CAPERS E. HORTON
Federal
Writers Project, 1936-1940
Mrs. [Edgorton?] Arnold, P.W.
Hamilton County, Texas
District B
No. Words 254
File No. 240
Page No. 1 REFERENCE
C. E. HORTON, HAMILTON, TEXAS TRANSPORTATION. "UNCLE APPLE"
For more than thirty years John Joseph Applewhite owned and operated what
was known as the "Frieghters". Powerful horses and big dray
wagons. He was a freighter of the old days who, before the advent of the
railroads hauled through the scorching suns of summer or the bitter winds
of winter on roads heavy in hot sands or rutted deep with mud in the
winter, with a four-mule team. He hauled lumber that new homes might grow,
that land might be filled and cotton marketed.
It was a hard life, but life in the open always compensated "Uncle
Apple" as he was affectionately called.
"We've plenty of live on the rest of our lives,' he would say:
"But I work hard and have always worked hard, for that is the only
way to accomplish anything."
After the building of the railroad in 1908 Mr. Applewhite sold his "freighters"
and went into the dairy business. Previous to that time he freighted from
Hico, Clifton, and Dublin to Hamilton.
There was a freight line of four wagons of four mules each, and sometimes
the roads were so bad that it too from 3 to 5 days to make the trip of 22
miles to Hico.
The heavy loaded wagons would stick in the mud and often it took eight
horses to pull them out.
During the first seven years of this time Mr. Applewhite freighted for
John S. Spurlin, C. E. Horton was "straw boss". He later went
into the frieghting business for himself. {Begin handwritten} C12 2/11/41
Texas