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A Journey through Texas: Or a Saddle-Trip on the Southwestern Frontier

A Journey through Texas: Or a Saddle-Trip on the Southwestern Frontier
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A Journey through Texas: Or a Saddle-Trip on the Southwestern Frontier

 
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Before he became America's foremost landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmsted (1822–1903) was by turns a surveyor, merchant seaman, farmer, magazine publisher, and traveling newspaper correspondent. In 1856–57 he took a saddle trip through Texas to see the country and report on its lands and peoples. His description of the Lone Star State on the eve of the Civil War remains one of the best accounts of the American West ever published. Unvarnished by sentiment or myth making, based on firsthand observations, and backed with statistical research, Olmsted's narrative captures the manners, foods, entertainments, and conversations of the Texans, as well as their housing, agriculture, business, exotic animals, changeable weather, and the pervasive influence of slavery.
 
Back and forth from the Sabine to the Rio Grande, through San Augustine, Nacogdoches, San Marcos, San Antonio, Neu-Braunfels, Fredericksburg, Lavaca, Indianola, Goliad, Castroville, La Grange, Houston, Harrisburg, and Beaumont, Olmsted rode and questioned and listened and reported. Texas was then already a multiethnic and multiracial state, where Americans, Germans, Mexicans, Africans, and Indians of numerous tribes mixed uneasily. Olmsted interviewed planters, scouts, innkeepers, bartenders, housewives, drovers, loafers, Indian chiefs, priests, runaway slaves, and emigrants and refugees from every part of the known world—most of whom had "gone to Texas" looking for a fresh start. He also observed the breathtaking arrival of spring on the prairie and the starry nights that seemed to prove the truth of the German saying “The sky seems nearer in Texas.”

 
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Product Details
Author:Frederick Law Olmsted
Paperback:539 pages
Publisher:Bison Books
Publication Date:December 01, 2004
Language:English
ISBN:0803286201
Product Width:1.37 centimeters
Product Height:2.0 centimeters
Product Weight:0.01 pounds
Package Length:7.9 inches
Package Width:5.2 inches
Package Height:1.2 inches
Package Weight:1.3 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 4 reviews

Features
  • ISBN13: 9780803286207

  • Condition: New

  • Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Tracking provided on most orders. Buy with Confidence! Millions of books sold!


Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:5.0 ( 4 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

18 of 18 found the following review helpful:


5A rare gem!  Jul 12, 2009 By R. Plemmons "deltadad"
Bought this at a museum gift shop having been previously unaware of it. The book is subtitled "A Saddle-Trip on the Southwestern Frontier." It was written by New Yorker Frederick Law Olmsted in the mid-1850s and describes a trip by horseback through a large swath of Texas, including a trip to the Mexican border. As a longtime Texas resident, I can safely say that for him to have traveled as far as he did over the types of terrain that he did without major incident was an amazing accomplishment in itself. The author was then a newspaperman reporting on slavery in the South, but he later became a famous landscape architect who would help design Central Park in New York. The book is like a time capsule from the pre-Civil War frontier. His descriptions of the natives and settlers in Texas are detailed and revealing. If you are from Texas, his descriptions of the early days in familiar places (Austin, San Antonio) will be especially enjoyable. His accounts of visits to small towns in Texas (New Braunfels, Castroville, many others) are also quite entertaining. Lastly, his observations on the corrupting influence of slavery and on the variety of peculiar relationships between slaves and masters (including former slaves holding slaves!) are absolutely fascinating. Anyone wishing to learn what it was like in the "Old West" in Texas will enjoy this book. Those interested in the history of slavery in the antebellum South will also find this book valuable. Highly recommended.

7 of 7 found the following review helpful:


5A Texas History Essential  Jan 04, 2011 By D. L. Smith
The writer's descriptions of places, things and people are so good that it is the closest thing to being there. People, like me, who tend to look at the Peculiar Institution through rose colored glasses will have to struggle through his continuious comments on it's all too apparent evils, but it is well worth the struggle and the stark lesson. He makes it easy to also see how the feelings, North and South, had obviously chrystalized to a point where the Civil War was bound to happen. Texas in the 1850's, with all it's raw beauty, was no place for the faint hearted. If you love animals you will want to buy a mule and name it Mr. Brown! This is 1850's Texas with the bark stripped off.


5Riveting! Authentic!  Apr 27, 2012 By James Denny "History Guy1"
Take a journey through Texas in the early years of statehood with famed reporter, biodynamic farmer and future landscape architect, Frederick Law Olmsted. Olmsted traveled on horseback across Texas in the mid-1850's as a reporter for the New York Times just ten years after Texas attained statehood. Texas was big, wild and untamed.

There were three trips taken: east Texas; west Texas; and along the Gulf coast. The three journals have been combined into a book, a first-person travel narrative. With Olmsted's keen eye for culture, landscape, crops, farming practices, diet, persona and folkways, your reading chair is transformed into a horse named "Mr. Brown." Several times, "Mr Brown" nearly drowns in fording Texas rivers. However, most evenings after each day's travel, "Mr. Brown" collapses into deep slumber in a rough camp or next to a settler's cabin, utterly spent.

Described as one of the best books ever written about the American West, "A Journey through Texas" does not disappoint. Olmsted's predictions correctly point to where Texas would stand when the Civil War became reality just a few short years later.

His observations about the last of the free-roaming American Indian tribes, German settlers in the Texas hill country, Mexicans who had settled in Texas long before it was occupied and absorbed by Americans, slaves, escaping slaves and free Negroes, the Cajuns from Louisiana who settled in east Texas and American settlers from played-out farms in the old South, states like Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi and Kentucky are rich with detail. In the 1850's people knew what GTT stood for: Gone To Texas.

Observations of Texas character and culture described by Olmsted stand to this day. His narrative is full of intrigue, danger, charm and insight.

This is a great work that brings history alive in a way that few textbooks could ever hope to match. Five stars!


5A Journey through Texas  Nov 17, 2011 By CACTUS N' ROSES
Olmsted's account of his 1856-1857 saddle trip through Texas is a must read for anyone who appreciates early America's history. Despite the hardships...Blue Northers, wind, heat,bugs & critters,crude accommodations, meals of cornbread, rancid butter & greasy bacon...I wish I could have ridden along with him! The natural beauty of my adopted state is still apparent today but it must have really been jaw-dropping awesome when seen through Olmsted's eyes.
A friend lent me the book & now I'm ordering a copy for myself & a couple more for Christmas giving.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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