Milam County Historical Commission
Milam County, Texas
Milam County Historical Commission - Milam County, TX
Statue of Ben Milam at Milam County, TX Courthouse
Old Junior High School Building, Rockdale, TX
Milam County Courthouse - Cameron, TX
Preserve America

                         Cameron City Park steeped in history
                                  by Jeanne Williams
                           Temple Daily Telegram - June 23, 2008


CAMERON - A Texas historical marker humbly affirms City Park as the site of Cameron’s
first home, whose occupants were standout Texans.

The conventional black and silver sign also proclaims the fact that the 1890 park
pavilion dominating the lot made history as the scene of an 1892 political debate
between gubernatorial candidates, Gov. James S. Hogg and George Clark.

But, if the historical commission could magically turn back the clock to 167 years ago,
before Cameron was founded, the 2.48-acre park site would be a vignette of frontier
Texas, complete with raiding Comanches and indefatigable pioneers.

A July 1841 flood that forced the Little River out of its banks literally shaped the
course of history for this simple, tree-shaded plot adjacent to Texas Highway 36 in
Cameron.

In the fall of 1840, after spending several months at Nashville-on-the-Brazos, five
families - Ross, Sullivan, Wortham, Thompson and Turnham - moved to the north bank of
the Little River, built cabins and cleared acreage for crops. A flooded Little River
drove all the settlers to higher ground and swept crops and  houses to the bottom of the
channel, according to the reminiscences of Cameron pioneer Susan Turnham McCown, who was
5 years old at the time.

Kentucky-born Shapley Prince Ross, an Indian agent and ranger, chose a site with high
ground, a grove of shade trees and a flowing, natural spring to rebuild a home for his
wife, Catherine Fulkerson Ross, daughters  Mary and Margaret, and sons, Peter and
Lawrence Sullivan. There the Ross family took the oath of allegiance and homesteaded on
640 acres at a site now occupied by the town of Cameron, according to the Fulkerson
family Web site.

History records the Ross house as the first domicile built in the area that became
Cameron. The Handbook of Texas on Line states that Cameron was established in 1846 on a
60-acre tract of Daniel Monroe’s headright on the Little River. The town honors Texas
hero Ewen Cameron.

Soon the Wilson and Lamkin families moved in, Mrs. McCown stated in memoirs published in
the Southwestern Historical Quarterly in 1947. Later, W.W. Oxsheer and his bride, Martha
Kirk Oxsheer, settled beside the river.

Families lived off the land, established a school and watched for Indians, Mrs. McCown
said in her memoirs titled “Early Days in Milam County.” When Comanches stole horses
from Ross and Daniel Monroe, the men tracked them down, with Ross killing, then scalping
Chief Big Foot. Weeks later, as Ross lay under a shade tree in his yard convalescing
from an illness, a party of 25 Comanches rode up and demanded the family give them corn
and watermelons.

The first religious service in Cameron was conducted by Methodist minister Mordecai Yell
at the park site  under an arbor of brush and leaves. Split logs serving as makeshift
pews. Families moved into the community, where the nearest neighbors were in Port
Sullivan and Nashville-on-the-Brazos.

Another first for Cameron was peddler Kattin Horn’s sale of whiskey from a barrel tapped
by penniless customers who promised to pay later.

Among various accounts of Ross history, after a few years in Cameron, the Ross family
traded their land for a two-horse wagon, and a yoke of oxen and headed west to look for
something better. The family settled in Austin and in 1849 moved to Waco, where the Ross
patriarch was credited with being one of the founding fathers.

Ross was an Indian agent, hotelkeeper and postmaster, but he is most recognized in
history for being the father of Sul Ross, a Texas Ranger and Indian fighter, Confederate
general, governor of Texas and president of Texas A&M.

The Texas State Library & Archives Commission’s Web site titled “Portraits of Texas
Governors” records Sul Ross’ birth as Sept. 27, 1838, in Iowa, but he became a Texan
before his first birthday when the family moved to Milam County.

In his book, “Texas in the War,” Col. Harold B. Simpson stated that Sul Ross attended
Baylor University at Independence in 1856, but transferred to Wesleyan University at
Florence, Ala., where he graduated in 1859.

Sul Ross gained “quite a reputation” as an Indian fighter on the Texas frontier during
his summer “vacations” from his university studies. In 1859, Sam Houston commissioned
Ross a captain in the Texas Rangers.

“He further enhanced his frontier fighting reputation by rescuing Cynthia Ann Parker,
and killing Comanche Chief Peta Nocona in an Indian encounter on the Pease River just
prior to the Civil War,” Simpson wrote.

Sul Ross joined the Confederate Army as a private in early 1861. He was promoted rapidly
through the ranks, and was engaged in battles at Corinth, and was commended for covering
Van Dorn’s retreat and for his work at Holly Springs. He was promoted to brigadier
general, and his brigade consisted of the 3rd, 6th, 9th and 27th Texas Cavalry
regiments. He fought in the Atlanta campaign and in Hood’s ill-fated Tennessee campaign
before surrendering his brigade at Jackson, Miss., in the spring of 1865, Simpson wrote.

“Ross is reputed to have been a participant in 135 engagements and to have had five
horses shot from beneath him.”

After the war, Sul Ross returned to Texas, and farmed in the Brazos River Valley near
Waco before being elected McLennan County sheriff, and later to the Texas Senate and as
Texas governor in 1887. Following his retirement from office in 1891, Ross became
president of Texas A&M College and held this position until his death.

Dr. Lucile Estell, Milam County Historical Commission chairperson, said the Ross family
heritage is one of  many historical treasures in the county. Photos and brief histories
celebrate the Ross father and son for their contribution to Milam County’s heritage.

Mary Belle Batte of Cameron applied for the Texas historical marker, which was dedicated
June 6, 1969, said  Texas Historical Commission spokesperson Debbi Head. W.S.G. and
Lizzie Wilson donated 2.48 acres for City Park specifically so a pavilion could be build
to accommodate the famous Hogg-Clark debate, which in 1892 drew 5,000 spectators, the
state historical commission reported.







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All articles from the Temple Daily Telegram are published with the permission of the
Temple Daily Telegram. 
All credit for this article goes to
Jeanne Williams
and the
Temple Daily Telegram