After a time in the bawdy port of Antwerp, while they waited for their ship to come, the family boarded the wooden sailing vessel Harriet, along with some eighty other immigrants, and began their crossing—in the dead of winter—on the stormy north Atlantic. This first experience with a ship under sail profoundly impacted the nine-year-old German lad, who would sit for hours on end watching shipboard life, in all its aspects, rough and sublime. At some point during this voyage, a dream was born, a passion for the wind and the water. One day, years later, Karl would realize his dream and become a captain of his own ship. A sloop which would run for many years on a regular schedule on Galveston Bay . . . and he would marry a shipbuilder’s daughter to boot. Good thing for me, because Karl’s marriage to Katherine Icet of Cove, Texas, produced my grandfather, and eventually me!
But lots of life stood between the young boy and his second marriage years later, at the age of 52 to my grandfather’s mother. First the stormy Atlantic had to be crossed. From diaries we know that the steadfast heads of all the families aboard the Harriet spent a lot of time on their knees, horrified by the violent weather and the smallness of their vessel, praying for deliverance from the colossal storms that threatened their ninety-foot-long wooden boat. After two months at sea, the green of the island of Cuba was sighted, and a few days later the Harriet slipped over the sand bar which almost connected Bolivar Peninsula with east Galveston Island and came to rest in the primitive Port of Galveston.
Settling in Anahuac
Choosing not to make the last short leg of the trip down the Texas coast to the mouth of the Guadalupe River—the jumping off point for the wagon trip to New Braunfels—my family stayed in Galveston doing odd jobs to save money until they could afford to settle on the north side of the Bay, near the old Mexican Customs House at Anahuac.
Family legend says that Karls’s stepfather traded with the local Indians for his patch of ground, and that once settled in their new home, it was not uncommon for the family to spot bears and large cats around their cabin, where the Piney Woods of east Texas meet the waters of upper Galveston Bay. Not much is known of the family until twenty years later, when an extraordinary collection of Civil War correspondence between Karl, his brothers, Fritz and Wilhelm, and their mother were discovered and obtained by the Barker Texas History Library of the University of Texas. Drafted into the Confederate Army when in their late twenties, the three brothers were posted in Louisiana and in the Sabine Lake region under Dick Dowling. When Dowling and his forty-seven rebel soldiers through deception turned back ships of the northern navy which contained tens of thousands of troops sent to invade Texas.
Lying low with his fellow soldiers behind the hastily built breastworks on the edge of the large salt water lake, Karl peered out at the large sailing ships loaded with men, and his boyhood memory of crossing the Atlantic must have returned vividly to his memory. Karl and his brothers kept in touch with home while at war through tiny letters written on one side of scraps of paper as small as four inches across—paper and almost everything else was scarce during the war—and some scraps had as many as 350 words on them. The back side of each letter was left blank, for the reply from Mamma. The letters were carried as a courtesy by random travelers. The subject matter of the letters were the unpleasant conditions of life in the army, the size and activities of barnyard animals belonging to the brothers, and the thread bareness of the brothers’ shirts.
At the conclusion of the war, we know Karl returned, married, and raised his first family of seven children. He became respected in the Anahuac area, and his dinner table was always open to travelers who stayed up late in the night sharing the latest news and political gossip from Beaumont and Houston. Karl was widely read and consulted by others in the rural community on subjects ranging from medical remedies to weather and agriculture.