Dallas County Pioneers Association
Dallas County Pioneers Association Homestead House in Downtown Dallas
 
© 2010 Dallas County Pioneers Association
email    Privacy Policy   Un/Subscribe to our email list

Home
Event & Meeting
  Calendar
Photo Gallery
Stories of the Pioneers
Pioneer Stories
Historical Stories
La Reunion Stories
Civil War Stories
WW I Stories
WW II Stories
Obituaries
Submit a Story
Frequently Asked Questions
Links
Publications
About Us

 
Stories of the Pioneers » Historical Stories

BECHTOL, DANIEL

Daniel and Mahala Biser Bechtol
From: Proud Heritage Vol 2 by DCPA. This 315 page hardcover book is available online.


DANIEL BECHTOL and WIFE. MAHALA BISER

Daniel Bechtol and his wife, Mahala, migrated to Duck Creek, Dallas County, Texas, from Middletown, Frederick County, Maryland, in 1876, settling on 310 acres in what is now south Garland. Daniel Bechtol was born 13 January 1824 near Middletown, the son of Ludwig (Lewis) Bechtol (1783-1851) and Catherine (Stemple) Bechtol (1782-1874). The Bechtols are believed to have been of Swiss ancestry and were among the early settlers of Pennsylvania, western Maryland, and eastern West Virginia.

Daniel Bechtol and Mahala Biser were married 10 September 1846 at Middletown. She was the daughter of John Biser (1789-1865) and Mary (Schlosser) Biser (1794-1848). Daniel and Mahala Bechtol were the parents of seven children, four of whom settled with their parents in Dallas County: Mary Catherine (born 26 November 1849, died 17 September 1923 at Garland, married 17 December 1874 to L. M. T. Flook), Daniel Wesley (born 9 April 1857, died at Rio Vista, Texas, married Melissa _____) Edward Clayton (born 10 June 1860, died 1939 at Grapevine, Texas, married 14 October 1877 to Sarah J. Willingham), and Charles Elmore (born 18 October 1862, died 31 March 1912 at Garland, married 1 November 1883 to Sarah A. Lander). A fifth sibling, John Lewis Bechtol and his wife, Alice (Linebaugh) Bechtol, came but stayed only briefly moving on to Gettersburg, Ohio.

After his father's death, Daniel Bechtol operated the family farm in the Middletown Valley for more than 20 years, caring for his widowed mother. He served a brief stint in the Union army during the Civil War. When his mother died in 1874, Daniel inherited the farm but soon sold it. In December, 1875, he purchased the farm on Duck Creek in Dallas County. The following April, he brought Mahala and their three youngest children to their new home. His daughter, Catherine, and her husband, L. M. T. Flook, had preceded the Bechtols to the Duck Creek community by a few months. Tragically, before their first year in Texas had passed, Mahala was struck down by typhoid fever and died. She was buried in what is now known as McCree Cemetery, on Audelia Road in Dallas.

The Bechtols were accompanied to Texas by a single woman, Elizabeth Babbington, who had been raised as a foster child by Daniel Bechtol's parents. A year after the death of Mahala, Daniel and Elizabeth Babbington were married and she became a beloved step-mother to Daniel's children.

Daniel Bechtol's farm fronted on the south side of present-day Kingsley Road in Garland and stretched from First Street on the east to Saturn Road on the west. Daniel primarily raised cotton, but also kept a large herd of goats - perhaps a manifestation of his Swiss heritage and something of a rarity for this part of Texas. For several years he owned and operated a cotton gin directly across Kingsley Road from his house.

A grandson of Daniel Bechtol, John L. Bechtol (1881-1979) of Grapevine, spoke of his memories of his grandfather in an oral history interview in 1972. He recalled Christmas being celebrated in the home by Daniel Bechtol bringing a 5-gallon jug of cider and Elizabeth baking a big batch of gingerbread. John Bechtol also recalled his grandfather coming to his (John's) parents' farm in Mesquite to help with the chores of hog killing in winter, when four or five animals might be slaughtered and dressed in a single day. "The last time Grandpa came down to help with hog killing, about 1893, a flock of prairie chickens flew over - 15 or 20 birds -the last I ever saw." John recounted another event in association with his memories of his grandfather, "The day Grandpa died in Garland [8 December 1905], a Mr. Ryon came to town drunk. He went into Naylor's Store [on the square], bought a six-shooter, and came out shooting. Shot one man before they could take cover!"

Daniel Bechtol's obituary in the Garland News cited his strict honesty and observed that by "... attention to business 'Uncle Dan' accumulated a handsome competency, and that without being miserly. He was always ready to help those in distress, and nothing he could do to help suffering humanity was ever withheld." Daniel Bechtol and both of his wives are buried in McCree Cemetery.

Submitted by: Jerry M. Flook
Forney. TX 75126
 

CLYDE BARROW GRAVE
FIRST PIONEER ASSOCIATION MEETING
ARNOLD, DEAN SWIFT
1854 WAGON TRAIN
1856 TORNADO
ACCURATE MACHINE WORKS
AIR CONDITIONING
AN ORGANIST REMINISCES
ANDERSON, EUGENE PEMBROOK
AXE HOMEPLACE BEING RAZED
AYERS FAMILY IN DALLAS
AYERS, SIMPSON G.
BACK, JAMES M.
BAIRD, JOHN BARNET
BECHTOL, DANIEL
BIRDWELL, RUSSELL
BIRD'S FORT
BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS
BOHNY, LIOPOLD F.
BRADEN'S CAKE SHOP
BRADY, CAMDEN C.
BRADY, HARRY G.
BRAND, ALBERT ROSCOE
BRYAN'S SMOKEHOUSE BARBcUE
BUCY, RICHARD EUGENE
BURKS VARIETY STORES
CAMP ESTATE
CAMPBELL, J. HUGH
CEMETERIES
CHURCHES
CLARK, THOMAS C.
CLARK, WILLIAM H.
CLOWER, WALTER M.
COMMUNITY STORIES
CORLEY, OWEN BATES
CORNWELL, DAN
COTTONWOOD CEMETERY
CURRY, SAMUEL E.
CURTIS, WESLEY FLETCHER
DALLAS COMMERCAIL CLUB
DALLAS COOUNTY WW II VETERANS
DALLAS COUNTY POOR FARM
DALLAS DEATHS 1871 - 1893
DALLAS LAND & LOAN CO.
DALLAS RAILWAY & TERMINAL
DALLAS TRUNK FACTORY
DALLAS' FIRST SKYSCRAPER
DCPA Reunions & Anniversaries
EAST DALLAS CHRISTIAN CHURCH
EAST DALLAS, CITY OF
FERGUSON HEIGHTS
FLORENCE, EMET DAVID
FOLSOM, JOHN VEST
FOSTER, GEORGE W. (DUB)
FROG TOWN
GILBERT, DANIEL WEBSTER
GILLESPIE, CHARLES B.
GREENE, HERBERT M.
GREENVILLE AVE. CHRISTIAN CHURCH
HAMILTON PARK
HARRIS, JAMES H.
HAWPE, TREZEVANT
HEREFORD, JOHN BRONAUGH
HUFFINES, DONALD F.
KATY RAILROAD
KEENE, ABNER
KEENE, JOHN WINFRED
KENNEDY, JAMES M.
KEMP, WILLIAM MAZWELL
KILLING AT ELM ST. HAT CO.
KILLOUGH MASSACRE
KIMBALL, JUSTIN F
KIVLEN, KEARNEY J.
LEE PARK & ARLINGTON HALL
LEXINGTON VILLAGE
LOVE FIELD'S BEGINNING
LaFON, LEEANDER CALVIN
MARSHALL, EUGENE
MARTIN, EDMINSTON KENNEDY
MAY, JOHN BYRON
MERRIFIELD, JOHN
MESQUITE COMMUNITY FAIR, 1950
MILLER, WILLIAM BROWN
MILITARY ROARD
MOB THREATENS NEGRO SLAYER
MORGAN, DANIEL
MOORLAND YMCA
MYERS, SAMUEL B.
NEIMAN MARCUS
NORTH OAK CLIFF BAPTIST CHURCH
OAK CLIFF CHRISTIAN CHURCH
OLD CITY PARK
OLD CITY PARK PRINT SHOP
ORIENTAL OIL COMPANYH
OVERTON, PERRY Speaks to DCPA
PARKLAND HOSPITAL
PARKLAND ON MAPLE AVE.
PEAK, CAPTAIN JEFFERSON
PERRY, ALEXANDER WILSON
PETERMAN, HENRY
PHELPS, JOSIAH S.
PHOTOS
PIG STANDS
PLEASANT VALLEY STORE
RAMSEY, DR. FRANK L.
RIEK, MAE
RIPLEY SHIRT FACTORY
SAMUELL, WILLIAM WORTHINGTON
SHARROCK, EVERARD
SHOOTOUT AT PLEASANT VALLEY - 051
SKILLERN, ZULA
SONS OF HERMANN
SPAINHOUR, FRED BRADEN
SPANISH INFLUENZIA EPEDEMIC 54-1
STAMPS QUARTET
STORIES OF THE PIONEERS
TANNER, JAMES HENRY, SR.
THE COVERED WAGON
TITCHE, EDWARD
TOPPIN, ANANIAS SOCRATES
TRINITY RIVER
TRINITY RIVER'S EARLY DEVELOPMENTS
TUCKER, CHARLES MASTERS
TULEY, WESLEY W.
TYLER ST. METHODIST PIPE ORGAN
WARNER, VIVIAN M. WOMACK
WEBB CHAPEL CEMETERY
WEINSTEIN, ABE
WELK, J. SIDNEY "PETE"
WHEATLAND UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
WHITE ROCK CREEK
WILLOUGHBY, HERBERT E.
WITT, PRESTON
WOOD, DAVE G.
WYRICK, JOHN S.
YEARGAN, NATHAN A. F.