves gain freedom. It restated that her date of birth, date of death and maiden name was unknown and that her grave is on private property inaccessible to the public. It suggested the following biographical information on her, citing a historian by the name of Marjorie Adams. Mrs. Powell was of African-American descent. For some time she had fled to Mexico to escape slavery. She had married an African-American merchant named Joseph Powell who was injured between 1815 and 1817 in a shipwreck. They came to the area three miles from the current location of Kendleton in 1818 or 1819 where she cared for him until his death. It added that Santa Anna came to her home on his way to San Jacinto and that because of her background in Mexico she was able to converse with him. It added that Mrs. Powell had raised enough money to turn her residence into a stage and rest stop. She had aided slaves by putting out code words if it was not safe for them to stop and that she had tried to informally educate slaves on her property.

No portraits or other images of Mrs. Powell or any of her homes are known to exist. Historian Adams was quoted as calling Mrs. Powell “a hero without a face.”


Acknowledgement: Thanks to Sarah Reveley for introducing us to Mrs. Powell.

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Santa Claus Bank Robbery

Friday, December 23, 1927 in Cisco, Texas began like any other day in the Eastland County town. People were going about their business and finishing their Christmas shopping when around noon, four bandits stepped into the First National Bank of Cisco and announced that there was a robbery. The next day, an eye witness named Marion Olson gave his account as reported in the December 24, 1927 issue of the Fort Worth Record Telegram. Marion was a recent graduate of University of Texas at Austin and was home to visit his family during a Christmas break from a semester of Harvard Law School.

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Charles Bellinger Stewart

Charles B. Stewart was born February 18, 1809 in Charleston, South Carolina to Charles and Adriana Bull Stewart and was the second of their two children. His full name was Charles Bellinger Tate Stewart. Charles was about eleven years old when his father died in Georgia in 1817 and was not quite twenty years old when his mother died in 1825.

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Greenberg Smoked Turkeys, Inc.

Zelick Greenberg was the face of the smoked turkey business for 40 years, beginning in 1942. His son Sam Greenberg took over in 1982. The business began with Samuel I. Greenberg, father of Zelick. Samuel and his wife Selma Solinger Greenberg were both immigrants who became naturalized United States citizens. Each was born in Europe, Sam in Warsaw, Poland and Selma in Koenigsberg, Germany. Per one of the Federal census reports (and not surprisingly), both grew up in households that spoke Hebrew as the primary language. Sam came to the United States around 1900, apparently not accompanied by any adult relatives when he was still a young boy of about 13 to 15 years old. He was later routed to Galveston (the port of entry for many Jewish immigrants in Texas) by friends, arriving around 1903. Both of Sam’s parents and numerous other family members later joined Sam in Texas. Selma and Sam were married in Tyler in 1909. Their sons, Isadore and Zelick were each named for a father of the couple. Sam and Selma settled in to life in Tyler. Over the years, Sam had various jobs including working as a blacksmith, later as a kosher butcher and he also began a dairy business.

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Peter Aloysius Molyneaux

Peter Molyneaux was born in New Orleans, Louisiana on April 18, 1882 to James Molyneaux and Rosana Lawler Molyneaux and was the oldest child of the couple. There is not a lot of biographical information available regarding his parents but his father James was listed as a day laborer in the 1900 census. Peter was one of two sons and five daughters in the family.

Peter is not known to have had a great deal of formal education early on, but began to work in the newspaper business while he was still in his upper teens. By 1898, he was working for the New Orleans Daily News and soon became a reporter for that publication. Molyneaux later worked for other local publications including the New Orleans Item and Daily States.

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