Peter W. Gray - Pampa, TX
Posted by: YoSam.
N 35° 32.208 W 100° 57.834
14S E 321957 N 3934348
A Memorial to a Texan Who Served the Confederacy
Waymark Code: WMMJX4
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 09/30/2014
Views: 2
County of memorial: Gray County
Location of memorial: Russell St. & Francis St., rear courthouse lawn, Pampa
Date memorial erected: 1963
Memorial erected by: The State of Texas
Monument text:
County Named for Texas Confederate
PETER W GRAY
1819 - 1876
(Front):
Virginia-born, came to Texas 1838. Aided 1839 removal Texas Shawness. Officer in Milam Guards, Texas Republic. Political, cultural leader in Houston, Republic, State, and Confederacy: he was District Attorney, Judge, Justice Texas Supreme Court, Legislator in Texas and C.S.A. Delegate to Texas Secession Convention that raised troops to seize U.S. forts, provided for Texas frontier defense, and ratified C.S.A. Constitution.
(Back):
Gray in 1864 became Treasury Agent for the "amputated" C.S.A. Sector West of the Mississippi River. There, in effect, he was Treasury Secretary for a land in chaos. Smuggled currency was scarce. Often it was hijacked. No western press could be found to print notes. Couriers and Pony Express were Gray's "wireless" to the Confederate capital. Ammunition, arms, medicines, factory goods vital to the war effort had to be imported for Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri, as well as for Texas. Blockade-runners exported cotton via Havana to Europe. Cattle and cotton went to market in Mexico, as Gray served the gallant Confederacy.