May 27, 2020

William Fielder Sparks (1814–1900)

    William Fielder Sparks, son of Richard and Elizabeth (Cooper) Sparks, was born January 22, 1814 in Lawrence County, Mississippi. He accompanied his parents to Texas and was a member of their household when the 1835 census was taken of Nacogdoches County. It was probably there that he married Minerva Frances McKay (born 1816 in Louisiana) in 1838. They started house-keeping about two miles southwest of the village of Douglass. When the Texas-Mexican War began, Billy Sparks first joined Capt. Bryant's Company of the Texas Army of the Republic. He then became an orderly-sergeant in Robert Smith's Company and was in the Battle of Kickapoo. His company arrived too late to participate in the Battle of San Jacinto. Sparks returned to Nacogdoches County after the war ended, and in 1839 he moved to Robertson County where he was listed on the 1840 census of the Republic of Texas. 

    In 1841, he was elected to represent Robertson County at the Seventh Texas Congress, and, after Texas became the 28th state of the United States in 1845, he returned to Nacogdoches County. War between the United States and Mexico broke out in May 1846, and on May 16, Billy Sparks enrolled as a captain in Company E (Capt. Sparks' Company) of the 2nd Regiment of Texas Mounted Volunteers at Nacogdoches to serve for a period of six months. He was mustered into service at Port Isabel, Texas, on June 22, 1846, and was present for duty until October 2, 1846, when he was mustered out with his company at Monterrey, Mexico. He returned to Nacogdoches for a brief stay, and in 1848 he went to Houston. His stay there was also short, and when the 1850 census was taken, he and his family were in Fort Bend County, Texas. On August 7, 1863, Billy Sparks joined the Confederate States Army in J. M. Weston's Company as a lieutenant. At the close of the Civil War, he went to Johnson County where he was elected tax assessor for 1879-1880. Billy Sparks died on July 13,1900, in McLennan County, Texas. His wife, Minerva, survived him by only two months, dying on September 3, 1900. They were buried in the Oakwood Cemetery at Waco, Texas. Source

Block 8
Oakwood Cemetery
Waco

COORDINATES
31° 32.197, -97° 06.555

May 20, 2020

James Hope (?-1836?)

    James Hope, pioneer settler, moved to Texas from Alabama before July 10, 1824, when, as one of Stephen F. Austin's Old Three Hundred colonists, he received title to 1¼ leagues and two labors of land on the east bank of the Brazos River in what is now southwestern Brazos County. By March 26, 1825, he had exchanged his league for that of Bluford Brooks and was trying to secure vacant land on Mill Creek. Hope's daughter, Augusta, married Horatio Chriesman in 1825. The census of March 1826 listed Hope as a farmer and stock raiser aged between forty and fifty. His household included his wife, Althea, three sons, six daughters, and one servant. In January 1827 at Mina, Hope signed a declaration of loyalty to the Mexican government and a protest against the Fredonian Rebellion. He bought garden lots in 1829 and in May 1830 advertised his Connecticut garden seed and fruit trees for sale at San Felipe. In August 1830 he and Gail Borden, Jr., were nominated commissioners to superintend surveying of town lots at San Felipe. Hope in December 1831 advertised that he was going to England and leaving his son Richard in charge of his 15,000 to 20,000 peach and nectarine trees. According to Worth S. Ray's Austin Colony Pioneers, the tax rolls of 1840 indicate that James Hope died about 1836. His sons took part in the battle of San Jacinto and later had a saddle shop at Washington-on-the-Brazos. Source

Note: During the Texas Revolution, the town of San Felipe was largely destroyed by Mexican troops chasing after the Texan army. Nothing was spared, not even the town graveyard. The majority of those buried here prior to 1836 are no longer marked, so although James Hope is known to be buried here, the exact location has been lost. The photo below shows the oldest section of the cemetery where it is possible he still rests.


San Felipe de Austin Cemetery
San Felipe

COORDINATES
N/A

May 13, 2020

Joseph Manson McCormick (1806-1865)

    Joseph McCormick was born on January 9, 1806 in Christian County, Kentucky. He came to Texas in 1829, and although he secured land from the Mexican government, he settled on a farm belonging to his uncle David McCormick and lived there the rest of his life. On June 22, 1832, he received title to one league of land in Austin's Second Colony in what is now Fort Bend County, but never improved upon it. On March 5, 1836, he enlisted in the Texas army for three months, from March 5 to June 5, 1836, as a member of Captain William H. Patton's Columbia Volunteers and with them fought at the battle of San Jacinto. He re-enlisted on July 4, in Captain Byrd Lockhart's Company and was discharged a month later for unknown reasons. McCormick married Agnes Louisa McKenzie, the sister of Josiah Hughes Bell, on January 3, 1852. He died January 21, 1865 and was buried in the cemetery at West Columbia.


Columbia Cemetery
West Columbia

COORDINATES
29° 08.426, -095° 38.864

May 6, 2020

Macario Garcia (1920-1972)

    Macario García, recipient of the Medal of Honor during World War II, was born on January 2, 1920, in Villa de Castaño, Mexico, to Luciano and Josefa García, farm workers who raised ten children. In 1923 the family moved to Texas; they eventually settled in Sugar Land. Like the rest of his brothers and sisters, he contributed to the family's support by picking crops. He was working on the Paul Schumann Ranch near Sugar Land when he was drafted into the army on November 11, 1942. García distinguished himself on the battlefield. He was wounded in action at Normandy in June 1944, but after his recovery he rejoined his unit, Company B, First Battalion, Twenty-second Infantry Regiment, Fourth Infantry Division. On November 27, 1944, near Grosshau, Germany, he single-handedly assaulted two German machine-gun emplacements that were blocking his company's advance. Wounded in the shoulder and foot, he crawled forward alone towards the machine-gun nests, killed six enemy soldiers, captured four, and destroyed the nests with grenades. Only after the company had secured its position did García allow himself to be evacuated for medical treatment. He was awarded the Medal of Honor with twenty-seven other soldiers at a White House ceremony on August 23, 1945, by President Harry S. Truman. García also received the Purple Heart, the Bronze Star, and the Combat Infantryman's Badge, as well as the medal of Mérito Militar, the Mexican equivalent to the Medal of Honor, during a ceremony in Mexico City on January 8, 1946. After three years of active service, one of which was overseas, García received an honorable discharge from the army with the rank of sergeant. He returned to Sugar Land and found that he had become a celebrity around the state. Newspapers published accounts of his heroism, and he was asked to appear at meetings and banquets. The League of United Latin American Citizens Council No. 60 in Houston, presided over by president Fernando Salas Aldaz and vice president John J. Herrera, honored him at a special ceremony at the courthouse.

    In September 1945, shortly after his return to Texas, García again attracted media attention when he was denied service at a restaurant in Richmond, a few miles south of Houston, because he was Hispanic. Outraged that he was treated like a second-class citizen after having risked his life for his country, García fought with the owner until police were called in. He was arrested and charged in the incident. His case immediately became a cause célèbre, symbolizing not only the plight of Hispanic soldiers who returned from the war, but the plight of the Hispanic community as a whole. Numerous groups and private citizens rallied to his aid. LULAC Council No. 60 and the Comité Patriótico Mexicano sponsored benefits in his honor to raise money to pay for his defense. Garcia’s legal defense was headed first by John J. Herrera and later, James V. Allred. During 1945-46, the case was repeatedly postponed, until all charges were finally dropped. On June 25, 1947, García became an American citizen. He earned a high school diploma in 1951, and married Alicia Reyes on May 18, 1952. They raised three children. Like other GIs who returned from the war, García encountered many difficulties in finding employment. He eventually found a job as a counselor in the Veterans' Administration, and remained with the VA for the next twenty-five years. In 1970 García and his family moved to Alief. He died on December 24, 1972, in a car crash and was buried in the National Cemetery in Houston. At the graveside ceremonies an honor guard from Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio performed the military rites. In 1981 the Houston City Council officially changed the name of Sixty-ninth Street to Macario García Drive. This 1½ mile thoroughfare runs through the heart of the city's east-side Mexican-American community. In 1983 Vice President George Bush dedicated Houston's new Macario García Army Reserve Center, and in 1994 a Sugar Land middle school was named in García's honor. Source

CITATION
    While an acting squad leader of Company B, 22d Infantry, on 27 November 1944, near Grosshau, Germany, he single-handedly assaulted 2 enemy machine gun emplacements. Attacking prepared positions on a wooded hill, which could be approached only through meager cover, his company was pinned down by intense machine gun fire and subjected to a concentrated artillery and mortar barrage. Although painfully wounded, he refused to be evacuated and on his own initiative crawled forward alone until he reached a position near an enemy emplacement. Hurling grenades, he boldly assaulted the position, destroyed the gun, and with his rifle killed 3 of the enemy who attempted to escape. When he rejoined his company, a second machine gun opened fire and again the intrepid soldier went forward, utterly disregarding his own safety. He stormed the position and destroyed the gun, killed 3 more Germans, and captured 4 prisoners. He fought on with his unit until the objective was taken and only then did he permit himself to be removed for medical care. S/Sgt. (then private) Garcia's conspicuous heroism, his inspiring, courageous conduct, and his complete disregard for his personal safety wiped out 2 enemy emplacements and enabled his company to advance and secure its objective.
 
Section Ha
Houston National Cemetery
Houston    

COORDINATES
29° 55.858, -095° 27.066