I slipped up big time! I “THINK” I may have overloaded my brain. You see, today is my birthday—the big 59 (and forever holding, right here!) and a boxed set release day with one of my “oldie but goodie” stories in it. And it’s also my blog day here at Sweethearts. Sorry to be so late, but without further ado, here’s my big news! I will give away a Kindle copy of this boxed set to ONE LUCKY WINNER! Just leave a comment about what got you started reading romance books and be sure to leave your contact info in the comment section, as well! You just might be my winner!
Are you ready for FIVE books in one of the best western historical romance boxed sets to debut this year? Prairie Rose Publications has got just the stories you’ve been craving! Get ready for some wonderful hours of pleasure-filled reading as you settle back in your easy chair and get lost in these wonderful tales of romance that you won’t be able to get enough of!
HER SANCTUARY by Tracy Garrett
Beautiful Maggie Flanaghan’s heart is broken when her father dies suddenly and the westward bound wagon train moves on without her, leaving her stranded in River’s Bend. But Reverend Kristoph Oltmann discovers the tender beginnings of love as he comforts Maggie, only to find she harbors a secret that could make their relationship impossible.
GABRIEL'S LAW by Cheryl Pierson
Brandon Gabriel is hired by the citizens of Spring Branch to hunt down the notorious Clayton Gang, never suspecting a double-cross. When Allison Taylor rides into town for supplies, she doesn't expect to be sickened by the sight of a man being beaten to death by a mob—a man she recognizes from her past. Spring Branch's upstanding citizens gather round to see a murder, but everything changes with the click of a gun—and GABRIEL’S LAW.
OUTLAW HEART by Tanya Hanson
Making a new start has never been harder! Bronx Sanderson is determined to leave his old outlaw ways behind and become a decent man. Lila Brewster is certain that her destiny lies in keeping her late husband’s dream alive—a mission house for the down-and-out of Leadville, Colorado. But dreams change when love flares between an angel and a man with an OUTLAW HEART…
THE DUMONT WAY by Kathleen Rice Adams
The biggest ranch in Texas will give her all to save her children…but only the right woman’s love can save a man’s tortured soul. This trilogy of stories about the Dumont family contains a new, never-before-published tale by Kathleen Rice Adams! Nothing will stop this powerful family from doing things THE DUMONT WAY…
YESTERDAY’S FLAME by Livia J. Washburn
When smoke jumper Annabel Lowell's duties propelled her from San Francisco 2000 back to 1906, she faces one of the worst earthquakes in history. But she also finds the passion of a lifetime in fellow fireman Cole Brady. Now she must choose between a future of certain danger—and a present of certain love—no matter how short-lived it may be... "A timeless and haunting tale of love."~ The Literary Times
The link is "live" at Amazon, if you want to pop over and pick this great collection up for only .99!
https://www.amazon.com/Kiss-Remember-Western-Historical-Romance-ebook/dp/B01IM37OAA/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1469752535&sr=8-1&keywords=A+Kiss+to+Remember#nav-subnav
Thursday, July 28, 2016
Tuesday, July 26, 2016
THE CATTLE QUEEN OF TEXAS--ELIZABETH JOHNSON WILLIAMS
Don’t you love hearing about strong, successful women who shaped the West? Let me tell you about one who became called The Cattle Queen of Texas and who was a teacher, author, and business woman. Her name was Elizabeth “Lizzie” Johnson Williams.
Lizzie Johnson was born in Jefferson City, Missouri on May
9, 1840 to Catherine (Hyde) and Thomas Jefferson Johnson, who were both educators. In 1846, the family moved to Huntsville,
Texas. In 1852, her father founded the Johnson Institute on Bear Creek in Hays County about sixteen miles southwest of Austin. Students called Thomas "Old Bristle Top" because of his unruly hair and called his wife "Aunt Caty". All six of the Johnson children attended the Institute, and then Lizzie also attended Chappell Hill
Female Institute in Washington County, Texas. When she graduated, she joined
the staff of the Johnson Institute, teaching basic subjects and bookkeeping.
Elizabeth "Lizzie" Johnson |
In 1863, Lizzie left her family’s Institute and taught
in various Texas schools before she ended up in Lockhart. In that town, she
started a business bookkeeping for cattlemen, thereby learning much about the
cattle business. When she moved on to Austin to establish her own primary school,
she continued keeping books for ranchers.
Lizzie was intelligent with a vivid imagination and
began to dabble in writing stories. No one would buy fiction written by
a woman, so she wrote anonymously for Frank
Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly and Frank
Leslie’s Magazine. According to Carmen Goldthwaite, Lizzie’s stories
reportedly included “The Sister’s Secret”, “The Haunted House Among The
Mountains”, and “Lady Inez: or, The Passion Flower, an American Romance”. Since
she wrote anonymously, no one knows how many or which other stories she had
published.
Working three jobs, she saved $2500, which she
invested in the Evans, Snyder, and Bewell Cattle Company of Chicago. Three
years later, she sold her interest for an astounding $20,000. Lizzie registered
her CY brand in Travis County and began buying cattle and land. In 1873, the glut of beef and the economic downturn
resulted in many ranchers contracting with a stock driver to take the cattle
north for sale. At first, Lizzie did also.
In 1879, she met and married a retired Baptist
minister, Hezekiah “Hez” Williams. He was a tall,
charming widower with several children and he drank and gambled. Here’s another first for the time. Before
Lizzie married him on June 8, 1879 in a Presbyterian ceremony, she had him sign
what is believed to be Texas’ first prenuptial agreement. She retained rights
to all her property brought into the marriage. (When I used this in my now permafree book
BRAZOS BRIDE, now with an audio version available, many people thought that anachronistic, but that book takes place
in this era.) At that time in Texas, when a woman married, all her property
came under control of her husband, who could sell it and keep the money without
benefit to her.
Lizzie was a spiritual woman who read scriptures
daily. Hez drank, but not in her presence. Reportedly, they had a great deal of
respect for one another. She was far better in business and kept careful tally of their herds, insuring that she received the money for her cattle and
he for his. On occasion, she loaned him money, but insisted he repay her.
Eventually, he yielded his operation to her.
The two were very competitive. One ranch hand who
worked for them recounted the story of competing instructions. Lizzie would
tell him to brand all Hez’s calves with her brand and Hez told him to brand all
of Lizzie’s calves with his brand. The cowboy was kept busy following these
instructions.
Lizzie’s life revolved around cattle, real estate, and
investments. She was good at all three. Soon she and Hez were living the good
life. In addition to their ranch at Driftwood, they owned a home in Austin.
Lizzie was one of the first women to go on a cattle
drive. The hardy Texas cattle were immune to the ticks that caused serious
illness in Hereford cattle raised further north. When tick fever made Texas
cattle unwelcome in Oklahoma and Kansas in the 1880s, Lizzie took her cattle and Hez's up
the Chisholm Trail.
Lizzie Johnson Williams |
Eventually, she and Hez followed their herd up the Chisolm trail in a buggy. Other ranchers trusted Lizzie to keep careful tally of the “community
herd” driven north.
When driving north became impossible due to barbed
wire, quarantines, and arrival of the railroad about 1890, she began shipping
beef from Indianola and Galveston to Cuba. She and Hez traveled to Cuba, where
he was kidnapped. She paid the $50,000 ransom. Those who knew them joked that
Hez kidnapped himself to get a little spending money of his own.
With their increased wealth, the couple was able to
travel, always staying in the finest hotels. Lizzie became interested in silks
and satins, jewelry, and accessories. Reportedly, on one trip to Manhattan,
Lizzie spent $10,000 on jewelry.
Hez’s health declined after their trip to Cuba so they
traveled to Hot Springs, Arkansas for him to take the waters and also to the
drier climate of El Paso. He died in El Paso in 1914. She purchased a fancy
casket for $600 and returned him to Austin for burial. Allegedly, she scribbled
across the undertaker’s bill, “I loved the old buzzard this much.”
Lizzie, now in her seventies, continued to manage her
businesses. Without her gregarious and charming husband, she became a recluse who was known as miserly. About six months before her death, a niece took
Lizzie into her home when the niece determined Lizzie had dementia.
Elizabeth Johnson Williams died on January 5, 1924
without a will and was buried in Austin’s Oakwood Cemetery beside Hezekiah. Because she had appeared
to Austinites as impoverished, they were surprised to learn she had amassed a
fortune worth a quarter of a million dollars. Lizzie had a strict policy of no
loans to family or friends and had told no one where all her funds were. She was
so eccentric, she had hidden money and jewels in all sorts of places in her
home—in wallboards, floors, cabinets, basement, and crevices.
Though unconventional, this amazing woman achieved major accomplishments. She was one of the first women to drive her cattle up the Chisholm Trail, which resulted in her nickname as The Cattle Queen of Texas; she had the first prenuptial agreement in Texas; and she was a pioneer in breaking the barrier into what had always been a man’s world: cattle trading. Is it any wonder she was the Cowgirl Hall of Fame honoree in 2013?
Caroline
Clemmons writes historical and contemporary western romance. Her latest is THE RANCHER AND THE SHEPHERDESS, a Montana Sky Kindle World novel being released
from Amazon on July 27, 2016. Check her Amazon Author Page here
for all her books. For a free novella, subscribe to her newsletter.
Sources:
TEXAS RANCH WOMEN: Three Centuries of Mettle and
Moxie, by Carmen Goldthwaite, History
Press, 2014
Sunday, July 24, 2016
The Virginian
www.laurirobinson.blogspot.com |
I think I’ve seen every episode of the long running TV show,
The Virginian, but that doesn’t stop
me from watching them again when my husband clicks in on. Even if I’m deep into
a book, either reading or writing, that show has the ability to pull me out and
engage me in what’s happening in Medicine Bow.
The TV series is but one adaptation to the original book
written in 1902 by Owen Wister. Several movies were also created based on this
book that has been credited as being the first true western ever written and
the one that created the genre made famous by Louis L’Amour and Zane Grey. In
my office, I have boxes of Louis L’Amour and few Zane Grey novels that had been
my grandfather’s and then my mother’s. I’ve read many of them, but in truth,
they are getting too fragile, but I’m not ready to be parted from them yet.
I’ve also read The
Virginian. I found the concept of the 1st person narrator who details
the story of a man who is only referred to as the Virginian interesting and
unique. No real name is ever mentioned. One of my favorite characters in the TV
series is Trampas. (I appreciated the cameo of Doug McClure in the popular 1994
Maverick movie starring Mel Gibson. McClure died just a year later.) In the
book, Trampas is the Virginian’s foe. The book also has the Virginian ‘getting the
girl’, a young school teacher named Molly Stark Wood, and has an happily ever
after ending.
The Virginian TV series was unique in the fact it was filmed
to be ninety minutes long, (seventy-five with commercial breaks). Running for
nine years, it became the third longest running western series behind Bonanza
and Gunsmoke. The show had many changes throughout it’s run, including the
changes in the owner’s of Shiloh Ranch, but the main character, the Virginian,
played by James Drury, remained the same. Drury starred in many TV shows and films,
including a cameo appearance in the 2000 movie, The Virginian starring Bill Pullman.
If you enjoyed the show, this is a fun website full of information--
http://www.thevirginian.net/.
If you have the time and interest, I’d recommend reading the
original novel, just because. A free download can be found here.
Friday, July 22, 2016
The National Park Service turns 100!
By Peggy L Henderson
This year marks the 100th
anniversary of the National Parks system. And it all started in Yellowstone…
with the US Army.
In 1872, President U.S. Grant
signed into law the Yellowstone National Park Protection Law, making
Yellowstone the nation’s first national park. Protecting a large area of land
was a big deal, because during that era, it was all about expansion. The new law
states “…the headwaters of the Yellowstone River…is hereby reserved and
withdrawn from settlement, occupancy, or sale … and dedicated and set apart as
a public park or pleasuring ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the
people.”
However, there were problems.
Lawmakers didn’t think that maintaining the park would cost the government
anything. The first superintendent, Nathaniel Langford, was unpaid in his
position. He did what he could to
protect wildlife and the natural features. Without money, he couldn’t hire
anyone to enforce the laws within the park.
When the second superintendent,
Philetus Norris, took over in 1877,
Congress appropriated money to “protect, preserve, and improve the Park.”
Roads were constructed and a
“gamekeeper” was hired to get rid of vandals and poachers. He was succeeded by
three superintendents who were ineffective at protecting the park. Even with
ten assistants, they could not properly police the park and couldn’t stop the
destruction of wildlife.
The army posing in front of the Liberty Cap at Mammoth Hot Springs where Ft Yellowstone was built |
In 1886, Congress refused to
appropriate money for Yellowstone. The Secretary of the Interior therefore
called on the help from the Department of War. So on August 20, 1886, the US
Army took control of Yellowstone. They didn’t expect to stay long, but they
were so effective in keeping law and order in the park, that they remained for
30 years.
On May 11, 1891, the army
received approval for a permanent base, and began constructing Fort Yellowstone
inside the park. Prior to this date, the Army had operated out of Camp
Sheridan, located at the base of the Mammoth Terraces.
Mounted cavalry at Ft Yellowstone |
The army, comprised of Company M
of the US cavalry, enforced regulations inside the Yellowstone Park boundaries,
guarded the major attractions, patrolled the interior, and got rid of
troublemakers. Their main role turned out to be apprehending poachers. Poachers
slaughtered deer, elk, and bison, threatening their extermination. The maximum
punishment at the time for poachers was eviction and banishment from the park.
In 1894, the cavalry arrested one
persistent poacher, Ed Howell for killing bison when there were only several
dozen left in the park. A journalist was present at the arrest, and sent a
report and photographs to his newspaper in the east. His story created a
national outcry, and within two months, Congress passed the Lacey Act, giving
the army greater authority for protecting animals and features in the park.
The image that spurred the Lacey Act (soldiers with confiscated bison heads from poacher Ed Howell) |
While the army was great at
protecting the park, they couldn’t do much when it came to answering visitor
questions about the area. Furthermore, 12 other national parks had since been
established in the US, all under different administration.
Finally, on August 25, 1916, Woodrow Wilson signed the National Park
Service Organic Act, creating an agency that would manage all national parks.
The first national park rangers, many of whom were veterans of the army, took over in Yellowstone in
1918.early NPS image, ca 1929 |
Peggy L
Henderson
Western
Historical and Time Travel Romance
“Where Adventure Awaits and Love is Timeless”
Award-Winning Author of:
Yellowstone Romance Series
Teton Romance Trilogy
Second Chances Time Travel Romance
Series
Blemished Brides Western Historical
Romance Series
Wilderness Brides Historical Romance
Series
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