The Evolution of a State or Recollections of Old Texas Days (Barker Texas History Center Series) by University of Texas Press Title: The Evolution of a State or Recollections of Old Texas Days (Barker Texas History Center Series)

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Manufacturer: University of Texas Press
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Customer Reviews:
The Evolution of a State or Recollections of Old Texas Days (Barker Texas History Center Series) by University of Texas Press

Good Reading

We found this book to be full of interesting stories about early Texas. It was helpful in finding information about our ancestors and our early Texas family.
The Evolution of a State or Recollections of Old Texas Days (Barker Texas History Center Series) by University of Texas Press

An Excellent Memoir

I learned of this book through the H-Texas History forum online and I was not disappointed. Occasional "old time" expressions make the account interesting and remind the reader that the writer is speaking from another time. The story as told from a first-person point of view was enhanced by my prior knowledge of events in Texas history. Reading about those events in the words of a person who was there was impressive. I highly recommend this book. I have purchased copies as gifts.
The Evolution of a State or Recollections of Old Texas Days (Barker Texas History Center Series) by University of Texas Press

First hand account

Read about what happened from someone who was really there for the early days of Texas.
The Evolution of a State or Recollections of Old Texas Days (Barker Texas History Center Series) by University of Texas Press

A good read, but use with caution

Dictated to one of his daughters when he was well past eighty, Noah Smithwick witnessed the panorama of Texas History. From the early days of Austin's Colony to the the aftermath of the Civil War, the text is lively with a dry sense of humor. But the reader is urged to use this book with caution. Some facts don't match up with other documents that were written at the time, instead of years later. (Noah had been banished from Texas in a round-about way. He had made a rifle and loaned it to another settler, who promptly used it to commit a murder.) Smithwick seemed to posess a fair education, which on the Texas frontier was something of an accomplishment. Blacksmith, carpenter, tobacco smuggler, gunsmith, racontour par excellance and even somewhat of a romantic, Smithwick's book is well worth reading.
The Evolution of a State or Recollections of Old Texas Days (Barker Texas History Center Series) by University of Texas Press

A Rare Personal Account of Early Texas

Noah Smithwick was an old man, blind and near his ninetieth year, when his daughter recorded these words. After his death in 1899, she polished the manuscript and had it published in 1900. He had stayed on in "paradise" Texas from 1827 to 1861, when his opposition to secession took him to California. This book is his story of these "old Texas days." If his memory for facts sometimes fails him, his stories never do.
The Evolution of a State or Recollections of Old Texas Days (Barker Texas History Center Series) by University of Texas Press

Book Description

"I was but a boy in my nineteenth year, and in for adventure when I started out from Hopkinsville, Kentucky, with all my worldly possessions, consisting of a few dollars in money, a change of clothes, and a gun, of course, to seek my fortune in this lazy man's paradise."

Noah Smithwick was an old man, blind and near his ninetieth year, when his daughter recorded these words. He had stayed on in "paradise"—Texas—from 1827 to 1861, when his opposition to secession took him to California. The Evolution of a State is his story of these "old Texas days."

A blacksmith and a tobacco smuggler, Noah Smithwick made weapons for the Battle of Concepción, and he fought in that battle. With Hensley's company, he chased the Mexican army south of the Rio Grande after the Battle of San Jacinto. Twice he served with the Texas Rangers. In quieter times, he was a postmaster and justice of the peace in little Webber's Prairie.

Eyewitness to so much Texas history, Smithwick recounts his life and adventures in a simple, straightforward style, with a wry sense of humor. His keen memory for detail—what the people wore, what they ate, how they worked and played— vividly evokes the sights, sounds, and smells of the frontier.

First published in part by the Dallas Morning News, Smithwick's recollections gained such popularity that they were published in book form, as The Evolution of a State, in 1900. This new edition of a Texas classic makes widely available for the first time in many years this "best of all books dealing with life in early Texas."


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