Uvalde County, Texas For the following account of Indian of Indian outrages in Uvalde county we are indebted chiefly to Mr. Ross Kennedy, a well known citizen of that county: The first murder committed by the Indians in Uvalde county of which we...
Uvalde County, Texas Richard M. Ware was digging a ditch to irrigate a small place in Onion Creek, about seven miles south of Utopia, and about six miles south of Waresville. He noticed six Indians quietly slipping toward him. Just at the moment one...
Uvalde County, Texas Julius Sanders and the Remaining Part of the Red Men's Raid Julius Sanders and the Remaining Part of the Red Men's Raid Julius Sanders who lived on the Frio about nine miles east of Uvalde was returning home from some corrals or...
Uvalde County, Texas The 13th day of March, 1861, Henry M. Robinson and Henry Adams, who lived twelve and fifteen miles northwest of Uvalde on the Nueces, started to camp Wood, a Federal military post, which was being abandoned because of the...
Uvalde County, Texas Indian Raid Through Uvalde County, When Henry Robinson Jr. was Killed September 8, 1865, the Indians passed near Waresville south of the present town of Utopia, on a horse-stealing raid, and from here they moved west. After the...
Uvalde County, Texas Dr. John Richardson, who lived near the present town of Concan, and Frank Watkins who lived near the present village of Rio Frio, started to Uvalde for the purpose of registering in the War between the States. After reaching a...
Uvalde County, Texas About 1873, Ben, Xury, and N.B. Pulliam, were camped with some Mexican hired hands on Tartuga Creek, several miles south of Uvalde. Three of their horses had been missing, so about nine o'clock one morning, after Ben Pulliam had...
Uvalde County, Texas John Leaky and Others Fight in 1858 During the above year, Wilson O'Bryant drove his family over to visit his son-in-law, George Thompson, who then lived about four miles above the present city of Utopia. During the night they...
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