Aldrich, Roy Wilkinson

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Aldrich, Roy Wilkinson

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Aldrich, Roy Wilkinson

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At the time of his death in 1955, Roy Wilkinson Aldrich had served in the Texas Rangers longer than any other man, 32 years, from his enlistment in 1915 to retirement in 1947 at the age of 78. From the days of the horseback Ranger of the frontier to the modern era of automobile and airplane, Aldrich built his career upon the major law-enforcement issues of Texas in the early Twentieth Century: The violence along the Mexican border stemming from the Mexican Revolution, from World War I, and from the smuggling of liquor during Prohibition; racist and other mob violence; and the problems associated with the oil boomtowns, the gambling, prostitution, illegal liquor, unethical officials, and general lawlessness, all challenged the abilities of the Texas Rangers through the 1930s.

Born in Quincy, Illinois, September 17, 1869, Aldrich was raised in Golden City, Missouri, the son of a wealthy banker, Joseph Wilkinson Aldrich. Though he attended school only six months, Roy Aldrich was well educated at home by his mother, Georgia Ann Wakeman Aldrich, and he enjoyed a widely varied and highly adventurous life before joining the Texas Rangers.

Leaving home in 1888, Aldrich journeyed first to the Idaho Territory, finding work as a miner and lumberjack. The next year he made his first trip to Mexico, delivering a load of pigs by train from Kansas City. In 1890 he returned to Golden City, where he and his younger brother, Jules Wakeman Aldrich, after the death of their father, took over the bank for three years, becoming the youngest bankers in the state. During this period, Roy Aldrich served as deputy sheriff of Barton County, Missouri.

In 1893 he traveled to Oklahoma (Indian) Territory, trading horses with the Cherokee Indians and participating in the land rush in the Cherokee Strip. The sale of the Aldrich Banking Company in Golden City allowed Aldrich to purchase a coffee plantation in the state of San Luis Potosi, Mexico, where he lived comfortably for several years, until 1896, when he joined the Missouri National Guard as a second lieutenant. In 1898 and 1899, during the Spanish-American War, he served as first lieutenant in Company C of the Second Regiment of Infantry, stationed in Georgia and Kentucky.

After his coffee plantation was ruined by severe frosts, Aldrich traveled in 1899 to Arizona Territory, where he mined for copper in Pima County and drove a stage coach near Tucson, where his grandfather, Mark A. Aldrich, had lived from 1856 to 1874.

Early in 1901 Aldrich contracted to deliver 1100 horses from Kansas City to New Orleans, for the British Cavalry's Remount Service, and then agreed to oversee the difficult transportation of the horses by sea to South Africa for service in the Boer War. Returning to this country late that same year after travels in Europe, Aldrich moved to Hobart, Oklahoma Territory, where he worked as a bank cashier, was elected city treasurer, and served as deputy sheriff.

In 1903 Aldrich married Della Dunlap, the daughter of Andrew Judson Dunlap, president of the Hobart National Bank. The marriage, marked by long periods of separation and Dell's ill health, lasted until 1913 or 1914, when it ended in divorce in San Antonio, Texas. Aldrich seldom mentioned his marriage and allowed numerous articles and a master's thesis ( The Life of Captain R. W. Aldrich, by Virginia Duncan, Sun Ross State Teachers College, Alpine Texas, 1942) to characterize him as a life-long bachelor.

With his brother Jules (called Tod ), Roy Aldrich went into the real estate business in 1907 in Corpus Christi, Texas, building the first pleasure resort there. In 1909 they moved their partnership to San Antonio, Texas, where they were soon joined by their mother.

The violent turmoil in South Texas stemming from the Mexican Revolution drew Roy Aldrich, then past the age of 45, to enlist in the Texas Rangers in March of 1915. After two years in the Rio Grande borderlands with Company A, he was transferred to Austin and promoted to the rank of sergeant. During the First World War, Aldrich served as Chief Inspector for the Selective Service in Texas, and in 1918 he was promoted to captain of Company H of the Texas Rangers and made quartermaster, a position he called the ramrod of the force. His brother Jules also joined the Texas Rangers, serving until his death in 1940. For the last years before his retirement in November of 1947, Roy Aldrich was in charge of drug and narcotic law enforcement.

Outside the Texas Rangers, Aldrich was known for his interests in Texas history, botany, and natural history. After the death of Georgia Aldrich in 1920, he purchased a 20-acre farm on Manor Road, near Austin, at the site of the present Robert Mueller Municipal Airport. His gardens of desert plants, menagerie of native animals, collections of Indian artifacts and other objects from the Old West, and his 10,000-volume library of rare books were famous throughout the state. After his death in 1955, his books and many of his manuscript materials were purchased by Sul Ross State University in Alpine, Texas, and the artifact collections went to the Big Bend Museum there.

From the guide to the ALDRICH (ROY WILKINSON) PAPERS, AR 83-10., 1858-1955, (Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin)

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Travel

Adobe buildings

Adobe buildings

Aldrich Banking Company

Alpine, Texas

American flag on top of globe floating in waves: Our Country

Amusements

Antiquarian booksellers

United States. Army

United States. Army

Arts

Austin, Texas

Bandits see Outlaws

Banks and banking

Soldiers, Black

Book collecting see also Antiquarian booksellers

Boom towns

Bootleggers and bootlegging

Border affairs

Border raids see Border affairs

Buildings and towns:

Cactus

Military camps

Military camps

Canoes and canoeing

Cartes de visite

Cattle Raisers' Association of Texas, 1915-3P157, Folder #2

Cattle stealing

Cherokee Indians

Cherokee Strip land rush

Church controversies see also Disputations, Religious

Church controversies see also Disputations, Religious

Coffee plantations see also Plantations

Compulsory military service

Crime and criminals

Crime and criminals see also Outlaws

Customs administration

Dallas, Texas

Dalton, Frank, 1948-3P155, Folder #11

Desert flora

Deserts

Deserts

Detective and mystery stories

Diaries

Domestic relations

Draft resistors see Military service, Compulsory

Drawings

Eagle clutching shield, arrows, flag of liberty, Constitution

Eagle on rock

Eagle on stars-and-stripes shield: The U. S. Army and Navy

Eagle Pass, Texas

Eagle with American flag: Remember the Maine

Firearms

Fishermen

Floriculture see also Gardens

Floriculture see also Gardens

Forts and fortifications

Fort Worth, Texas

Gambling and gambling halls

Gammel's Book Store

Gardens and gardening

German propaganda see Propaganda, German

Hillcrest Dairy

Houses and housing

Houston, Texas

Houston, Texas

Houston, Texas

Hunting

Indians of North America

Indians of North America

Indians of North America

Indians of North America see names of individual Indian tribes

James, Jesse, 1948-3P155, Folder #11

King, Richard, 1915, 1916, 1919-3P157, Folder #2; 3P159, Folder #1

King's Ranche [sic], Kingsville, Texas, 1915, 1916, 1919-3P157, Folder #2; 3P159, Folder #1

Kiowa Apache Indians see also Kiowa Indians

Kiowa Apache Indians see also Kiowa Indians

Kiowa Indians

Land rushes

Letterheads

Private libraries

Log cabins

Man climbing flag pole with American flag: Freedom for All

Martial law

Menageries see also Zoological gardens, Private

Menstruation disorders

Mescal button see Peyote

Mexico

Military men grouped around flags

Military posts

Military propaganda, War of 1898-3P154, Folder #3:

Military service

Mines and mining

Missouri. National guard

Mountains

Mountains

National Guard

Nudism

Oil fields

Oil fields and wells

Organizations

Our Three War Presidents: Liberty, Unity, Humanity

Outlaws

Outlaws see Criminals and crime

Papago Indians

Peyote

Pictographs see Indians of North America

Plantations

Plantations, Coffee see Coffee plantations

Politics and politicians

Portraits

Portraits of George Washington, William McKinley, Abraham Lincoln:

Post, Texas

Prohibition

Prohibition see also Stills, Smuggling

Raymondville, Texas

Real estate business

Rivers and streams

Rivers and streams

San Antonio, Texas

San Antonio, Texas

Selective service see Military service, Compulsory

Smuggling

Smuggling see also Prohibition

Soldiers see also Black soldiers

Soldier under American flag, standing on Spanish flag

Spanish

Stills see also Prohibition

Sul Ross State Teachers College

Tents

Texas Centennial Exposition

Texas Company

Texas. Department of Public Safety

Texas history

Texas Rangers

Theology, Protestant

Two American flags, with stanza of The Star

Uncle Sam chasing Cuban with bayonet: Get off the Earth

Uncle Sam looking at a Cuban? through a magnifying glass

Uncle Sam with bayonet: Halt! Freedom and Humanity is the Pass Word

United States Army see Army, United States

War of 1898

Western art see Art

Wichita Falls, Texas

Woodcutters and woodcutting

World War I, 1914-1918 - Draft resistors

Yaqui Indians

Young Men's Christian Association, 1898 (with American flag) - 3P154, Folder #3

Zoological gardens, Private

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Brewster County, Texas

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Tucson, Arizona

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South Texas

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Davis Mountains, Texas

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McCamey, Texas

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Presidio County, Texas

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Rio Grande City, Texas

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Hobart, Oklahoma

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Fort Davis, Texas

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Wichita Falls, Texas

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Ruidosa, Texas

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*Camp Thomas, Georgia

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Desdemona, Texas

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Golden City, Missouri

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Africa

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Indian Territory --see also --Oklahoma Territory

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Oklahoma Territory --see also --Indian Territory

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Lewis Peak, Texas

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Southwest Texas

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Cherokee Strip, Oklahoma

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*Camp Chicamauga, Georgia

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Idaho Territory

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Boquillas, Mexico

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Ranger, Texas

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Big Bend of the Rio Grande, Texas

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Alpine, Texas

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San Antonio, Texas

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Camp Mabry, Texas

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Pima County, Arizona

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Big Bend National Park, Texas

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Carrizo Springs, Texas

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*Camp Hamilton, Kentucky

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*Davis Mountains State Park, Texas

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Glen Rose, Texas

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Lexington, Kentucky

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Glen Spring, Texas

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Webb County, Texas

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Marfa, Texas

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Santa Elena Canyon, Texas

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Norias, Texas

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Palafox, Texas

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Duval County, Texas

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Dimmit County, Texas

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Borger, Texas

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Arizona Territory

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Fort Ringgold, Texas

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Austin, Texas

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Veracruz, Mexico

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Valles, Mexico

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Zavala County, Texas

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Chisos Mountains, Texas

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Longview, Texas

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Asherton, Texas

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Breckenridge, Texas

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Rio Grande (river)

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Helvetia Mining Camp, Pima County, Arizona

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*Lower Rio Grande Valley, Texas

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Mexico

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Convention Declarations

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Identity Constellation Identifier(s)

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