William Wallace Simpson, Illustrator and Artist

William Wallace Simpson might be one of the lesser known Texas illustrators, having worked primarily for North Texas newspapers for several decades. His many illustrations were added to articles. He was born July 8, 1880 in Shelby County, Illinois to William Laybourn Simpson and Sarah Jane Evans Simpson.

Wallace’s father had been born in England in 1844 and had come to Canada with his family in 1856. When William L. was about nineteen, he came to America, settling in Illinois. A great granddaughter told that they had moved to Texas around 1870. She added that William had participated in cattle drives including being one of sixteen cowboys on a drive that took 5,000 head of cattle from South Texas to Fort Laramie, Wyoming. In 1877, William L. married Sarah Jane Evans and they began to raise their family. When Wallace was born, his parents were in their thirties and his father was working as a farmer in Illinois. Wallace, as he was called, was the second child and oldest son of the couple. By the time the 1900 federal census was taken, the family was living in Childress, Texas, having moved there in 1892. Wallace was nineteen years old and the oldest of four children living at home. His father was operating a livery stable in town.

Wallace was known for liking to draw and sketch. He began working as a cowboy on ranches around his home. He worked on the 3-Bar and Buckle L ranches and studied art. As noted, he had discovered that he had considerable gifts as an artist. In a somewhat unusual turn of events considering his upbringing, Wallace decided to pursue his art interests and turned it into a career. It was said that he loved the cowboy life and used his deep affection for the lifestyle as the inspiration for his artwork. He married the former Effie Fields, whose family owned the Buckle L Ranch, on September 22, 1902. Their son Leroy Labon Simpson was born in Decatur in 1905. Effie had grown up in Decatur and the pair had met when her family sent Wallace in a buckboard to pick Effie up at a local train station. One article noted that Wallace would likely have enjoyed living the remainder of his life on a ranch, but that Effie was a “city girl” and preferred living in town to ranch life. Soon they moved to Fort Worth and Wallace took a job working for a livestock agent. He kept up his art and drawing and one of his engagements was to design stationary for a local company called Davis & Hamm Livestock Commission Company.

His first newspaper job was to work for $3 per week as an apprentice at Peerless Press in Oklahoma City around 1913. In 1914, they had moved to El Paso where he was working for the El Paso Times, having traveled with all their belongings to West Texas via stagecoach. After returning to Fort Worth, his work flourished at the Star-Telegram. The newspaper used his monochrome and color illustrations regularly. In addition to the annual stock show and rodeo, he illustrated articles about cattle drives, Texas personalities and an essay by the venerable Charles Goodnight. Wallace was also chosen to illustrate a 1926 series of articles by Walter Noble Burns entitled “Saga of Billy the Kid.” The newspaper had secured an agreement with the author to publish excerpts from Noble’s book of the same name in serial form. Below is Wallace’s banner illustration accompanying a long article about headquarters houses of some of the well known ranches of West Texas. His characteristic signature appears in the lower right between cattle bearing the Waggoner and JA brands.

Image credit: Fort Worth Star-Telegram, January 30, 1921

Where the family lived over the years: In the 1910 federal census, Wallace’s profession was listed as designer for a paper company and the couple was living in Oklahoma City. By the time the 1920 census was taken, they were residing in Fort Worth. His profession was listed as artist and presumably he was by that time working for the Star-Telegram, though the “industry” category is illegible on the census form. The 1930 census form was much the same, listing his job as “artist,” except at that point, he listed his workplace as “studio.” In the 1940 census they were living in Sapulpa, Oklahoma. The Simpsons had moved there around 1936 on land that his family had acquired from Chief Billy Sapulpa. He ran some cattle while living there. Wallace was director of an art gallery in a public library. Biographical information also notes that while in Sapulpa, Wallace also did artwork used on milk bottles for Liberty Glass Company. The family returned to Fort Worth in 1952.

In 2004, the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame exhibited forty of his sketches and illustrations in connection with the 108th Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo. In a Star-Telegram article about the exhibit, the art curator of a West Texas museum referred to Wallace’s work as being “rather naive” and quickly added “but that made it charming and honest.” He described Simpson as being one of a small group of artists who documented the cattle industry of his day, also one of a select few who had an interest in cowboying. Further, he referred to Simpson as “a cowboy who happened to paint, not a painter who tried his hand at cowboying.”

After Wallace died in Decatur in 1956, the article added, most of his art was stored in a family attic. Many years later, a granddaughter began looking through the collection, framing and preserving it. The collection caught the eye of the president of the North Fort Worth Historical Society after which interest in his work began to grow. All of this led to Wallace’s 1928 stock show artwork being selected to highlight the 2004 exhibit. Wallace had been chosen to illustrate the 1927, 1928, 1929, 1933 and 1934 programs for what was then called the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock Show. In 1930, one of his duties for the stock show was to serve as director of the exposition’s western themed art show featuring local and other artists.

Simpson’s honors include being inducted into the Texas Trail of Fame in 2008. Other honorees that year included Buck Taylor, Randolph Scott, Larry McMurtry, Clara Driscoll, Mirabeau B. Lamar and the American buffalo. The Texas Trail of Fame is located in Fort Worth and its mission statement states that it was established “to honor those individuals, organizations, groups and animals who have made a significant contribution to our heritage, traditions, set of values, and dedications to the preservation and perpetuation of the Western way of life.”

Wallace Simpson died in Fort Worth on December 17, 1956 at the age of 76. He was survived by his wife Effie, their son Leroy, two grandchildren and three great grandchildren. After a funeral service at a local funeral home, he was buried in Oak Lawn Cemetery in Decatur. Effie followed him in death in 1967 and is also buried there in Decatur.

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Tales of the Texas Rangers

“Tales of the Texas Rangers” refers to two programs which aired in media during the 1950s. The first was a radio program and the second was a television series.

The radio program: It was conceived as a weekly half-hour program to broadcast fictionalized stories pertaining to the former law enforcement agency. It was set in the 1880s and used scripts in a style that might be reminiscent of shows like “Dragnet.” Stacy Keach, father of actor Stacy Keach, Jr., was producer and director. Joel Murcott was the head writer of the series.

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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.

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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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