Dabney Walker

Dabney Walker
Author: United States. Congress. House. Committee on War Claims
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1878
Genre: United States
ISBN:

Dabney Walker

Dabney Walker
Author: United States. Congress. House. Committee on War Claims
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1
Release: 1880
Genre: Bills, Private
ISBN:

Dabney Walker

Dabney Walker
Author: United States. Congress. House. Committee on Claims
Publisher:
Total Pages: 4
Release: 1874
Genre: Bills, Private
ISBN:

Widow of Dabney Walker

Widow of Dabney Walker
Author: United States. Congress. House. Committee on War Claims
Publisher:
Total Pages: 3
Release: 1892
Genre: Bills, Private
ISBN:

The Clothesline Code

The Clothesline Code
Author: Janet Halfmann
Publisher: Brandylane Publishers, Incorporated
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2021-02
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 9781951565572

One year after escaping slavery, Lucy Ann and Dabney Walker used a clothesline code to steal Confederate military secrets and send them back to the Union army, at great risk to themselves.

Pleasant Bend

Pleasant Bend
Author: Dan Worrall
Publisher: Dan Michael Worrall
Total Pages: 434
Release: 2016
Genre: History
ISBN: 0982599625

Today’s Greater Houston is a vast urban place. In the mid-nineteenth century, however, Houston was a small town – a dot in a vast frontier. Extant written histories of Houston largely confine themselves to the small area within the city limits of the day, leaving nearly forgotten the history of large rural areas that later fell beneath the city’s late twentieth century urban sprawl. One such area is that of upper Buffalo Bayou, extending westward from downtown Houston to Katy. European settlement here began at Piney Point in 1824, over a decade before Houston was founded. Ox wagons full of cotton traveled across a seemingly endless tallgrass prairie from the Brazos River east to Harrisburg (and later to Houston) along the San Felipe Trail, built in 1830. Also here, Texan families fled eastward during the Runaway Scrape of 1836, immigrant German settlers trekked westward to new farms along the north bank of the bayou in the 1840s, and newly freed African American families walked east toward Houston from Brazos plantations after Emancipation. Pioneer settlers operated farms, ranches and sawmills. Near present-day Shepherd Drive, Reconstruction-era cowboys assembled herds of longhorns and headed north along a southeastern branch of the Chisholm Trail. Little physical evidence remains today of this former frontier world.