Southwestern Historical Quarterly Online
Volume 001 - 100 (1897 - 1998)
Volume 062
Table of Contents
Issue 1
The Texan of 1860
by Llerena B. Friend
A Texas Expedition
into Mexico, 1840 by David M. Vigness
Sam Houston and the
Texas War Fever, March-August, 1842 by Harry A. Gailey, Jr.
Secular Life in the
San Antonio Missions by Billie Persons
Notes and Documents
A Journey from Sweden
to Texas in 1867 Translated and edited by Carl T.
Widén (Illustration)
Dr. Ferdinand
Roemer's Account of the Llano-San Saba Country Translated and edited by Rudolph L. Biesele
Account of the
Journey of Bénard de la Harpe: Discovery Made by Him of
Several Nations Situated in the West Translated and annotated by Ralph A. Smith
Affairs of the
Association (Illustration)
Texas Collection by H. Bailey Carroll
Book Reviews
Brann and the
Iconoclast.
Big D Is for Dallas.
The Letters of
Antonio Martinez, Last Spanish Governor of Texas, 1817-1822.
The Lasting South:
Fourteen Southerners Look at Their Home.
The Frontier in
Perspective.
The Contriving Brain
and the Skillful Hand in the United States: Something about History and
Philosophy of History.
Pete Whetstone of
Devil's Fork: Letters to the Spirit of the Times.
Brenham, Texas,
1844-1958.
Book Notes
Contributors
Issue 2
The Reconstruction
Courts of Texas 1867-1873 by James R. Norvell
The United
States-Mexican Boundary Survey, 1848-1853 by W. H. Goetzmann
The Texas Road to
Secession and War: John Marshall and the Texas State Gazette 1860-1861 by Larry Jay Gage
Logs Reveal Texas
Gulf Coast History, 1866-1900 by Phyllis Coffee
Notes and Documents
Stephen F. Austin and
Anthony Butler Documents by Henry P. Beers
Research
Opportunities in the General Land Office of Texas by Bill Allcorn
Cryptograms in the
General Land Office of Texas by John Farmer (Illustration)
Account of the
Journey of Bénard de la Harpe: Discovery Made by Him of
Several Nations Situated in the West Translated and annotated by Ralph A. Smith
Texas Collection by H. Bailey Carroll
Book Reviews
Texas in 1837: An
Anonymous Contemporary Narrative.
Fabulous Quarter
Horse: Steel Dust.
David S. Terry of
California: Duelling Judge.
Indians of the
Southwest.
Contributors
Issue 3
The Problem of
Command In the Army of the Republic of Texas by Henry W. Barton
The Intellectual
Climate of Houston During the Period of the Republic by Andrew Forest Muir
An Analysis of the
Membership of the Texas Secession Convention by Ralph A. Wooster
Horace M. Hall's
Letters from Gillespie County, Texas, 1871-1873 Edited by Joseph S. Hall (Illustration)
The Red River
Boundary Controversy by Monroe Billington
Notes and Documents
Parker County Cattle
Trails by Fred R. Cotten
Contemporary Comments
on Texas, 1844-1847 Edited by Nell Mick Pugh
Account of the
Journey of Bénard de la Harpe: Discovery Made by Him of
Several Nations Situated in the West Translated and annotated by Ralph A. Smith
Texas Collection by H. Bailey Carroll
(Illustration)
Book Reviews
Something About
Brown: A History of Brown County, Texas.
Thirteen Days to Glory
Madstones and
Twisters.
Gold Country,
1828-1858.
Book Notes
Contributors
Issue 4
B Hall of Texas by Walter E. Long
(Illustration)
The Renaissance of
the Galveston Theatre: Henry Greenwall's First Season, 1867-1868 by Joseph S. Gallegly
(Illustration)
Origins of the Texas
Bill of Rights by J. E. Ericson
Pershing's Chinese
Refugees in Texas by Edward Eugene Briscoe
Santa Anna in Texas:
A Mexican Viewpoint by James Presley
Notes and Documents
A Letter from San
Antonio de Bexar in 1836 Contributed by Ralph W. Steen (Illustration)
A Settler's Report
(1836) on Santa Anna's Defeat and Land Prospects in Texas Edited by Robert Partin
Inventions Patented
by Texans, 1846-1861 Compiled by Andrew Forest Muir
Account of the
journey of Bénard de la Harpe Discovery Made by Him of
Several Nations Situated in the West Translated and annotated by Ralph A. Smith (Illustration)
Texas Collection by H. Bailey Carroll
Book Reviews
Then Came the
Railroads: The Century from Steam to Diesel in the Southwest
A History of Collin
County, Texas.
A Trail to
Mañana.
How Come It's Called
That? Place Names in the Big Bend Country.
Contributors
Index
Illustrations
Issue 1
Notes and Documents: A Journey from Sweden to Texas: Photograph: Log cabin on
S. M. Swanson's plantation, "Govalle."
Affairs of the Association: Photograph:
The University of Texas Seventy-fifth Anniversary display by Mrs.
Gladys Fouts of Hemphill's Book Stores in Austin
Issue 2
Notes and Documents: Cryptograms in the General Land Office of Texas: A sample page of Volume X
of the English Field Notes of the Spanish Archives of the General Land
Office of Texas
Issue 3
Horace M. Hall's Letters from Gillespie County, Texas, 1871-1873: Photograph: Horace M. Hall
about 1872; Figure:
A Sketch Map of the Pedernales River between Fredericksburg and Austin.
By Horace M. Hall in 1872
Texas Collection: Daniel
M. Warren Presented an Award of Merit
Issue 4
B Hall of Texas: Photograph:
George W. Brackinridge; Photograph: Brackinridge
Hall, the first units of which were erected in 1890; Reproduction: Brackinridge
Hall. Thanksgiving Day, 1892. Menu; Photograph: The first
cannon used in a campus observance of Texas Independence Day, 1897;
Photograph: A
characteristic sense of humor marked the life of the normal B Haller.
The "borrowed" sign of Great Removal Sale was carefully chosen when all
the inmates dressed for this 1905 photograph; Photograph: One advantage
of living in B Hall was that the east windows overlooked Clark Field;
Photograph: B Hall
men knew how to work, to study, and to enjoy their pranks and humor to
the limit, but the grim realities of World War I found them lined up
100 per cent to "Save the World for Democracy;" Photograph: B Hall's
exterior while it was being used for classrooms and offices in the
1930s and 1940s
The Renaissance of the Galveston Theater: Photograph: Henry
Greenwall;
Notes and Documents: Reproduction:
The first page of William R. Carey's letter from San Antonio on January
12, 1836
Notes and Documents: Map:
Bé de la Harpe's explorations for the Council of Louisiana,
1718 to 1719
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