Lone Star Lore
Welcome to Lone Star Lore - hosted by filmmaker Matthew Thornton, and written by historian Joleene Maddox Snider, the series pairs immersive narration and cinematic sound with expert guests who help us ask better questions: * What happens when a place this vast and mythologized tries to agree on one story? * Who owns Texas history? * And how do the stories we inherit still shape who we are today? How History Is Written — Part I: Evidence, Interpretation, and Cynthia Ann Parker Before we can argue about what happened in Texas history, we first have to ask how we know what we know — and why some versions of the past endure while others fade. In this episode, we step away from events themselves and into the process of historical research. Using the life of Cynthia Ann Parker as our case study, we explore how historians work with incomplete records, conflicting accounts, and inherited myths — and how research, interpretation, and humility shape what eventually becomes “history.” With research librarian and historian Margaret Vaverek (Texas State University), we examine primary and secondary sources, the evolution of historical method, and the ways technology — from digitization to artificial intelligence — has changed how the past is accessed, questioned, and understood. This episode lays the groundwork for Part II, where these research principles will be put to the test in a close examination of Cynthia Ann Parker’s recapture by Sul Ross at the Battle of Pease River. Written by: Joleene Maddox Snider Hosted & Produced by: Matthew Thornton Featuring: Margaret Vaverek Produced by: Griffyn.Co Productions About Margaret Vaverek: Margaret Vaverek is a historian and research librarian at Texas State University, where she teaches students and scholars how to work responsibly with historical sources. Her work focuses on information literacy, archival research, and guiding searchers into becoming careful, critical researchers. Research Concepts from this Episode: Primary vs. Secondary Sources Information Literacy and Historical Method Myth, Memory, and the Written Record Historiography and Revision Archives, Digitization, and Access Technology, AI, and the Limits of the Record Timestamps / Chapter Guide: 00:00 – The thrill of the hunt: why research matters (Margaret) 00:38 – Lone Star Lore theme song 01:21 – A research story that flips the “Boston Tea Party” myth (Margaret) 02:43 – What this two-part arc is doing: story + process (Host) 03:34 – Fort Parker, 1836: Cynthia Ann’s capture (Jo) 08:53 – Cynthia Ann as a Comanche woman; Quanah Parker and the 1875 surrender (Jo) 09:54 – Pease River, 1860: recapture and return to white society (Jo) 13:50 – Recap + the core problem: what the record can’t tell us (Host) 15:09 – Primary vs. secondary sources: what “evidence” really means (Margaret) 16:17 – Myth vs. reality: “old” vs “new” histories and why they diverge (Jo + Host) 20:03 – Scholarship as conversation + the fragility of archives (Margaret) 23:34 – Digitization & AI: access, risk, and the limits of the record (Margaret + Host) 28:08 – Final takeaway + Part II setup (Host)
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