Jump to content

Packsaddle Mountain (Llano County, Texas): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Clayd61 (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
Clayd61 (talk | contribs)
m Clean up
Line 1: Line 1:
{{cleanup}}
{{cleanup}}
{{unsourced}}
{{orphan}}
{{orphan}}

{{uncat}}
Named after the saddle-like appearance provided by twin peaks, Packsaddle Mountain is an [[Austin, Texas]] area land mark that stands five miles southwest of [[Kingsland, Texas]] in eastern [[Llano County]] (at 30°37' N, 98°30' W) on [[Texas State Highway 71]] and is of interest to both historians and geologists.
Named after the saddle-like appearance provided by twin peaks, Packsaddle Mountain is an [[Austin, Texas]] area land mark that stands five miles southwest of [[Kingsland, Texas]] in eastern [[Llano County]] (at 30°37' N, 98°30' W) on [[Texas State Highway 71]] and is of interest to both historians and geologists.



Revision as of 18:07, 26 March 2008

You must add a |reason= parameter to this Cleanup template – replace it with {{Cleanup|reason=<Fill reason here>}}, or remove the Cleanup template.

Named after the saddle-like appearance provided by twin peaks, Packsaddle Mountain is an Austin, Texas area land mark that stands five miles southwest of Kingsland, Texas in eastern Llano County (at 30°37' N, 98°30' W) on Texas State Highway 71 and is of interest to both historians and geologists.

Famous for the region’s last battle with Indians in 1873, it is thought that the Spanish mined the mountain for gold prior to the Texas Revolution and that it was the site of Los Almagres, Jim Bowie’s famous lost mine. Prospectors searched the area as late as the 1920s. Intriguing traces of gold, silver and other minerals have been reported in the sands of Honey Creek and the mountainside.

Prospecting on Packsaddle Mountain renewed interest in gold mining in Llano County in the 1920s, but with no lasting result. At an elevation of 1,628 feet, the higher of the two summits rises 650 feet above U.S. Highway 71. Local topography ranges from flat to rolling to steep, with local escarpments, covered with soils ranging from shallow and stony to deep, fine, sandy loams. Vegetation consists primarily of open stands of live oak and Ashe juniper.

A historical landmark, the mountain was the site of the Packsaddle Mountain Fight with Indians on August 4, 1873, and was the last major Indian battle in the area. The Fight on Packsaddle Mountain was precipitated when a cow on the Moss Ranch (in what is now Llano County) came into the ranch house with an arrow sticking out of its side. A party of eight ranchers, including W.B. Moss and his two brothers, was raised to pursue the Indians. They found some twenty one Indians encamped on Packsaddle Mountain. In the ensuing fight at least three Indians were killed and three ranchers wounded.

The Texas Historical Marker reads "Two and one half miles east on the Packsaddle Mountain, in a battle fought August 4, 1873, Captain J. R. Moss, Stephen B. Moss, William B. Moss, Eli Lloyd, Arch Martin, Pink Ayers, E. D. Harrington and Robert Brown routed a band of Indians thrice their number. The last Indian battle in this region."


References


Kingsland Chamber of Commerce -
Texas Historical Commission