Jane Herbert Wilkinson Long (July 23, 1798 – December 30, 1880) was a Texas pioneer. She owned boarding houses and a plantation in Texas. She is best known as the "Mother of Texas."
Biography
Early life
Jane Herbert Wilkinson Long was born on July 23, 1798, in Charles County, Maryland.[1] She was a niece of General James Wilkinson;[2] her father was James' eldest brother, William Mackall Wilkinson (c.1751-1799).[3]
She sold part of her land in Fort Bend County, on which the town of Richmond was built. She later moved to Richmond, where she opened a boarding house and started a plantation nearby.
Personal life
Jane was married in Natchez, Mississippi,[1] in 1815 to James Long, a doctor and a native of Virginia. He had led a filibusterexpedition attempting to take control of Spanish Texas in 1819, and in a second attempt in April 1820 he brought his pregnant wife and 300 troops to join refugees from the first expedition on the Bolivar Peninsula near present-day Galveston. Forced to surrender along with his troops at Presidio La Bahía in October 1821, he was killed by a guard on April 8, 1822, during imprisonment in Mexico City.
Meanwhile, left behind at Bolivar Point (now Port Bolivar), Jane gave birth on December 21, 1821, to her third child, Mary James Long,[1] with her only slave, Kian, helping.[4] Throughout a long winter, they and her children struggled as she waited for her husband's return. At one point, several Karankawa Indians appeared, but she fired a cannon each day to make them think there was an army stationed there. Together Jane and Kian fought starvation for weeks, hunting their own game, fishing and gathering oysters, until the news of her husband's death finally reached her during the spring, whereupon they headed out.[4] She then left Texas but returned in the later 1820s as a bona fide colonist.
Jane Long claimed to be the first woman of English descent to settle in Texas, and her daughter Mary is often said to be the first child born in Texas to an English-speaking woman,[1] but this has been disproved by census records from 1807 to 1826 which show a number of Anglo-American births.[1][5]
Nevertheless because of this, she became known as the "Mother of Texas." Sam Houston later gave the same title to Margaret Theresa Wright during a gubernatorial speech on August 1, 1857, in Wright's hometown of Victoria for Wright's heroic support of Texas troops during the Texas Revolution.[6]
^McArthur, Judith N. "Wright, Margaret Theresa Robertson". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association. Archived from the original on January 8, 2009. Retrieved May 3, 2013.
^Neila Skinner Petrick, Jane Long of Texas, 1798-1880: A Biographical Novel of Jane Wilkinson Long of Texas : Based on Her True Story, Pelican Publishing, 2000, p. 89 [1]
^Mary Austin Holley, Mary Austin Holley: The Texas Diary, 1835-1838, Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, 1965, p. 113 [2]