Barnards of the Brazos -- First Family of Glen Rose
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Bronze monument depicting Glen Rose's founding couple: Tejana Juana Cavasos and white American trader Charles Barnard. Barnard supposedly ransomed Cavasos from Comanches who had taken her captive.
Images
Barnards of the Brazos statue
Barnards of the Brazos interpretive plaque
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
Bronze monument depicting Glen Rose's founding couple: Tejana Juana Cavasos and white American trader Charles Barnard. It was sculpted by local artist Robert Summers. The young woman is mounted on horseback; her suitor stands near her, holding a rope to guide her and her horse to safety.
An interpretive plaque for this 2007 monument explains that Charles Barnard, a white New Englander came to the Republic of Texas in 1843 to establish American Indian trading posts. Barnard ransomed and then fell in love with Juana Cavasos, the daughter of a wealthy family, rescuing her from the Comanches who held her captive. That “spirited, intelligent young captive … proved to be … an outstanding mother, horsewoman, herbal doctor, and neighborhood midife.”
The monument attempts to tell inclusive local history and celebrate strong women. Yet the story of Glen Rose’s “first family” actually serves to reinforce traditional racial and gender narratives: A white settler came to profit off local Indians. In the absence of white American women, he “bartered successfully” for and married the Mexican-born daughter of a large “Spanish” landholder, simultaneously saving her from barbarous Indian captivity--and gained access to a large Mexican land grant on which his African-American slaves labored.
Sources
“‘The Barnards of the Brazos’ Dedication Ceremony in Glen Rose, Texas- Speeches- Sept 15, 2007,” accessed August 22, 2016, http://salon.glenrose.net/default.asp?view=plink&id=4704.
“Juana J. Cavazos Captured by Comanches.” Brownsville Herald. Accessed September 20, 2016. http://www.brownsvilleherald.com/opinion/letters_to_editor/article_55d4d0e8-7720-11e2-bcf6-001a4bcf6878.html.
Cynthia E. Orozco. “Barnard, Juana Josefinea Cavasos.” Handbook of Texas Online June 12, 2010. https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fbane.
John Watson. “Barnards of the Brazos Statue Unveiled in Glen Rose.” Cleburne Times-Review September 24, 2007. http://www.cleburnetimesreview.com/news/lifestyles/john-watson-barnards-of-the-brazos-statue-unveiled-in-glen/article_39aca20a-a4e8-50ad-ac71-b74f229294a0.html.
Photo by Anna Prescott
Photo by Anna Prescott