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Wanderings in the Southwest in 1855 (Western Frontiersmen)
 
 
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Wanderings in the Southwest in 1855 (Western Frontiersmen) [Hardcover]

J.D.B. Stillman (Author), Ron Tyler (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

Western Frontiersmen August 1, 1990

Virtually unknown today, Stillman's observations have eluded even historians who have sought nineteenth-century travel accounts of Texas and the South. Stillman was a full-fledged member of a generation that had fallen completely in love with America's natural beauty, represented in the works of Emerson and Thoreau. His letters reflect that sensitivity and gift for description.

Nowhere have I seen nature display so much of the chastened beauty, or rugged grandeur . . .; nowhere have I seen realized, in so high a degree, the charms of the classical. Arcadis as in the rolling grassy regions of West Texas.

From Port Lavaca Stillman traveled alone by horse through Anaqua, Goliad and Helena, much the same route that his friend and fellow diarist, Frederick Law Olmsted, had followed just a few months before. Upon arrival in San Antonio he tarred, visiting with Adolph Douai, editor of the San Antonio Zeitung.

From San Antonio, Stillman ventured west as far as the Pecos River in the company of an army wagon train along the newly-opened road from San Antonio to El Paso. He penetrated unsettled areas, risking Indian attack to see first-hand the "wilds" of Texas.

. . .the water was now over the whole ground, and by floundering and swimming we reached the margin of the first slough. Here the flood had taken a shortcut . . . Shouts of distress were heard in the rear, when presently Antonio's mule came swimming past without his rider.

Wilderness flash floods, rough rides over long and muddy roads, and periodic residences in poorly-constructed log houses did not deter his romantic spirit. He carefully recorded his observations regarding the settlers and their surroundings, the botanical wonders and curiosities, and Indian conflicts.

Stillman wrote extensively concerning his travels, both in Texas and California during the gold rush period. He published essays in The Overland Monthly, and in 1877 published his memoirs, Seeking the Golden Fleece, a Record of Pioneer Life in California. Three books were published in the 1960s and 1970s containing his diaries and letters concerning his California experiences.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 194 pages
  • Publisher: The Arthur H. Clark Company (August 1, 1990)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0870621920
  • ISBN-13: 978-0870621925
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.1 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,804,779 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4.0 out of 5 stars An Interesting Account of Wanderlust, May 25, 2004
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This review is from: Wanderings in the Southwest in 1855 (Western Frontiersmen) (Hardcover)
In May 1855 a 36-year-old physician named Jacob Davis Babcock Stillman visited Texas to observe the culture of the state and to study its "resources and natural history" (p. 16). He saw himself as an intellectual in the mold of Frederick Law Olmstead, whose travel accounts in the South and West have become classics of that type of literature. Stillman wrote about his travels in Texas for "The Crayon," a New York magazine devoted to landscape art. The first appeared in the June 1855 issue and ran through April 1856. A total of 11 letters were published by Stillman in "The Crayon." Divided into two series--the series were delineated by the year in which they appeared--the first contain seven letters and the second had four. It is these letters which editor Ron Tyler has assembled, edited, and made available here for the first time in book form.

During his six-month stay in Texas, J.D.B. Stillman commented in his letters on geography; the mixing of Spanish colonial, Mexican, southern, German, and black cultures; the settlement of west Texas and the conflicts with Indians, and the social and cultural aspects of life on the frontier. Stillman was especially interested in the German immigrant settlements along the Gulf Coast and spent considerable time there. He shared many of these people's values, especially their aversion to slavery, and enjoyed their company. He also used his medical training to gain an invitation from the Army to see the more untamed sections of West Texas. Practicing medicine as he went, Stillman visited Fort Clark; Camp Lancaster, from which two letters in the second series originate; and other places in the far west along the San Antonio- El Paso road. Finally, in the fall of 1855 Stillman returned to California, and settled in Sacramento.

This first book-length compilation of Stillman's writings about Texas will be a useful primary resource for those interested in the early history of state. While the letters have been available in "The Crayon," this book makes them more readily accessible, something which The Arthur H. Clark Company has been doing for primary sources related to the American West for decades. An informative introduction adds to the value of the publication.

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