Ross to Thomas J. Brackenridge,
April 24, 1886
The Red River had been recognized the northern boundary
of Texas below the Panhandle since the 1819 Adams-Onís treaty between
the United States and Mexico. A discrepancy in the treaty led to a
border dispute between Texas and the United States over part of present-day
Oklahoma. The treaty defined the Red River as the boundary as far
northwest of the 100th meridian, as shown on the Melish map, an authoritative
map of the day. However, the Melish map showed the 100th meridian
inaccurately, leaving a gap of 16,000 square miles. The Red River
itself was also inaccurately drawn, without showing a fork in the
river in the area. Texas claimed that the north fork was the true
river and thus the true border.
According to a strict construction of the Adams-Onís
treaty, this territory belonged to Texas. However, the matter was
complicated still more by the fact that Texas had agreed to the Compromise
of 1850, which used the true meridian to define the Red River border,
not the Melish map, and Texans and others had treated this as the
boundary of Texas ever since.
Nonetheless, Texas decided to lay claim to the territory.
In 1860, the legislature passed an act forming Greer County out of
the disputed area. The Civil War and its aftermath interfered with
pursuing the matter further until 1884, when Texas leased the land
to a cattle company and began settling people in the area and constructing
a county government. In 1886, Texas established a Boundary Commission
to define the problem and build its case. In this letter, Sullivan
Ross, who would be elected governor later in the year, gives an account
of an 1858 frontier experience that bolsters Texas' position in the
dispute.
In 1891, the United States government filed suit against
Texas to settle the dispute about the ownership of Greer County. The
Supreme Court ruled against Texas in 1896 and Greer County became
part of Oklahoma.
"Texas
Rising "

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Copy
Waco, April 24th 1886
Maj. Thos J. Brackenridge
Sir:
Your request has
been received and in compliance there with I will
state that, in October 1858, my father, Capt. S. P.
Ross, Indian Agent at the Brazos Agency
received a communication from Maj Earl
Van Dorn, U.S. Army, asking co-operation
in a contemplated campaign agains hostile
Comanches. At the head of one hundred and
thirty-five Indians, volunteers from the five
tribes resident at the Brazos Agency, I
marched to Otter Creek, and encamped
where Camp Radziminski was afterwards
established. From that point sent out a
scout with orders to proceed up Red River
and ascertain whether the Comanches were
in that section. They went up the North
Fork, and declared that the Red River.
I was enabled at a later period, to satisfy
myself that the scout had moved as they reported
I have the honor to be your obt servt
Signed
L.S. Ross
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"Texas
Rising "
Ross to Thomas J. Brackenridge, April
24, 1886, Boundary Papers (State) 1837-1911, Texas Secretary of State,
Archives and Information Services Division, Texas State Library and
Archives Commission.