Lone Wolf - Ranger Captain Manual T. Gonzaullas. (original) (raw)

The Lone Wolf, at least in the figurative sense, is once again at the center of a mystery.

Long-time Ranger Captain Manual T. Gonzaullas, one of Texas� best-known 20th century law enforcement officers, died at 85 on Feb. 13, 1977 in a Dallas hospital. Old-time Rangers, Department of Public Safety officials, younger officers and many friends packed his funeral service two days later.

Born in Spain on July 4, 1891 to a Spanish father and Canadian mother, Gonzaullas was orphaned by the devastating 1900 Galveston hurricane. He got his first taste of gunfire as a major in the Mexican Army in 1911 and later spent five years as a U.S. Customs border guard. Joining the Rangers in 1920, he served until fired by Gov. Miriam Ferguson in 1933.

Two years later, when the Department of Public Safety was organized, Gonzaullas was hired to set up the new law enforcement agency�s crime lab. In 1940, he opted to return to the Ranger service and soon became captain of Co. B in Dallas. Among numerous other high-profile cases, Gonzaullas spearheaded the investigation into Texarkana�s infamous Phantom Killer murders in 1946. The captain usually prevailed in what he set out to do, but Rangers never apprehended a suspect in the Texarkana slayings. He retired in 1951.

�In my opinion,� his old boss DPS director Col. Homer Garrison said in 1963, �Gonzaullas will go down in history as one of the great Rangers of all time.�

Indeed, historians consider Gonzaullas a key player in the modernization of the Rangers. But a third of a century after his death, a writer has made a surprising discovery.

Ron Franscell, who is working on a book called �Outlaw Texas� that will explore some 400 outlaw-related sites from pirate Jean Lafitte�s base in Galveston to the former Enron headquarters in Houston, decided the final resting place of Lone Wolf was definitely worthy of inclusion.

The San Antonio resident went to Dallas last fall to collect Global Positioning System (GPS) coordinates and photograph various graves in the area for his book, due out in 2010. One of his stops was Dallas� Sparkman-Hillcrest Memorial Park Cemetery, where Franscell had read that the famed former Ranger captain had been laid to rest. That�s when he got a shock.

�The cemetery had no record of him, or anyone by that name,� Franscell said. �Later research shows he had been cremated but his wife Laura died the following year and she, too, was listed as being buried at Sparkman-Hillcrest.�

Finding no �Gonzaullas� in their records at Sparkman-Hillcrest, a helpful funeral home clerk even checked under �Gonzales� in case someone had made a spelling error back when. Again, nothing that fit Lone Wolf and his wife came to light.

The sprawling cemetery, located at 7405 W. Northwest Highway on Dallas� north side certainly has its share of notables. Oil tycoon H.L. Hunt, blues musician Freddie King, baseball great Mickey Mantle and actress Greer Garson among others are buried there.

Franscell says he walked around the cemetery looking for a grave marker for Gonzaullas and his wife but found none.

�It�s possible he is really at Sparkman-Hillcrest and their records are wrong,� Franscell continues, �or that when he was cremated and given to Laura, she scattered the ashes somewhere or was buried with them herself when she died�or they were both scattered somewhere else. They had no children.�