Bessie Reid and the story of Kisselpoo; Sorry for ruining your childhood stories; Iron Eyes Cody was Italian; Gremlins in the courthouse; Old Roy

Bessie Reid wrote the Legend of Kisselpoo in 1923. It was published in the Port Arthur News on July 1st. The story was epic because it was derived from Indian legends found from New Mexico to Louisiana. With Florence Stratton, Reid also published a textbook called When the Storm God Rides in 1936, but this book does not concern the history of SETX except for one link. I’ll add the story and then get in the weeds of our area.

It is when that orb sheds its full light across the lake that the story has its greatest attraction. Then the tale-tellers declare, in the silvery path across the twinkling water, sometimes can be seen a canoe bearing a boy and girl in strange clothing, paddling up the shimmering moon way.

The tribe of Kisselpoo, so runs the ancient story, lived by the lake; and she, the only child of the chieftain, had been born when the moon was full and was under the protection of the moon goddess. When Kisselpoo was fifteen years old, tales of her beauty and ability had traveled far, and many braves from other tribes came to woo her. The one whom the leaders favored was head of several groups whose land adjoined to the north; and, although he was older than her father and already had many wives, arrangements were made for their marriage.

When nuptial preparations were far advanced, a stranger, whose home was seven sleeps distant toward the setting sun, arrived in the village. He was tall and straight as the pines, and for gifts he brought arm bands of a shining metal, set with stones like rainbows and like the blue of the skies. Kisselpoo loved him, but her wedding was set for the time when the moon would be at its brightest. That night as the luminous disc rose over the horizon, she waited in her finery for other maidens of the village to come to her father’s lodge and lead her to the elderly northern chief.

Instead, she heard the westerner’s deep voice softly speak her name, and with him she fled through reeds and grass to the lake where a canoe lay waiting. Swiftly they glided out on the water; but already the princess had been missed, and pursuit, led by the chieftain from the north and medicine men of her own tribe, was close. Her father did not participate in the chase, for he had dreamed a dream in which the moon goddess appeared to him and urged him to let his daughter wed the Indian from the west.

The medicine men called down the wrath of their gods, and a storm came up, ruffling the lake and upsetting the canoe, so that the eloping pair was last seen in the path of moonlight. Thereupon, the moon goddess, angered, called upon her kinsman, the storm god from the tropics, who rode in on a devastating hurricane. When at last the waves retreated into the Gulf, there was nothing left of the village or its inhabitants. The moon goddess decreed that the Lake of the River of Cypress Trees, for allowing itself to yield to the medicine men’s commands, should slowly disappear and all the streams that feed it bear down silt and mud to fill it.

For many moons after the great storm, the waters of the lake were clouded with mud, and its sandy bottom was covered with silt. The fish that were once abundant were now only a few. The sandy shores of the lake were stained, and shorebirds that once nested in the reeds and fished the shallow flats were gone. However, the spirit of the young lovers has remained with the lake that Kisselpoo loved so dearly. The moon goddess has shown forgiveness, and the lake is free of the curse that could have destroyed it. One can only assume that Kisselpoo had asked her protector, the moon goddess, to restore the beauty of the place of her birth. Now a swift current from the River of Cypress Trees is sweeping away the silt, and a fine sand shall again cover the lake floor.

With each new moon, the water becomes clearer, and great schools of fish have returned to the lake. Beautiful shorebirds and waterfowl have also returned to the sandy shores, along the salt marshes where alligators and furbearing animals abound. Meanwhile on a night when the full moon is rising, to those who have the power to see such things, appears the canoe with its two occupants who shall watch over Lake Sabine and protect its beauty until the last full moon.

One thing that this story mentions is when the god Hurrican devastates the area. In an article entitled Southeast Texas Indian Homeland, W. T. Block says that the demise of the Nacazil tribe in this area might have been caused by the Great Hurricane of 1780. I don’t know if this is factually true, but it would fit into Bessie Reid’s take on the story (if she even knew that a hurricane had hit the Texas gulf coast at that time). Unfortunately, W. T. Block’s notes are not present, and I have no way to confirm this, but it did make a great story!

I’m no expert on indigenous peoples, but I do see that a few are embracing their Karankawa ancestry. I wish them well and hope they don’t invite me to lunch.

Now that I’ve ruined a few people’s childhood stories of the beautiful Kisselpoo, who didn’t exist, I would like to take it further. Do you remember that Indian in the 1970s commercial crying because West-End Wanda was throwing her Burger Chef wrappers out the window of her 1970 Ford Pinto? He was Italian—but I digress.

Jefferson County Courthouse 2012

On Wednesday, I attended a Jefferson County Historical Commission meeting. The gremlins were in full force around the elevators and possibly in the County Clerk’s office as well. Our usual quorum was met, plus some familiar faces to everyone’s delight. After the meeting, while taking the suspect elevator that made a few members late, I glanced at the panel and remembered that the courthouse is thirteen stories, and at one time, the county jail took up five of them. I toured the floors early in my journey in SETX history and will leave links to both the article and the photos at the bottom of this blog.

At our after-meeting (the one in the parking lot, because we were kicked out when they closed the building—as usual), I brought up a memory of working in a shipyard, which I try to forget, but it did make me think of my neighbor Roy in Port Arthur. He taught me many things in life and was a godsend and an excellent source of information. He worked in the shipyards in New Orleans during WWII, and he talked about it frequently with me because he knew I enjoyed his rambles. He grew up in Leesville, Louisiana, and is one of the few people who have influenced my life. He was special to me, and I loved every minute of his rants about Port Arthur, growing up in Leesville, being a union carpenter, and having to wear a sidearm on his belt in the 1960s to build his brother-in-law’s house because the union was on strike for whatever reason. Politics aside, this was wrong. I’ll leave a link at the bottom of this page.

Well, that’s it for this week, but October is on its way. Enjoy your family, neighbors, and friends. Alla prossima! Happy fall y’all.

SOUTHEAST TEXAS INDIAN HOMELAND:

THE BURIAL MOUNDS OF OLD PORT NECHES

By W. T. Block:

http://www.wtblock.com/wtblockjr/indian.htm

Iron Eyes Cody:

https://walkoffame.com/iron-eyes-cody/

Jefferson County Courthouse Jail:

Article:

https://www.rediscoveringsetx.com/2012/09/27/jefferson-county-courthouse-jail/

Photos:

https://flic.kr/s/aHBqjA8nZx

Remembering Roy:  

https://www.rediscoveringsetx.com/2012/07/24/remembering-roy/

Thoughts and Ramblings: Hurricanes Ike, Humberto, and Fern; researching history.

Crystal Beach October 2008

It’s the fourteenth anniversary of Hurricane Ike this week, and what do I get from Entergy? Three days of texts saying that they’re going to turn the power off on September 13 for a routine fix. Everything went well, but it did bring back memories. After Ike, we spent a week without power, but it would seem that we brought back a cool front as we returned from Austin, Texas. The weather was nice for a week until the day they turned the power back on. Luckily, we had no damage from Hurricane Ike, but many communities experienced flooding, and some lost everything.

Rollover Pass October 2008

In October of that year, I volunteered for a cleanup crew at Crystal Beach. I have videos of my journey to the site and the devastation of the peninsula. In our team, I met a man from Bridge City whose house was one of the fourteen that didn’t flood. He was there because he was spared the tragedy and wanted to help those who hadn’t been so fortunate. People like him are unique and should be put on a pedestal, but in life, they are the silent ones who help strangers and don’t look for credit. They seek a better life for all.

We moved from Port Arthur to Under the Oaks on Ye Olde Block Farm in 2006, after Hurricane Rita’s visit. We chose well because the other choice was the highest point in Labelle, which didn’t work out after Hurricane Ike. After all, the Corps of Engineers got the elevation wrong. It was a lovely house on an acre, but the neighborhood is no longer there because the flooding pretty much destroyed all the houses. A twelve-foot surge will do that.

September 13, 2007, is also a date to remember—at least, my cat would. At the time, Hurricane Humberto did a wibbly-wobbly thing and landed at Crystal Beach, then moved to our area. Of course, it was a late night-morning storm, and at 3:30 a.m., when I woke up, I checked the radar on my phone and found out quickly that there was a hurricane over the area. The eye passed over my house, and my cat, which had refused to leave for Rita, was doing his thing in the neighborhood. When he saw me come outside, he ran from the neighbor’s yard. I never knew a cat could gripe and relay so many messages in the fifteen seconds it took him to get to the back door. We endured the back half of the storm, but it was a minor event compared to what was happening in Beaumont.

We still had power, so I turned on the television to see what KFDM had to say. Unfortunately, I tuned in to see three guys, two weathermen and Larry Beaulieu, trying to figure out if they were on air or not. Of course, Larry’s backside was front and center on camera, but to be fair, Beaumont took a bigger hit than the southern part of the county. Apparently, their radar was destroyed, and they couldn’t figure out where the freak storm was. They said that Humberto’s eye was in Winnie, but I had already experienced the eye of the storm to the south, and it moved on to Vidor. When you live on the Gulf Coast, you experience these things.

Am I right to remember Hurricane Fern doing some sort of wibbly-wobbly thing and breaking up to have two eyes? I vaguely remember reporters on the Texas beaches interviewing folks and asking if they’d seen the hurricane. I need to ask Al from the radio because I might or might not have this memory because of him. Some of his whines about the old times are interesting, but facts must be checked.

Photo Credit: Kim Brent/ Beaumont Enterprise

I’ve been busy this week, but I did see that the Beaumont Police honored their fallen brethren, officers George Frederick and James A. Gaines. I also know why these officers were discovered. When I joined the Jefferson County Historical Commission in 2012, I regretted that not much was going on. But in the past couple of years, a few people have added their research and knowledge for others to build on. Regardless of what subject you are exploring, it has been a godsend to other researchers, new and old, to know that someone has done the work. I am happy with my comrades doing the things they love, even if I’m a slacker. There are things afoot that I will contribute to going forward.

Meow for now.

Beaumont Enterprise:

https://www.beaumontenterprise.com/news/article/officers-honored-after-100-years-17443913.php

Hurricane Ike photos:

https://flic.kr/s/aHsiZr1kEZ

Thoughts and Ramblings: Battle of Sabine Pass; Dick Dowling Days; the veil is thinning; God save the Queen

This week was the 159th Anniversary of the Battle of Sabine Pass, where 46ish Irishman defeated a Union flotilla of 5,000. They also had Kate Dorman in reserve just in case they couldn’t handle it themselves. A twenty-three-year-old lieutenant named Richard Dowling took out the flotilla by practice and planning. He was also at the Battle of Galveston. His history is fascinating because he arrived in New Orleans at around age four from a poor family, but if I remember correctly, he owned three bars in Houston by age twenty-one. The Bank of Bacchus is my favorite one of his establishments. He died of yellow fever at twenty-eight or twenty-nine (his birth records aren’t very clear.)

Dick Dowling Days 2013

In 2013, during the 150th anniversary of the battle, when it was alright to explain history’s sour past, there were many reenactments for each significant battle, and Sabine Pass was no different. This was the last reenactment battle and the 50th Anniversary of Dick Dowling Days, which was a thing since 1967. I was new to the Historical Commission, which I joined in 2012, and was wondering how I would take off three days of work for this, but I did, and it was worth it that year. Since it was the 150th anniversary, more reenactors were on the Union side, and many were dressed as Navy guys (300, actually!).

It was good to listen to some of them and their stories of past reenactments, letting the history and the hilarity flow. Past battles may or may not have included stuffing a beer can with concrete inside a cannon or firing blanks at a foreign tanker that didn’t know what was happening and swerved to miss the (blank) round. I have some videos from 2013 of some of the staged events; I’ll leave the links to them.

As I look back at the photos, I’m reminded that we’ve lost many of these guys in the past few years. Pictures are great, but their families would rather have them in their lives.

It seems the veil is thinning earlier than usual on the research front. I’ll get into more of this in October, but sometimes when you start researching someone with the hope of bringing their stories to light, and you know there are dead ends everywhere, you reach a point where you ask yourself: Why am I doing this? Then things get wibbly-wobbly, and people unexpectedly start to appear, and suddenly you have new, accurate information that you treasure. My Florence Stratton research was like this, and it is still ongoing; each year, we find more info to sift through for twenty hours over a weekend. I’m not complaining; I like doing this because it answers questions about our past. It is evident that I have a new research project for this winter, and hopefully, we will get more history on someone who I think deserves it.

Well, the Queen has died. This is not SETX related, but I’m going to ramble anyway. My interest in history spans different areas, and Rule Britannia is a big one. It is incredible to me that I have no interest in Dickens on the Strand in Galveston though—but I digress.

Growing up, my TV choices were limited to three channels, but thanks to Channel 39 out of Houston, the Benny Hill Show was available.

On PBS, Channel 8 out of Houston was also a window into different things. Toby Charles’s Soccer Made in Germany was a great program for Americans who couldn’t see a decent football match because the US soccer/football team was nonexistent. This is why I latched on to the English national team back in 1982. Rooting for the English national team is like rooting for the Astros (before they saw the sign) or the Oilers. After forty years of pain, I have switched to the Welsh team.

Queen Elizabeth ruled longer than any of her predecessors. As a princess during the war, she was a truck mechanic. Lilibeth, as her sister Margaret called Elizabeth because she couldn’t pronounce her name, was ultimately groomed by her father, King George, for a role in the monarchy. I can’t speak for Britannia, but in my opinion, she did as well as she could. God save the Queen!

As far as Charles goes, I side with Diana’s kids.

I once asked someone from the UK to explain to me the difference in how the US and Great Britain rally their people. He told me, “The US rallies around its flag while we rally around the Queen.”

Seems legit. Rest in Peace Ma’am

Until next week, cheerio!

Dick Dowling Days 2013:

Photos: https://flic.kr/s/aHsjJ35YXp

Colonel Crocker’s Surrender:

Lone Star Pipe Band:

Court Martial and Execution of Elijah Allen:

Queen Elizabeth: The Mechanic – Aiding the War Effort  

Thoughts and Ramblings: Bayoulands TALKS; Beaumont’s Civil Air Patrol in WWII; Marine Aircraft Group 93; 1943s Surprise Storm; the USS Texas and Rabauru kaigun kōkū-tai

USS Texas photo credit: National WW2 museum

Well, it’s September, and we’re still a month away from talking about spooky stuff. I hope we can cross the finish line and not see Jim Cantore rolling down my street with his goggles on. Just in case, my strategic cans of spaghetti reserves are well stocked.

https://www.lamar.edu/kvlu/programming/local-programs/bayoulands.html

This week I was listening to the Bayoulands TALKS podcast. It’s produced by Shannon Harris and Jason Miller for KVLU public radio, and it’s yet another excellent local podcast you should consume. One episode in particular that I enjoyed was the Penny Clark episode. Penny is the author of Beaumont’s Civil Air Patrol in World War II, which came out last year and is another book I can spend hours on just looking at the photos. Her knowledge of the subject, evidenced both in her book and her extra stories on the podcast, is another good resource of our history. I’ll leave a link to the book Penny made and the podcast at the bottom of this blog.

Photo credit: Arcadia Publishing

It also made me think back to how Marine Aircraft Group 93 (MAG-93) would train its pilots for dive bombing targets in the Gulf of Mexico for a short time. MAG-93 began in April 1944 at Cherry Point, North Carolina. Its first squadron was commissioned on April 15th under the command of Major John L. Dexter and was known as Marine Scout Bomber Squadron 931. Other squadrons, such as VMSB-932, would also be commissioned into MAG-93 and spend countless hours (round the clock for a brief time) in training centered at Jefferson County Airport (now Jack Brooks Regional Airport). There are some interesting stories about all of this, but there are some tragic ones too. I’ll leave a link to their history at the bottom of this blog.

I don’t want to talk about tropical stuff, but I guess I’ll throw this in because it’s relevant. In July of 1943, our area experienced a storm of a tropical nature, but since there were still German U-boats in the area, the government “forgot” to warn the coastal cities of the storm. As usual, storms cause deaths. Actually, the government hid the information, which I can understand a bit, but they treated this like they treated paying the Civil Air Patrol. (Listen to the podcast.) “Oops, forgot, catch you next week.” I’ll link to NOAA’s weather site for the whole story of the “surprise storm.” The main reason for not warning the coastal cities was that they didn’t want the U-boats to find out if the refineries were damaged or shut down in a weather event. I’ll let you ponder whether this was a good idea or a bad idea.

USS Texas

Well, the USS Texas has left its home for a 35-million-dollar makeover. (Don’t worry, Beaumont, you don’t have to pay for it.) The last of the World War I battleships is currently in dry dock getting a makeover in Galveston. The repairs will take a year, and she doesn’t know where her home will be afterward. A few cities are interested in hosting the old girl, but at this time, it’s early days. I live in Grigsby’s Bluff, under the Oaks, on ye olde Block Farm, and would love for it to be moored in that city north of me. But some think (who don’t even live in that city) that it shouldn’t be there. I’ll admit that Beaumont has a giant fire hydrant, paid for by Walt Disney, and it’s pretty interesting. Still, I’d rather spend my volunteer time and money on something actually worth remembering—something that means something that matters. I believe the Battleship Texas Foundation is looking for a city to pay to have it moored and a place for their gift shop. The foundation will cover all other expenses. It’s your call, Beaumont. My opinion doesn’t matter in y’alls business.

If, by some miracle, the USS Texas makes her home in Beaumont for all to see as they drive across the Purple Heart Bridge along Interstate 10, then my time and money will be spent to support this old girl for the next 107 years of her existence Even if it’s swabbing the decks while I hum a few bars of “Rabauru kaigun kōkū-tai” (google it) to generate some paranormal activity, I’m in. Her history deserves it.

As I stated last week, the Historic Magnolia Cemetery Tour II will be on Thursday, October 20, from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., and on Saturday, from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. All are welcome, and the tour is free to all. It’s a history tour of past residents and their lives in the area. Some achieved great things, while others just lived interesting lives. We love them all and want to tell their stories.

Well, happy September, and looking forward to October. Not much humidity in October. Let’s all get thru this month safe and sound.

Bayoulands Talks:

https://www.npr.org/podcasts/970687057/bayoulands-t-a-l-k-s

Beaumont’s Civil Air Patrol in World War II by Penny Clark

https://www.amazon.com/Beaumonts-Civil-Patrol-Images-Aviation/dp/1467106208

Marine Scout Bomber Squadron 931 (VMSB-931):

https://www.rediscoveringsetx.com/2019/11/18/marine-scout-bomber-squadron-931-vmsb-931/

The 1943 “Surprise” Hurricane:

https://www.weather.gov/hgx/projects_1943surprisehurricane

USS Texas links:

Foundation: 

https://battleshiptexas.org/

History:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Texas_(BB-35)

ラバウル海軍航空隊 Rabauru kaigun kōkū-tai

Rabaul Naval Air Corps:

https://youtu.be/iog7wm6Uo4Q