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  Texas : Feature : Columns : "They shoe horses, don't they?"

"The Day the Monkey Got Loose
from the Carnival and Bit the Sheriff"

Lost Treasures mined from County Histories

by John Troesser

"County histories agree on two unspoken points:
Every life is interesting and
the harder the times, the more interesting they seem."

The memorable title of this piece is an actual entry on a page called "Remember when…" The page is from a county history (whose name has regretfully been forgotten).

If you are unfamiliar with county histories, they are serious-looking tomes so heavy that they're usually the only books left after the tornado levels the rest of the library.

The eye-catching title was an early form of what is now universally known as a "teaser." Sadly, there was no elaboration included about the monkey-sheriff confrontation. Did the sheriff die an agonizing death? Did the monkey get sick? Did the sheriff shoot the monkey? The monkey's owner? Was it monkey business with malice aforethought?

Only the people who witnessed the incident know the facts - and they aren't talking. That's why county histories seldom become best sellers. Locals know the story and might bring it up once or twice a year. Details differ among the listeners/ storytellers but no one's looking for a fight, so most of the time all parties just smile and nod (knowingly).

A county history is a sort of a local Who's Who. Sorting out who's who and (whenever possible) putting people in their place are favorite county pastimes.

County histories can also offer some families a rare chance to tell the world their side of the story. The books can settle old arguments - or instigate new ones. Conventional thought says: If it's published, it might be true, but, if someone paid to have it published - then it must be true!

Reading many county histories is like one of those federally funded projects studying chaos. If you read enough county histories, then certain patterns start to emerge.

People of a particular county - whether they're recent immigrants or transmigrated Oklahomans - will, in a short period of time start exhibiting similar traits based on their new surroundings and local geography. Winds and floods will roughly forge them into a new sub-group and intermarriage smoothes the seams.






The first thing you'll notice about county histories is that NOBODY had it easy. Bankers and merchants got rich and fat, but they usually died early. Undernourished cotton-pickers didn't get fat and got to enjoy their miserable existence decades longer. It's nice to know everything equals out.

County histories agree on two unspoken points:
Every life is interesting and the harder the times, the more interesting they seem.

In previous generations, near-constant battles with drought, flood, coyotes, Indians, disease, insect plagues, wars, snakebites, shootouts with rivals, train wrecks, low cotton prices, fires, and poisonings by family members left survivors happy just to be able to sit and read a book without interruption.

A woman's tombstone in what most of us would consider a God-forsaken corner of Gonzales County has two separate inscriptions. On the left side was the familiar quotation from an English poet:
" …that there is a corner of the world that is forever England"
and on the right side was: "It was a good life."

The woman's death was prior to the medical miracles that we now take for granted. She had lived her "good life" when living to adulthood was a major accomplishment. It's hard to imagine a very good life in those hard times, but who will argue with the autobiographical epitaph?




County histories will never be used as textbooks and besides keeping the wolf from the publisher's door (or proping a door open), they're usually consulted for genealogical purposes only. But they're an under-appreciated gold mine of fables, proven proverbs, incidents and adventure stories.

One of the advantages of living in a nomadic society is that distant county histories sometimes appear in local libraries. See if there are any when you next go to your library.

Remember the Gonzales County grave and think of the epitaph in the present tense.


© John Troesser
"They shoe horses, don't they?"
February 23, 2004
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