Nocona, Texas (coordinates: 33°47′18″N 97°43′35″W) is located in Montague County and was named for Peta Nocona, a famous Comanche warrior and chief. It was founded about 1887 and was the last stop on a cattle trail before its the cattle drives came to the Red River on their way from Texas ranches to rail heads in Kansas.
Continue reading Nocona, TexasTag: biography
Ace Reid, Cowboy Cartoonist
Asa Elmer “Ace” Reid, Jr. was born March 10, 1925 in Lelia Lake, Donley County, Texas to Asa E. Reid and Callie Miles Bishop. The family moved to a ranch outside Electra, Wichita County, Texas where Ace lived until he left high school to join the Navy in 1943.
Continue reading Ace Reid, Cowboy CartoonistValentine, Texas
Valentine, Texas in Jeff Davis County is not a ghost town, but is currently a shadow of the village it was during its brief heyday. It was founded on February 14, 1882 by a Southern Pacific Railroad crew. Trains began to run the following year and it added a post office in 1886. For many years, the Southern Pacific Railroad maintained a large roundhouse in which they serviced their railroad engines running between California and Chicago. With the railroad business, the population of Valentine briefly swelled.
John Wesley Hardin, Outlaw (1853-1895)
Reported in the Galveston Daily News, Galveston, Texas Saturday August 25, 1877:
“A Texas Desperado
WHITING, -ALA, August 24. – Today, as the train was leaving Pensacola, the sheriff, with a posse, boarded the cars to assist two Texas officials to arrest the notorious John Wesley Hardin, who is said to have committed twenty-seven murders, and for whose body four thousand dollars has been offered by the Legislature of Texas. His last murder in Texas was the killing of the sheriff of Comanche County. He has lived in the State of Florida for years as John Swain. Being related to the county officers he has escaped arrest. About twenty shots were fired in making the arrest.
Hardin’s companion, named Mann, who held a pistol in his hand, was killed.”
Continue reading John Wesley Hardin, Outlaw (1853-1895)The Preacher and the Police Chief
117 years ago today, the paragraph below appeared in the Bryan, Texas Eagle: “The Gun of Rev. George W. Truett Goes Off Accidentally While Hunting. Dallas, Feb. 5. – J. C. Arnold, chief of police of this city, was accidentally shot yesterday near Cleburne, Tex., while hunting, by Rev. George W. Truett, pastor of the First Baptist church here. The gun of the minister was accidentally discharged, sending a load of birdshot into Captain Arnold’s leg. The wound is not considered dangerous.”
Continue reading The Preacher and the Police Chief

