The cave just beyond the First Crossing of Devils River was described by
Robert A. Eccleston in his diary of his journey over the
San Antonio-El Paso Road with the military expedition that pioneered the route in 1849:
"Wednesday, July 11. ... After passing through a rocky country for about 3 miles, we came to water in a bed of rock. ... We here visited some caves in the rocks of considerable extent, in which were found Indian drawings, &c., such as buffaloes, men. They were colored."[3]
Thirty years later Burr G. Duval described the site in his "Journal of a Prospecting Trip to West Texas in 1879":
Friday, Jan. 9. Pulled out of Devils River, 7 a.m. doubled teams up the hill. Moved only about 8 miles and camped near a water hole on the headwaters of Painted Cave Spring Creek. Painted Cave, two miles out of Devils River, is a noted camp and cave grotto, rather, which was formerly embellished with numerous Indian picture writings, no longer to be seen, but in their place appear the mysterious characters, "S. T. 1860", "X Plantation Bitters", "Tutt's Pills", "Sozodont," etc. showing that the Star of Empire still takes its way westward and that the peripatetic advertising agent is still aboard on "Devils River."[5]
The site was submerged by the construction of Lake Amistad in 1969.
References
^Gunnar M. Brune, Springs of Texas, Volume 1, Texas A&M University Press, 2002, p.455
^
abRobert Eccleston, Edited by
George P. Hammond and Edward H. Howes, Overland to California on the Southwestern Trail, University of California Press, Berkeley, 1950, pp.63-64, note 7
^Federal Writers Project, Texas: A Guide to the Lone Star State, Texas State Highway Commission, 1940, North American Book Dist LLC, June 1, 1990, pp, 31, 613-614, 617