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Lubbock
 

San Jacinto Museum of History

Albert and Ethel Herzstein Library

Manuscript Collections

Finding Aid

LUBBOCK FAMILY PAPERS

1838 – 1931 (Bulk: 1850 – 1884)

Manuscript Collection: MC029


Size:  .2 linear feet

Boxes:  1

OCLC No:  47188792

Acquisition:  Mrs. Wendell T. Lubbock, 1951 and Mrs. W.H. Murray, 1952.

Restrictions on Access:  None

Terms Governing Use:  Open for research by appointment.

Processed by:  Joel Minor, 2001

Publication Rights:   Copyright has not been assigned to the San Jacinto Museum of History. All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Library Director. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the San Jacinto Museum of History as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained by the researcher.

Citation:  [Identification of Item], Lubbock Family Papers, MC029, San Jacinto Museum of History, Houston, Texas.

Creator Sketch:

Texas governor and treasurer Francis Richard Lubbock was born on October 16, 1815, in Beaufort, South Carolina, to Dr. Henry Thomas Willis and Susan Ann (Saltus) Lubbock.  Lubbock pursued business careers in South Carolina and New Orleans before moving to Texas in 1836 in search of his brother, Thomas.  In 1837 Lubbock and his wife moved to the new town of Houston and he opened a hardware store there.  He was narrowly defeated as the town’s first mayor.  During the 1840s he began his ranching operations and continued his political aspirations in Texas.  He was elected lieutenant-governor in 1857 but lost his re-election bid in 1859.  He chaired the Southern Democratic Convention of 1860, and in 1861 he was elected governor of Texas.

Lubbock was an ardent supporter of Jefferson Davis and the Confederacy, and worked hard to enhance Texas’ military capabilities, including supporting Confederate constriptions in the state for fighting in the East.  He decided not to seek a second turn in 1863, and instead immediately enlisted.  He was appointed lieutenant colonel and was active in the Red River campaigns.  In August 1864 Jefferson Davis summoned Lubbock to Richmond to serve as his aide-de-camp and expert on trans-Mississippi affairs.  Lubbock accepted the position, and after Lee’s surrender, he fled with Davis and his cabinet, headed toward Texas, but Federal troops captured them in Georgia.

After an eight-month imprisonment, Lubbock returned to Texas and ranching, then to Houston and business ventures.  He served as tax collector in Galveston, and from 1878 to 1891, state treasurer.  Lubbock died in Austin on June 22, 1905.  He was married three times: Adele Baron, 1835; Sarah E. Black Porter, 1883; and Lou Scott, 1903.

Houston businessman Robert Lockart married Anna Bythewood Lubbock, sister of Francis R. Lubbock, in 1843.  He went into the realty business in Houston with his son, Robert Lockart     (c. 1849 – 1920).

Bibliography:

Nunn, Dr. W.C., ed. Ten Texans in Gray. Hillsboro, Tex.: Hill Junior College P., 1968.

Raines, C.W., ed. Six Decades in Texas: The Memoirs of Francis R. Lubbock Confederate Governor of Texas. Austin, Tex.: The Pemberton P., 1968.

“Lubbock, Francis Richard.”  The Handbook of Texas Online.

                http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/LL/flu1.html

Scope and Content Note:

Correspondence, legal and financial documents, printed materials, photographs and albums document the personal and professional lives of Francis R. Lubbock, Robert Lockart, Henry S. Lubbock and William L. Lubbock.  Correspondence of interest includes post-Civil War letters from Jefferson Davis to Francis R. Lubbock.  The legal and financial documents mainly deal with real estate and land in and around the Houston area, in the form of deeds, grants, receipts, and surveyor’s notes and sketches.  These documents range from 1838 to 1880.  The Robert Lockart Papers are believed to have belonged to the father, Robert Lockart Sr.  Photographs of family members are Francis R., Henry S. and William L. Lubbock.  In addition to personal photographs, the snapshot album contains pictures of damage in Galveston and Houston after the 1901 hurricane, the St. Louis flood of 1903, the 1904 powerhouse explosion of St. Louis Transit Co., and the first Beaumont, Texas oil gusher.

 

 

LUBBOCK FAMILY PAPERS, 1838 – 1931 (Bulk: 1850 – 1884)

Manuscript Collection:  MC029

Size:  .2 linear feet

Boxes:  1

Inventory

     Group:  Francis R. Lubbock Papers

     Series:  Correspondence

Location

Title

Dates

31

1

Jefferson Davis

1873 – 1889

31

2

General

1864 – 1884

31

3

Typescripts

1864 – 1889

     Series:  Legal

31

4

Deed

1845, 11/24

     Series:  Printed Materials

31

5

Loans

1862, 01/01

31

6

Real Estate Bond

1880s

31

7

Certificate

1903, 05/11

31

8

Newspaper Clipping

1905

     Group:  Robert Lockart Papers

     Series:  Correspondence

31

9

Mattie L. Foushee

1870 – 1871

31

10

General

1872 – 1873

    

     Series:  Financial

31

11

Property Lists

1851 – 1852

31

12

Receipts and Statements

1853 – 1879

31

13

Promissory Notes

1874, 07/20

31

14

Receipts:  Typescripts

1866 – 1867

     Series:  Legal

31

15

Land

1850 – 1879

     Group:  Lubbock Family Papers

     Series:  Correspondence

Location

Title

Dates

31

16

General

1869 – 1931

31

17

Typescripts

1865 – 1869

     Series:  Financial

31

18

Promissory Notes

1861, 03/30

     Series:  Legal

31

19

Land

1838 – 1880

     Series:  Printed Materials

31

20

Newspaper Clippings

n.d., 1931

     Series:  Creative Works

31

21

“The Influence of Protestantism on American Independence”

n.d.

     Series:  Photographs

31

22

Lubbock Family

1905, n.d.

31

23

General

n.d.

     Series:  Albums

31

24

Autograph

1876 – 1877

Range 14

Shelf 4

Snapshot

1901 – 1904