Babyhead Llano, TX photos click here
For over 100 years, the presence of Babyhead
Mountain, a rugged hill lying some nine and a half miles north
of Llano, has given foreboding testimony to one of the most gruesomeand
controversialincidents to have ever occurred in Llano County.
It was here that a search party discovered the dismembered body
of a missing child, her head impaled on a stick near the summit
of the hill.
The century-long reigning oral account of the atrocity has, curiously,
divulged only that the hill received its name after the discovery
there of the child; that the bloody head had belonged to a tiny
girl; and that people in general believed that the barbarous act
was yet another Indian depredation perpetrated to convince the
Whites they were not welcome in Indian territory. Time has produced,
in addition, conflicting dates to no ones satisfaction as to when
the incident occurred.
This scant information has left many people mystified as to how
such a monstrous deed could have helped but leave in its wake
an abundance of details. In turn, it has veiled the crime in mystery
over the years and produced a number of questions: Who was the
girl? Who were her parents? Where did they live? Who discovered
the body? What exact year did the horror occur? Where is her grave?
Twelve years, however, "new" oral history surfaced that
answers most of these questions, revealing the fact that many
of the old timers in that area knew these details and passed them
on to family members and friends. And, to add even more controversy
to the pot, as recently as a few weeks ago, yet "newer"
history emerged that points to a conspiracy among Whites. Thus
the perplexing questions arise: If these "new" details
are true, why did they not wind up in the incomplete and traditionally
accepted account? And if the conspiracy angle, which contradicts
the traditional version, is valid, why have the facts of the conspiracy
remained in limbo all these years?
The "new" oral history not only answers most of the
questions, it also establishes a later date for the incident.
In the late John E. Conners book, A Great While Ago,--published
just twelve years ago in 1983 (Eakin Publications, Inc.,Austin)--Conner
wrote an account of the Babyhead tragedy, drawn from oral reports
he heard when he was a child.
Conner, an esteemed professor of history at Texas A&M University
in Corpus Christi for over 25 years, was born in Llano county
in 1883 and grew up in the Pontotoc/Field Creek area not far from
Babyhead Mountain "as the crow files."
The late professor wrote that when he was a small boy he heard
"many stories of Indian raids&the mobbing, the maiming,
the murders.."and added,"&such were the topics of
conversations.
In another place, Conner penned, "The Indians who were in
the Packsaddle Mountain battle were sometimes held responsible
for the death of Bill Busters daughter. At least Busters house
was near the point where Pecan (Pecum) Creek enters the Llano
River, just below the place where San Fernando Creek runs into
it. The child had been captured and carried away. A few days later
the remains of a small child were found near the top of a peak
in the Colorado Hills (today called Babyhead Mountain) not far
from the point where the town of Cherokee was later established.
The head of the baby was all that could distinguish the body.
Bill Wyckoff of Pontotoc found an Indian pipe near the place where
the Buster baby had been captured. He gave it to the D.R.T. (Daughters
of the Republic of Texas) and I saw it once in their museum when
it was in the Old Land Office Building on the Capitol Grounds
in Austin."(Capitalizations are Conners.)
It is a documented fact that the Battle at Packsaddle Mountain
took place on August 15, 1873. So, then, Conners claim that the
locals held the same Indians responsible for the death of the
Buster child would place the date of the Babyhead Mountain tragedy
sometime after August, 1873.
This date, however, contradicts the claims of other historians,
who have placed the date much earlier. In his book, Canyon of
the Eagles, (Taylor Publishing Company, Dallas, 1991),C.L. Yarbrough
states that the baby was killed in 1855. The Handbook of Texas,
c1952, claims that "(Babyhead Mountain) was named about 1850."
Yet other historians have figured the same date, about 1850, basing
their conclusions primarily on the alleged time frame in which
settlers established a community and cemetery in the area and
named them both after the infamous hill of death.. In addition,
a state historical marker erected in 1991 at what is known today
as Babyhead Cemetery, lists the incident as occurring "in
1850s."
Llano historian and author Alline Elliott, however, recently corroborated
Conners date of the babys death with oral accounts she heard from
her late husband Sidney. She says that according to these oral
transmissions, the hill, the community and the cemetery could
not have received their names "Babyhead" before 1873.
"My husband Sidney told me that when he was 14 or 15 he worked
for Bill Wyckoff on Mr. Wyckoffs farm," Alline says. "The
farm was at Field Creek about 15 miles southwest of Babyhead Mountain.
Mr. Wyckoff told my husband the story of the baby, and said that
when he (Wyckoff) was 17, he and "Lib" Pankey (a Field
Creek/Pontotoc resident) went with Bill Buster to search for Busters
baby. Ive read Mr. Wyckoffs obituary, and he was born in 1856.
that would make him 17 in 1873, the same year that Conner said
in his book that the baby was killed.
"My husband also told me a story that his father, Bill Elliott,
told him. Bill said that his parents told him that when he (Bill)
was born (at Babyhead in 1888), the local people had called the
hill Babyhead Mountain for only 15 years. That makes it 1873 when
the baby was killed, just like Conner said in his book."
Reaching into her prodigious memory, Alline suddenly produces
the babys name. "Her name was Mary Elizabeth. Mrs. Helen
Terry of Richland Springs was a relative of Bill Wyckoffs, and
she told me that was the babys name, that she had heard it with
her own ears, from relative." Alline adds, "Mary Pickett,
Mr. Wyckoffs great-great-granddaughter, told me the same thing,
and that the babys parents called her Beth. Mary Pickett is still
alive and lives here in Llano. I never learned the name of the
babys mother."
Nor indeed has anyone else. That portion of the Babyhead mystery
remains to this day. In addition, no one has ever located the
childs burial site.
One of the statements Conner made in his book has led Llano historian,
Goldie S. Conley, to doubt the accuracy of Conners memory, since
he was almost 100 years old when he wrote the history of the area.
Goldie did the research for the state historical marker at Babyhead
Cemetery and authored a book, Cherokee Creek Country (Eakins Publications,
Inc., Austin,1988).
In a recent telephone conversation with Enchanted Rock Magazine,
Goldie cited Conners claim that searchers found the babys remains
(in 1873) "not far from the point where the town of Cherokee
was later established." (Cherokee is located in San Saba
County about eight miles north of Babyhead Mountain.) She said
she questions Conners statement, "because in 1858 there was
a settlement there large enough to warrant the establishment of
a post office."
She conceded, however, that Conners statement could also well
be true-- depending upon how one interprets the history of Cherokee
post offices. According to the San Saba Historical Commissions
San Saba County History published in 1983, the first Cherokee
post office did indeed form in 1858, but "changed locations
five times before permanent settlement&(then) in 1878 David
Seth Hanna laid out the present site of Cherokee&"
Thus Conners claim that the Babyhead incident occurred in 1873
"not far from&where&Cherokee was later established
(in 1878) could be true.
But as conflicting as these accounts may be, they pale in comparison
with the claims of Llano resident Ned Cook. A few weeks ago, Cook,
45, whose ancestors lived in the area during the time of the incident,
presented an entirely different version of the famous tale.
"When I was 14, my Uncle David Webster told me that his father,
M.L. Webster, told him that a local "mob" of wealthy
and powerful ranchers killed the little girl and blamed it on
the Indians. They came to M.L.s father (my great-grandfather,
Nathaniel Webster), who lived in Cherokee at the time and was
considered an important and influential man, and told him they
were going to massacre a whole family of homesteaders. They gave
him three reasons why and asked him to participate in it.
"Number one, they considered this particular family poor
white trash and they were therefore expendable. I never heard
the name of the family. Number two, there had been frequent raids
by the Comanches, and ranchers and homesteaders alike wanted the
U.S. Cavalry to dispatch a unit in the area for protection. (The
government had dismantled some of the area forts and didnt regard
the Comanche problem as warranting a Cavalry unit here.) And number
three, they wanted to discourage more settlers from coming in
and staking homestead claims on their lands. There was a big disagreement
over land claims at that time.
"So the "mob" thought up an incident of such horrible
magnitude that it would show there was a serious Indian problem
in the area, and the army would bring the Cavalry in. And at the
same time it would solve the problems with the homesteaders. My
great-grandfather Webster was an honorable man and told them he
wanted no part of it."
Cook says he doesnt know the exact year the "mob" killed
the child, or why they did not massacre the whole family as they
originally planned, but that the incident had to have occurred
sometime after 1867 or 1868, because "my great-grandfather
was in the Cherokee/Babyhead area at that time, and he told family
members that just a few years later he heard that the little girl
had been killed."
Cook says no one ever suspected the "mob" of "reputable"
citizens, because they quickly spread the rumor that the Indians
had committed the heinous deed.
As in the traditionally accepted version of the incident, no documented
proof exists to substantiate this version. But if it is indeed
true that a conspiracy resulted in the unthinkable slaughter,
it could well explain the conspicuous absence of--and the mysterious
aura of silence surrounding -- the details. As far as the "mob"
was concerned, it was enough that people believed the Indians
murdered and mutilated a local child. The victim was, after all,
of poor white trash extract, and neither her name nor her parents"
names were of any importance. All that mattered to this self-serving
"mob" was that they accomplish their ends.
But history reveals-- if this version is true-- that the only
objective they achieved was to come out scott free of blame for
the crime. Ironically, even after the bloody butchery of an innocent
child (at the hands of savage Indians, of course), the U.S. Army
never dispatched a Cavalry unit to the area, Cook says. Whether
the incident discouraged the flow of settlers into the area is
not known, but it would seem obvious that it did not. This whole
region eventually developed into what it is today, and that development,
needless to say, required the influx of people.
This startling version could also explain why even those who had
knowledge of the details were so close-mouthed about them. Fear
of the ruthless power which the "mob" represented was
more than enough to guarantee the silence of even the most notorious
of gossipers.
Even the significance of Bill Wyckoffs discovery of the Indian
pipe at the site of the girls kidnapping could easily figure into
this version. It could be that the "mob" planted the
object there to cast suspicion on the Comanches.
It is possible that we may someday solve the mystery of Babyhead
Mountain. But during the process of digging out historical data
in an effort to come up with the "truth," it is all
too easy to fail to see the real, heart-rending truth -- that
a valuable life met an undeserved end there on that rocky, remote
hill today known as Babyhead Mountain
Back to Ranch Overview page 1
Candy Mountain Ranches Copyright © 2005