Ann Eliza
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SHELLBANK,
LOUISIANA:
THE LEGEND OF
PAVELL'S
ISLAND
By
W. T. Block
SOLD
TO AND ED BY
TRUE WEST,
DECEMBER,
1978, PAGES
26FF
In
the course of
a century, the
geography of
the Sabine
River has
changed but
slightly.
Meandering a
thousand river
miles from its
head, north of
Greenville,
Texas, the
placid stream
slices through
the iron ore
beds,
redlands, and
pine forests
of East Texas
to the salt
grass marshes
surrounding
Sabine Lake.
The
passage of
time has not
altered the
plant and
wildlife
extensively. A
few alligators
still haunt
its confines,
and here and
there a
gnarled
cypress stands
in snow-capped
elegance
beneath a
colony of
downy egrets.
Near its
mouth, the
deep river
abruptly
divides itself
into its east
and west
forks,
creating a
delta
sanctuary for
muskrats and
water fowl,
and known to
the present
day as
Pavell's
Island.
The
influx of
civilization
accounts for
most of the
changes of the
past decades.
The forests of
stately
cypresses are
gone. And
channel
clearance and
wave action
continue to
erode the
shoreline. The
jaws of giant
dredges have
long since
leveled the
high
shellbanks,
landmarks that
were once the
refuse heaps
of the
Attakapas
Indians' diet
and a
sepulchre for
their dead.
And now and
then, one sees
a bank crevice
that bears
mute evidence
that
occasionally
the normally
placid stream
has been known
to give way to
turbulence and
flooding.
As
far back as
the Texas
Revolution,
Sabine River
flatboatmen
floated their
cotton cargoes
to their
journey's end
at Pavell's
Island.
Lacking
conventional
steering
equipment for
navigating in
Lake Sabine,
the
flatboatmen
often
experienced
long delays
while waiting
for some
cotton
schooner to
arrive to buy
their cargoes.
It
was this
dilemma at the
terminus of
the cotton
trade which
eventually
attracted the
attentions of
two German
immigrants,
Capt.
Augustine and
Sophie Pavell,
to the lonely
island which
still bears
their name,
and to the
position of
middleman of
the Sabine
River trade.
Natives
respectively
of Prussia and
Hanover, Gus
Pavell and his
wife had been
married for
ten years when
they arrived
in New Orleans
in 1853. Gus
was a
seafaring man,
his mind and
instinct
attuned to
every sail and
spar, but he
still treated
his blonde
Sophie with
the gentleness
of a trade
wind. She
responded in
kind, catering
to her
husband's
every whim and
fancy; but she
adjudged
herself as
failing in one
wifely aspect.
She had not
provided him
with a male
heir, and as
she approached
her
thirty-fifth
birthday, her
hopes to do so
were indeed
growing dismal
and forlorn.
When
the Pavell's
arrived in
Orange County
in 1854, Gus
had already
won for
himself a
reputation as
a shrewd and
hard-nose
trader. He
quickly
foresaw the
dilemma of the
flatboatmen,
who needed to
return upriver
before the
water level of
the river fell
and the spring
planting
season began.
The
delta island
would prove to
be a lonely
outpost for a
social
creature such
as Sophie, but
its high
shellbank
certainly
offered the
economic
springboard to
their success
as merchants.
And its
elevation
eliminated any
threat of
overflow by
the seasonal
flood tides.
Pavell
bought lumber
and shingles
and set about
to build a
store building
with a cotton
warehouse and
living
quarters
attached. At
the water's
edge, he
shored the
shellbank with
logs and built
a wharf to
accommodate
the river
traffic. He
also added a
glassed-in
alcove to the
building, for
Sophie loved
to putter with
her flowers
and pot
plants.
When
the long and
tedious
project was
completed, the
Pavell's
sailed their
two-masted
schooner, the
"Sophia," to
New Orleans to
buy
merchandise.
There were
barrels of
lard, flour,
crackers, and
whiskey to be
bought,
hogsheads of
sugar,
tobacco, and
molasses,
bolts of
calico and
muslin, plus
hardware,
glassware,
gunpowder,
lead, and many
other items
too numerous
to be recited
in detail. A
month later,
all the stock
was shelved
and in place
for the
opening day,
and Gus nailed
a sign above
the roof which
read "A.
Pavell and
Co., Cotton
Factor."
Gus
passed on to
Sophie all the
business savvy
he had
acquired, for
she would have
to tend the
store alone
when he was
away on
business
trips. She
mastered
cotton-grading
and weighing,
fur trading,
and other
commercial
techniques,
for every item
used on the
frontiier had
to be bought,
sold or traded
for.
Oftentimes
there issued
forth the
cling and
glitter of
gold coins on
the counter,
but payments
were sometimes
tendered in
land
certificates
or the titles
to slaves.
Frontier
merchandising
was indeed
strange and
foreign to
Sophie at
first, but in
time, her
trading acumen
was adequately
honed.
Almost
every one she
encountered
was a
stranger, for
the nearest
neighbor, Sol
Sparks, lived
a mile
upstream. A
lone woman at
such a distant
outpost might
be considered
as easy prey
for some
fugitive from
justice, and
Gus trained
her well in
the use of
firearms. A
buxom female,
Sophie often
wore a fiber
bag, tied at
her waist,
which usually
bared a
portion of her
wool yarn and
knitting
needles, but
never the cap
and ball Colt
pistol upon
which they
rested.
All
of the river
boats stopped
at Pavell's
store to
deposit or
pick up mail,
and in time,
the trading
post became a
post office as
well. The
decade of the
1850's was a
prosperous
one; profits
were high, and
the couple
were soon
riding at its
economic
crest. By
1860, they
owned land and
inventory of
merchandise
valued at
$10,000.
One
day, as her
husband
returned from
Orange with a
load of cattle
hides, Sophie
met him at the
wharf, her
face beaming
and all aglow,
and she
shouted,
"Guschen, mein
schatz! I
think I am
going to have
a baby!"
Half
in disbelief,
the captain
stared at her
as he sought
the words to
reply with. He
knew his wife
would not lie
about a
subject so
dear to her
heart, and
finally, in a
similar
mishmash of
German and
English,
exclaimed, "A
baby? Is that
really so?"
And she
assured him
that it was.
Basking
there in the
sunlight of
her husband's
approval, Gus
then embraced
her tenderly,
planting
caress upon
caress on her
rosy cheeks.
Sophie added
that time
might prove
her statements
false, but Gus
took no note
of that,
quickly
accepting as
fact her
presumed
condition of
impending
motherhood. He
wanted to take
her to a
doctor in
Orange. But
Sophie
refused,
reminding her
spouse that
she was a
vigorous woman
who had
already
mastered a
thousand arts
and crafts,
and in time
she could
adapt to
motherhood as
well.
Time
passed, the
gold coins
clinked on the
counter, and
Sophie,
pregnant with
new life and
hope, whiled
away her days
with laughter,
planting
flowers, and
knitting tiny
garments. As
the
cotton-shipping
season
approached,
Gus informed
her that he
would have to
sail to
Galveston soon
to replenish
their
dwindling
stock of
merchandise.
He
wanted to
close the
store and take
his wife to
the hotel in
Sabine Pass,
but she
refused to go.
Their
customers, she
reminded him,
depended on
them for the
necessities of
frontier
living. And
besides, the
baby was not
due for
another two or
three months,
and she still
had so much
unfinished
sewing and pot
plants to
putter with.
Reluctantly,
Gus loaded the
Sophia with
cotton, hides,
peltries, and
other
commodities,
and after
kissing his
wife goodbye,
he steered his
schooner
toward the
Island City.
It was a
vexatious
voyage for
him, one
fraught with
delays, no
docking space
at Galveston,
frustrations,
and seas too
calm for
sailing, and a
week had
transpired
before Gus
docked again
at the island
shellbank.
Sophie
ran to him
with tears
streaming from
her eyes.
Between sobs,
she led him to
a tiny grave
outside of the
glassed
alcove. Then
she related
the pathetic
events of the
previous week
when,
frightened
into hysteria
by the sight
of a chicken
snake coiled
up in her
kitchen, she
fell against a
table, and was
soon smitten
with birth
pangs.
She
added that,
despite her
cries for
help, she soon
gave birth
alone to a
tiny stillborn
daughter.
Later she
fashioned a
coffin from
some cypress
boards, and
when her
spouse failed
to return
promptly, she
buried her
infant in a
grave hacked
out amid the
clam shell.
She tried to
console her
husband with
the fact that,
if she could
conceive once,
she could do
so again, and
surely some
day,
Providence
would reward
them with the
birth of a
son. Pavell
sent away to
Galveston for
a small
tombstone
inscribed as
follows: "In
Memory Of Our
Beloved
Daughter, Ann
Eliza Pavell,
Born And Died
Sept. 10,
1858."
From
the beginning,
Sophie
lavished much
affection on
the tiny
grave, banking
its sides with
marsh mud and
bordering it
with plants.
She buried a
bronze urn,
its rim neatly
decorated with
tiny
cherubims,
upright in the
center, and
often the
steamboatmen
passing in the
river would
view with
compassion the
sight of
Sophie as she
kneeled and
placed a fresh
bouquet of
flowers
therein in
memory of her
child. In
time, it
became a
byword
everywhere
along the lake
and lower
Sabine River
that no grave
of record ever
received more
attention than
that of Ann
Eliza Pavell.
In
the aftermath
of her grief,
the sparse
neighbors,
including the
Sparks family
upstream, and
George Block
and his wife,
a German
couple who
farmed on
nearby Black
Bayou, dropped
by to tender
their
condolences.
Time soon
healed
Sophie's
wound, and it
quickly became
business as
usual at
Pavell's
Island. The
gold coins
clinked on the
counter, and
cotton and
hides changed
hands, as
commodities
floated forth
to market, and
the wares
needed to
sustain the
frontier
economy moved
upstream. Gus
and Sophie
continued to
prosper, but
never once did
she conceive
again, for the
Pavell's were
destined to
die childless.
In
1861, the
Civil War
brought the
Sabine River
trade to an
abrupt halt. A
Union blockade
soon choked
off all
imports,
skyrocketing
the prices of
cotton and
manufactured
items. Being
past forty
years of age,
Gus felt no
compunction to
enlist, but
his younger
brother,
Ferdinand
Pavell of
Johnson's
Bayou, La.,
soon joined an
artillery
unit, Company
B of Spaight's
11th Texas
Battalion, in
garrison at
Sabine Pass.
Fate,
however,
seemed to
foster upon
Gus the role
of blockade
runner. With
his schooner
serenely at
anchor nearby,
and his superb
knowledge of
the Sabine
estuary
navigation
pitfalls, such
a course of
events was
inevitable.
And Gus was
fortunate to
escape capture
by the
blockaders
throughout the
war. During
the dark of
the moon, he
would load the
"Sophia" with
150 bales of
cotton, tack
out of the
Sabine Pass
under a fog
cover or dark
of the moon,
and usually
before the
Federal ships
could detect
his movements,
Gus would
hoist all
sails and
escape, at a
14-knot speed,
toward Havana
or Belize,
Honduras.
Sometimes
Pavell, his
schooner laden
with gunpowder
and muskets,
would run the
blockade into
Galveston Bay,
later
returning home
via the
Houston train
to Beaumont.
Those
were lonely
years for
Sophie, and
after Gus'
first return
voyage in
1864, she
talked him
into quitting
the sea,
convincing him
that his luck
had probably
played out.
Her spouse,
too, was ready
to quit,
knowing that
he had already
freighted
several
hundred tons
of munitions
for the
Confederacy,
but he had
also lined his
own pockets
with much gold
in the
process.
When
Gen. Lee's
surrender of
the
Confederate
armies
signaled the
South's
demise, Sophie
determined to
abandon
Pavell's
Island and its
loneliness for
good, and her
husband agreed
with her
decision.
Compared to
other
Southerners,
they had
survived the
war in
comparative
comfort, their
large land
holdings and
coffers of
gold coins
still intact.
Why not, they
pondered,
resettle in
Galveston,
where they
could still
pursue
merchandising
and also enjoy
a sociable
existence,
attending
church and the
theater? And
if there were
any doubts
about the
wisdom of that
move, these
also vanished
when the great
hurricane of
Sept. 13,
1865,
destroyed the
city of Orange
completely and
pounded their
Sabine River
outpost
unmercifully.
Gus
went to
Galveston
where he
bought a house
and a lot and
a store
building. A
month later,
he loaded all
of their
furniture, pot
plants, and
store
inventory
aboard the
"Sophia," but
he soon
encountered a
problem with
his wife. She
insisted on
exhuming the
coffin of her
infant as
well, and
while he was
engaged in
other chores,
Sophie took a
shovel to the
grave site and
finished the
grizzly and
unpleasant
task.
The
Pavell's soon
opened their
Galveston
store, joined
a church, and
continued to
prosper, but
fate had other
plans in
store. In
1867, Gus came
home sick one
day, and
later, as his
fever
heightened,
accompanied by
jaundice and
black vomit,
he realized he
was a victim
of the dreaded
yellow fever
plague that
was already
decimating the
island's
population. In
desperation,
Gus called in
his pastor and
dictated a
will which
left one-sixth
of his
property to
the German
Presbyterian
Church;
Pavell's
Island, his
schooner
"Sophia," and
a shingle
business to
his brother
Ferd; and the
remainder to
his widow.
Shortly
afterward, the
captain died.
Sometime
later, Sophie
married
another German
immigrant
named
Picklaps. With
extensive
properties,
including a
1,400-acre
tract at Port
Neches, at her
disposal, she
lived out her
later life in
Galveston in
relative
comfort, so
far as is
known.
After
the storm of
1865, old
Solomon Sparks
tinkered for
awhile with
the idea of
purchasing
Pavell's
Island and
moving his
shingle mill
there. He
rowed his
skiff down the
river one day,
tied up at the
wharf, and
while
examining the
storm damage,
happened to
encounter the
excavated
grave site.
Nearby
he spotted the
cherubim-decorated
object which
he always
thought was a
flower vase,
but in reality
was a 2-foot
section of two
inch bronze
pipe, sawed
from a bed
post. It still
bore the
tarnished
markings from
those years
when it had
stood upright
in the grave.
At
the bottom of
the excavation
was a residue
of rust of
powder
consistency
and the
imprint of
square corners
where the
casket had
lain. But
imagine his
surprise and
the shades of
doubt which
encompassed
him when
there, beneath
a clam shell,
he found a
$20.00 gold
piece which
Sophie,
undoubtedly in
her haste to
leave, had
overlooked.
Back
at his home,
Sparks
pondered the
strange
finding,
wondering as
well if Sophie
had really
exhumed a
small skeleton
from the grave
for reburial
in Galveston.
If so, he
wondered why
she had left
the little
tombstone of
her infant Ann
Eliza which
still stood at
the grave
site. Would
she not also
need it at the
new grave site
in Galveston?
Sparks
wondered also:
did Sophie
really have a
baby, or had
she only
perpetrated
the grossest
of hoaxes on
her husband
and neighbors?
Or maybe the
purpose of
those fresh
bouquets was
simply to
disguise the
coin entrance
to her private
"bank" in the
clam shell
mound? Perhaps
the world will
never know for
certain what
the truth was,
but the
evidence at
hand accounted
for one of the
strangest and
most
widely-circulated
legends ever
heard along
the lower
Sabine River.
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