Alamo Campers Visit the DRT Library

Earlier this month, the DRT Library welcomed young people attending summer camp at the Alamo.

DRT Library Director Leslie Stapleton took campers on a behind-the-scenes tour of the library.

DRT Library Director Leslie Stapleton takes campers on a behind-the-scenes tour of the library.

During each of the two week-long sessions of camp, participants spent about an hour in the library working with staff members to learn about and use a variety of library and archival materials. Campers enjoyed a behind-the-scenes tour of the library; researched their ancestors or famous Texans using online census records; examined an 1873 bird’s eye view map of San Antonio; and used city directories and other sources to learn about Texas artist Theodore Gentilz and the Hugo and Schmeltzer mercantile firm, which operated its business on the Alamo grounds in the late 1800s and early 1900s.

Young people interested in learning about Texas history – particularly as part of a school assignment or National History Day project – are encouraged to visit the DRT Library and explore its library and archival materials. Check out the library’s website for more information.

Assistant Director Martha Utterback, bookkeeper Madalene Morgan, and Alamo museum educator Sherri Driscoll assist campers in closely examining an 1873 map of San Antonio.

Assistant Director Martha Utterback, Bookkeeper Madalene Morgan, and Alamo Museum Educator Sherri Driscoll (left to right) assist campers in closely examining an 1873 map of San Antonio.

Archivist Caitlin Donnelly and library assistant Lydia Cuellar assist campers in searching online census records.

Archivist Caitlin Donnelly, left, and Library Assistant Lydia Cuellar, right, help campers in searching online census records.

Cataloging librarian Beverly Ewald helps students use library materials to conduct research.

Cataloging Librarian Beverly Ewald helps students use library materials to conduct research.

Library Assistant Rusty Gamez showed campers reproductions of artwork by Theodore Gentilz.

Library Assistant Rusty Gamez shows campers reproductions of artwork by Theodore Gentilz.

Published in:  on July 24, 2009 at 11:46 am Leave a Comment
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General Cós’s Warning to Texans, July 1835

In his decree dated July 5, 1835, Mexican general Martín Perfecto de Cós warned Texans that disruptive activities against the government will result in war.

Martin Perfecto de Cos's declaration of July 5, 1835.

Martin Perfecto de Cos's declaration of July 5, 1835.

Cós issued his announcement shortly after a confrontation in Anuahuac over the collection of custom duties; if he was aware of these events, the document may have been a direct answer to the Texans’ actions there, specifically when he refers to “some bad citizens” who had “attempt[ed] to disturb the public order and peace.”

In a larger context, however, Cós’s words were a response to tensions that had been rising in Texas and elsewhere across Mexico for several years as a result of the country’s tumultuous political circumstances. Texans sought the repeal of the Law of April 6, 1830, and other measures enacted to regulate the importation of slaves, strengthen the presence of the Mexican military in Texas, and establish customs houses that would collect taxes and stop illegal trade with the United States. Texans also wanted their state to be detached from Coahuila; with the two states joined together as Coahuila y Tejas, the capital was located in Saltillo, 400 miles south of San Antonio.

Cos's broadside was printed in Spanish on one side and English on the other.

Cos's broadside was printed in Spanish on one side and English on the other.

More broadly, Mexicans across the country were angered when Antonio López de Santa Anna, elected president of Mexico as a liberal in 1833, later stated that Mexico was not ready for democracy and emerged as an autocratic Centralist. He discarded the Federalist Constitution of 1824 and was granted extra powers while a new centralist constitution was being written. The new document transformed states into departments whose governors were appointed from Mexico City and reduced the size of each state’s militia in order to curtail resistance to the redistribution of power. Rebellion against Santa Anna’s centralism broke out in the states of Zacatecas and Yucatan; Texans eventually revolted, as well, ultimately demanding full independence from Mexico.

Click here for a full citation of the documents and images included in this entry.

2009-2011 DRT Library Committee

The staff members of the DRT Library are pleased to welcome the members of the 2009-2011 Library Committee. Members of the Committee were selected in June from the nearly 7,000 members of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas.

DRT Library Committee Chairman Elaine Vetter.

DRT Library Committee Chairman Elaine Vetter.

The incoming Library Committee will be chaired by Elaine Milam Vetter, who is a member of the Alamo Heroes Chapter in San Antonio. Elaine is a sixth generation Texan and a descendant of Collin McKinney, a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence. She has long been active in the DRT, having served as Chairman of the Annual Proceedings Committee, District III Representative, and Historian General. Elaine also helped charter and served as the second president of the Collin McKinney Chapter in Plano, Texas.

Perhaps Elaine’s most significant contribution to the DRT was creating the Native Texan License Plate (NTLP) Project. According to Elaine, “I thought of the idea one afternoon while standing in front of the Alamo under the olive tree. I wanted a way to raise funds for the preservation of historic Texas sites such as our beloved Alamo and for programs that teach and preserve Texas history.”  Elaine is pleased that “well over $100,000 has been raised to date” and that “Texans from all over the state are contributing to this project and preservation with their purchase of the Native Texan License Plate.” She writes, “I still get goosebumps every time I see one on cars traveling the highways of Texas!”

In addition to her activities with the Daughters of the Republic of Texas, Elaine is a member of the San Antonio Conservation Society, the San Antonio Fiesta Commission, the Society for Human Resource Management, the San Antonio Human Resource Management Association, and Holy Trinity Catholic Church. She is also a Captain in the Texas State Guard, Alamo Medical Response Group (AMRG), and serves as their personnel officer.

Elaine earned her bachelor’s degree from the University of Texas at Dallas and an MBA from the University of Dallas. She is also a certified meeting professional. Elaine currently works as Sysco San Antonio’s recruiter. (She supplied us with an interesting historical note that the founder of Sysco San Antonio is a descendant of John J. Baugh, an Alamo defender.) Elaine has been married for thirty-eight years to Lewis Vetter; their family also includes their children – Bryce and his wife, Jodie, and Diane her husband, Joseph – as well as a granddaughter, Alice.

In addition to Elaine, the other members of the 2009-2011 Library Committee are:

  • Theresa Baucum, Clara Driscoll Chapter DRT
  • Cecilia Cheever, Alamo Mission Chapter DRT
  • Roxann Garcia, James Butler Bonham Chapter DRT
  • Rosemarie Gregory, Ferdinand Lindheimer Chapter DRT
  • Mary Ann Oliver, Alamo Couriers Chapter DRT
  • Lois McCarthy, Alamo Heroes Chapter DRT
  • Armandina Sifuentes, Alamo Couriers Chapter DRT
  • Jeanie Travis, Alamo Mission Chapter DRT
  • President General Patti Atkins, Franklin Hardin Chapter DRT
Published in:  on July 14, 2009 at 5:57 pm Comments (1)
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Henri Castro’s Société de Colonisation Europée-Américain au Texas

“Once I thought to write a history of the immigrants in America,” wrote historian Oscar Handlin in the introduction of his Pulitzer Prize winning work The Uprooted. “Then I discovered that the immigrants were American history.” Indeed, the DRT Library’s collections contain many books, vertical files, archival collections, and other materials documenting the history and experiences of immigrant groups in San Antonio and Texas.

Maria Derungs's contract with the Societe de Colonisation au Texas and Maria Derungs dated June 27, 1847.

Maria Derungs's contract with the Societe de Colonisation au Texas dated June 27, 1847.

Second page of the contract.

Second page of the contract.

Third page of the contract.

Third page of the contract.

One of these items, pictured above, can be found in the DRT 9 Documents Collection. It a contract between colonist Maria Derungs and Henri Castro’s Société de Colonisation Europée-Américain au Texas, signed on June 27, 1847. Through the Société, writes Bobby D. Weaver, Castro “hired agents to recruit colonists and devised the means to insure the orderly movement” of European colonists – specifically individuals and families from France and the German states – to Texas beginning in 1842 (26). While the original office for the Société was located at 6 rue de la Beaume in Paris, a new organization with the same name was later created with headquarters in Antwerp.

As an empresario, Henri Castro was granted the right to settle on 1.25 million acres of land west-southwest of San Antonio in exchange for recruiting and taking responsibility for new settlers. The empresario system originated when Texas was ruled by the Mexican government. However, because the practice had the potential to sell vast public lands to new settlers, Texans continued it after independence as a means of remedying the economic instability facing the Republic of Texas. In theory, writes Wayne M. Ahr, the system also benefited empresarios like Castro and each new colonist:

The grant…stipulated that each married man would be allotted 640 acres, and each bachelor would be allotted 360 acres. To gain proper title to the land, colonists were required to construct a permanent dwelling on their plots and put at least fifteen acres under cultivation within a year. Castro would receive ten sections of land for every one hundred colonists he introduced” (130).

Each colonist to Castro’s colony signed a contract similar to the one signed by Maria Derungs. Weaver describes that the document “paraphrased the law that granted Castro his concession and outlined the stipulations of his contract.” In addition, each colonist signed a supplementary statement in which he agreed to “relinquish to Castro one-half the land due to [him] in return for expenses incurred by the empresario in recruiting and transporting the colonist to the property.” After signing both documents, the colonist paid a deposit of 100 francs ($20), “which he could redeem upon arrival on concession land.” The fee protected Castro’s financial investment in the colonization program by “insur[ing] that the person would indeed go to the colony or forfeit his deposit.” Finally, “each emigrant received detailed written instructions on what to do, whom to see, and where to go” at all points on the journey from Europe to Texas (26-27).

Auguste Fretelliere. (SC889.50.2.9)

Auguste Fretelliere. (SC889.50.2.9)

In “Adventures of a Castrovillian,” Auguste Frétellière, friend and brother-in-law of artist Theodore Gentilz, describes his experience in becoming one of Castro’s colonists. The reader firsts meets Frétellière “strolling along the Champs Elysées” on a June morning in 1843, anxious about his future in France. He is intrigued when his friend Page asks “Would you like to earn a million in five years?” and offers to introduce him to a “great capitalist who wished to establish a colony in Texas.” Frétellière’s account illustrates Wayne M. Ahr’s argument that Castro impressed potential recruits with “his manners, sumptuous headquarters, and promises of fortune” (131). However, unlike Frétellière, many people were not impressed enough to agree to go to Texas.

I was punctual for the engagement, and [Page and I] went together to Mr. Henry Castro’s house in the rue Lafitte. We were kept waiting in the antechamber rather a long time. (The custom is fairly general in France, since it gives importance to the personage on whom one is calling.) Finally a butler, conventionally dressed, came to show us into the drawing-room. The apartment was magnificent, Brussels carpet, a tête-à- tête and arm-chairs upholstered in crimson satin; a Saint Gobain mirror with an ornate frame; and a series of paintings which depicted scenes in America and Indian life. It was marvelous. My friend presented me to Mr. H. Castro. He was a middle-aged man, dressed in the latest fashion. He had the manner of a person of consequence, and of a diplomat as well – characteristics which impressed me at once. The conversation began, and he had no difficulty in convincing me that I should join his colony; for with that enterprise I would realize a fortune in a few years. He gave me a brochure, begging me to notice that in the little book I would learn of all the advantages which would accrue to people casting their lot with him. We took leave of the gentleman, promising to give him an answer shortly (80).

While at this time nothing else is known about Maria Derungs, Frétellière’s account helps us imagine and surmise the circumstances in which she signed her contract with Henri Castro’s Société de Colonisation Europée-Américain au Texas.

References:

Wayne M. Ahr, “Henri Castro and Castroville: Alsatian History and Heritage,” in The French in Texas: History, Migration, Culture edited by François Lagarde

Auguste Frétellière, “Adventures of a Castrovillian,” in Castro-ville and Henry Castro, Empresario by Julia Nott Waugh

Bobby D. Weaver, Castro’s Colony: Empresario Development in Texas, 1842-1865

Click here for a full citation of the documents and images included in this entry.