MR. ERASTUS RAUSCH & TIP
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Erastus Rausch, the grandson of Carl Rausch
& Clara Ziesing
Rausch who emigrated from Germany to New Orleans in 1799, has continued
his family's tradition of being an ironworker. His father, Fredrich
Rausch, relocated from New Orleans, where his family still operates the
smithy founded by the elder Rausch, to Gonzales Texas in 1828 to start a
new branch of the business. There he met & married Mary Kennedy, the
youngest of John Kennedy & Francis Wylie Kennedy's nine children.
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Friedrich fought in the Battle of
San Jacinto under Sam Houston, while his wife & children accompanied Sarah
McClure on the much lauded 'Runaway Scrape', in which the brave women of the
American settlements made a dash for the Louisiana border to escape the Mexican
Army. At the end of the Texian revolution, the Rausch family relocated to Seguin, where Fredrich
opened the smithy that his eldest son, Ernest, still operates.
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The Rausch's
second son, Erastus, was born in 1833. Mary Kennedy Rausch died in 1840
for childbed fever. Following his father's death in 1857, Eratsus relocated
to the Grapevine area of Tarrant County, having been unable to negotiate
a share in the Seguin smithy with his older brother. Erastus currently lives on the farm of his cousins, William
& Elizabeth Gordon Kennedy, where
he helps out with farming & smithy tasks. While it is suspected that Erastus has some abolitionist leanings, such views are unpopular among
his north Texas relatives & go, for the most part, unexpressed. |
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Always by Erastus' side is his faithful dog Tip.
If you any any questions about hand-forged items
or blacksmithing, contact Erastus.
Also visit our Blacksmithing
Class Page
Return to 1860s Farm Page
About the Farmstead • Meet Our Livestock • Meet Our Interpreters • The Year is 1861
Questions or comments, email
the web administrator.
Site last updated
08/24/2004
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Old City Park: The Historical Village of Dallas. All rights
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