Ghosthunting San Antonio, Austin, and Texas Hill Country. Michael Varhola
ONE OF SAN ANTONIO’S smaller municipal parks, 96-acre Comanche Lookout Park emits a sense of being a microcosm and frequently seems more isolated than it really is, despite being surrounded by major roads, shopping plazas, and housing developments. Those who visit it during normal business hours are likely to get an accentuated feel of this and, other than a few headphone-wearing people who jog by wraithlike and without acknowledgement, are likely to have the place pretty much to themselves. That, of course, can be the best way to explore and appreciate this profoundly historical site, to investigate the legends associated with it, and to possibly come into contact with some of the many ghosts who have long been believed to haunt it. And, as strange and haunting as it might feel on its face to the casual visitor or ghosthunter, an investigation of its history will reveal some genuinely strange things about it.
At 1,340 feet above sea level, what is also sometimes known as Comanche Hill is the highest point in northeastern Bexar County, at one time offering unobstructed views of the surrounding countryside. Only sporadic peeks are now available through gaps in the dense forest of native ash juniper, chinaberry, graneno, honey mesquite, huisache Lindheimer hackberry, live oak, and Texas and Mexican buckeye covering the slopes of the hill. At the time that what is now San Antonio was settled by Spanish colonists, however, the south Texas plains to the south and east and the hills of the Edwards Plateau rising up to the north and west were predominantly grasslands over which buffalo roamed. This ecosystem was maintained by immense fires that would periodically break out along the Gulf Coast and work their way northward over a period of months, killing any saplings that had sprouted up since the last conflagration swept through. Modern fire protection, roads, and infrastructure have greatly reduced the impact of these wildfires and allowed for the succession of forests in areas, including Texas Hill Country, that were formerly seas of grass.
Like many places in Texas where people lived at the time of initial European contact, what became known as the Comanche Lookout was at least sporadically inhabited since prehistoric times by Paleo-Indians from no later than about 9500 B.C. onward.
In the 1700s and 1800s, Apache and then Comanche Indians hunted along nearby waterways that included seasonal Cibolo Creek, and used the hill both as a meeting place and a lookout from which they could scan the landscape for game. When Spanish colonists began traveling from Nacogdoches in east Texas for purposes of settling along the banks of the San Antonio River, the Comanches were able to spot them as well from the crest of the hill. This allowed the Indians to muster war bands in the hours before travelers arrived and to ambush them as they passed by the base of the hill along what was then known as the Camino Real—the “Royal Road”—and what is now known as Nacogdoches Road, a route that followed traditional Indian trails. The hill thus became a prominent landmark that told travelers not just that they were nearing their destination but also that they might soon be exposed to mortal danger as they completed the last leg of their journey, between Bastrop and San Antonio. Significant bloodshed occurred in the vicinity of the hill and continued to one extent or another into the 1870s.
The land surrounding and including Comanche Hill was part of a 1,476-acre land grant surveyed for owner James Conn in April 1847, and over the following 17 months the property was transferred to a number of other owners, including Peter W. Gray, a lawyer, legislator, and officer in the Texas Army; Alexander Patrick; and Ludovic Colquhoun, a surveyor and state senator. Frequent sale of land grants was not uncommon during the period of the Republic of Texas, so this is not overly exceptional in and of itself. This was also, however, the era of the bloody Indian Wars, and it bears asking whether either physical threat or the lingering spiritual energies of a site that had been used since time immemorial might not have played a role in these very short periods of ownership.
In September 1848, Mirabeau B. Lamar, a career diplomat, soldier, and politician who served as the second president of the Republic of Texas, acquired the property containing the Comanche Lookout. Exactly why he purchased it is unclear, and he appears to have not put it to any use during the remaining 11 years of his life. It passed to his daughter, Loretto Evalina, who was only 7 years old at the time of his death in 1859. She ultimately married Samuel Douglass Calder, member of another prominent Texas family, and they lived in Galveston and apparently did not use the property for anything, either. In July 1890, the Calders sold 524.6 acres of the land for $3,500 to brothers Gustav and Adolph Reeh, a pair of German immigrants who lived in Bexar County and used the land for farming. Then, in February 1923, following the death of Adolph, Gustav sold a part of the land containing the hill to retired U.S. Army Colonel Edward H. Coppock for $6,000.
Coppock was a 44-year veteran of the service who had fought in the wars against the Apache and Sioux, the Spanish-American War, the Philippine Insurrection, and World War I. He was also a history aficionado and romantic who had spent time in Europe and who had decided that he was going to build a full-sized, U-shaped castle on the slopes and flat crown of Comanche Hill. With help from his two sons, Edward Jr. and E. S., and a Mexican laborer named Tarquino Cavazos about which little else is known, he began to lay the foundations for and construct what was clearly intended to be a sprawling complex.
By 1928, they had completed the four-story, Norman-style stone tower that can be seen on the hill today and which was modeled after “a similar structure erected by William the Conqueror at the site of the Battle of Hastings in the 11th century,” according to a 1948 newspaper article. In addition to this, over the 25 years that Coppock developed the property they also built a stone lodge, several outbuildings, a 2,500-gallon water tower, a Spanish-style corral, picnic tables, a barbecue pit, a tennis court, and some smaller homes since destroyed by fire. Both Coppock and Cavazos died in 1948, however. The colonel’s sons then abandoned the project and in 1968 sold the land to a developer.
Initially, the new owner began to move ahead with plans to develop the land and started by removing all of the structures on the property except for the tower and some of the foundations. For whatever reasons, however, they did not move ahead with any new construction and nothing was ever again built on or right around the hill. The property continued to change hands over the following years until, in the 1980s, the owner became insolvent and had to liquidate its assets, which led to acquisition of the property by the U.S. government’s Resolution Trust Corporation in 1990.
Around this time a private group called Save Comanche Lookout led an effort to preserve the site that resulted in the Trust for Public Lands providing an interim loan to the city of San Antonio to purchase the site for a park. A 1994 bond issue provided the funds to repay this loan and develop the site.
“In 1995, the Parks and Recreation Department retained landscape architectural consultant Laffoon Associates to analyze the site and develop a conceptual plan that would preserve the park’s natural and cultural assets,” the city’s official description of the site says. The first phase of development included construction of off-street parking, service roads, some trails, and installation of drinking fountains. The second phase of development was funded with $762,300 from a 1999 bond election and was completed in conjunction with construction of a branch library on the perimeter of the park, additional parking improvements and trails, picnic and restroom facilities, and landscaping. In 2004–05, the San Antonio Parks Foundation contributed $100,000 for an outdoor classroom.
IT WAS DURING THIS PERIOD that the Center for Archaeological Research at the University of Texas at San Antonio released, in 1998, “An Archaeological Investigation of Comanche Lookout Park.” Suffice it to say that this report reveals some interesting things about the history and prehistory of the hill and the area surrounding it, including the presence of an ancient chert quarry, toolmaking area, and campsite. What it does not say, however, is perhaps even more interesting, but we may never know what that is, and it is here that we encounter one of those rare glimpses of officialdom coming into contact with things so strange that they cannot credibly deny or reveal their existence. Three pages of this report have, in fact—pages 2, 18, and 19—been redacted because they contain what is described as “restricted information.” This sensitive information is being withheld not by a government agency but rather by a public research university, and is not about a site in some hellhole like North Korea but rather one right in the middle of an urban area in the United States. Whatever those