“Crosswire” Awarded 2010 Naylor Book Award

The Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library Committee is pleased to announce that the 2010 June Franklin Naylor Award for the Best Book for Children on Texas History is awarded to Dotti Enderle for her book Crosswire, published in 2010 by Calkins Creek Books of Pennsylvania.

The announcement was made Friday evening, May 13, 2011, by Mrs. Elaine Milam Vetter, Chairman of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library Committee, at the 120th Annual Convention of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas.

From left to right, 2009-2011 DRT Library Committee Chairman Elaine Milam Vetter, Crosswire author Dotti Enderle, and DRT Library Director Leslie Stapleton.

From left to right, 2009-2011 DRT Library Committee Chairman Elaine Milam Vetter, Crosswire author Dotti Enderle, and DRT Library Director Leslie Stapleton.

A three-member panel of judges comprised of historians, educators, and librarians evaluated the Naylor Award entries. The 2010 committee included chairman Dr. Barbara Immroth, professor in the School of Information, the University of Texas at Austin, and committee members Dr. Viki Ash, Coordinator of Children’s Services, San Antonio Public Library, and Professor Amy Carter, English Department Instructional Facilitator, Floresville High School, Floresville, Texas.

The committee noted that native Texan Dotti Enderle has crafted a suspenseful coming-of-age story set in rural Texas in 1883. Thirteen-year-old Jesse Wade tells a story of personal struggle, family tension, and drought-induced fence cutting. Enderle’s cast of well-developed characters includes a tyrannical father, a rebellious older brother, and an undercover Texas Ranger. Tight plotting and historical detail add to the books’ appeal.

The June Franklin Naylor Award for the Best Book for Children on Texas History, endowed by the family of June Franklin Naylor and sponsored by the Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library, is given annually to the author/illustrator of the most distinguished fiction or nonfiction book for children and young adults, grades K-12, that accurately portrays the history of Texas. Mrs. Naylor, for whom the award is named, was a former schoolteacher and long-time resident of Odessa. She served as President General of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas from 1989 to 1991.

Please see the DRT Library’s website for additional information about the June Franklin Naylor Award, including guidelines for the 2011 award.

“The Crimson Cap” Awarded 2009 Naylor Book Award

The Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library Committee is pleased to announce that the 2009 June Franklin Naylor Award for the Best Book for Children on Texas History is awarded to Ellen Howard for her book The Crimson Cap, published in 2009 by the Holiday House, New York.

The announcement was made Friday, May 14, 2010, by Mrs. Elaine Milam Vetter, Chairman of the DRT Library Committee, at the 119th Annual Convention of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas.

Each year, a three-member panel of judges comprised of historians, educators, and librarians evaluates the Naylor Award entries. The 2009 committee included chairman Dr. Barbara Immroth, professor in the School of Information, University of Texas at Austin, and committee members Dr. Viki Ash, Coordinator of Children’s Services, San Antonio Public Library, and Mrs. Amy Carter, English Department Instructional Facilitator, Floresville High School, Floresville, Texas.

The committee noted that Ms. Howard weaves a compelling tale around the historical figure Pierre Talon. The young boy is only ten years old in 1687 when he leaves explorer René Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle’s doomed settlement on Matagorda Bay in search of aid from the settlers of New France. Braving illness and intrigue, Pierre also struggles with inner conflicts, including questions of personal safety, family solidarity, and ultimate justice. Howard skillfully portrays Pierre’s hardships, friendships, and personal struggles in a story that is sensitive to cultural diversity and historical nuance.

The June Franklin Naylor Award for the Best Book for Children on Texas History, endowed by the family of June Franklin Naylor and sponsored by the Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library, is given annually to the author/illustrator of the most distinguished fiction or nonfiction book for children and young adults, grades K-12, that accurately portrays the history of Texas. Mrs. Naylor, for whom the award is named, was a former schoolteacher and long-time resident of Odessa. She served as President General of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas from 1989 to 1991.

For Further Reading

You can read Voyage to the Mississippi Through the Gulf of Mexico, 1687, the English translation of a 1698 interrogation of Pierre Talon and his brother Jean-Baptiste, through the Wisconsin Historical Society’s American Journeys website.


Fiesta, 1910: “It’s Enough to Make One Want to Live Here Always”

Mary Ware in Texas

We recently came across a charming item documenting the early history of the Battle of Flowers Parade and the Order of the Alamo court: Mary Ware in Texas, a children’s book published one hundred years ago, provides an example of how each has been portrayed in popular culture.

Mary Ware was a character in Annie Fellows Johnston’s immensely popular and semi-autobiographical Little Colonel children’s series. The books focused on the adventures of Lloyd Sherman, a young girl whose fierce mannerisms echoed the traits of her grandfather, a Confederate colonel in the Civil War, and earned her the moniker “the Little Colonel.” Johnston (1863-1931) based the title character on five-year-old Hattie Cochran, whom she met in Kentucky in the early 1890s. The Little Colonel series eventually comprised twelve volumes published between 1895 and 1912; Shirley Temple played in the title role in the 1935 film adaptation.

The frontispiece illustration in Mary Ware in Texas, showing the title character in a field of bluebonnets.

The frontispiece illustration in Mary Ware in Texas, showing the title character in a field of bluebonnets.

Johnston introduced the character Mary Ware in Mary Ware: The Little Colonel’s Chum (1908), written in response to a flood of fan inquiries. Johnston wrote both that book and Mary Ware in Texas (1910) towards the end of her eight years residing in Boerne; the latter was finished around the time her stepson, John, died of tuberculosis at age twenty-nine.

Chapter 14 in Mary Ware in Texas focuses on Mary and her friends sightseeing in San Antonio during “San Jacinto Day” (now Fiesta San Antonio). Preliminary research does not indicate how Johnston obtained information about the various events she described. In a letter written from her home in Boerne on April 19, 1908, Johnston stated, “The Carnival begins tomorrow in San Antonio with its Battle of Flowers and parades, and we are thankful we are up in the hills ‘far from the maddening crowd.’” While Johnston may have attended Fiesta events other years during her time in Texas, she may have also relied on secondhand sources (e.g. stories from friends or detailed accounts published in the newspaper).

Four duchesses in the 1910 Court of the Roses, from the History of the Order of the Alamo.

In the book, Mary and her friends first attend the coronation of the Court of the Roses. Johnston apparently created characters who were members of the 1909 and 1910 courts in the story but not in real life. However, a comparison of Johnston’s account with details provided in the Order of the Alamo’s official history (shown below) indicates that she did accurately depict the opulence of the coronation 1910 ceremony, which in reality was only the second one held by the Order. “Look at Mary’s rapt expression!” her friend observes during the ceremony. “She’s always adored queens and such things, and now she feels that she’s up against the real article.”

Two pages from the first volume of the History of the Order of the Alamo describe the 1910 Court of the Roses and its coronation.

Following the coronation, Mary and her friends visit the illuminated San Antonio River, described in the book this way:

[Billy Mayrell] led them to a place where they could look across a bend and see one of the bridges. It was strung so thickly with red lights which outlined every part, that it seemed to be made of glowing rubies, and its reflection in the water made another shining ruby bridge below, wavering on the dark current.

Mary leaned over the rail watching the shimming lights, and feeling dreamily that this City of the Alamo was an enchanted city; that the buildings looming up on every side were not for the purpose of barter and trade. They were thrown up simply as backgrounds for the dazzling illuminations which outlined them against the night sky. The horns of the revellers answering each other down every street, the music of distant bands, the laughter of the jostling throngs, all deepened the illusion…

[The city] was a realm given over utterly to “Mirth and Merriment,” where a gracious young queen held sway, where illness and trouble and grief had no part.

“I don’t wonder that the Major wants everybody not already a loyal Texan to see this,” [Mary] said to the Lieutenant. “It’s enough to make one want to live here always” (343-345).

Postcard showing the Alamo decorated for the Battle of Flowers Parade and Helena Guenther, Queen of the Court of Carnival Flowers, 1911.

A postcard showing the Alamo decorated for the Battle of Flowers Parade and Helena Guenther, Queen of the Court of Carnival Flowers, 1911.

Finally, the next day, Mary and her friends attend the Battle of Flowers Parade, which they watch from the backseat of an automobile:

Back and forth in front of the Alamo went the two divisions of the parade, meeting and passing and turning to meet and pass again, all the while pelting each other with flowers, till the plaza where they rode was covered deep with them. And the bands played and the people cheered, till the smallest schoolboy in their midst felt a thrill of gratitude to the heroes whose deeds they were commemorating. He might miss the deeper meaning of it all, but he grasped one fact clearly enough: that had it not been for the grim battle which those brave fellows fought to the death, there would have been no San Jacinto Day for him. No pageant-filled holiday to make one feel that it is a great and glorious thing to be a son of the Lone Star State (346).

References and Further Reading

The Little Colonel website, http://www.littlecolonel.com, is authored by Donna Russell and provides a wealth of information about the series, including a biography of author Annie Fellows Johnston, descriptions of real people and places that inspired characters and locations in the stories, and full texts of each work.

Photographs of Annie Fellows Johnston and Hattie Cochran are available through the digitized Kate Matthews Collection, available through the University of Louisville Libraries.

The five-volume History of the Order of the Alamo, available at the DRT Library, contains information about each court between 1909 and 1989, including photographs of each queen, princess, and duchess during that period.

For more information about how the history of the Battle of Flowers Parade is documented in archival collections at the DRT Library, see last year’s entries about the event on the “Inside the Gates” blog. One post focused on the parade’s beginnings and earliest years; another highlighted photographs of participants and floats in the late 1800s and early 1900s, around the time Mary Ware in Texas takes place; and a third featured footage of the 1971 and 1976 parades.

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

Fern and Castillo Win the 2008 June Franklin Naylor Award

NaylorBook

The Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library Committee is pleased to announce that the 2008 June Franklin Naylor Award for the Best Book for Children on Texas history is awarded to author Tracey E. Fern and illustrator Lauren Castillo for Buffalo Music, published in 2008 by Clarion Books in New York. The announcement was made Friday evening, May 15, by Connie Impelman, Chairman of the DRT Library Committee, at the 118th Annual Convention of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas in Killeen, Texas.

A three-member panel of judges comprised of historians, educators, and librarians judge the entries. The 2008 committee included its chairman Dr. Barbara Immroth, professor in the School of Information, the University of Texas at Austin, and committee members Dr. Viki Ash, Coordinator of Children’s Services at San Antonio Public Library, and Linda Plevak, Adjunct Librarian at Northeast Lakeview College in Universal City, Texas.

Buffalo Music was inspired by real people and events of Texas history, namely Mary Ann Goodnight and her husband, Charles (who laid a route that would become the Goodnight-Loving Trail). When they settled in the Palo Duro Canyon in 1876, the “music of the buffalo” was the background score of their lives. However, buffalo hunters quickly decimated the herds, much to Mary Ann’s dismay.

Mary Ann’s story is told through the character of Miss Molly, and Fern’s work highlights her efforts to save the American Bison. Although she began with only two orphaned buffalo calves, Miss Molly’s conservation efforts ultimately assisted in the repopulation of buffalo in Yellowstone National Park.

The Naylor Award Committee notes that the book should appeal not only to children interested in the rich anecdotes that comprise Texas history but also those young readers with interests in nature and endangered species.

The June Franklin Naylor Award for the Best Book for Children on Texas History, endowed by the family of June Franklin Naylor and sponsored by the Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library, is given annually to the author/illustrator of the most distinguished book for children and young adults, grades K-12, that accurately portrays the history of Texas, whether fiction or nonfiction. Mrs. Naylor, for whom the award is named, was a former schoolteacher and a long-time resident of Odessa, and she served as President General of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas, Inc., from 1989 to 1991.

Please see the DRT Library’s website for information about past winners of the Naylor Award.

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