Panhandle
Plains
Panhandle Plains Towns:
Booker
Seminole -
"Seminole Camp was a frontier Black Seminole Indian qv community
on Las Moras Creek south of the site of what is now Brackettville in
Kinney County. Around 1870 some 150 Black Seminoles formed the nucleus
of a community located south of Fort Clark. Several members of this
population were enlisted as scouts in 1871 by Zenas Randall Bliss qv
and organized into a company of Black Seminole scouts qv stationed at
Fort Clark. Around 1874 several hundred Black Seminoles from Mexico
moved to Seminole Camp, bringing the total population of the community
to an estimated 500. A Mount Zion Baptist Church, built to resemble
the First Church of Salem, Massachusetts, was established in the community
soon thereafter. Seminole Camp was abandoned after the closing of the
Fort Clark reservation in 1914. Many Seminole Camp residents moved to
Brackettville, taking their church with them. By the 1950s some descendents
of the original inhabitants of Seminole Camp were still living near
Brackettville, and the Black Seminole scout burial ground had become
a tourist attraction. By 1977 the Seminole Indian Scout Association,
whose membership included descendents of the original Fort Clark scouts,
was holding annual fund-raising events for the preservation of the Seminole
Cemetery."
-Bibliography:
Kinney County: 125 Years of Growth, 1852-1977 (Brackettville, Texas:
Kinney County Historical Society, 1977).
Sources
"SEMINOLE
CAMP, TX." The Handbook of Texas Online. [Accessed Fri Jul
4 6:59:27 US/Central 2003 ]. by Ruben E. Ochoa