1815 - The Pirate, Jean Laffite, had to delay a far-flung plot to attack Texas and Tampico, and sailed to New Orleans to help the forces led by Andrew Jackson to secure an overwhelming victory for the Battle of New Orleans. He returned from this trip in November 1816. During his absence the New Orleans plotters had broadened their plan to open a port on the Texas coast that would serve as a haven for privateers and as a base for an attack against Texas. At his brother's request, Jean Laffite prepared to take over at Galveston, having spent several thousand dollars, for vessels and supplies. Laffite remained the master of Galveston after his return in September 1817, and made it a center for smuggling and privateering. Laffite abandoned Galveston early in May 1820 and sailed to Mugeres Island, off the coast of Yucatán due to American government's determination to end the Galveston establishment as a raiding base against them.
1836 - A flag created by Johannan Troutman depicting a blue start on a white background with the words "Liberty of Death", was flown over the American Hotel in Valasco. William Ward's Georgia Battalion, in Texas to help with the Revolution, brought the flag with them. On March 8th, the flag would be flown over Goliad by Colonel James Fannin.
1864 - Seventeen-year-old David Owen Dodd was hanged. The Texas native was captured as he tried to cross Federal lines near Little Rock, with notes in Morse code hidden in his shoe. After a military court found him guilty, he confessed that he had been sent to gather information about Union troops. Dodd may have been the youngest person hanged as a spy in the Civil War.
1865 - About 160 Confederates and 325 state militiamen lost a battle against the Kickapoo Indians about twenty miles southwest of present San Angelo. A militia force under Capt. S. S. Totten and state Confederate troops under Capt. Henry Fossett set out, but the two forces lacked a unified command and full communication. When the troops and militiamen finally rendezvoused near the timbered encampment of the Kickapoos along Dove Creek, the forces concocted a hasty battle plan. The Confederate force was splintered into three groups caught in a heavy crossfire. Three days later the battered Texans retreated eastward, while the embittered Kickapoos, once peaceful, escaped to the Mexican border. Thus began a violent period of border raids on settlers along the Rio Grande.
1869 - Major Eugene Carr gave up his attempt to establish a resupply depot for Bvt. Brig. Gen. William H. Penrose, who was ordered to pursue and capture recalcitrant Cheyennes who had been raiding in the Canadian River area of the Texas Panhandle, and marched back to Fort Lyon, Colorado with the loss of 181 animals and two men from exposure. Among the civilian scouts accompanying his "Dandy Fifth" were James Butler (Wild Bill) Hickok and William F. (Buffalo Bill) Cody, whom Carr highly commended after Cody made a ride to Camp Supply in Indian Territory to deliver dispatches and obtain maps; this was the only foray these legendary frontiersmen ever made into Texas as army scouts.
1870 - Edmund Davis became the first Republican governor of Texas. Davis, a Union Army officer and political ally of Sam Houston, won a disputed 1869 election to become Reconstruction-era governor of Texas. He was described by a contemporary as a "tall, gaunt, cold-eyed, rather commanding figure." After a controversial term in office, Davis lost a re-election landslide to Richard Coke in 1873. It was 105 years before Texas had another Republican governor: Dallas oilman Bill Clements.
1884 - The state legislature made fence cutting a felony punishable by one to five years in prison. In 1883, fence cutting had become a major source of friction between landless cattlemen who wanted to retain practices of the open range and those who fenced their land with barbed wire. The fence war was precipitated by the drought of 1883. Governor John Ireland called a special session of the legislature to meet on January 8, 1884, to address the issue. The ensuing legislation ended most of the fence troubles, although sporadic outbreaks of nipping continued for a decade, especially during droughts.
This Date In Texas History - January 8
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
This Date In Texas History - January 8
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Re: This Date In Texas History - January 8
1935 - Elvis Presley was born in Tupelo, Mississippi. I know it didn't happen in Texas, but I think that many Texans must have listened to his music.
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Re: This Date In Texas History - January 8
I didn't know that! Thanks WildBill.WildBill wrote:1935 - Elvis Presley was born in Tupelo, Mississippi. I know it didn't happen in Texas, but I think that many Texans must have listened to his music.

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Re: This Date In Texas History - January 8
The Galveston County Daily News prints items from their archives from 50 and 100 years ago.
This date in 1911 the captain of a ship disappeared about 100 miles offshore of Galveston. No witness admitted to knowing anything about the incident. The missing captain was presumed to have fallen overboard in a "stiff norther" and drowned.
In 1961 headstones were knocked down in the Catholic cemetery at 40th and Avenue L. The authorities said the incident must have been caused by a "freak wind," because the headstones were too heavy for human beings to have moved. [They got into the cemetery somehow, didn't they?]
Both of these incidents were undoubtedly caused by the space aliens that have been poking around for centuries.
- Jim
This date in 1911 the captain of a ship disappeared about 100 miles offshore of Galveston. No witness admitted to knowing anything about the incident. The missing captain was presumed to have fallen overboard in a "stiff norther" and drowned.
In 1961 headstones were knocked down in the Catholic cemetery at 40th and Avenue L. The authorities said the incident must have been caused by a "freak wind," because the headstones were too heavy for human beings to have moved. [They got into the cemetery somehow, didn't they?]
Both of these incidents were undoubtedly caused by the space aliens that have been poking around for centuries.
- Jim
Fear, anger, hatred, and greed. The devil's all-you-can-eat buffet.
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Re: This Date In Texas History - January 8
Today's Birthdays
1947 - David Bowie
1942 - Stephen Hawking
1935 - Elvis Presley
1933 - Charles Osgood
1902 - Carl Rogers
Birthdays on January 8th
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1947 - David Bowie
1942 - Stephen Hawking
1935 - Elvis Presley
1933 - Charles Osgood
1902 - Carl Rogers
Birthdays on January 8th
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(where you can shop for interesting Forum "signature" quotes)
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N. Texas LTC's hold 3 breakfasts each month. All are 800 AM. OC is fine.
2nd Saturdays: Rudy's BBQ, N. Dallas Pkwy, N.bound, N. of Main St., Frisco.
3rd Saturdays: Golden Corral, 465 E. I-20, Collins St exit, Arlington.
4th Saturdays: Sunny St. Cafe, off I-20, Exit 415, Mikus Rd, Willow Park.
2nd Saturdays: Rudy's BBQ, N. Dallas Pkwy, N.bound, N. of Main St., Frisco.
3rd Saturdays: Golden Corral, 465 E. I-20, Collins St exit, Arlington.
4th Saturdays: Sunny St. Cafe, off I-20, Exit 415, Mikus Rd, Willow Park.
Re: This Date In Texas History - January 8
Keith B (TexasCHLforum moderator)surprise_i'm_armed wrote:Today's Birthdays
1947 - David Bowie
1942 - Stephen Hawking
1935 - Elvis Presley
1933 - Charles Osgood
1902 - Carl Rogers
Birthdays on January 8th
Source: http://www.brainyquote.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
(where you can shop for interesting Forum "signature" quotes)
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