First Crossing Of Devils River
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The First Crossing of Devils River was the first point at which the Devils River was crossed by the San Antonio-El Paso Road. It was located 10.22 miles west of
San Felipe Springs San Felipe Springs is a spring in Val Verde County, Texas Val Verde County is a county located on the southern Edwards Plateau in the U.S. state of Texas. The 2020 population is 47,586. Its county seat is Del Rio. In 1936, Val Verde County r ...
at the mouth of San Pedro Creek on the Devils River. It was 2.54 miles southeast of Painted Caves, on California Creek, a noted camp location on the road.Gunnar M. Brune, Springs of Texas, Volume 1, Texas A&M University Press, 2002, p.455 The crossing point and the gorge leading down to it from the east are now submerged under
Lake Amistad Amistad Reservoir ( es, Presa Amistad) is a reservoir on the Rio Grande at its confluence with the Devils River northwest of Del Rio, Texas. The lake is bounded by Val Verde County on the United States side of the international border and by ...
.


History

Robert A. Eccleston Robert A. Eccleston (1830-1911) was a pioneer, California Gold Rush#Forty-niners, forty-niner, and diarist whose records offer crucial insights into the discovery of the Tucson Cutoff and Yosemite Valley.Robert Eccleston, Edited by George P. Ham ...
described the crossing and the route from San Felipe Springs to the Devils River in his diary of his journey over the San Antonio-El Paso Road with some of the emigrants to California, travelling with the military expedition that pioneered the route in 1849:
Tuesday, July 10th. We started from the campground this morning at 6 1/2 O'clock and crossed the river. .... We understand that we were to camp at a pond 8 miles distant. ... We found no water pond of any description at 8 miles. We travelled on through a gorge between and came to the River Styx, or as it is commonly called, Devils River. There was no pasture here at all and our
waggon A wagon or waggon is a heavy four-wheeled vehicle pulled by draught animals or on occasion by humans, used for transporting goods, commodities, agricultural materials, supplies and sometimes people. Wagons are immediately distinguished from ...
s stood directly in the road. On one side there was a perpendicular elevation of rocks, some 40 feet high, on the other side a steep sloping bank. The only good thing that can be said of this place is that we had plenty of good water to drink and a fine place to bathe. The Devils River at this place runs over a solid bed of rock, and the water is from 1 to 2 feet deep and so clear that the smallest thing can be seen at the bottom. It is over 100 feet across as the road runs. The opposite bank is somewhat steep but the descent on this side easy.Robert Eccleston, Edited by
George P. Hammond George Peter Hammond (September 19, 1896 – December 3, 1993) was an American professor of Latin American studies. He published works related to the founding of New Mexico and other Spanish settlements in the United States. He was the director ...
and Edward H. Howes, Overland to California on the Southwestern Trail, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1950, pp.61-62
There was formerly a stone stagecoach station at the crossing, mentioned by Burr G. Duval in "Journal of a Prospecting Trip to West Texas in 1879", his diary of his journey along the San Antonio-El Paso Road in 1879.''The Burr G. Duval Diary'', edited by Sam Woolford, The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Volume 65, July 1961 - April, H. Bailey Carroll, editor, Journal/Magazine/Newsletter, 1962, Texas State Historical Association, 1962, p.494
from texashistory.unt.edu: accessed January 21, 2014, University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, http://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas State Historical Association, Denton, Texas.


References

{{coord, 29, 29, 12, N, 100, 59, 48, W, display=title Devils River (Texas) Stagecoach stops in the United States San Antonio–El Paso Road San Antonio–San Diego Mail Line Geography of Val Verde County, Texas