John O. Meusbach (1812-1897)
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John O. Meusbach (1812-1897)
A skilled gardener, the former Baron
Otfried Hans Freiherr von Meusebach was the second commissioner of The Society for the
Protection of German Immigrants in Texas and an accomplished student of natural sciences.
Upon arriving in Texas he dropped his noble title and became simply John O. Meusebach. He
is also widely known for founding the town of Fredericksburg, forging a lasting peace
treaty with the Comanche Indians of the Texas Hill country, and serving as a sate senator.
He later moved to Loyal Valley where his farm, garden, and nursery became a showplace.
Visiting in 1877, N.A. Taylor wrote: "Loyal Valley is indeed a garden in a
wilderness; a garden in which one can linger and be happy. Here is a nursery in which
sixty varieties of roses grow, and hundreds of the finest flora of three continents; sixty
varieties of pear, forty of peach, and an array of apples, plums, and grapes-all
cultivated and arranged with taste and skill that cannot be excelled. It is curious to see
such an industry in so isolated and remote a region; and nothing could possibly indicate
so well the higher civilization of the people of the valley, as the fact stated to me by
the proprietor that he had liberal and profitable customers. I am sure, said John O.
Meusebach, that our valley will soon have as fine vineyards, orchards and gardens as any
country in the world, and I feel some little pride in the thought that it is I that am
doing it.
John O. Meusebach held that people could not be happy and really blessed until they had
vineyards and orchards...in which view I heartily concurred..." (13). In a letter
dated March 14, 1884, Meusebach stated "...We have planted onions, (German) potatoes,
beans, and sugar corn in the garden. We had plenty of turnips, and sold about $30.00
worth. As I bought no new trees this year, I trimmed all the old trees severely, and made
2000 cuttings of grape-vines, as well as 1000 of crepemyrtle and other
shrubs..." (17) His crapemyrtles were evidently quite a spectacle.
Describing the garden in her book, John O. Meusebach (1967), Irene Marschall King, his
granddaughter, states: "The avenue of crape-myrtle shrubs leading to the family
residence had a graduation of color that would have pleased an artist. The path to the cow
pen had rows of lilacs on either side, and Vitex (American lavender) surrounded the
outhouses. Bamboo plants grew near the pond, and jujube plums or Texas dates, with
their thick, thorny growth served as fences. Meusebach tended carefully a small-leafed
boxwood, so that his wife could use the miniature leaves to decorate cakes for special
celebrations. Trumpet vines flourished to attract hummingbirds. Bachelor buttons were made
into dried bouquets for the winters; a pot of Parma violets usually stood in a sunny
window to give fragrance to the winter air. The flowering willows provided thimbles for
the children..." Offspring from these flowering willows (Chilopsis linearis, related
to catalpas not willows) and jujubes (Ziziphus jujube, also called chinese date) can be
seen naturalized on the old property today. His outdoor Roman bath constructed of
whitewashed native stone
beneath a bathhouse covered with purple and white wisteria was also quite a novelty.
The Germans loved life, gardening, and most of
all their new home. In a final show of typical German-Texan pride and unity, John O.
Meusebach had the strongest forces behind his existence inscribed on his tombstone...TENAX
PROPOSITI (Preserverance in purpose) and TEXAS FOREVER.
Meusebach died at Loyal Valley in 1897 and was buried nearby at Cherry
Springs.
For more information on John Meusebach, see the following books.
King, Irene Marschall. John O. Meusebach. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1967.
Thousand Miles in Texas on Horseback. New York, Chicago, and New Orleans: A.S. Barnes and
Co., 1877.
McDaniel, H. F., and Nathaniel Alston Taylor. The Coming Empire; or Two Wurzbach's Memoirs
and Meusebach Papers. San Antonio: Yanaguana Society Publications, 1937.
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