Since 1903 - The Best Goats
Welcome to Our Ranch | Our Family Album | Our Goats | Sale Goats | Show Goats | Ranching Gallery | Contact Us
Home Pasture | Extended Family | Family News | Days of the Texians | Serendipity | Smile | Greetings

Time for us to remodel the website!

We enjoy working with the website too much to shut it down even though we have only a few goats now, so we began to think of ways to expand it beyond our pastures so it would be more interesting. We decided to add several new sections. In one of those we will feature some goats from THE SEVEN A+ FAMILY.

   

"Hurry, Girls! We want to be the first ones in the new 7A+ Family part of the website!"
   

Some of our customers are using billies from our herd with nannies from our herd, thus continuing the same bloodlines. We plan to put some pictures of their goats in the Family section and make a link to their websites. That way the people who visited our website through the years will have a place to look at more 7A+ goats than the small herd we have now and will become familiar with other websites that show goats from some of our bloodlines.  (Note: the three nannies who went to Maryland ran to get their pictures taken so they could be the first ones in this new section.)

   
 THE DAYS OF THE TEXIANS
   

Coming to the Texas coast in 1834 from Ireland, the leader of the settlers had a confrontation when the skipper of a small steamer taking them to Copano tried to wreck the boat on a sandbar. (This sketch and other pictures in this section are from a book of family history put together by Donald Priour.)

   

Another new section of our website will deal with stories from the days of the Texians. Everyone's ancestors lived through dramatic periods of history, but most of those people were too busy surviving to write down any accounts of their experiences. We are fortunate enough to have narratives from several family members, so that makes it easier to visualize what it was like to live in such unsettled and dangerous times.

Our ancestors came here when Texas was still part of Mexico and lived through those wild and dangerous years when Texas became the Republic of Texas and the settlers began to call themselves Texians instead of Texicans. Indian raids, outlaw attacks, rattlesnakes, wild cattle, wild horses, bears, and panthers were a part of everyday life for those Texians. Since I have always been fascinated by the stories handed down through generations my aunts and uncles gave me all their books and manuscripts. Through autobiographies and assorted narratives I have a unique opportunity to re-live those early years.

   

Blackrock Castle in Cork, Ireland, where the Hart family lived while Thomas was captain of the Water Guards
   

My father’s mother descended from Grandma Hart who came from Ireland and landed at Copano on the Texas coast in 1834. Her daughter Rosalie Hart wrote in detail about all the family’s story beginning in 1799 when her grandfather was killed by the English in Dublin because of his religion. She told about her father arresting smugglers at night on the Irish coast as captain of the Water Guard and the epidemics their family went through in Ireland before her parents came to Texas.

   

A painting by Andrew J. Houston of the massacre by the Mexican army of Texians at Labardee where Elisabeth Hart's second husband was killed
   

As soon as they landed at Copano Bay on the Texas coast their lives were filled with dramatic situations. She tells about her father’s death, the Runaway Scrape, the years of living in Texas as a Republic, on through the hardships and danger brought on by the Union blockade of the Texas coast. Grandma Hart was finally buried under an old liveoak tree on the ranch at Papalote Creek, and Rosalie’s sons (one of whom was Daddy’s grandfather) served in the Texas Rangers protecting settlers against Indians and outlaws who took refuge in the Nueces Strip.

   
THE DIVIDE COUNTRY IN 1900
   

My father was born in 1900 and from the time he was big enough to listen he was interested in old times and remembered all the stories he heard. He was a master storyteller. When he was in his eighties I persuaded Daddy to write down for me what he could remember of those accounts and of his own experiences. His life was filled with challenges. The family lived 40 miles from town with the only travel being by horseback, and the road crossed the Guadalupe River seventeen times. His father was in an Indian raid. His paternal grandfather was in the Cavalry and fought Commanches on a regular basis.

   

The Gonzales Flag (inspired by the fact that the Mexican army wanted to take away a cannon from the settlers in Gonzales)
   

My mother’s family lived in Gonzales where the war for Texas Independence began. Since no one in that family wrote the kind of detailed history that Rosalie Hart did, the picture of the Greens and Nixons is less complete, but no less interesting. Her grandfather was a frontier doctor who was paid in chickens more often than in money. My mother’s father went on trail drives to the Kansas markets on the Chisholm trail which passes by Rancho where Honey (my mother) grew up, then he became a lawyer and a judge. I can remember going with him as a four-year-old when he was the speaker at an Old Trail Drivers Reunion.

   

The Family Storyteller

 

Gutherie Hodges was kin to both the Gonzales family and the Papalote family. The stories from the families and from nearby settlers fascinated Gutherie who turned them into adventure novels, trying to make the characters come alive for later generations.

I know that some of you have found this historical material as interesting as I have because I’ve shared bits and pieces of it with various friends. Since I have more time now I’ll make those stories available to the people who still like to read books and enjoy narratives set in the old West. In this day of hectic schedules and instant entertainment, both the desire and the leisure time to live adventures through reading have almost disappeared, however, some of us still enjoy that pastime. Since I have access to a treasure trove from the early days I intend to share the narratives with those of you who are interested

 
Since 1903 - The Best Goats
Welcome to Our Ranch | Our Family Album | Our Goats | Sale Goats | Show Goats | Ranching Gallery | Contact Us
Home Pasture | Extended Family | Family News | Days of the Texians | Serendipity | Smile | Greetings

©Seven A Plus Boer Goats. All Rights Reserved
Site design and maintenance:
Glaze Designs of Texas