Mary Adams Maverick
Published: 1849
Total Pages: 0
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Unbound hectograph copy of manuscript memoirs of Texas pioneer Mary Ann Adams Maverick dated 1881, recording details of her large family and the enslaved people in their household; life in and around San Antonio before and after Texas statehood; events of the Mexican-American War and Civil War; and interactions and conflicts with local tribes, including captivity narratives of Matilda Lockhart and Mrs. Webster (f. 37r-40r). In an "Apology" (f. 4r), which is not included in the edition published in 1921, Mary's son George Madison Maverick describes working with the contents of his mother's diary entries, arranging subject matter in chronological order, and dividing the book into chapters. This item is one of two known copies of the hectograph edition of five or six made for family members in East Hampton, New York, in 1896, according to George's daughter Rena Maverick Green (Samuel A. Maverick, Texan: 1830-1870, privately printed, 1952, p. xiv). The leaves were originally stabbed and sewn along the top edge, and the former sewing thread is housed following the final leaf. Text is on the recto only of each leaf and its legibility varies widely, with the text on some leaves too faint to be read. The original pagination seems to anticipate a printed edition, with the dedication and preface on the same leaf assigned different page numbers (p.1 and p. 3, on f. 2r) and another leaf marked "pp. 69-78 (estimated)" (f. 69r). Citations in this record are to the pagination as it appears on the lower left recto of most leaves, treated as foliation, except for the first four leaves (f. 1r is an unpaginated title page; f. 2r has sections paginated 1 and 3; f. 3r is the table of contents, paginated 4; and f. 4r is George's Apology, with original pagination 4 1/2 and a later note, "(Temporary page)").