Inscription
(19 miles to the southeast) First known to civilized men in the 18th century, when, according to legend, Franciscan Padre Alvarez prayed for water to ease his thirst, put down his staff, and saw a spring gush forth from the ground. This landmark of western travel was named for its rediscoverer, Richard A. Howard of San Antonio, an ex-Texas Ranger.
Howard and other men, along with 15 Delaware Indian guides, made up an expedition sent out in 1848 under Col. John Coffee Hays to map a wagon road from San Antonio to El Paso. Although aided by the discovery of the well, the expedition failed, turning back in a state of near-starvation. In 1849 the US Army made its maps of the route, with Howard along as a guide.
Many forty-niners went this way to the California gold rush. In 1853 the first regular San Antonio to El Paso mail line was routed by way of the well. So were many later ventures. Although white travelers seldom caught sight of them, Indians frequented the well. There on April 20, 1872, Comanches and Kiowas surprised a large wagon train led by a man named Gonzales, and killed 16 persons.
This was one of the events that led to the US Government's cancellation of hunting permits for reservation Indians. (1976)
Location
Sources
More markers in Crockett
Emerald Townsite
Ozona, TX
The first platted town in Crockett County, Emerald was founded in 1889 by Fort Worth & Rio Grande Railway Immigration Agent T. W. Wilkinson.
Powell, Ernest Malapert
Ozona, TX
A native of Illinois, E. M. Powell was a surveyor and railroad engineer in Kentucky before moving to Texas in 1874.
Fort Lancaster, C.S.A.
Ozona, TX
Site 33 miles west on US 90.
Hoover, Laura and William Peery
Hoover Divide, TX
Although Indians, Spaniards, wagon trains, and military expeditions crossed through this area earlier, the first permanent settlers in...
O. W. Parker Ranch Headquarters
Iraan, TX
O. W. Parker (1876-1962) moved to Crockett County in 1902 and worked for local ranchers until he eventually established his own ranch.
