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INDIAN WARS AND PIONEERS OF TEXAS. 115 six or eight weeks, and was then enabled to reach his home, where he in due time recovered, as proud of his heroic wife as he was thankful for their preservation through such apparently hopeless dangers. A party, accompanied by little Stockman, went out during the succeeding night to recover the body of little James Gracey, but were unable to find it. They camped at the spot indicated by Stockman, and when daylight came found it in their midst, and then realized the cause of their failure in the fact that the nude body, lying among the white rocks, was not distinguishable in the night time. The remains were conveyed to his stricken parents and family, and interred in the presence of a sympathizing concourse. Stockman now lives in San Antonio, but has been much about Dallas, and only a few days since recounted to me his version of this bloody episode in our border history. It will be of interest to many old residents of East and Southwest Texas to know that he is a grandson of Elder Garrison Greenwood, a sterling old Baptist preacher, who settled in Nacogdoches County in 1833, and moved west in 1846, finally to die in Lampasas County.
Raid into Cooke County, in December, 1863. On the 22d and 23d days of December, 1863, occurred one of the most bloody and destructive Indian raids to which our poorly protected frontier was subject during and for some years after the late war. At this time Col. James Bourland, one of the bravest and truest of all our frontiersmen, coinmanded a regiment of Confederate troops with his headquarters at Gainesville, but at the time of this particular raid he was in Bonham, on official business with Gen. Bourland had to protect with his regiment such an extended reach of frontier that he was compelled to scatter his troops in small squads far apart, and for this reason it was impossible to concentrate any considerable number of his troops at any given point in time to repel such an invasion as this.
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At this time Capt. Twitty, a brave and true soldier, was in command of the few troops of Col. Bourland's regiment, that then hal)pened to be at and near Gainesville not exceeding fifty or seventy-five in number. At the same time Capt. Rowland, a brave and experienced Indian fighter, commanded a company of Texas State troops.
Rowland was in camp at Red River Station, in Montague County, and was the first to hear of the raid. The Indians crossed Red river into Texas about 2 o'clock in the afternoon of the 22d of December, 1863, a few miles below Red River Station, and at once commenced their fiendish work of murder and burning. They first came upon the house of Mr. They killed his wife, and left her with her feet so near a fire in the yard as to roast her feet. At the residence of Wesley Willet they killed Mr.
Willet and one daughter, while his wife and another daughter made their escape. They burned and plundered Mr. Willet's house, and then came upon the house of Mr.
Hatfield and his family made their escape, but they had fled only a short distance before they looked back and saw their home in flames. After taking such things as they wanted the Indians set fire to the house. Settlements at this time along the Red river border were quite spare and what was then known as the Wallace settlement, in Sadler's bend in Cooke County, was the next settlement below Hatfield's and was some twelve or fifteen miles distant. The Indians started in the direction of this settlement when they left the Hatfield place, but they were closely pursued by Capt.
Rowland with about twenty-five men. The Indians were between two and three hundred strong. Before reaching the Wallace settlement the Indians recrossed Red river and this led Capt.
Rowland to believe that they had abandoned the raid, as it was their custom to make these sudden inroads upon the settlements and then make their escape under cover of night. Rowland and his men had ridden very rapidly the Indians had so much the start of them, that their horses were completely wearied out, so he thought it was best to turn into Capt. Wallace's and rest his men and horses for the night, and renew the pursuit early next morning. The news of the raid and the massacre of the Willet family with the usual exaggerations, had already been carried to the Wallace settlement, by some terrified settler, and when Capt. Rowland reached Wallace's.
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