Young
Frank Augustus Hamer, Texas Ranger
©2002
Texas Ranger Hall of Fame
Francis Augustus Hamer
"Frank"
1884 - 1955
Captain Frank
Hamer (pronounced Hay-mer) was born on March 17, 1884 in Fairview, Wilson
County, Texas. He grew up on the Welch Ranch in San Saba County. The
family moved to Oxford, Texas in 1894. Hamer worked in his father's
blacksmith shop and later as a wrangler on the ranch of Barry Ketchum.
In 1905, while working as a cowboy on the Carr Ranch, Hamer helped to
capture a horse thief. Afterwards, the sheriff recommended Hamer to
the Texas Rangers.
Hamer joined the Rangers in April 1906. He
became part of Captain J. H. Rogers' Company C, patrolling the border
in south Texas. In 1908 he resigned from the Rangers to become the City
Marshal of Navasota, Texas. He served in this position until April 1911
when he became a special officer in Harris County. Hamer rejoined the
Ranger in 1915. He was once again patrolling the south Texas border
from the Big Bend to Brownsville. The Rangers dealt with arms smugglers,
bootleggers, and bandits throughout the area. In 1921 Hamer transferred
to Headquarters Company in Austin (now part of Company F) and served
as Senior Ranger Captain.
In the 1920s Hamer was instrumental in helping
to bring order to the oil boom towns such as Mexia and Borger. In 1928
he took on the Texas Bankers' Association "reward ring." Hamer charged
that some people were framing others and also tracking down and killing
small-time outlaws to collect the Bankers' $5,000 reward for every dead
bank robber. Once the scam was made public, the Bankers' Association
changed their policy to a reward for every legally killed bank robber.
Hamer retired from the Rangers in 1932, but retained a special Ranger
commission.
In 1934 the retired Capt. Hamer was hired as
a Special Investigator for the Texas prison system to track down gangsters
Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow. The notorious outlaws had killed more
than a dozen law enforcement officers and unarmed citizens in a crime
spree spanning several states. The Texas prison system became involved
when the Barrow gang broke into a State prison, freed a gang member
and killed an officer. After a three-month search, Hamer and Texas and
Louisiana law enforcement officers ambushed and killed the criminals
near Gibsland, Louisiana.
During the 1930s Hamer worked for various oil
companies and shippers helping to prevent strikes and breaking up mobs.
He was called again to Ranger duty in 1948 by Governor Coke Stevenson
to help check election returns in Jim Wells and Duval County in the
U. S. Senate race.
Frank
Hamer retired in 1949 and lived in Austin until his death in 1955. He
is buried in Austin's Memorial Park.
Suggestions
for further reading:
- H. Gordon Frost and John H. Jenkins, I'm Frank Hamer, Austin: 1968
- Lee Simmons, Assignment Huntsville,
Austin: 1957
- William W. Sterling, Trails and Trials
of a Texas Ranger, Norman, OK: 1968
- Vertical files, Barker History Center, University
of Texas at Austin; Texas Ranger Adjutant General's Service Records,
Texas State Archives, Austin, TX
- Vertical files, Texas Ranger Research Center,
Texas Ranger Hall of Fame and Museum, Waco, TX.
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