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"ALL
THINGS HISTORICAL"
A weekly column syndicated in 70 East Texas newspapers
by
Bob Bowman &
Archie P. McDonald, PhD
East Texas
Industries /
Business / Towns
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- Who?
Hoo Hoo. That’s Who by Bob Bowman 1-12-09
Separated by more than 200 miles, Gurdon, Arkansas, and Lufkin,
Texas, share a unique legacy: the Concatenated Order of the Hoo
Hoo, an international fraternity of lumbermen...
- Labor
Day by Archie P. McDonald 9-1-08
Most of our national holidays commemorate civic events or religious
observances; Labor Day celebrates the concept that work is noble
and worthy of honor for its own sake...
- Chautauqua
by Bob Bowman 8-18-08
Dominating Getzendaner Park in Waxahachie, a large wooden, octagonal-roofed
pavilion stands as a symbol of entertainment and enlightment in
the days before movies and television...
- The
forgotten forests by Bob Bowman 6-23-08
A new book published by Jane G. Baxter of Nashville, Tennessee,
and Dan T. Barnes of Trinity, Texas, has captured the appearance
of the old forests that existed in the early 1900s.
- A
good ol’ store by Bob Bowman 2-11-08
Losing a community institution is like losing a good friend. Such
was the case when the Poynor General Store closed last summer
in the Henderson County community on U.S. Highway 175...
- Kirby
Lumber Company by Archie P. McDonald 1-21-08
My father-in-law, B.L. Barrett, was born in Fuqua, graduated from
high school in Kirbyville, and married Edna Idell Bass, born in
Warren. What does Fuqua, Kirbyville, and Warren have in common?:
saw mills operated by John Henry Kirby.
- History
and sawmill tokens by Bob Bowman 1-14-08
"...Inside was the finest and most complete collection of
sawmill tokens--the rarest kind of tender in early East Texas--that
I have ever seen, including any museum. Buster, 80, who retired
from the Lufkin post office in 1990, has been scouring East Texas
for the tokens since 1995. Amazingly, he has collected nearly
260 tokens, most of them from sawmill communities that have vanished..."
- Remembering
school days by Bob Bowman 11-19-07
Few things stir the nostalgia of our lives as the days we spent
in our schools decades ago.
- The
Kelly Plow by Archie P. McDonald 9-10-07
Early in the nineteenth century, American farmers broke the soil
pretty much the same way as old English grangers or even Biblical
tillers did—with wooden plows...
- Gaceta
de Teja by Archie P. McDonald 8-6-07
Readers of the Dallas Morning News, Tyler Telegraph, Gilmer Mirror,
Jefferson Jimplecute and every other newspaper in Texas may not
know about the journalistic ancestor they share. That was a single
issue of the Gaceta de Tejas, or Texas Gazette, and here is its
story.
- The
Cotton Bowl by Archie P. McDonald 5-7-07
East Texans claim Dallas-Big "D," as we once said-so a story of
the Cotton Bowl falls into our area; well, at least the stadium
is located in Dallas' east side, in Fair Park...
- The
Emporia Mystery by Bob Bowman 3-29-06
In the early 1900s, an explosion and fire spread throughout the
old Emporia sawmill in south Angelina County. An estimated 30
sawmill workers, most of them black, are believed to have perished
in the conflagration...
- The
Piney Woods by Bob Bowman 12-11-06
In view of an economic development group's plan to change the
image of the piney woods of East Texas with a new name, perhaps
a look at the history of this part of Texas is appropriate...
- The
First County Agent by Bob Bowman 11-27-06
In the early 1900s, during a time of low crop production and a
depressed farm economy in East Texas, Tyler and Smith County pioneered
a concept that celebrates its 100th anniversary this year--the
county agricultural agent.
- The
first "over water" oil well by Bob Bowman 10-30-06
n the early l900s, 27-year-old Walter B. Pyron, of Blossom, Texas,
a production foreman for Guffy Oil Company, noticed gas bubbles
rising from Caddo Lake.
- Air
Conditioning by Archie P. McDonald 7-3-06
When someone asks my wife how people lived in Texas before air-conditioning,
she says that no one did. That is partly true and partly false,
but we can all agree that the a/c makes surviving Texas’ summers
a happier experience. The old timers coped, however, and here
is how.
- Nethery's
Store by Bob Bowman 6-11-06
In hundreds of small towns in East Texas, the general store was
the hub of the community--a place where neighbors visited, made
purchases of everything they needed, and usually put it on credit.
Few, if any, of the old general stores remain today. Most were
simply victims of changing times. However, in the little town
of Milam near the Texas-Louisiana border, you can sample the flavor
of what old general stores looked and felt like.
- East
Texas Savior of the French Wine Industry by Archie P. McDonald
6-5-06
Those who favor a glass of wine, especially French wine, may not
be aware of the debt they and the French owe to Dr. Thomas Volney
Munson of Denison, Texas
- Pink
Palace of Healing by Archie P. McDonald 5-8-06
University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
- Kinkaid
School by Archie P. McDonald 4-24-06
When I attended French High School in Beaumont, Texas, early in
the 1950s, we "country hicks" from the north side of town looked
across town at students in the tonier Beaumont High School, many
of whose students lived in the affluent westside along Calder
Avenue. It would have been above our station to know that Beaumont
Highers felt the same way about the scholars at Kinkaid School
in Houston.
- Gilmer,
Texas by Archie P. McDonald 3-11-06
It is presumptuous for a native of Beaumont and long-time
resident of Nacogdoches to be writing about Gilmer, Texas. Only
admiration for my long-time friend and publisher of the Gilmer
Mirror-and being able to take advantage of the research of Mary
Kirby - provides the courage to do so.
- Why
did they call it that? by Bob Bowman 3-7-06
Don't let anyone tell you that the people who picked names for
some of East Texas' earliest communities were not imaginative
or lacked a sense of humor.
- Brotherhood
of Timber Workers by Archie P. McDonald 1-16-06
Those engaged in a common activity often refer to themselves as
“brothers” or “sisters,” but the Brotherhood of Timber Workers
refers to something rare in East Texas—a labor union.
- The
Boll Weevil by Archie P. McDonald 1-1-06
The boll weevil found its home, much to the chagrin of East Texas
cotton growers.
- All
Journalism is Local by Archie P. McDonald 12-26-05
"Tip O’Neil reminded us that 'all politics is local.' Millard
Cope taught us that the best journalism is local, too."
- A
Christmas Treat by Bob Bowman 12-19-05
"Stars top the sixty replica derricks, helping Kilgore maintain
its title as the state's official "City of Stars." Kilgore is
also among the stops on the Holiday Trail of Lights, which includes
Marshall and Jefferson in East Texas and Natchitoches and Shreveport
in Louisiana."
- The
Poinsettia by Archie P. McDonald 12-11-05
Every Christmas your house and mine brightens with the seasonal
introduction of the poinsettia plant with its red and green leaves
and tiny yellow blooms. Perhaps you would like to know how such
came to be.
- A
steamboat’s Tale by Bob Bowman 9-18-05
The Ruthven
- Demise
of a town by Bob Bowman 6-14-05
"In the 1960s, Camden -- a sawmill town tucked away in the
tall pines of northern Polk County -- held a special place in
history. It was the last company town in East Texas..."
- Sharecroppers
by Archie P. McDonald 4-24-05
- Shacklefoot
by Bob Bowman 4-1-05
The community existed two centuries ago as a robbers den perched
on the Texas side of the Sabine River somewhere near the present-day
settlement of Patroon Bay on Toledo Bend Reservoir.
- Why
Did They Name It That? by Archie P. McDonald 3-9-05
Cut and Shoot, Texas
- Bet-A-Million
Gates by Archie P. McDonald 2-16-05
John Warne Gates, a native of Winfield, Illinois, became associated
with three of Texas’ most important items: barbed wire, railroads,
and oil.
- Nazis
in East Texas by Bob Bowman 1-1-05
German POWs providing labor for the lumber industry in East Texas
during WWII.
- John
Henry Kirby by Archie P. McDonald 12/20/04
Founder of a firm that eventually operated sawmills in the heart
of the pineywoods and controlled 300,000 acres of timberland...
- The
Four Towns of Onalaska by Bob Bowman 10/15/04
This year, as Onalaska celebrates the 100th anniversary of its
founding, townspeople are discovering more about their past, including
the fact there are four Onalaskas in the United States
- Braniff
International by Archie P. McDonald 9/7/04
"Long before American Airlines moved to Dallas or Continental
dominated Houston, Braniff flew the skies over Texas."
- Webster's
Buck by by Bob Bowman
The San Augustine Tribune, publisher Webster Hays and his buck.
- Texas
First Cattle King by Archie P. McDonald 2/23/04
- Inventing
the Oilfield Pumping Unit by Bob Bowman 1/20/04
The invention of the counterbalanced pumping unit -- the most
visual piece of machinery in today's oilfields.
- The
Front Camps by Bob Bowman 1/6/04
Today, they're little more than trails or clearings in the forest.
They were logging camps - the short lived and sometimes mobile
communities which supported the earliest East Texas sawmills.
- Air
Pioneer by Bob Bowman 12/03
- Forestry
Education by Archie P. McDonald 10/19/03
- A
Geography Lesson by Bob Bowman 11/02
- Hemphill,
Texas by Archie P. McDonald 7/7/02
- Old
Concord by Bob Bowman 6/8/02
- San
Augustine by Archie P. McDonald 5/10/02
- Almost
a Houston by Bob Bowman 1/31/02
- Holiday
Day Trips by Bob Bowman, 12/2/01
- New
Birmingham and East Texas Iron by Archie P. McDonald, 9/15/01
- Turpentiners
by Bob Bowman, 7/15/01
- Saratoga
by Archie P. McDonald, 7/10/01
- Wonder
Why They Named it That by Archie P. McDonald, 5/5/01
- Radio
Days by Bob Bowman, 4/22/01
- The
50,000 Shoeshine by Bob Bowman, 4/8/01
- Homer
Bryce by Archie P. McDonald, 2/18/01
- Lyne
Taliaferro Barret by Archie P. McDonald, 2/4/01
- When
Oil Became An Industry by Archie P. McDonald, 12/24/00
- The
Pioneer Paper Machine by Bob Bowman, 11/5/00
- The
Lone Star Brand by Archie P. McDonald, 10/8/00
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Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history, stories,
landmarks and recent or vintage photos, please contact
us. |
Books by
Archie P. McDonald - Order Here
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