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Armstrong,
John
Aten, Ira
Baylor,
George
Brooks, J.
Abijah
Burton,
Marvin
Crowder, Robert
A.
Doherty,
Bobby Paul
Ford, John S.
Gillett,
James B.
Gonzaullas,
Manuel T.
Guffey, Stanley
Keith
Hall, Jesse
Lee
Hamer, Francis
A.
Hays, John Coffee
Hickman,
Thomas R.
Hughes, John
R.
Jones, John
B.
Klevenhagen,
John J., Sr.
Marsh, Bryan
Miller,
Charles E.
McCulloch,
Benjamin
McDonald,
William J.
McNelly,
Leander
Peoples,
Clinton T.
Riddles,
James E.
Rogers, John
H.
Ross, Lawrence
S.
Walker,
Samuel H.
Wallace,
William
Wright,
William L.
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George
W. Baylor
1832-1916
George
Wythe Baylor was born August 2, 1832 in Fort Gibson, Indian Territory.
The family moved often during his early years. In 1836 they relocated
to Natchez, Mississippi where his father died. Over the next several
years the family moved back to Fort Gibson to Pine Bluff, Arkansas,
Little Rock, Arkansas, and finally back to Fort Gibson.
In
1845, Baylor moved to Texas to live with his brother John in Ross Prairie
near La Grange. He went to Rutersville College and later, through the
influence of his uncle R.E.B. Baylor, he attended Baylor University
at Independence, Texas. He worked for a short time as a clerk with the
Commissary Department of the U. S. Army at the Alamo in San Antonio.
Gold
fever took him to California in 1854. 1856 finds Baylor in San Francisco
and a member of the Vigilance Committee. According to family letters,
George could not find steady employment or strike it rich in the gold
fields. By late 1859 he was back in Texas and living with his brother
in Weatherford. Baylor joined the Confederate cause at the outbreak
of the Civil War. Serving first with his brother's Arizona brigade,
by late summer, he was aide-de-camp to Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston.
Following the battle of Shiloh, Baylor returned to Texas and was elected
colonel of the 2nd Cavalry Regiment of the Arizona Brigade. He also
led a Cavalry regiment during the Red River campaign of 1864 and was
commended for gallantry.
Following
the war, Baylor continued his restless lifestyle, never staying in one
place for long. In September of 1879, Baylor was commissioned a lieutenant
in the Texas Rangers and ordered to take over the command of a detachment
of Rangers in El Paso. Baylor was able, through his knowledge of Spanish
and his friendships with many of the leading citizens of El Paso, to
put to rest the lingering hatreds caused by the Salt Wars. He was soon
involved in protecting the region from attacks from the Apaches. Baylor
used local guides and worked closely with Mexican authorities on the
south side of the Rio Grande.
One
of Baylor's greatest successes as a Ranger came in January 1881. For
several weeks the U. S. Tenth Cavalry and the Rangers were kept busy
in pursuit Victorio's band of Apaches. In January 1881 a small band
of Apaches attacked a stagecoach in Quitman Canyon. Following the cold
trail, Baylor and his Rangers tracked the Apaches down the bank of the
Rio Grande and into Mexico. Along the way they found items taken from
the stage. The trail turned back into Texas, where they found a fresh
camp site. Following the trail into the Eagle Mountains, the Rangers
came across a camp that was only hours old. Baylor's men met up with
a detachment of Rangers from Lt. Nevill's company at Eagle Springs.
After more tracking, the Rangers finally came upon the Indian camp.
A fight ensued on the morning of January 29. The fight, though small,
has come down through history as the last Indian battle in Texas. In
1882 Baylor was promoted to captain of Company A. In 1885 Baylor's Company
A was disbanded due to budget cuts.
After
his Ranger service, Baylor was elected from El Paso to serve in the
Texas State House of Representatives. He also served as clerk of the
district and circuit courts for a number of years. He died on March
17, 1916 in San Antonio. He is buried in the Confederate Cemetery in
San Antonio.
Suggestions
for further reading:
-
George
W. Baylor, Into the far, wild country, El Paso: Texas Western
Press, The University of Texas at El Paso, 1996
-
Frederick
Wilkins, The law comes to Texas, Austin: State House Press,
1999
-
The
New Handbook of Texas, Austin: The Texas State Historical Commission,
1996, vol. 1
-
Walter
Prescott Webb, The Texas Rangers, Boston: Houghton Mifflin,
1935
-
Texas
Adjutant General's Papers, Texas State Archives, Austin, Texas
-
Vertical
files, Texas Ranger Research Center, Texas Ranger Hall of Fame, Waco,
Texas
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