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Where Liberty Dwells
True Texas Tales
by Jim McLaughlin
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Overview


Explorers and Indians. Soldiers and generals. Oil barons and ranchers. Outlaws, gunslingers, war heroes, and even journalists. All are bound together by a single common denominator—Texas. This delightful romp through the history of the Lone Star state begins 317 years before the first white European male washed ashore near Galveston Island, and winds up with the settlement of the High Plains. Within these pages are little-known stories not only involving well-known heroes, but unknown players who contributed to and changed the history of Texas.
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Description


Explorers and Indians. Soldiers and generals. Oil barons and ranchers. Outlaws, gunslingers, war heroes, and even journalists. All are bound together by a single common denominator—Texas. This delightful romp through the history of the Lone Star state begins 317 years before the first white European male washed ashore near Galveston Island, and winds up with the settlement of the High Plains. Within these pages are little-known stories not only involving well-known heroes, but unknown players who contributed to and changed the history of Texas. Every child in Texas has heard of Cabeza de Vaca, but few know how he survived among the Indians for eight years. Sam Houston, William Barret Travis, and Ben Milam are examined carefully, and Juan Davis Bradburn, General James Wilkinson, and Jane McManus Storm are introduced. John Warne Gates brings barbed wire, and later, oil, into the mix. Ranald Slidell Mackenzie, the greatest Indian fighter of all time, is followed as he chases Comanche across the Texas Panhandle. Richard King and Charles Goodnight develop gigantic ranches in different ends of the state. Reading like an adventure novel, Where Liberty Dwells: True Texas Tales provides a good, close look at the fun that was had by the rugged men and women who created Texas.
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About the author


Jimmy Paul McLaughlin was born in 1936, in a one-room, dirt-floored farm worker's shack in Lubbock County, Texas. His parents had been on their way to California, but when Jimmy was followed by a brother and sister, his family abandoned their dreams of the "land of milk and honey" and instead built their lives in the hard, dry dirt of the Texas Panhandle. So far as Jim McLaughlin is concerned, it was the generous, kindly hand of fate that kept them in Lubbock. There was no better place to live, nor a better time to grow up than Lubbock than in the 1940s and 1950s. He graduated from Lubbock High School in 1955 and attended Texas Tech, off and on, for the next seven years. Although encouraged by many of his teachers to write, his heart wasn't in it, and he took time off from college to join the Marine Corps before dropping out of school entirely. After working for a year in Las Vegas, he moved back to Texas, eventually settling in Houston where he began his career in construction. After retiring and resettling in the Texas Hill Country, he traveled extensively for business and for pleasure and developed close friendships with many interesting people. He still considers his best friends the guys he ran around with in high school—the Lubbock Boys with whom he grew up have stayed in touch and remain close friends.
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Book details

Genre:HISTORY

Subgenre:United States / State & Local / Southwest

Language:English

Pages:286

eBook ISBN:9781543987669

Paperback ISBN:9781543987652


Overview


Explorers and Indians. Soldiers and generals. Oil barons and ranchers. Outlaws, gunslingers, war heroes, and even journalists. All are bound together by a single common denominator—Texas. This delightful romp through the history of the Lone Star state begins 317 years before the first white European male washed ashore near Galveston Island, and winds up with the settlement of the High Plains. Within these pages are little-known stories not only involving well-known heroes, but unknown players who contributed to and changed the history of Texas.

Read more

Description


Explorers and Indians. Soldiers and generals. Oil barons and ranchers. Outlaws, gunslingers, war heroes, and even journalists. All are bound together by a single common denominator—Texas. This delightful romp through the history of the Lone Star state begins 317 years before the first white European male washed ashore near Galveston Island, and winds up with the settlement of the High Plains. Within these pages are little-known stories not only involving well-known heroes, but unknown players who contributed to and changed the history of Texas. Every child in Texas has heard of Cabeza de Vaca, but few know how he survived among the Indians for eight years. Sam Houston, William Barret Travis, and Ben Milam are examined carefully, and Juan Davis Bradburn, General James Wilkinson, and Jane McManus Storm are introduced. John Warne Gates brings barbed wire, and later, oil, into the mix. Ranald Slidell Mackenzie, the greatest Indian fighter of all time, is followed as he chases Comanche across the Texas Panhandle. Richard King and Charles Goodnight develop gigantic ranches in different ends of the state. Reading like an adventure novel, Where Liberty Dwells: True Texas Tales provides a good, close look at the fun that was had by the rugged men and women who created Texas.

Read more

About the author


Jimmy Paul McLaughlin was born in 1936, in a one-room, dirt-floored farm worker's shack in Lubbock County, Texas. His parents had been on their way to California, but when Jimmy was followed by a brother and sister, his family abandoned their dreams of the "land of milk and honey" and instead built their lives in the hard, dry dirt of the Texas Panhandle. So far as Jim McLaughlin is concerned, it was the generous, kindly hand of fate that kept them in Lubbock. There was no better place to live, nor a better time to grow up than Lubbock than in the 1940s and 1950s. He graduated from Lubbock High School in 1955 and attended Texas Tech, off and on, for the next seven years. Although encouraged by many of his teachers to write, his heart wasn't in it, and he took time off from college to join the Marine Corps before dropping out of school entirely. After working for a year in Las Vegas, he moved back to Texas, eventually settling in Houston where he began his career in construction. After retiring and resettling in the Texas Hill Country, he traveled extensively for business and for pleasure and developed close friendships with many interesting people. He still considers his best friends the guys he ran around with in high school—the Lubbock Boys with whom he grew up have stayed in touch and remain close friends.
Read more

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