Retracing the Steps of History
One of the joys of this project is communicating with people whose discovery of my book on Trammel’s Trace leads them to physically connect with its history.
Jennifer Judkins, in an article titled “On Things That Are Not There Anymore,” explores the notion that a physical connection to history is vital to creating an emotional link to events and people from the past. She explains a critical aspect of how we connect to our past by declaring that “our appreciation of things that are not there anymore is enriched when we understand and value what is missing, and when we have an accurate original location.” We must not only understand what happened and where, but we must also value it on its own merit and for our own personal reasons. In the past few weeks, my contact with two readers has highlighted that point.
Lisa Trammell Deaven at the DRT marker in Nacogdoches.
A Trammell Descendant on Nick’s Route
Lisa Trammell Deaven is a descendant of Nicholas Trammell himself! When she gave her family the opportunity to join her on a point-to-point trip following that history they could not say no. Okay, literally could not. (She may have dragged them, but who says no to a Trammell?).
They started in Nacogdoches at the Trammel’s Trace DRT marker in Banita Creek Park, followed the route through Tatum, and made their way all the way up to Fulton and Old Washington on the other side of the Red River.
They even made a valiant effort at finding the location of Nick’s Taven east of Old Washington using coordinates I sent. Lisa relished in what she correctly identified as a “Nicholas Trammell trailblazer-frontiersman-smuggler-sketchy-resourceful-pioneer-entrepreneur celebrity status I’m carrying.” As she should!
What came through clearly was Lisa’s sense of joy and discovery in connecting her family history to a broader history of Texas. And BEING THERE in places where old Nick trod made all the difference.
Vernon May’s stomping grounds.