DeShields, James T., 1861-1948
Variant namesAuthor and businessman, of Texas.
From the description of Collection of Reuben M. Potter articles, 1878-1945. (Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library). WorldCat record id: 70961984
From the description of Papers, 1863-1940. (Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library). WorldCat record id: 70961982
Texas historian and author.
From the description of James T. DeShields papers [manuscript], 1815-1944. (Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library). WorldCat record id: 310373365
Born in Louisiana. Family moved to Texas at the end of the Civil War. Worked as book agent. Collected material on Texas history. Author of articles and books on frontier history.
From the description of Papers, 1901-1907. (Denver Public Library). WorldCat record id: 54004437
James Thomas DeShields (1861-1948), Texas historian, son of James Calvin and Drucilla (Chandler) DeShields, was born in Louisiana on May 3, 1861. About the end of the Civil War, his parents moved to Texas and settled on a farm in Bell County. Between crops, young DeShields attended public schools, read avidly, and absorbed tales of frontier adventure. He attended Salado College and Baylor University. While working as a house-to-house book agent, he began, as a hobby, to collect manuscripts, books, and pictures relating to Texas history. This interest led him to write articles on frontier history, which he contributed to the Fort Worth Gazette and other newspapers and magazines. A collection, Frontier Sketches, appeared in 1883, and Cynthia Ann Parker was published in 1886. In 1886 DeShields married Ennola Lee Huddleston in Bell County. They had three daughters.
Over a long period, DeShields set down the stories of frontiersmen he knew and dug historical material from newspaper files and other sources. His Border Wars of Texas (1912) recounted many Indian engagements. In 1914 he moved to Dallas, set up a dry-goods business, and continued to write in his spare time. He wrote many articles on such subjects as Stephen F. Austin, Sam Houston, John Coffee (Jack) Hays, the battle of the Alamo, the story of the Texas Revolution, Texas border tales, riding and fighting with the Texas Rangers, and the lure of the frontier. His longer works were The Fergusons: Jim and Ma (1932), Tall Men with Long Rifles (1935), and They Sat in High Places (1940). He retired from business in 1935, but continued to write. He died in Dallas on February 8, 1948.
Taken from The Handbook of Texas Online, Wayne Gard
Bibliography:
Dallas Morning News, February 9, 1948.
From the guide to the James T. DeShields papers and collection of Texana A1991. 1750., 1851-1950, 1940-1950, (DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University)
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Frontier and pioneer life |
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Kiowa Indians |
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San Jacinto, Battle of, Tex., 1836 |
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Person
Birth 1861
Death 1948