Daniel Webster Wallace

Reading time: 3 – 4 minutes

It was September 15, 1860 when Mrs Mary Wallace, a negro slave in Inez, Texas gave birth to her son. Mary had been sold to the O’Daniel family just three months prior. Mrs O’Daniel who was present asked, “Mary, he a handsome lad. What will you name him?” Mary replied, “Daniel. How about Daniel Webster Wallace”.

While Daniel was born into slavery, he was treated much like family on the O’Daniel farm growing up playing and working with the O’Daniels two sons, M. H. and Dial. However, Daniel did not care much for farming growing tired of his job chopping cotton. The Civil War had ended several years earlier and Daniel now being a free man dreamed of being a COWBOY. He was a mere 17 years old when he ran away venturing his dreams of the west and cattle drives. Although, he remain good friends with the O’Daniel family through out his life.

Young Daniel truly just a green horn found his first job as a Cowboy with little effort joining the cattle drives of 1877. He drove cattle for C. C. Slaughter, Isaac L. Ellwood, Andrew B. Robertson, Sam Gholson, C. A. “Gus” O’Keefe, and for the Bush and Tillar Cattle Company. He worked for John Nunn’s N.U.N. cattle outfit on the headwaters of the Brazos River as a wrangler and horse breaker.

However, Daniel with no education and much bigger dreams than the many peers he worked with knew he needed schooling if he planned to be a businessman. At age twenty-five he returned to school in Navarro County, where he was admitted to the second grade, and in two winters learned to read and write.

Now in his later-twenties, Daniel joined Clay Mann’s outfit near Colorado City in Mitchell County, Texas. The Mann’s cattle brand was a large eight zero read as 80 on the side of cattle that Daniel branded. Daniel could out brand, out work and perform better than any other wrangler in the outfit. It was there that Daniel earned the nickname “80 John”. He voiced his dream with Clay Mann about wanting to one day own a Ranch. Mann agreed to help him become his own rancher by taking wages as cattle rather than dollars. Mann implemented a plan that would pay Daniel Webster Wallace “80 John” five dollars a month from his thirty-dollar wage for two years and put the remainder aside to invest in his own herd, for which Mann provided free pasture. This working relationship nurtured a bond of mutual trust and respect which lasted until Mann’s death in 1889. Two years later Wallace moved his cattle to 1,280 acres which he had purchased in 1885 and started ranching for himself southeast of Loraine in Mitchell County.

He became one of the most respected black ranchers of his time. His Durham cattle brand was a D triangle and on his Herefords he used a D on the right hip and a running W on one side. “80 John” married Laura Dee Owens who was considered highly educated to his standards on April 8, 1888; they had three daughters and a son. Daniel Wallace was a member of the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association for thirty years. He died on March 28, 1939, leaving an estate worth more than $1 million, and was buried on his ranch. A state historical marker in Loraine, Texas commemorates his life.



3 Comments

  1. J Clark wrote:

    This is a great post it shows that a person can achieve a goal if they believe in themselves and follow through to the end. Mr. Wallace was born a slave then went back to the 2nd grade in his 20′s to learn how to read humility is important in this game.

  2. kukura wrote:

    That’s deep it shows it’s never too late to start up, he did all that and started 2nd grade in his twenties.

  3. R&G wrote:

    @JClark – Welcome – Humility is important in life and keeps you focused on the bigger goal. Anyone can do it you just happen to the cat who did. It’s amazing what some people are able to do under extreme duress. Here we have a man who despite his shortcomings and the lay of the land left a legacy for his own.

    @Kukura – Welcome – Well the prevailing mentality is to quit and say it’s too late to turn around and change a life. Here we have a very motivated man who took what he learned and built a empire in his own time against real odds not the perceived ones we have today.

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