If you’re going to write a story of your life, you need to start at the beginning. Well the beginning of what? Surely you don’t expect me to trace my ancestry back to Adam. I’m not a genealogy buff, but I would like to be reasonably accurate. I invite others who have this kind of information to sign up on the blog and offer appropriate comments.
My cousin, Bob Hodges, who has done genealogy work, says he can go trace the Bales side of the family back a few generations to Tennessee, but then he loses the trail. He’s obviously gone farther down the trail than I have.
Charles McKinley Bales was my paternal grandfather and he’s not my problem. Of that I’m certain. I knew him well. He is listed in the Stephens County, Texas census of 1880. His father was named Earley Bales. I don’t know too much about my great grandfather other than from stories my father told me. According to my father, Earley Bales was a teamster who ran a freight wagon from Fort Griffin to Fort Worth.
It must have been a somewhat dangerous occupation. Comanche Indians still roamed the area, and they could get nasty once in awhile. After all Fort Griffin existed to protect the settlers - those of European descent, who believed that it was their Manifest Destiny to occupy all the territory from the shores of the Atlantic to the shores of the Pacific. Most of the early white settlers probably didn’t think too much about Manifest Destiny. They were looking to better themselves, and the Indians stood in the way
James K. Polk, was one of the strongest advocates of Manifest Destiny. It was during his administration that Texas was annexed to the union. For that reason, those who proceeded westward had no compunction of conscious about forming treaties with indigenous people and then breaking those same treaties.
Of course the Comanches were not farmers. They survived by hunting, and they needed to roam widely to find their food. The population influx in the West threatened their way of life, so conflict was inevitable. That’s why places like Fort Griffin existed.
We can only imagine what Charley’s early life was like. We do know that his father died when he was yet a young boy.