The Lee Brothers

These were three brothers: James, Tom and Pink Lee who came from a large family. Their parents were Robert Culpepper Lee and Amanda Giles Lee. The three brothers settled in Cooke County, Texas. They were accused of stealing cattle. One of them, Jim Lee, was reportedly married to a Choctaw woman and was able to establish a ranch in the Delaware Bend area of Indian Territory where the Red River makes a loop to the south.

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July 4, 1865 and July 4, 1876

We can often learn a great deal from online newspapers. One early Texas publication was the Galveston Daily News. It had begun in 1842 and could for many years be relied on to cover state wide news despite its Gulf Coast publishing location. In its issue of July 4, 1865, it discussed several items of interest to Texas residents. Placing it in context, the Confederate surrender at Appomattox, Virginia had occurred April 8, 1865, not quite three months earlier. Major-General Gordon Granger of the United States Army had issued General Order #3, commonly referred to as the “Juneteenth” order, two weeks earlier.

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Edward H. Tarrant

Edward H. Tarrant (1796 or 1799 – 1858) was the namesake of Tarrant County. He was born in South Carolina and was the son of Samuel A. Tarrant and Nancy Anna Hampton Tarrant. He was the youngest of at least four children. His father died in 1799 and his mother remarried after many years. Tarrant was living in Muhlenburg, Kentucky at the outset of the War of 1812 and is said to have participated throughout the war, including the Battle of New Orleans. After the war ended, he lived for some time in Tennessee before moving to Texas after 1830, settling first in Red River County.

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Stampede Mesa and “Ghost Riders in the Sky”

Stanley Davis “Stan” Jones (1914 – 1963) wrote “Ghost Riders in the Sky” about 1948 or 1949. This tune is probably his best remembered composition. He was born in Arizona and moved with his family to California after his father died. Jones had a varied background that included earning a degree in zoology from the Berkeley campus of University of California, service in the United States Navy, writing songs for Disney Studios and for his own account, and serving as a Death Valley park ranger. He also did a bit of film acting and other jobs. Of “Ghost Riders,” Jones would tell of hearing stories from old cowboys back in Arizona when he was a boy. Before one old cowboy died he told Stan an old yarn about a ghost herd of cattle in the sky being pursued by ghost riders.

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