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Road Maps and guidebooks a-plenty have been worked out by experts at
watching signposts and mile-markers to lead you through the trails and
canyons and up the mountains of the Big Bend country, so we have in no
way attempted to chart your course. However if any of your explorations
in the region cause you to wonder at the peculiar-sounding name
attached to some remote place, or if there seems to be no logic
whatsoever in the name of a spring, mountain or canyon, drag out this
little volume and find out how come it's called that.
If there are several versions to the story of how a place was named
we have given all the versions, but if you find something you don't
believe, remember that this is how we heard it, for all the stories
came from the people. And you will miss the most important commodity
the Big Bend has to offer if you don't get to know the people.
In a region where the people are individualists, it is impossible to
get all the good stories between the covers of one book, for there are
just as many good yarns as there are individuals. If you hear a story
about the naming of some landmark which we did not include, jot it
down, for it will give you a bright peg upon which to hand your memory
of that place.
Excerpts ...
Once a Brewster County resident, who had been
in the region some forty-odd years, inquired of an old cowhand who had
spent seventy years in the Big Bend, "Roy, can you tell me why in
tarnation they call that break between the Santiago Mountains and the
Dead Horse 'Dog Canyon?'"
"Sure, I can tell you how come it's
called that." And out came the tale in a very few words.
"Years ago when one of the early settlers was going through that
particular canyon, he found a wagon and ox-team with a dog guarding
them. There was no trace of the owner. From then on it was called 'Dog
Canyon.'"
–
from the "What's in a Name? - History and Happenings"
chapter
A few miles from Study Butte on Highway
118 going toward Alpine, one of the formations which attracts tourists
is the honeycombed surface of Bee Mountain named for the hives of bees
which live in the crevices. So numerous are these bee caves that the
whole mountain resembles an enormous beehive.
–
from the "Place Names West of the Park and Along Highway 118"
chapter
Pinto Canyon runs from Ruidosa into the
Chinati Mountains. Pinto Canyon means painted canyon and gets its name
from the brilliant colors of its walls.
–
from the "Southwest Big Bend and Down the Rio Grande"
chapter
About the Authors...
Virginia Duncan Madison, author,
historian, educator and lecturer, was born and reared in West Texas.
After her parents died she and her sister operated the family ranch
near San Angelo, Texas for eight years. Here Virginia was a
sheepherder, cowhand and horse wrangler. Later she attended Sul Ross
State College where she received her B.S. and M.A. degrees. She went on
to public opinion research work and to study at Columbia University.
Virginia knew and loved the Big Bend, and early became a collector of
its tales and legends In New York City, she met and married Elihue
Madison, also a Texas native. For twenty years they made their home in
New York, where their daughter, Dolly (Mrs. John McKenna), was born. In
1955 Virginia wrote The Big Bend Country of
Texas (University of New Mexico Press), the first major history
of the area. Upon Elihue Madison's retirement, the couple moved back to
their beloved Texas, settling in Austin. Virginia Duncan Madison died
August 9, 1984, and is buried in Austin.
Hallie Crawford Stillwell, pioneer
ranchwoman, was born in Waco, Texas, and came to the Big Bend country
at the age of twelve with her parents in a covered wagon. At the tender
age of sixteen Hallie Crawford - armed with a high school diploma, a
teacher's certificate, and a six-shooter - moved to Presidio, Texas to
teach school, just across the Rio Grande from Ojinaga, Mexico, where
Pancho Villa and his raiders were on the rampage. In 1918 she married
Roy Stillwell, a cattle rancher from Marathon, Texas, and moved with
him to his ranch, located just north of the Mexican border in a region
plagued by Villa and bandits. Hallie rode horseback, by her husband's
side, for thirty years. She learned the cattle business and the
country and its people, an education that served her well after Roy's
death in 1948. Her recollections of these years are recorded in her
book I'll Gather My Geese (Texas A&M
University Press, 1991).
After Roy Stillwell's death, she and her two sons took the family ranch
into their own hands. During the drought of the 1950s, Hallie turned to
outside employment to keep the ranch in operation. She began writing,
reporting for Texas newspapers, and lecturing. Her
"Ranch News" column appeared in the
Alpine Avalanche for more than thirty
years, and she served as Justice of the Peace in Alpine, Texas for
twenty years. Hallie Stillwell has been inducted into both the Texas
Women's Hall of Fame and the National Cowgirl Hall of Fame. She and
sons and a daughter operated the family ranch, an R.V. park and store,
and Hallie's Hall of Fame Museum near Big Bend National Park. Hallie
Crawford Stillwell passed away in 1997.
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