Posts Tagged ‘Ferdinand Lindheimer’
Sunday, June 16th, 2013
By Myra Lee Adams Goff
The story of the capture of children in 1800s Texas is told through the research of Scott Zech in his book “The Captured”. Many children were captured by the Plains Indians. In his book, he studies in depth the life and eventual release of nine children, mostly boys under 14, who were captured in the Hill Country by Comanche and Apache tribes.
Remember that the original land grant that the emigrants had with the Adelsverein was that they were granted 320 acres for a family and 160 acres for a single male in the three-million-acre Fisher-Miller grant between the Llano and Colorado rivers known as the San Saba. Now remember that Prince Carl found out from Ranger Jack Hayes that this piece of land was way too far from the coast and it was dangerous because it was the prime hunting grounds of the Comanche.
Prince Carl decided that he needed to make arrangements for a stopping place. New Braunfels was chosen but instead of just a stopping place, it became the final destination. Here the emigrants were given a half-acre lot and 10 acre farm lot. This decision led to the unhappiness of the settlers due to the discrepancy of the number of acres that they were promised.
John Meusebach who took Prince Carl’s place as commissioner general, lead a group to what would become Fredericksburg. Many more emigrants had landed at the coast and he had to find a place for them.
Fredericksburg was located south of the San Saba grant. To open up this territory, Meusebach called for a treaty between the Comanche chiefs and the Germans. Meusebach was the one qualified to do this – smart, charismatic and persuasive. He was successful with these 20 chiefs. The problem was that the treaty was only with a small number of chiefs and not all of them. In other words, each chief was autonomous for his tribe only and there was no “big chief” for all of the Comanches. Around the Civil War and immediately after, the Hill Country faced many Indian atrocities.
In New Braunfels and Comal County, there were Lipan, Tonkawa, Karankawa, Waco, and occasional visits from the Comanche. A few killings were recorded, but locals found most of the behavior more frightening and annoying than dangerous.
Hermann Seele witnessed a gruesome scene as he was traveling from the coast to New Braunfels in 1845. Right outside of Seguin, he experienced a Texas rainstorm which broke up a cannibalistic orgy by Tonkawa Indians in the Guadalupe River bottom. They had boiled and fried flesh and feasted on a Waco warrior. The squaws said that by eating this delicious meat of a warrior, their own offspring would be as brave as the Waco.
Lt. Oscar von Claren who was later murdered by Comanches on his way back from Austin writes to his sister of visiting the encampment of the Tonkawa, some 500 men, women, and children. Witnessing a ceremony inside a tent brought a menacing feeling to von Claren – the monotonous lamentations, the dull hollow drum, the senseless rattle of gourds and the earnest faces of the Indians brought on this foreboding. He went outside only to witness happy children playing around a tall pole on which hung the arm and leg of a Waco warrior.
Ferdinand Lindheimer tells of a Tonkawa camp on the Guadalupe above New Braunfels. One day the Tonkawa were celebrating because they had killed an enemy warrior and they cooked the flesh.
In spite of these cannibalistic practices, most of the relations with the Indian tribes in Comal County were tolerable, but not so in the Hill Country.
Zech’s book tells of the captivity of children in the Hill Country, some for only months, and most for years. In spite of the terrible lives these children endured,all had a hard time readjusting to their family life once they were returned. Some even voluntarily reunited with their Indian captives.
Zech tells the story of Rudolph Fischer (13), Banc Babb (10), Dot Babb (14), Minnie Caudle, released after five months, Temple Friend (7), Adolph Korn (10), Hermann Lehmann (11) brothers Clinton (10), and Jeff Smith (8). He covers subjects such as where and when they were captured, their individual lives in captivity, readjustment to white society, religious views, and more.
Understanding the “Indianization” of the captives has long been a subject of study. One reason that seems feasible is that the captive liked the freedom and adventure of the Indian culture. Their life on the frontier was monotonous labor. Zech says, “The Comanche and Apache not only received the child captives warmly and without prejudice, they also spent much time training them, making them feel significant in tribal society”. Anyone who has a child who played “Cowboys and Indians” would understand this fascination of Indian life over frontier life.
These captives had mostly good things to say about the Indians who became their adopted families. They seemed to understand the motives and superstitions of the Indians. They admired the Comanche character and tribal laws.
Zech tells the captives’ stories in a straightforward way and makes no judgment. Read the book and see what you think.

Meusebach’s treaty with 20 Comanche chiefs on March 1st and 2nd, 1847. Painted in 1927 by Mrs. Lucy Marschall, one of the daughters of Meusebach.
Tags: 10 acre farm lot, 160 acres, 1800s, 1845, 1847, 320 acres, Adelsverein, Adolph Korn, adventure, Apache, Austin, Banc Babb, book, cannibalism, children, Civil War, Clinton Smith, coast, Colorado River, Comal County, Comanche, Comanche chiefs, commissioner general, Dot Babb, emigrants, encampment, family, Ferdinand Lindheimer, Fisher-Miller Grant, Fredericksburg, freedom, frontier, Germans, Guadalupe River, half-acre lot, Hermann Lehmann, Hermann Seele, Hill Country, hunting grounds, Indian atrocities, Indian culture, Indianization, Jeff Smith, John Meusebach, Karankawa, killings, land grant, Lipan, Llano River, Lt. Oscar von Claren, Minnie Caudle, Mrs. Lucy Marschall, murder, New Braunfels, Plains Indians, Prince Carl, rainstorm, religious views, Rudolph Fischer, San Saba Grant, Scott Zech, Seguin, single male, superstitions, Temple Friend, Texas Ranger Jack Hayes, Tonkawa, treaty, tribal laws, tribal society, Waco, “Cowboys and Indians”, “The Captured”
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Sunday, February 10th, 2013
By Myra Lee Adams Goff
Yesterday (Feb. 9) a historic event took place for New Braunfels Masonic Lodge No. 1109. The cornerstone leveling of a new lodge building at 1353 Wald Rd. took place. This is the fourth home for this lodge.
It is believed that the history of the Freemasons goes back in antiquity to the worker organizations formed into guilds of like trades, particularly the building trades. A group of members is called a lodge. Today members wear aprons that look like the working clothes of the old stonemasons. The term “free” possibly refers to the freedom to move without the restrictions of the feudal lords.
Although it is not a religious organization, nor does it take the place of religion, members must believe in a Higher Being. Freemasonry accepts worthy men and seeks to make good men better. Members work through degrees, the highest being the 33rd degree. Lodges support all good works, and believe in the equality of people, freedom, and democracy.
The first Grand Lodge was established on June 24, 1717, in London, England. The first Grand Master in America was appointed in 1730 by the Grand Lodge of England. Fourteen U.S. presidents were Freemasons, plus other Revolutionary notables, such as Benjamin Franklin, and Paul Revere. The cornerstone of the National Capitol was laid by Mason George Washington on Sept 18, 1793. The well-known painting of him wearing his Masonic apron was given to him by the Marquis de Lafayette, a French aristocrat fighting for the American cause.
Closer to home, the Grand Lodge of Texas was formed during the time of the Republic with Sam Houston presiding at the formation. This Grand Lodge set aside 10% of their revenues for free public education. The Texas Freemason charter was received during the Battle of San Jacinto.
With this impressive background, let us get to the history of NB Lodge #1109. Remember that before the Texas Revolution the area that we now call Comal County was in the larger district of Bexar. The Texas Legislature created Comal County in 1846 after Texas became a state. The first Masonic Lodge in Comal County was actually in Twin Sisters on Curry Creek. Then when the final boundaries for Comal County were set in 1858, the western section of Comal County, where the lodge was located, was separated and the lodge was then located in Blanco and Kendall counties. Twin Sisters Lodge #216 was eventually moved to the city of Blanco and named Blanco Lodge #216 where it still exists.
The second Comal County Masonic Lodge, #276, was chartered in 1864 and demised in 1874. Some well-known early leading citizens belonged to this lodge, a few of which were Hermann Seele, Ferdinand Lindheimer, George Pfeuffer, Louis Henne, J.J. Groos, Joseph Landa, John Torrey, and Joseph Faust.
In 1915 the third lodge ,#1109, was chartered and met at the carriage house next to the Jahn building on South Seguin Avenue(building no longer standing). Fourteen Master Masons asked for a charter and chose R.E. Kloepper the first Worshipful Master, J.E. Abrahams the first Senior Warden, and J.E. Herd the Junior Warden. Celebrating the formation of this lodge in 1916, more than 200 Masons from neighboring counties marched with local candidates and guests from the Jahn Building to where the ceremony was to take place in the Knoke building (where the former Eiband and Fischer store was located). Some visitors came by train, but the majority came in automobiles. After the ceremony, they went to Tolle Hall for roast pig and sweet potatoes.
Then in 1923 the lodge moved to the Albert Ludwig building on the corner of W. San Antonio St. and S. Castell Avenue (present site of Phoenix Saloon). Being a Mason, Ludwig built a third floor to his building and offered it to house the lodge. Notice that the third story does not cover the whole building.
Forty two years later, the lodge was moved to its building at 1157 W. San Anonio St. where it remained until the new lodge was purchased and dedicated yesterday. This building is also home of the New Braunfels Chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star and the New Braunfels Assembly of Rainbow Girls, affiliates of New Braunfels Masonic Lodge #1109.
Worshipful Master Riley Miller, who jokingly says that “real men do wear aprons”, invites all to come visit the lodge with its Museum and Library any Tuesday evening.

In 1916, Richard Kloepper was the first Worshipful Master of N.B. Masonic Lodge No. 1109, A.F. & F.M.
Tags: 1717, 1730, 1793, 1846, 1858, 1864, 1874, 1915, 1916, 1923, Albert Ludwig Building, American Revolution, aprons, Assembly of Rainbow Girls, automobiles, Battle of San Jacinto, Benjamin Franklin, Blanco County, Blanco Masonic Lodge No. 216, building trades, City of Blanco, Comal County, Comal County Masonic Lodge No. 276, cornerstone, Curry Creek, democracy, District of Bexar, Eiband and Fischer store, equality, Ferdinand Lindheimer, feudal lords, freedom, Freemasonry, Freemasons, George Pfeuffer, George Washington, Grand Lodge, Grand Lodge of England, Grand Lodge of Texas, Grand Master, guilds, Hermann Seele, Higher Being, J.E. Abrahams, J.E. Herd, J.J. Groos, Jahn Building, John Torrey, Joseph Faust, Joseph Landa, Junior Warden, Kendall County, Knoke Building, lodge, London (England), Louis Henne, Marquis de Lafayette, Masonic apron, Masons, Master Masons, New Braunfels Masonic Lodge No. 1109, Order of the Eastern Star, painting, Paul Revere, Phoenix Saloon, public education, R.E. Kloepper, Republic of Texas, Richard Kloepper, Riley Miller, Sam Houston, Senior Warden, South Castell Avenue, South Seguin Avenue, statehood, stonemasons, Texas Freemason charter, Texas Legislature, Texas Revolution, Tolle Hall, trades, train, Twin Sisters, Twin Sisters Masonic Lodge No. 216, U.S. Capitol, U.S. Presidents, Wald Road, West San Antonio Street, Worshipful Master
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Sunday, August 26th, 2012
By Myra Lee Adams Goff
When I think of Botanists in New Braunfels, I immediately think of Ferdinand Lindheimer. Lindheimer was given property on the Comal for his botanical garden. No doubt his accomplishments were many, but there were others in the field who contributed much to the beauty of our town. One in particular helped make NB the “garden spot” of Texas and that was Otto Martin Locke, Jr. He was a third generation New Braunfelser and a third generation horticulturist. He died in 1994 so some of you may remember him.
Here’s his family story:
Johann Joseph Locke, hailing from Prussia, arrived in NB in 1852 and in four years bought two 10- acre plots of land on the Comal Creek, what is now Town Creek and running to the Landa Street area. It eventually also covered the area from the RR tracks to the hill. Seeing a need for ornamental trees, as well as fruit-bearing trees, he put his knowledge of horticulture to use and began the first nursery in New Braunfels.
For 30 years the business thrived and then was taken over by Johann’s oldest son, Otto Martin Locke, Sr., who named the nursery “Comal Springs Nursery”. He was responsible for developing and producing fruit and pecan trees, vegetables and ornamental shrubs. Large orders were shipped by train. One order of 50,000 peach trees was sent to Mexico.
Many pecan trees around town were grown and grafted by Locke. I grew up knowing that the 10 pecan trees in our yard, the soft-shelled Daisey Pecan, were developed by Locke.
In 1906 Locke planted 50 to 60 thousand roses and developed the Bonita Arbor Vitae, which is a variety of evergreens. Other plants developed by him were Heidemeyer apple, Strington apple, Ferguson fig, Comal cling peaches, Dixie peach, November peach, Daisey pecan, Fall City tomato, Germania rose, Locke’s pride pear, Perfection pear, Old-favorite pomegranate, McCarthy plum, and Guadalupe dewberry. Locke was granted the first state permit for irrigating using state waters (Comal Creek).
The Otto Lockes trained their four boys in the nursery business in NB, Poteet, and San Antonio. The boys were Emil, Herman, Walter and Otto, Jr. It was this youngest boy who made the biggest impact on the whole town of New Braunfels.
Otto Martin Locke, Jr. and his wife, Etelka Rose Locke, acquired property between W. San Antonio St. and Hwy 81 S. in 1928, after the death of his father. They began the Otto Martin Locke Nursery that they operated until Otto’s death in 1994. At the time that Otto and Etelka moved to their new property, Herman and Thekla Locke and their son Howard, formed the Locke Nursery and Floral on part of the old property in the area of present streets: Lockner (Locke Nursery),Howard (Howard Locke),and Floral (obvious).
When Otto and Etelka Locke bought the property on W. San Antonio, it was a cotton field. Etelka was famous for her gardens, once planting 5,000 tulip bulbs in the 1940’s. (For pictures of theses tulips, log on to Sophienburg.com and click on column). She planted the garden around the Lindheimer House on Comal Ave. and the McKenna Memorial Hospital. Otto planted a chestnut oak for the Arbor Day ceremony at the Landa Park office. They used no pesticides on their ten acres, using only chameleons, lizards and snakes to eat the bugs.
Otto Locke’s love of animals as a child grew into a business. He became famous nationally and internationally as a major importer and exporter of exotic native animals and birds for zoos around the world. Inquiries came for birds, snakes, and armadillos. He traded his stock for monkeys, exotic snakes, lion cubs, alligators, crocodiles and even kangaroos. Animals were shipped to many countries and continents- England, Mexico, Germany, Singapore, Australia, Africa, Calcutta, and India. He supplied many snakes for Hollywood. Locke Nursery provided the closest thing to a zoo that New Braunfels had, for these animals were all on display. Children’s trips to the nursery were a real treat.
Looking toward the old nursery from I.H. 35 S., you see the remnants of the old sign, “Locke Nursery”, and thousands of overgrown trees, helping us remember a thriving business for 138 years. But…
“We’ll never smile at a crocodile again”.

Etelka and Otto Martin Locke, Jr. Patricia S. Arnold, artist.

Original Locke Nursery

Locke Nursery between San Antonio Street and Interstate 35 access road around 1962

Locke Nursery between San Antonio Street and Interstate 35 access road around 1962

Locke Nursery between San Antonio Street and Interstate 35 access road around 1962
Tags: "garden spot" of Texas, 1852, 1906, 1928, 1940s, 1994, Africa, alligators, animals, Arbor Day ceremony, armadillos, Australia, birds, Bonita Arbor Vitae, botanical garden, botanists, bugs, business, chameleons, chestnut oak, Comal Avenue, Comal cling peaches, Comal Creek, Comal Springs Nursery, cotton field, crocodile, crocodiles, Daisey pecan, Dixie peach, Emil Locke, England, Etelka Rose Locke, evergreen, exotic native animals, exporter, Fall City tomato, Ferdinand Lindheimer, Ferguson fig, Floral Street, fruit trees, fruit-bearing trees, gardens, Germania rose, Germany, Guadalupe dewberry, Heidemeyer apple, Herman Locke, Highway 81 South, Hollywood, horticulturist, Howard Locke, Howard Street (Howard Locke), importer, India, Johann Joseph Locke, kangaroos, Landa Park, Landa Street, Lindheimer House, lion cubs, lizards, Locke Nursery and Floral, Locke's pride pear, Lockner Street (Locke Nursery), McCarthy plum, McKenna Memorial Hospital, Mexico, monkeys, New Braunfels, November peach, nursery, Old-favorite pomegranate, ornamental shrubs, ornamental trees, Otto Locke Jr., Otto Martin Locke Jr., Otto Martin Locke Nursery, Otto Martin Locke Sr., Patricia S. Arnold, pecan trees, Perfection pear, pesticides, Poteet, Prussia, railroad tracks, roses, San Antonio, Singapore, snakes, soft-shelled pecan, state irrigation permit, Strington apple, Thekla Locke, Town Creek, train, tulip bulbs, vegetables, W. San Antonio Street, Walter Locke, zoos
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Tuesday, May 15th, 2012
By Myra Lee Adams Goff
The Sophienburg’s Civil War exhibit will open this coming Saturday, May 19th. and that day has been designated as a “free museum day.” The exhibit will focus on Comal County’s part in the war and will be on display until spring 2013.
Here is a thumb-nail refresher course in Civil War history before you come:
The conflict between the industrial north and the agrarian south had been going on for years. Ferdinand Lindheimer, editor of the Neu Braunfelser Zeitung wrote editorials in the newspaper in favor of secession. He was an advocate of state’s rights to the end. Even Gov. Sam Houston didn’t have as much influence as Lindheimer in the county.
A state Secession Convention was held in Austin on Feb. 1, 1861. Representing Comal County were Dr. Theodore Koester and Walter F. Preston, native of Virginia, who had bought the Meriwether farm on the Guadalupe River near New Braunfels. The majority of the convention voted for secession.
A statewide election was to be held over the issue. Comal County Chief Justice Hermann Heffter called for an election to vote “for” or “against” secession on Feb. 23, 1861. Of the total voters (men only) 239 voted “for” and 89 voted “against”. Comal County was the only primarily German community to vote to secede. Do you think the vote would have been different if women also had the right to vote? I don’t know.
On April 26, 1861, the Neu Braunfelser Zeitung published the Constitution of the Confederate States of America on its front page. In keeping with a resolution of the Feb.1
Convention in Austin, 10,000 copies were to be distributed across the state, 1/5 of which were in German and Spanish.
Ultimately, the secession bill was ratified and Texas once again became a free sovereign and independent state with its capital in Montgomery, Alabama.
Now that Texas was part of the Confederacy, military forces had to be obtained. The first Confederate legislative act called for volunteers to serve 12 months and state militia volunteers to serve six months. By Dec. 1861, the Texas legislature passed a law for men from 18 to 50 to sign up for frontier defense. In Comal County, by March 15, 1861, three militia companies had been organized.
The July 4th parade was “dignified”. The home-guard militia and the bugle corps marched in the main streets to the beat of a single drum. At the plaza a military review was staged.
Now back to the exhibit: The Iwonski art exhibit that I told you about in my last column is part of the over-all exhibit. Outside, the Sons of the Confederacy in uniform are setting up an encampment with tent, cannon and many other archives.
Now go inside the museum. There are vast amounts of Civil War era artifacts in the Sophienburg collection and they will be displayed throughout the museum.
The first display that will catch your eye is the cabin reproduction. The story from the Landa family goes like this: Joseph Landa was in exile in Mexico as a result of his being tried by an anti-abolitionist secret society for freeing his five slaves in 1863. His wife, Helene, stayed behind to run the store and other businesses. A gang of “ruffians” invaded the store and Helene held them off with a six-shooter.
Every segment of the museum will display something that involves the Civil War period. The medicines in the Doctor’s office, alcohol in the saloon, guns, clothing, and the Ladies Aid Society’s role in the war effort. By the wall painting of the Comal Springs is an exhibit of saltpeter production used in gunpowder. There are panels of old photos and a vast amount of information about participants in the war effort, from the leaders Hoffmann, Podewils, Bose, and Heidemeyer to everyday people.
Sophie’s Shop has the largest collection of Comal County books for sale in town. There are three Civil War books, two about Comal County and also a beautifully illustrated Smithsonian collection.
It was a confusing time. Excerpts from this folk song by Irving Gordon tell it all:
Two brothers on their way…
One wore blue and one wore gray…
Two girls waiting by the railroad track…
One wore blue and one wore black…

Volunteers Janis Bodemann and Ann Giambernardi examine the clothing of the Landa mannequins inside the museum. The Landa story is part of the Civil War Exhibit beginning May 19 at the Sophienburg.
Related Articles
Books Available in Sophie’s Shop
Tags: "Montgomery, 1861, 1863, agrarian, Alabama, alcohol, anti-abolitionist, art exhibit, artifacts, Austin, books, Bose, bugle corps, cabin reproduction, Civil War, clothing, Comal County, Comal County Chief Justice Hermann Heffter, Comal Springs, Confederacy, Constitution of the Confederate States of America, Dr. Theodore Koester, election, Ferdinand Lindheimer, folk song, free museum day, frontier defense, German, Gov. Sam Houston, Guadalupe River, gunpowder, guns, Heidemeyer, Helene Landa, Hoffmann, home-guard militia, industrial, Irving Gordon, Iwonski, Joseph Landa, Ladies Aid Society, Landa family, medicines, Meriwether farm, military, military forces, militia, Neu Braunfelser Zeitung, New Braunfels, photos, Plaza, Podewils, ruffians, saloon, saltpeter production, secession, Secession Convention, secret society, six-shooter, slaves, Smithsonian, Sons of the Confederacy, Sophie's Shop, Spanish, state militia volunteers, states' rights, Texas Legislature, volunteers, voters, Walter F. Preston, war effort
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Tuesday, May 1st, 2012
By Myra Lee Adams Goff
On May 19th the Sophienburg Museum and Archives will present a Civil War Exhibit about what was happening here in Comal County during the war and the period of Restoration which followed it. One segment of the exhibit, sponsored jointly by the NB German American Society, will feature the art work of Carl Iwonski (1830-1912). Art work can tell us much about the times.
The first time that the Iwonski name appeared in historical literature was in 1847 when Leopold Iwonski, father of Carl, and a group of disgruntled citizens appeared outside the Sophienburg where Adelsverein’s second Commissioner General, John Meusebach, was residing. That night the Iwonskis, along with others they had recruited, demanded that Meusebach come outside and either honor their land contracts in the Llano region or give their money back. The crowd became agitated and insisted that Meusebach be hanged on the spot.
The von Iwonski family hails from the present Polish area of Silisia, originally a province until 1526, when it was overtaken by Austria. Then in 1742 it was overtaken by the Prussian state of Germany and finally returned to Poland in 1945 after WWII. When artist Carl Iwonski was born, it was part of Germany and his ancestral roots are Polish.
Political turmoil seemed to surround Leopold Iwonski. “He was described as an expelled Prussian” and he was no longer welcome in his native land. (Source: “John O. Meusebach”, Irene Marshall King)
Leopold Iwonski, his wife, and two children emigrated to New Braunfels with the Adelsverein in 1845. Carl was 15 at the time. The family moved across the Guadalupe into Hortontown, then in Guadalupe County. Iwonski became the land agent for owner Albert C. Horton, selling 50 acre tracts. He retained 41 acres of land for his farm. Young Carl Iwonski spent his early years clearing the land and helping his father construct the family home. In 1847 the home became a stagecoach inn and saloon, as it was on the Nacogdoches crossing of the Guadalupe. We learn from Carl’s painting what the interior of the tavern looked like.
Carl and his brother, Adolph, involved themselves with New Braunfels activities. They joined the Turnverein. His drawings of amateur theater in 1854 tell us what the stage and scenery looked like. Also his picture of Seele’s Saengerhalle is perhaps the only rendition we have of that building. The Iwonski exhibit features 25 original pencil or ink renditions of actors and actresses on stage at the Saengerhalle. Many of the characters on stage are recognizable, Hermann Seele being one of them.
Eventually, Iwonski and his parents moved to San Antonio where he taught drawing at the German-English school. He became a professional photographer with William DeRyee. DeRyee left San Antonio before the Civil War, but Iwonski kept the studio open.
Carl Iwonski was a Unionist. He was an admirer of fellow Unionist Sam Houston who refused to sign the oath of the Confederacy. In 1857 Ferdinand Lindheimer, editor of the Neu Braunfelser Zeitung, announced that a portrait of Sam Houston by Iwonski would be on display at the Saengerhalle theater.
At a time when many German Unionists of the Hill Country were being arrested or killed, somehow Iwonski managed to avoid conscription. Check out Sophienburg.com, Nov. 3, 2009.
Immediately after the war, the Unionists in San Antonio hoisted the American flag over the Alamo. Both Carl and his father were staunch Unionist Republicans. Carl drew a very controversial cartoon in the newspaper showing the Democrats’ exit from their public offices as a result of their affiliation with the Confederacy. With a Union victory, Iwonski became tax collector of San Antonio, however, when the Democrats swept office in the next election of 1872, Iwonski was out of office and he left for Germany. The next year he returned to SA and completed portraits of many prominent families. After the death of his father in 1872, Carl and his mother returned to Silisia.
Iwonski’s panoramic painting of New Braunfels tells us much about NB’s early days. The recently rediscovered10×10 ft. Prussian Council of War, 1870 oil on canvas will be featured. The rest of the Civil War exhibit, opening May 19th, will be just as interesting.

Carl Iwonski, (1830-1912 ) artist in New Braunfels and San Antonio. Sophienburg Archives
Tags: 1526, 1742, 1845, 1847, 1854, 1857, 1870, 1872, Adelsverein, Adelsverein Commissioner General, Adolph Iwonski, Alamo, Albert C. Horton, amateur theater, and finally returned to Poland in 1945 after WWII. When artist Carl Iwonski was born, artist, Austria, Carl Iwonski, cartoon, Civil War, Comal County, Confederacy, conscription, Democrats, drawings, Ferdinand Lindheimer, German-English school, Germany, Guadalupe County, Guadalupe River, Hermann Seele, Hortontown, ink, it New Braunfels, John Meusebach, land agent, land contracts, Leopold Iwonski, Llano region, Nacogdoches crossing, Neu Braunfelser Zeitung, New Braunfels German American Society, newspaper, oil on canvas, panoramic painting, pencil, photographer, Poland, portraits, Prussia, Prussian Council of War, Reconstruction, Republicans, saloon, Sam Houston, San Antonio, Seele's Saengerhalle, Silisia, Sophienburg, stagecoach inn, studio, tavern, tax collector, Turnverein, Unionist, William DeRyee
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Tuesday, February 21st, 2012
By Myra Lee Adams Goff
A month from this day on March 21, New Braunfels will once again observe Founder’s Day. It was the year 1845 when the first emigrants crossed over the Guadalupe River and made their way into what would become their new homeland. Germany was left far behind. The vast majority of those that crossed that day and became the first settlers of the town had never seen Texas before landing in November of 1844. Some that joined Prince Carl on the coast had been in Texas for quite a while.
Four of the more well-known immigrants who had been in Texas a decade or more were Ferdinand Lindheimer, Louis Ervendberg, George Ullrich, and Friedrich von Wrede. Johann Rahm and Daniel Murchison had been with Jack Hays’ Ranger group in San Antonio when they joined the Adelsverein. They all joined the Adelsverein at the coast and came with that first group of settlers.
Not very well-known was Daniel Murchison. He was born in North Carolina in 1809 and arrived in Texas in 1832. He was a soldier in the War for Texas Independence and received many land grants for military service and for surveying for the Republic. Murchison had a town lot in the fledgling town of Austin and in 1840 he joined Capt. Jack Coffee Hays’ Spy Company. Brave men were the only protection on the Texas frontier and these groups of men were called “ranging companies” or also called “spy companies”. Organized groups would later be called Texas Rangers.
Daniel Murchison was with Jack Hays in San Antonio when he met Prince Carl. He joined the militia of Prince Carl that was organized to accompany the emigrants in their trek inland as well as to protect them while they were in the new settlement. He accompanied the group and was given land.
After Meusebach took Prince Carl’s place, he disbanded the militia and organized another company with Lt. Murchison as leader. Rudolph Biesele in “The History of the German Settlements in Texas, 1831-1861” states that Meusebach left New Braunfels looking to establish a settlement due to additional emigrants on the way. Meusebach found a tract of land north of the Pedernales River about 80 miles from New Braunfels. Meusebach organized a surveying party of 36 men equipped with wagons, tools, provisions and guns under the command of Lieutenants Bene, Groos and Murchison. They were to lay out a wagon road from New Braunfels to the new settlement. After the surveying expedition returned to New Braunfels, preparations were made to send the first settlers to what would become Fredericksburg.
In 1850 Daniel Murchison married immigrant Wilhelmina Holzgrefe from Hannover. The 1860 census lists Daniel, 47, and wife Wilhelmina, 27, five children and two Holzsgrefe relatives living with them .He was politically involved in the community and served in the Texas Legislature in 1866 where he was on the initial committee to revise the state constitution.
In the old section of the Comal Cemetery is a lot with two identical obelisks, one for Daniel Murchison who died Feb. 22, 1867, and the other for his widow. After Murchison died, his wife, children and servant Hugh McCrainey moved to the Murchison’s ranch in Llano County. Six years later, Mrs. Murchison died and was buried at her husband’s side. The young children were then raised by the servant McCrainey.
Texans who emigrated independently of the Adelsverein like Murchison and others should be remembered as we once again observe Founder’s Day. And let’s give Prince Carl credit for having the foresight to invite them.Comal County Deed Records show Murchison’s name many times as the agent for land owners who were selling lots in Braunfels and Comaltown, across the Comal River from New Braunfels. An agreement between land owner Rafael Garza and land agent Murchison stated that Murchison was to sell lots between the Comal Springs and the Guadalupe rivers (Comaltown and adjoining land) for fifteen percent of what he could get for the lots, and to “prevent the cutting of timber of said land and to prosecute trespassers on the same”. The 1881 map by Augustus Koch shows that the present Central St. was formerly named Murchison St. That street was stemmed off by the building of the railroad track.
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