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Texas
state border
relocated east
during survey
By W. T.
Block
First
published in
Beaumont
Enterprise on
Saturday
January 22,
2000.
In
1970, while a
man was
walking in a
Sabine River
palmetto
thicket near
Joaquin,
Texas, he
stumbled upon
a
tombstone-like
object in the
ground, which
read:
“Official
Marker,
Texas-United
States
Boundary
Commission,
1840.” In May
1840, the
cotton steamer
Albert
Gallatin
brought 2 such
markers to the
Sabine River,
one of which
was erected at
Texas Point at
Sabine Pass,
and the other
which was
erected near
Joaquin.
When
the boundary
was surveyed
from Joaquin
to the Red
River north of
Texarkana, it
was discovered
that the
correct
longitudinal
boundary was
eight miles
farther east
than it was
generally
believed to
be, and that
one hundred
families who
thought they
lived in
Louisiana
actually lived
in Texas.
The
Albert
Gallatin had
taken half of
the boundary
commission up
the river in
April 1840,
while the
remainder left
Huntley (now
Orange, Texas)
on the same
steamboat on
May 22nd.
The
joint boundary
commission
consisted of 6
staff members
and several
subordinates.
The United
States
surveyors, two
from the U. S.
Army, included
Major J. D.
Graham,
Lieutenant
Thomas Lee,
and a civilian
civil engineer
named G. G.
Meade. The
Texas
surveyors
included
Captain P. J.
Pillans,
Lieutenant A.
B. Gray, and a
civilian named
Daniel C.
Wilbur.
The
constant
meanders in
the stream
made the river
mileage about
double the
airline
mileage, and
the boat had
to work its
way around
many logjams.
At the end of
each day, the
engineers took
celestial
bearings and
recorded them
in the
commission
journal.
Fortunately
the entire
journal was
published in
the Beaumont
Journal of
December 24,
1905.
The
boundary
commission
stopped at
several river
ports to buy
supplies,
among them
Salem,
Belgrade,
Hamilton,
Sabinetown,
Pendleton, and
Logansport,
all of which,
except
Logansport,
are now ghost
towns.
Near
Salem the
Albert
Gallatin
passed the
wreckage of
the cotton
steamer Rufus
Putnam, which
had struck a
snag and
foundered the
previous
January.
Near
Hamilton, the
boundary
commission
observed an
unusual sight.
For a distance
one-quarter
mile wide on
each side of
the river, the
huge cypress
and long leaf
pine trees lay
prostrate on
the ground,
the work of a
killer
tornado. It
was believed
to have been
the same
tornado, which
had destroyed
Natchez,
Mississippi
with great
loss of life
three weeks
earlier.
After
reaching
Joaquin, the
commission
members
erected the
northern
boundary
marker
adjacent to
the river.
Then they
continued
surveying and
taking
celestial
bearings until
they reached a
point on Red
River north of
Texarkana.
Eighteen
months later,
the steamer
Albert
Gallatin blew
up in
Galveston Bay
on December
23, 1841,
killing 15
persons, while
it was racing
another
steamer. The
fireman threw
rosiny pine
knots into the
furnace until
it was a
cauldron of
flames, and
the boiler
could not
withstand the
mounting steam
pressure.
If
the Gallatin
had exploded
in Sabine
River, it
might have
affected the
course of
history. While
nothing else
is known of
five members
of the
commission,
Meade, the
civilian
engineer, had
graduated from
West Point,
but he had
resigned his
commission to
found an
engineering
firm. In 1842
he re-entered
the army, and
on July 1,
1863, Major
General George
Gordon Meade
commanded the
Army of the
Potomac when
it fought
General Lee
and the
Confederate
Army at
Gettysburg,
Pennsylvania.
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