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In the winter of 1842, a strange ship appeared off Galveston and soon had Texan tongues wagging. That ship was the Dolphin, a British schooner-of-war, fitted out as an armed luxury yacht by Captain William Houstoun, a British cavalry officer.
Captain Houstoun had come to hunt and fish. His wife, Matilda Charlotte Jesse Fraser Houstoun (1815-1892), had come to observe...and record what she saw and heard for the London News. It was her mission to inform the civilized British public about this distant, dangerous, murderous place called Texas and it's wild inhabitants.
This book is the result of her observations and thoughts while voyaging the Gulf and visiting Texas.
"No one is stopped in this country by anything short of a Bowie knife or rifle-ball." Her tone is lighthearted, but proper, making it a bit like listening to Mary Poppins tell tales of Texas adventures and intrigue. She mixed with people of all types while in Texas, from store keepers, to high officials to slaves and free people of color.
"The Texans are an impatient people; they drive to, and at their end, with greater velocity than any individuals I have ever seen or heard of. Nothing stops them in their go-ahead career."
By the time they left, Mrs. Houstoun had grown to love Texas and Texans. She admired the free-spiritedness and good-heartedness of the people. She hoped that Texas would always remain an independent republic.
And she wished the women of Texas would exercise their influence over the men to stop their constant chewing and spitting of tobacco.
Why this Edition is Different... and Important
Mrs. Houstoun adhered to Victorian decorum in her writings and only the initials of her sources were included in the text, to avoid "name dropping." We have done the research, and now for the first time, the full names are included in the text. Corrects erroneous dates regarding the trip that appeared in the original and have been perpetuated in other books and journal articles since. (Even Streeter, the Texas State Library and the Library of Congress have it wrong.) Includes for the first time, her writings about their second Texas trip in 1846. They visited with several of the major players in the annexation drama, including President Anson Jones, and also stayed with Col. Morgan's family at Morgan's Point. Includes the first printed representation of the City of Houston which appeared in the London edition of 1844 (it was not included in the the American edition of 1845.) Known to scholars as 'The Alpine Houston' it was the only depiction of the city to be published during the Republic era. It shows Houston as a European-style hamlet at the base of a mountain. (It also shows a railroad bridge, though none would exist until 1861.) Includes a beautiful description of the yacht Dolphin that appeared in the Houston Telegraph and Texas Register. Is annotated to provide context for her observations within the bigger picture of Texas history.
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In the winter of 1842, a strange ship appeared off Galveston and soon had Texan tongues wagging. That ship was the Dolphin, a British schooner-of-war, fitted out as an armed luxury yacht by Captain William Houstoun, a British cavalry officer.
Captain Houstoun had come to hunt and fish. His wife, Matilda Charlotte Jesse Fraser Houstoun (1815-1892), had come to observe...and record what she saw and heard for the London News. It was her mission to inform the civilized British public about this distant, dangerous, murderous place called Texas and it's wild inhabitants.
This book is the result of her observations and thoughts while voyaging the Gulf and visiting Texas.
"No one is stopped in this country by anything short of a Bowie knife or rifle-ball." Her tone is lighthearted, but proper, making it a bit like listening to Mary Poppins tell tales of Texas adventures and intrigue. She mixed with people of all types while in Texas, from store keepers, to high officials to slaves and free people of color.
"The Texans are an impatient people; they drive to, and at their end, with greater velocity than any individuals I have ever seen or heard of. Nothing stops them in their go-ahead career."
By the time they left, Mrs. Houstoun had grown to love Texas and Texans. She admired the free-spiritedness and good-heartedness of the people. She hoped that Texas would always remain an independent republic.
And she wished the women of Texas would exercise their influence over the men to stop their constant chewing and spitting of tobacco.
Why this Edition is Different... and Important
Mrs. Houstoun adhered to Victorian decorum in her writings and only the initials of her sources were included in the text, to avoid "name dropping." We have done the research, and now for the first time, the full names are included in the text. Corrects erroneous dates regarding the trip that appeared in the original and have been perpetuated in other books and journal articles since. (Even Streeter, the Texas State Library and the Library of Congress have it wrong.) Includes for the first time, her writings about their second Texas trip in 1846. They visited with several of the major players in the annexation drama, including President Anson Jones, and also stayed with Col. Morgan's family at Morgan's Point. Includes the first printed representation of the City of Houston which appeared in the London edition of 1844 (it was not included in the the American edition of 1845.) Known to scholars as 'The Alpine Houston' it was the only depiction of the city to be published during the Republic era. It shows Houston as a European-style hamlet at the base of a mountain. (It also shows a railroad bridge, though none would exist until 1861.) Includes a beautiful description of the yacht Dolphin that appeared in the Houston Telegraph and Texas Register. Is annotated to provide context for her observations within the bigger picture of Texas history.