
|

|

John Baptiste
Carlat (1829-1902) was one of Denison’s more
colorful characters. He
was born in Dijon, France, a son of Jean
Claude Carlat (1805-1892) and Jeanne Antoine
Lamy (1802-1849). Claude
was educated in France to be a Catholic
priest; however, he gave up the priesthood
to be married at Evans, France in 1827. During their
marriage, Claude and Jeanne became the
parents of six children, the first four born
in France. The
children were:
Jean Baptiste
Carlat, who changed his name to John
Baptiste Carlat, born 1829
Eugene Carlat,
born 1832
Anne Pierre
Marie Carlat, born 1835
Anne Louise
Carlat, born 1836
Jean Claude
Carlat, born 1839
Charles Carlat,
born 1843
(Carlat Story,
pg.1. Ancestry.com.
Viewed September 7, 2022)
The Carlat
family departed Dunkirk, France aboard Brig
Louis Philippe January 26, 1843. They arrived in
Galveston, Republic of Texas April 2, 1843.
(Matheny, Nancy Bronte. Carlats to America:
The Jean Claude Carlat Story, 1805- 1845.
LuLu.com. March 31, 2016) Eldest son John
came to the United States as a young man;
"when he landed on the Texas
coast”. Claude’s wife, Jeanne
died during the 1849 cholera epidemic and he
returned to France to find a wife - Hortense
Poirer; they married in 1851 upon their
return to Carondelet, Kansas City, Missouri.

Hortense Poirer
Because of the
trouble brewing over slavery Claude moved
his family of wife and five children from
St. Louis to Muscatine, Iowa.
(Carlat Story, pg.2.
Ancestry.com. Viewed September 7,
2022)
Just
a few weeks before his death, Carlat
related to an employee of the Denison
newspaper, The Sunday Gazetteer, details of
his life among the Comanche.
As a
teenager in the Castro
Colony of Texas, west of San
Antonio, the warlike Comanche descended
upon John's camp, and he was carried
away into captivity and lived
among the Indians two years before he
escaped. (The Denison Press,
June 7, 1937, pg. 4) Carlat was
carried to the Ft. Sill country, but no
frontier post had yet been established
there. The Comanches treated
Carlat very kindly and he was frequently
a member of their hunting parties.
It was not an unpleasant life that he
led among his captors. There were
3 white women amongst the tribe, but
Carlat was not permitted to interact
with them. He was urged by the
chiefs to take a tribal wife and become
a member of the tribe. He fled
under cover of darkness by plunging on
horseback into a raging
river. After floating about a mile
downstream, he was found by some U.S.
Dragoons on their way to the Santa Fe
Trail. It was on this trip
that he first met the celebrated
frontiersman Kit Carson, who was a scout
for the dragoons. In later
years, he became a famous scout himself.
(The
Sunday Gazetteer, Sunday, July
6, 1902, pg. 2) His obituary noted
that he was a friend of President Grant,
an intimate of Kit Carson, General John
C. Fremont and Jim Bridges. He was
a guide for miners headed to California
in the 1849 Gold Rush. In
addition, he met Washington Irving while
he served as a hunter and trapper at
Fort Gibson in Indian Territory. (Weekly
Index, Mineral Wells, Texas,
June 2, 1902, pg. 3)
The Carlat farm
adjoined the Grant farm and John hauled wood
with the future President Grant to St. Louis
for his livelihood. The
wood haulers set up on the public square
where Grant would tie up his horse and rack
and stand by his horses waiting for
customers. Carlat went to Mexico with Grant
and served during the Mexican War. (1933 letter, San
Antonio, Texas, by Mary “Mollie” Carlat
Hallenbeck to Eugene Carlat's descendants. Ancestry.com,
viewed September 7, 2022)
In December
1890 Carlat heard of the death of Sitting
Bull. Carlat was with the Chief for six
years and was an intimate friend. (The Sunday
Gazetteer, December 21, 1890, pg.
1)
John enlisted
in March 1848 at Jefferson's Barracks, St.
Louise, Missouri in Co. A, 3rd Missouri
Volunteer Calvary, serving throughout the
Mexican War; and was discharged November
1848. He was
wounded in the right cheek in a battle with
Indians in July 5, 1848.
His claim for a pension for his
service in the Mexican War was denied
because his injury occurred within 60 days
of the end of hostilities.
(National Archives: Mexican War
Affidavit - request for pension.
Ancestry.com, viewed September 7, 2022)
In 1850, John married Helen
Heinman (1832-1895) in St. Louis,
Missouri. Helen was born in Alsace
Lorraine, France. John and Helen made
their home in Iowa and Kansas City; in
June or July 1863, John, aged 34,
registered for the Civil War as subject
for military duty. His residence was
Lake Township, Muscatine Co., Iowa.
In 1869 John worked for his brother,
Eugene, as a drover for his livery stable.
(Carlat Story, pg.4. Ancestry.com.
Viewed September 7, 2022)
John Carlat and
family settled in Denison about 1877. He had a vineyard
and made his own wine. The Carlat
farm was located a few miles west of
I-75 on the Red River. The wine cellar there
was an enormous affair, built of great
distressed rock. At the entrance there is a
block of white marble set in the masonry
which bears the inscription, "John B.
Carlat, 1881." There is good water, rich
land, good buildings, blooded stock,
splendid orchards and over 100 pecan trees. (The Sunday
Gazetteer, Sunday, October 28,
1900, pg. 2)
Carlat was
murdered by a fired farmhand in June 1902. He was discovered
in a pasture by his faithful friend and
ex-slave, Ben Cleveland. His killer, Gus M.
Carson, was captured while on the run near
Colbert in Indian Territory on the very day
and hour that John Carlat was laid to rest
at Calvary Cemetery. (The
Sunday Gazetteer, Sunday, June 15, 1902, pg.
7) He was convicted of 2nd degree murder
that November in Sherman and sentenced to 10
years in the Huntsville penitentiary. He escaped in
1905, was recaptured (The Fort Worth
Record and Register, March 8, 1905,
pg. 5), and paroled in 1910. (Texas Convict
and Conduct Registers, Ancestry.com)
Their
Graves & some obituaries.
The children of
John Baptiste Carlat and Helen Heinman
Brichet Carlat were:
Mary Eugenia Carlat (1858-1942)
m. 1879 Wilfred A. Hallenbeck
(1855-1915) who owned one of the
first candy stores in Denison.
According to family legend, he
had the last horse-drawn Hearse
in Denison.
Mary's
Grave and Obituary
|

|
|
|
George
L. Carlat (1861-1942) m.
1880 Meadora Olive Burson Opelt, a
widow (1856-1905). In 1906, he
married his second wife, Jesse
Jarvis (1877-1945).
|

|
|
|
Ida Ellen Carlat (1864-1937) m.
Godfrey Nevada “Van" Baker
(1864-1949)
Their
Graves
|
|
|
|

Harry Carlat in the Bread
"Truck"
|

Harry
Eugene Carlat (1872-1930) m. 1896
Birdie Dumas (1876-1966) (Bur.
in Sherman)
|
John
V. Carlat
(1865-1893) m. 1887 Ida
Hutton (1869-1905); he was killed
shortly after their marriage at a
railroad crossing while driving a
horse-drawn bread truck.
His wife won a judgment against
the Houston & Texas Central
railroad for $5500 in 1895. (The
Sunday Gazetteer,
Sunday, March 3, 1895, pg.4)
|
 |
Annie Carlat (1874-1891) m. 1891
Charles (F or H)Baer,
who lived on the farm adjoining
the Carlat farm and operated the
Baer's Ferry across the Red River.
She died in a snowstorm in
Amarillo, Texas shortly after her
son's birth. Annie's sister,
Mary, officially adopted Charlie,
changing his name to Charles
Frederick Hallenbeck.
Her Husband Charles was killed in
a runaway,
"Denison, Texas Nov 2, 1909.
Charles Baer, farmer, age 50, was
thrown by his wagon and killed
late this afternoon while on his
way to town with a load of fodder,
when his horses became frightened
and ran. He lived five miles
northwest of town"
1896 - Left to
right: Mae, age 10; Eva, age 18;
Inez, age 11; Charles, age 6
|
 |
Fred
L. Carlat (1879-1902), at
the time of his death, he was
engaged to Miss Annie Cutler.
|

|
 |

|
Biography Index
Susan Hawkins
©2025
If
you find any of Grayson County TXGenWeb links inoperable, please send me a
message.
|