Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Coat of Arms of James E.B. Austin. James Elijah Brown Austin (October 3, 1803 – August 14, 1829) was an American settler and brother of empresario Stephen F. Austin, "The Father of Texas." Counted also as one of the Old Three Hundred, he is listed in Spanish and Mexican records as "Santiago E.B. Austin".

    • 1519-1543
    • 1821-1836
    • 1684-1689
    • 1690-1821
  2. En marzo de 1822, después de haber cruzado el espacio que hay entre el río Medina y "Loredo" [sic], Stephen Austin dice que "es el lugar más pobre que he visto en mi vida, no es otra cosa sino arena, totalmente desprovisto de maderaje" (Carta a James E.B. Austin, Loredo [sic], 23 de marzo de 1822, The Austin Papers, 1928: 487). 7

  3. James Elijah Brown Austin (October 3, 1803 – August 14, 1829) was an American settler and brother of empresario Stephen F. Austin, "The Father of Texas." Counted also as one of the Old Three Hundred, he is listed in Spanish and Mexican records as "Santiago E.B. Austin".

    • 1519-1543
    • 1821-1836
    • 1684-1689
    • 1690-1821
  4. www.wikitree.com › wiki › Space:Old_Three_HundredOld Three Hundred - WikiTree

    James E.B. Austin : October 3, 1803 : August 14, 1829 : Helped put down the Fredonian Rebellion. Brother of Stephen F. Austin. John Austin : March 17, 1801 : August 11, 1833 : Stephen F. Austin: November 3, 1793 : December 27, 1836 : James B. Baily : November 13, 1797 : September 30, 1835 : 5 wives and 18 kids : Father-in-law of Joseph H ...

    • The Lively’s First Texas Voyage
    • The Lively’s Second Texas Voyage
    • The Legend of The Lively

    In 1821, Stephen F. Austin took up his father’s plan to settle 300 American families in Texas, which was then part of Mexico. Austin chose a tract of land between the Colorado and Brazos Rivers. In New Orleans, Austin and his business partner, Joseph H. Hawkins, purchased the Lively, a small schooner of thirty tons burden, for $600. The vessel was ...

    By early February 1822, the Lively was back in New Orleans, where it took on a second load of supplies and emigrants bound for Austin’s colony. The Lively sailed sometime between April and June and was wrecked on Galveston Island, with loss of cargo but no recorded loss of life. The passengers were taken off the island by the schooner John Motley a...

    The fact that the Livelydid not meet Austin at the mouth of the Colorado River led to the rumour that the vessel and its passengers had been lost. According to William Lewis, “[i]t was said we were all lost in attempting to pass the bar at the mouth of the Brazos. Another story was that we had been murdered by the Indians.” (8) Even though some of ...

  5. Stephen, James E. B. Austin, the sec ond son of Moses, returned from Ken tucky to Missouri, and thence to Texas where he expected to join his brother, Stephen. It was his purpose to bring on his mother and sister but his mother's death intervened and his sister married James Perry, so he undertook the jour ney alone, contracted yellow fever and

  6. James Elijah Brown Austin (October 3, 1803 – August 14, 1829) was an American settler and brother of empresario Stephen F. Austin, "The Father of Texas." Counted also as one of the Old Three Hundred, he is listed in Spanish and Mexican records as "Santiago E.B. Austin".