Ethan Cohen

More Cowboys of New Mexico

Christine Cohen’s paternal grandparents owned a 24 section ranch on the west side of the rugged Cabellos Mountains and the Rio Grande Valley. The Boles ranch stretched from Palomas Gap to the edge of Hot Springs (in 1950 renamed Truth or Consequences), New Mexico. Christine and her four siblings lived in Las Cruces, close enough for weekends and carefree summers at the ranch. She has many fond memories of roaming the property, searching for Indian artifacts and Spanish treasure. The Rio Grande flows through the area and has been home to native Americans for centuries. Arrowheads, beads, pottery, metates and grinding stones are easily found. The kids explored Palomas Gap, a canyon with a wagon road carved by early settlers. It was a paradise for adventurous youngsters.

Boles Ranch

Thelma O’Neal Ferris Boles (1913-1991), Christine’s grandmother, was the granddaughter of Warren A. Ferris’s son Henry. “Fimmer”, as she was called by the children, was a great storyteller who described Ferris’s exploits in the Rocky Mountains as told in his journal. Thelma felt that her ancestor’s journal was the inspiration for the movie “Jeremiah Johnson”. She entertained the young people with stories of her own colorful past.

Thelma Holding First Granddaughter, Therese Marie Boles

Thelma was the oldest child of Tom Allen Ferris and Effie May Baty Ferris. She, her brother Joe, and younger sister Eddie May were raised in Muleshoe, Texas. They had a difficult home life and Thelma, at age fourteen, eagerly accepted the local postal carrier’s proposal of marriage and the chance to leave Muleshoe. Lloyd Thomas Boles (1907-1988) was a good man and the best thing that ever happened to Thelma Ferris. He was steady and hardworking with a deep sense of integrity. They left Texas and homesteaded land near Pie Town in central New Mexico. It was mountainous country with silver mines. Tom, who was a water dowser, found water on his land and sold out to a neighboring rancher who needed the water. Thelma and Tom eventually bought a ranch near Hot Springs from their lifelong friends, Buster and Callie Slater. By then, they had two children, Bobby Kenneth (Christine’s dad) and Noel “Tootsie” Kay.

Tom Boles on Horseback

Homestead near PieTown, New Mexico

Bobby Boles in front of Pie Town Homestead

The ranch near the Rio Grande and the Cabello Mountains was rocky and dry. Raising cattle here was challenging, but there was adequate native grass to graze 500 head of cattle. It was comprised of privately owned land and land leased from Bureau of Land Management. Roundups were difficult as the cattle were scattered over a large area, but the neighbors came to help. It was a community effort. Tom Boles was known as a good neighbor and generous man who stepped up to help those in need. He hunted deer and shared the venison with families in need. The Boles lived off the land, always hunting and gardening, canning food for future hard times. Thelma was an integral part of the ranch life. She worked beside Tom in his ranch responsibilities; she cooked three meals a day, gardened, milked cows, made butter, tended the chickens and pigs, helped brand, fixed fence, and anything else that needed to be done. It was a hard, but satisfying life for Christine’s grandparents, until in their 70s, the ranch became too much and they had to sell. After selling, they bought land on a mesa overlooking the former Boles Ranch. Tom and Thelma built a home on the mesa using two old military dorm buildings purchased from New Mexico State University which they placed around a free-standing fireplace/chimney left from an old settler’s home. On the mesa is a centuries old settlers’ graveyard and abandoned schoolhouse. When the Boles children visited their grandparents, they loved roaming the cemetery, examining stones and artifacts piled around the ancient graves. Thelma and Tom had a magnificent view of the ranch, the Caballo Mountains, Palomas Gap, and the Rio Grande. There they enjoyed retirement and lived out the remainder of their lives.

Abandoned Schoolhouse on the Mesa

Cohen Family on the Mesa - 2015, Left to right: Ethan, Noah, Christine, and Fiona

Thelma claimed to have Native American Indian ancestry. Her beautiful looks were distinctively different from the English-Scotch-Irish appearance of others in the Boles family. Her hair was black and she had a darker complexion. Thelma’s maternal grandmother Alice Baty was a Ray (from Rey or Reyes), descendant of a family who owned a Spanish land grant in southeast Texas. The story told by Thelma was that the Ray family land was taken by the State of Texas; it became part of Angelina National Forest. Thelma’s stories changed over time. Sometimes she claimed to be of Kiowa/Apache ancestry; sometimes she denied Indian heritage. Her attitude toward Indians was conflicted. Thelma served as a mid-wife to natives in the Pie Town area. She was given beautiful woven blankets in gratitude for her help and she treasured them. She was fond of a Navajo couple who came annually to pick pinion nuts in the harvest near PieTown, but she was critical of the husband who earned a college degree only to return to the reservation and the “old ways”. She admired the artistry of the wife’s weaving of Navajo rugs, but deplored her lack of sanitation in not washing her hands when cooking. Thelma was the storyteller in the family, but her stories could vary. The validity of the stories of Indian heritage were a source of family conversation. After Thelma’s death, her daughter Noel had a DNA test performed and found that she was 4% Mongolian, not American Indian.

By Susanne Starling and Christine Cohen - 2022

Based on stories written by Mary Knox Boles, reminiscences and photos from Christine Cohen and Dulce Boles (February and March 2022).

Was Charles Drake Ferris at the Battle of San Jacinto?

Recently we have met (digitally) Anna Christine “Chris” Cohen, a Ferris descendant through the line of Henry Ferris, son of W.A. Ferris. She is the great, great, great granddaughter of Warren Angus Ferris. Christine lives on a horse ranch near College Station. She is retired from a career in the health field; her husband Noah is a professor of veterinary science at Texas A&M. They have two young adult children, Ethan and Fiona. Chris is very well-informed on Ferris family history. She has made three trips to study the Ferris/Lovejoy Papers at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. 

Christine Cohen

Christine determined to prove to the Sons of the Republic of Texas that Warren Ferris’s younger brother, Charles Drake Ferris, fought at the Battle of San Jacinto on April 21, 1836. Charles Ferris’s name does not appear on the official veterans list of that decisive battle and he did not receive donation land due to those veterans. Christine knew the SRT had rejected Charles, but she decided to write to them in hopes that they would be persuaded to add his name to the list.

Circumstantial evidence presented by Christine included family letters, published contemporary accounts, evidence from the historical record, and Charles Ferris’s own writings which carried the convincing flavor of an eye-witness to events at San Jacinto.

 

Charles D. Ferris and a Buffalo, NY friend Horace Chamberlain arrived in Texas as volunteers in early 1836. After the fall of the Alamo, the historic record shows that Ferris served as a “spy” for Mosley Baker, reporting on Mexican troop movements and later aide-de-camp to Lt. Governor James Robinson. Ferris delivered an urgent dispatch from James Fannin at Goliad to Robinson during the days that the Texian army fell back before the Mexican invasion. Charles Ferris was among those critical of Sam Houston’s inglorious retreat, dubbed the “Runaway Scrape”.

The Ferris family in Buffalo was convinced that Charles participated in the Battle of San Jacinto. His sister Sarah Lovejoy wrote in June 1836, “The last letter we had from Charles was dated the 22nd of April, the day after the battle of San Jacinto and Santa Ana’s capture. He was then well-delighted with the country and in good spirits - he thought the next movement would be to San Antonio to endeavor to retake it”. She also noted that Horace Chamberlain was with Charles at San Jacinto on April 23, a few days after the battle.

Horace Chamberlain’s June 15,1836 letter to his father was published in the Daily Advertiser in Buffalo, NY: “Charles D Ferris, formerly of Buffalo, is here, and belongs to the army - he is aide to Gov. Robinson. He was in the engagement, and narrowly escaped death…Three days after the battle, I visited the field, which was literally covered for ten miles with the dead…” In his letter, Chamberlain describes Charles’s hand-to-hand combat with a Mexican soldier. Having been thrown from his horse, dodging bullets and bayonet, Ferris killed the foe with his rifle butt.

 

Following the battle, in May 1836, Charles Ferris was commending by Lt. Gov. Robinson in a letter of introduction to Gen. Thomas J. Rusk as a “young man of classical education and morals, habits, and tried valor.”. This a month after San Jacinto.

 

On his return to Buffalo in the fall of 1836, Charles published in the Western Literary Messenger a tribute to Juan Almonte’s conduct at the Battle of San Jacinto. Almonte, Santa Anna’s aide-de-camp, acted with cool courage according to Ferris. As the battle turned into a massacre and Santa Anna fled the field,  Almonte raised a white flag of surrender, calming the angry Texans, and saving many lives. Charles Ferris’s moving descriptions of the horrors of the furious battle and the admirable behavior of Almonte have the earmark of an eye-witness account.

 

Charles D. Ferris’s name did not appear on Sam Houston’s list of men at San Jacinto or subsequent lists in 1875 and 1883. Although he did not receive donation land due to veterans of San Jacinto, the family of Charles Ferris was awarded a 960 acre land grant for his service in the Texas Army. Louis W. Kemp investigated omission of names of deserving men in 1906; some names were added but not that of Ferris. Kemp admitted that the list was probably incomplete. Omissions were possibly due to loss of documents. Some of the archives of Texas were lost during moves from Columbia to Washington-on-the-Brazos, from  Harrisburg to Austin. In 1845, the Treasury Office burned and muster rolls were lost.

 

The Sons of the Republic of Texas did not respond to Christine Cohen’s argument. Still she believes that that the evidence proves that Charles Ferris did participate in the battle that decided Texas independence. What do you think?

 

Fannin or The Massacre of La Bahia

A Poem by Charles Drake Ferris

 

What means that dark cloud, overhanging the vale;

And those soft mournful sounds that I hear in the gale!

Tell me why the rejoicings of liberty cease,

And those sobs of regret break the stillness of peace?

 

Oh say! What can thus like a funeral pall

Wreathe sorrow and stillness alike over all!

’Tis Nature and Texas commingling their grief

For the loss of a gallant and favorite Chief.

 

Jehovah himself, from his throne in the sky,

And the hosts of bright seraphs and angels on high,

From those scenes of delight in the regions above,

Sympathise in our grief for the hero we love.

 

They heard the wild shouts that arose from the plain

Where the heroes of Georgia with Fannin were slain;

And their blood gushing torrents of death and despair,

Rose aloft to the Lord on the pinions of air. 

 

Hushed at once were the sounds of devotion and praise,

For the highest archangel was struck with amaze;

As those currents of crimson arose from below,

Supplicating to God for revenge on the foe.

 

Soft and sweet was the halo of grief that o’ersspread

The fair shadowy forms of the time-honored dead,

And melting indeed was the holy appeal

As they held up their hands, and their wounds did reveal.

 

From hell’s dark abyss, the black caverns of night

At that moment arose the shrill sound of delight,

Triumphant, terrifick, that terrible yell

From the turrets of Heaven, was reechoed in Hell.

 

Sublime was the wrath that o’reshadowed His brow

As the echoing thunder repeated his vow.

That the fruits of a vengeance as deadly and deep

As our foes had deserved, they bitterly reap.

 

Brave Texians! To you the direction was given

To redress your own wrongs, and redress those of Heaven;

To the Plains of Jacinto ye gallantly moved,

Where the vengeance of God was performed and approved.

  

Like his brother Warren Ferris, Charles D. Ferris tried his hand at writing poetry. This moving poem was never published. It was rejected by the publisher as too emotional. They also objected to the idea that God approved the Texians’ actions of revenge for the Alamo and Goliad taken at San Jacinto.

 

Written by Susanne Starling from material provided by Christine Cohen.