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THE
'OPELOUSAS
TRAIL:'
BELLOWING COWS
MARKED FIRST
TRAIL TO NEW
ORLEANS
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
Enterprise,
about
1975, exact
date unknown
also in Block,
Frontier
Tales of The
Texas-Louisiana
Borderlands, MSS,
pp. 153-158,
in Lamar and
Tyrrell
libraries.
For
decades now
the writers of
pulp Western
Americana have
ground out
countless
tales of the
old Chisholm
and Goodnight
Trails to
Kansas and
Wyoming. For
some reason
unknown to the
writer, the
story of the
dusty, old
'Opelousas
Trail,' from
Texas to New
Orleans and
pockmarked as
it was with
the decades'
accumulation
of cattle
tracks, has
remained
largely muted
and unsung
around the
camp fires.
Undoubtedly,
even many
Beaumonters
are unaware
that Texas'
oldest and
longest-surviving
cattle trail
passed through
their city. In
Civil War
days, most
Beaumonters
greeted the
dawn with the
bellowing of
cattle, bound
for the river
crossing as
Tevis' Ferry.
The Opelousas
Trail, which
retraced or
ran parallel
to the Old
Spanish Trail,
was 102 years
old when the
first rail
bridge over
the Sabine
River at
Orange was
completed, and
through rail
service linked
Houston with
New Orleans
for the first
time. In 1881,
the need for
the long,
overland
cattle drives
effectively
ceased when
the first cars
of bellowing
cows crossed
that river en
route to the
Crescent City.
As
late as 1879,
according to
the Galveston
"News,"
perhaps the
largest herd
of record,
23,000 head,
crossed the
Neches River
at Collier's
Ferry in a
single day.
Mr. C. T. Cade
had just made
one of his
annual cattle
drives from
High Island,
Texas, to his
ranch at
Iberville
Parish,
Louisiana.
The
Chisholm Trail
to Kansas
lasted a bare
ten years, but
saw cattle
herds totaling
more than
400,000 heads
annually at
its peak
around 1873.
The trail to
New Orleans
never
witnessed more
than 75,000 at
its peak, but
its history
spanned more
than a century
of time. Yet
the writer
knows of no
volumes of
history or
fiction, nor
scores of
sheet music,
nor pages of
pulp Western
magazines that
owe their
origins to the
Opelousas
Trail. Thus,
it appears
that whenever
the cattle
drovers
strummed out
"Get Along,
Little Dogie"
around the
camp fires at
twilight, the
hands on their
compasses
always pointed
north.
Before
1778, no
commerce of
any kind,
except
smuggling,
existed
between the
provinces of
Texas and
Louisiana,
although as of
that year,
both belonged
to Spain.
Before that
year, there
were instances
when Texas
Indians stole
Spanish
mission cattle
and drove them
to the French
Acadian
regions of
Louisiana.
When the
viceroy lifted
the trade
embargo in
1778,
Francisco
Garcia left
San Antonio in
1779 with
2,000 steers,
bound for
beef-hungry
New Orleans.
Except for the
mission cattle
stolen and
driven to
Louisiana by
Indians,
Garcia's drive
was the first
herd to travel
the route once
marked so well
by cattle
hoofs and
known to the
present day as
the "Old
Spanish
Trail."
Although
no known
records
survive that
chronicle the
century's
aggregate of
cattle, a
probable two
million steers
had made the
long trek to
the Crescent
City before
1881, the year
of the first
New
Orleans-bound
train. During
the 1850s, the
number of
cattle being
driven along
the trail was
nearer to
50,000 heads,
but by then a
figure between
10,000 and
20,000 steers
each year were
being moved to
New Orleans by
steamboat from
the Texas
ports of
Sabine Pass,
Galveston, and
Indianola.
The
first Anglo
cattleman of
note in
Southeast
Texas was
James Taylor
White, who
settled on
Turtle Bayou
near Anahuac
in 1818. He
began his
first drives
to New Orleans
during the
early 1820s,
but he was
soon joined by
other
ranchers, most
of them from
around Velasco
in Stephen F.
Austin's
colony on the
Brazos River.
By 1830,
White's herd
numbered 3,000
heads and by
1840 had grown
to 10,000
domestic
cattle. At
that time,
however, there
were great
herds of wild
Spanish cattle
all along the
Texas coast,
and whenever
White could
get his brand
on a wild one,
the steer was
included in
his trail
drives. In
1773, the
Spanish
abandoned
their missions
at Presidio
LaBahia and El
Orcoquisac
(Wallisville),
along with
40,000 branded
and unmarked
cattle at the
former site
(Goliad) and
3,000 more at
Wallisville.
Before
the Texas
Revolution,
one of the
Louisiana
cattle buyers
who often
visited
White's Ranch
to buy cattle
was Captain
Arsene LeBleu
de Comarsac,
of Calcasieu
River in
Louisiana, who
had been one
of Lafitte's
pirates in
1820. When the
Runaway Scrape
was in
progress in
April, 1836,
Taylor White
had just
crossed
Jefferson
County and was
New
Orleans-bound
in the
vicinity of
LeBleu's home
with a trail
herd of 1,000
steers.
Gradually, the
size of his
trail herd
increased to
around 2,500
each year, for
which he was
paid upon
delivery at
the rate of
$10-$12 each
in gold. When
White died in
1851, a part
of the
inventory of
his estate
included
$150,000
banked in New
Orleans, the
proceeds of
his cattle
drives of many
years.
As
early as 1840,
the drowning
of livestock
in the Neches
River was
sufficient to
cause
Beaumont's
first Board of
Aldermen its
greatest
concern. The
council
enacted an
ordinance
requiring each
drover to put
up a $50 bond
before
crossing his
herd and to
pay into the
city's
treasury $6
for each dead
animal that
had to be
removed from
the river. On
August 10,
1840, the
aldermen
passed the
famed
"Ordinance to
Prevent
Nuisances by
Swimming
Cattle," and
one of its
provisions
required the
constable to
be present at
each crossing
to collect the
$50 bond, or a
$50 fine in
lieu of it.
Another
provision
required the
$6 removal fee
only if paid
in "treasury
notes." If
paid in
"current
money," only
$1 per head
was collected.
Nevertheless,
one of the
first
industries at
Beaumont was
the
slaughtering
of cattle,
principally
the wild and
unclaimed
Spanish
cattle, for
their hides
only, worth
$1.50 each.
Carcasses were
thrown into
the river for
the huge
catfish and
alligator
garfish to
feast upon.
The
importance of
cattle
crossing in
early
Jefferson
County can
also be noted
in the
earliest
"Minutes of
the County
Court." In
1837, the
commissioners,
upon licensing
Ballew's
Ferry, on the
Sabine River
north of
Orange, Texas,
ordered the
ferryman to
provide stock
pens in which
trail herds
could be kept
overnight,
accommodations
and meals for
drovers, and
"three hands
for crossing
cattle." In
return, the
ferryman was
allowed to
collect 2
cents for each
steer or horse
crossed, and
he was
licensed to
dispense
whiskey to
drovers and
passengers.
(Richard
Ballew had
also been one
of Lafitte's
pirates.)
There
were three
ferries at
early day
Beaumont,
Tevis Ferry at
the townsite
of Beaumont,
William
Ashworth's
ferry at Santa
Ana, about
three miles to
the south, and
Pine Bluff
Ferry (later
Collier's),
five miles to
the north. The
latter was the
preferable
crossing point
because of the
high land
there on both
sides of the
river. In
1842, Pine
Bluff was
allowed 3
cents each for
swimming
cattle,
horses, mules,
or hogs.
Between 1846
and 1848, the
crossing fee
was still 3
cents per head
at Nancy Tevis
Hutchinson's
ferry at
Beaumont and
at John
Sparks' ferry
over Taylor's
Bayou.
However, the
crossing fee
at Amos
Thames' ferry
over Pine
Island Bayou
in 1846 was
only 2 cents a
head.
The
swimming of
cattle was a
dangerous
occupation for
the 'cattle
crossers,' one
of whom was a
pioneer
settler named
Sterling Spell
of Beaumont. A
biography of
Spell in the
Beaumont
Journal of
April 11,
1908,
described the
brute strength
he expended in
that effort,
as follows:
"Sterling
Spell was an
extraordinary
man in some
respects. He
was six feet
and six inches
in his bare
feet, and his
usual weight
was 256
pounds. . .
.The stock
raisers here
would employ
him when
driving beeves
to the New
Orleans market
to assist
them, and it
was related to
this writer by
an eye witness
that when the
drove arrived
at the Neches
River, Spell
would take off
his outer
clothing and
go in among
the cattle and
seize a big
1,000 pound,
four-year-old
steer by the
horns, back
him into the
river, turn
him around,
hold to the
horns by his
left hand, and
swim across
the river with
him. The other
steers of the
drove would
follow. No
other man was
ever known to
have attempted
that feat of
strength."
Some
of Taylor
White's
contemporaries
and companions
on many of his
long drives
were William
and Aaron
Ashworth,
David Burrell,
John McGaffey,
and Christian
Hillebrandt,
the latter's
Mexican land
grant being on
the Jefferson
County bayou
of the same
name. In 1856,
a traveler
named
Frederick
Olmsted, who
later
published
Journey
Through Texas,
encountered
Hillebrandt
while he was
swimming his
herd at
Hutchinson's
Ferry, into
the inundated
Orange County
marshes
beyond.
Olmsted
described "Old
Dutch Chris"
Hillebrandt as
being a huge
man, similar
to Spell, who
barked out his
orders to his
drovers and
who sometimes
had to abandon
steers who
were sunk to
the hips in
the soft mud.
Perhaps
Jefferson
County's
foremost
rancher of his
day,
Hillebrandt
told the
census
enumerator in
1850 that he
owned only
2,000 heads,
but probably
that figure
was
notoriously
understated.
As any
early-day
rancher could
affirm, the
census taker,
Worthy
Patridge, had
a "double
interest" in
the count, for
Patridge was
also the
county's tax
assessor-collector.
When
Hillebrandt
died in 1858,
the inventory
of his estate
indicated that
he owned 9,000
cattle and
1,000 horses,
which roamed
over parts of
Liberty,
Jefferson, and
Orange
Counties.
Arsene
LeBleu's log
cabin at
Calcasieu
River was one
of the cattle
"stands" along
the route to
New Orleans.
At all other
points along
the trail,
cattle
"stands' were
operated in
Louisiana,
giving the
drovers access
to cattle
pens, lodging
at night, and
warm food. The
stand owners
made their
living from
the Texas
herdsmen
moving along
the trail.
By
1855, cattle
movements
along the
Opelousas
Trail
approached
50,000 heads
annually. In
two months
time,
October-November,
1856, 15,000
steers swam
the Neches
River at
Beaumont. On
November 5,
1856, an early
Beaumont
school
teacher, Henry
R. Green,
recounted in
one of his
articles to
the Galveston
Weekly News,
as follows:
"Three
droves came in
last night
from Refugio
County, which
is certainly a
long way to
drive beeves.
These animals
seem to lose
nothing in the
flesh and are
the finest
specimens of
cattle I have
ever seen. The
animals have
been passing
daily for
about five
weeks, and
still they
come!"
Within
two months of
1857, February
and March, 109
droves of
Texas cattle,
numbering
14,000,
arrived at
Lake Charles.
In June, the
Galveston News
reported that
the number of
cattle that
already had
reached Lake
Charles would
indicate that
1857 would be
another banner
year. A final
tally of
50,000 heads
was again
predicted.
An
alternate
route by sea
was
inaugurated in
mid-nineteenth
century, and
this greatly
reduced the
number that
otherwise
would move
over the
Opelousas
Trail. Since
these
shipments of
cattle
originated and
ended at the
same place,
they could
also be
credited as
moving over
the trail if
one so chose.
In 1849, the
first shipment
of Jefferson
County cattle
was sent from
the Sabine
River to New
Orleans aboard
the Brazos
River cotton
steamer E. A.
Ogden By 1855,
the steamer
Jasper was
carrying 5,000
steers
annually from
Sabine Pass to
New Orleans in
addition to
10,000 bales
of cotton. The
Jasper
belonged to an
association of
New Orleans
butchers, who
kept a cattle
buyer
permanently
domiciled in
Sabine Pass.
The writer
estimates that
from 15,000 to
20,000 steers
annually were
shipped by
water to New
Orleans from
Galveston and
Indianola.
Certainly,
the overland
cattle drives
to New Orleans
reached their
zenith during
the
Reconstruction
years between
1865 and 1876.
One of the
foremost Texas
cattleman-drovers
of that period
was the
renowned
"Shanghai"
Pierce, about
whom one or
two books have
been written.
In 1866,
cattle could
be bought most
anywhere in
West Texas for
$3 a head,
whereas the U.
S. Army in New
Orleans was
paying from
$20-$30 a
head. Thus,
the Army set
the price for
beef
throughout the
city.
A
Beaumont
newspaper
reported a
drive of 1879
which is the
largest ever
located by the
writer. For
many years the
herd's owner,
C. T. Cade,
had been the
largest
cattleman and
landholder at
High Island
and on Bolivar
Peninsula as
well as in
Iberville
Parish, La.,
where he
fattened his
herds for the
New Orleans
market. In
June 1879, the
Beaumont
Lumberman,
quoted by the
Galveston
News, recorded
that:
"Mr.
C. T. Cade of
Oasis,
Iberville
Parish, La.,
who owns large
stock
interests in
this county,
started a
drive of
23,000 beeves
last Saturday.
They were
crossed over
the Neches
River at
Collier's
Ferry, four
miles above
this place.
Five heads
were drowned
and four
escaped into
the woods,
making a total
loss of nine,
which is
considered a
remarkably
successful
crossing for
so large a
herd."
Two
years later,
when the
Louisiana and
Western
Railroad and
the Texas and
New Orleans
line linked up
at Orange,
Texas, to
become the
Southern
Pacific
system, the
large cattle
treks across
the Pelican
State finally
bowed to the
progress of
the iron
horse. The
continuous
pounding of
the cattle
hoofs through
the dirt
streets of
Beaumont would
become only a
memory among
the
old-timers.
But the
bellowing and
lowing of the
steers
continued as
each freight
train moved
fleets of
cattle cars
over the rails
to the
Crescent City.
As
of 1881, the
Jefferson
County cattle
industry was
still in its
ascendancy,
although the
actual number
of small
ranchers had
decreased
considerably.
As early as
1847,
Jefferson
County farmers
wanted only to
raise cattle
and sweet
potatoes, not
corn and
cotton as many
might think.
And a district
judge of that
year chastised
a grand jury
in Beaumont in
an effort to
alter that
pattern of
agriculture.
By 1860, there
were 60,000
cattle on the
tax rolls,
although many
cattle may
never have
been
enumerated.
As
of 1888, the
Beaumont
Pasture
Company,
composed of
William and
Perry
McFaddin,
Valentine
Wiess, and W.
W. Kyle, owned
the 60,000
acre
"Mashed-O"
ranch south of
Beaumont, so
completely
surrounded by
water that
only nine
miles of fence
was needed to
complete the
enclosure.
Within its
confines were
10,000 heads
of cattle. It
was the
Pasture
Company which
also initiated
the first
program to
upgrade the
quality of
livestock in
the county by
the
introduction
of
thoroughbred
Brahman and
Hereford
bulls. Perry
McFaddin
bought the
first Brahman
bull in the
county from a
traveling
circus who had
the bull on
exhibit.
It
was also under
McFaddin,
however, that
the county's
first cattle
industry
reached its
peak after
1900. Even
after the
Pasture
Company sold
60,000 acres
of its land to
the Kansas
City Southern
Railroad in
1894, the
sprawling,
100,000-acre
"Mashed-O"
spread still
stretched out
along the
upper 25 miles
of the Texas
coast until
the ranch
began to
disintegrate
about 1930.
Since 1900,
there have
been numerous
other ranchers
in Jefferson
County, among
them Ben and
Martin Hebert
and Joe
Broussard,
with herds
exceeding
5,000 heads.
On one
occasion about
1914, Perry
McFaddin moved
a single herd
of 14,000
steers from
his West Texas
ranch in Greer
County to the
"Mashed-O"
spread in
Jefferson
County. Until
around 1950,
the stretch of
coast between
Sabine Pass
and High
Island
contained more
cattle per
square mile
than any point
in West Texas.
A sleet
blizzard of
Jan. 18-21,
1935, caused
about 25,000
heads of
cattle to
freeze to
death in this
county, and in
Feb. 1899, the
temperature
dropped to 4
degrees F. in
Beaumont.
Today, the
county's
cattle
industry is
grossly
overshadowed
by the
industrial
smoke stacks
and petroleum
cracking
units, but
correlative
with rice
production,
cattle are
still an
important
financial
ingredient. In
1970, cattle
sales added
$2.4 million
to Jefferson's
economy, and
today's
typical
rancher is a
rice farmer
who may run up
to 200 steers
on his fallow
rice lands.
Beaumont
for many years
had possessed
historical
markers
commemorating
about
everything,
including
Spindletop,
the founding
settlers, the
rice mills,
lumber
industry, and
many churches.
Of no less
historical
worth would be
a marker which
chronicled a
century of
cattle
crossings over
the Neches, a
century filled
with saddle
sores,
loneliness,
camp fires,
stampedes,
blizzards,
monsoons,
drownings, and
all of the
frontier
hazards to
human life
encountered
daily by the
tens of
thousands of
drovers who
traversed to
and from New
Orleans over
the unsung
Opelousas
Trail. Their
contribution
to history,
punctuated by
the bellowing
of their herds
and the
pounding of
hoofs, as well
as to the
advance of
civilization
and the
development of
a nation,
certainly
deserves a
place in the
compilation of
Texas history
that,
heretofore, it
has not been
accorded.
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