‘Leading Ladies’ is the Hill Country Community Theater’s first show of the 2008-2009 arts season
Other planned shows include: “Driving Miss Daisy,” Nov. 13-23 This Pulitzer Prize-winning drama covers the…
Other planned shows include: “Driving Miss Daisy,” Nov. 13-23 This Pulitzer Prize-winning drama covers the…
COTTONWOOD SHORES — Actor Mark Fernandes has some big shoes to fill. “We actually…
LLANO — A battle of the bands fundraiser to benefit Llano resident and cancer patient…
JOHNSON CITY — Get to know the arts by attending the ARTS Encounters at Benini Galleries…
MABLE FALLS — The legendary Johnny Bush and Tommy Alverson will pull up stools and join…
An unfamiliar luminous yellow caterpillar nudging across a garden path brought us to our feet…
BURNET — A Landowners Workshop Series from Oct. 9-30 offers insight on land-management strategies, officials said. …
MARBLE FALLS — A nonprofit agency helping children in need got some good news recently…
MARBLE FALLS — Two local musicians are teaming up to fight blindness with benefit performances and…
BURNET — Though it’s been rescheduled to spare residents the full fury of the Texas summer, this year’s National Night Out event will still offer community members a chance to get to know the first responders working full time to keep the city safe.The event gets under way 6:30 p.m. Oct. 7 in the H-E-B parking lot, 105 S. Boundary Street.Burnet Police Chief Paul Nelson said the focus of the event is for residents to get to know public safety officers and vice-versa. Officers from the Burnet Police Department and Burnet Fire/EMS will be there to meet and greet their neighbors, he added.“I think if we can get the community involved and interested in the Police Department, and if the Police Department and the citizens work together, crime would go down,” Nelson said. “The public could get more familiar with the officers, and the officers could get more familiar with the community.”H-E-B will serve free hot dogs and drinks at the event, which will include public safety displays and activities for children, Nelson said.“We’ll be doing fingerprint kits for the children, and we’ll have some public safety educational material to hand out,” he said. “We actually started National Night Out several years ago, but we haven’t done it since then. So we’re sort of starting it off again.”Burnet Fire/EMS Chief Mark Ingram said National Night Out gives his personnel a chance to mingle with residents outside of the line of duty.“Usually, the only time we deal with community members is when something bad is happening to them,” Ingram said. “This gets us out there with them on a more normal occasion.”Ingram said his officers will have fire trucks and ambulances on display, adding children will be able to leave the event with a few freebies.“We’ll have some giveaway stuff for the kids to help with fire safety education,” he said. “We’ll also have some fire-prevention material for the adults.”According to the event’s Web site, National Night Out began in 1984, with 2.5 million Americans taking part in events in cities across the country.The first programs began as neighborhood block parties where residents took time to mingle with neighbors and visiting police officers.Since then, the annual event has grown to include more than 35 million people across 12,000 communities in all 50 states.“It’s a wonderful opportunity for communities nationwide to promote police-community partnerships, crime prevention and neighborhood camaraderie,” said Matt A. Perskin of the National Association of Town Watches. “While the one night is certainly not an answer to crime, drugs and violence, National Night Out does represent the kind of spirit, energy and determination that is helping to make many neighborhoods safer places throughout the year.” Nelson said the event also gives his department a chance to thank the community for its continued support.“The community has given so much to the public safety officials,” he said. “They would like to take this opportunity to give back.”For more information on National Night Out, call (830) 756-6404.
The following facts and quotes were taken from “The Evolution of a State” by Noah…
by Rachel Bryson The following facts and quotes were taken from “The Evolution of a State” by Noah Smithwick, first published in 1900 and “Interesting History About Smithwick Community,” an article written by Olivia Cox and published in the Burnet Bulletin in 1938 and the Burnet County History Book, Vol. I, published in 1979.Smithwick arrived in Texas at the age of 19 in 1827. He wrote that he “drifted with the tide of emigration to Texas,” bringing all of his worldly possessions, “consisting of a few dollars in money, a change of clothes, and a gun…to seek my fortune in this lazy man’s paradise.”He traveled on a schooner from New Orleans, landed at Matagorda Bay and ate his first meal in Texas consisting of “venison sopped in honey.” Later he worked his way up to Bastrop where he met and married a widow named Thurza Blakey Duty. Smithwick fought for Texas’ independence from Mexico and served in a rear detachment at the Battle of San Jacinto. His brother-in-law, Lemuel Stockton Blakey, was killed during the battle and his remains are buried on the battle grounds. He was in Austin in 1845 when Texas became the 28th state of the Union and participated in the huge celebration.Afterward he became a Texas Ranger and fought with Col. John Henry Moore against the Comanche Indians. Three years later in 1849, at the age of 41, he came to Burnet County and served as the first armorer at Fort Croghan. He was a civilian responsible for the maintenance and repair of the small arms at the fort. Several other early settlers of the county joined him; among them were William H. Magill, Christian Dorbant and Logan Vandeveer. All were instrumental in helping establish the new county in 1852, which was the year that Smithwick brought his family to Burnet County. His fifth and last child, Robert, was born here.He purchased the first mill that had been built west of Georgetown on the Mormon Mill property, but later sold it and moved in 1855, eight miles below “the marble falls” on the Colorado River. He established a new farm and built one of the first frame houses in the region. Two years later he built the Smithwick Mills and a post office was established in that name. He was a loyal “Texican” and an American, so when the “rise of ominous war clouds arose from the south,” he began to contemplate moving. He wrote, “As the son of a revolutionary soldier, I could not raise my hand against the Union he had fought to establish. I had fought to make Texas a member of the Union, and I would not turn around and fight to undo my work…I was unalterably opposed to secession, both on principle and policy.”He voted against secession, as did the majority of the people in Burnet County, but Texas still broke away from the United States. Smithwick knew he could not stay and prepared to leave for California. He had been offered $12,000 for his mill, but because of the turbulent times, the sale did not go through. He eventually sold the mill for just $2,000.He also owned two slaves and sold them, one to Gov. Sam Houston for $800, even though he had “a few months before the election been assessed at $1,500.” He left his farm to his nephew, John Randolph Hubbard, who also was a Union sympathizer. Hubbard decided to stay and try to make it through the war, but in 1863 after threats to his life, he attempted to flee. He was ambushed by bushwhackers and his body was thrown into a water hole on Cow Creek, now known as Hubbard Falls.Smithwick, his family and several others who shared his views left for California on April 14, 1861, unaware that Fort Sumter had been fired on that day and the War Between the States had begun.He eventually settled in Santa Ana, Orange County, Calif., where he died in 1899 at the age of 91. His only wife, Thurza, and three of his children preceded him in death.He left behind the community known as Smithwick and a wonderful book. He was a keen observer and his anecdotes of many of the events are recorded in the memoirs. The “Evolution of a State” has been reprinted in numerous formats, and some think it is one of the most interesting and most accurate of all accounts about life in early Texas.Bryson is a former Highland Lakes reporter who lives in north Burnet County. Her e-mail is oliverplaceranch@wildblue.net.
All of my 80 years, I have been told there are only two truths: death…
A new revival could be in the works for Main Street in Marble Falls, but this one is based on art, not drinks and food.
MARBLE FALLS — The 116-year-old Christian-Matern House can be viewed by the public Dec. 13 as part of the annual Victorian Christmas Open House sponsored by the board of the Falls on the Colorado Museum.
A new monument was dedicated Nov. 23 at St. Frederick’s Baptist Church in Marble Falls with the blessing of associate minister Rev. Roy Crayton (left) and interim pastor George Perry.
SAN SABA — The Burnet High School girls basketball team split four games at the San Saba Tournament Nov. 20-22, turning in a whale-of-a-game against state-ranked Goldthwaite, a team that has long haunted the Lady Dawgs coach.
BURNET — Burnet Bulldog basketball head coach Roy Kiser would have liked the win, but a 64-56 loss to Taylor still left him feeling mighty good about his ball club’s effort this early in the season.
In Texas, football and basketball are the “sports.” That’s something we come to expect —…
Board members of the Marble Falls Independent School District recently made the right move when they voted to rename the track of the new extracurricular and athletic facility after Leonel Manzano.