Bill
Cherry's Galveston Memories |
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Because
I have written so much about Galveston,
her people and her past, most people assume I’m from a multi-generational
island family.
The truth is I was the first one of this family of Cherrys that
was born on the island. All before me were born in Kentucky and
Louisiana.
Quite frankly, it’s a source of embarrassment for me. Why would
they have wanted to live in Kentucky and Louisiana when Galveston
was here?
My very first friend on this earth was Butch Kelso. We met in 1944
because we lived across the street from each other. Butch was three
and I was four.
That best buddy friendship has remained strong for all of the subsequent
68 years.
In fact we are so close to being blood brothers that we decided
it would be alright for me to claim his son, Mark, as my nephew.
And I do it with pride.
Butch and his wife, Judy Kobarg Kelso, are both from families that
settled on the island in its early years as a city.
Butch’s mother’s side just after the Civil War; Judy’s father’s
family in the early 1900s.
Both families quickly became prominent.
When my nephew, Mark, and his wife, Jennifer Beck Kelso, had their
first child on April 4th, 2012, Mark Andrew “Drew” Kelso, Jr. became
a sixth generation Galvestonian.
As
World War I ended in
1918, Barbara Bornefeld was born into two prominent island families
– the Herman Bornefelds and the Alphonse Kennisons. Herman Bornefeld
was in the steamship business, Fowler and McVitie. Herman’s wife,
Lucie, was the daughter of the Alphonse Kennisons.
The Kennisons were in the insurance business. Kennison and Beers
was its name.
Lucie played the violin and was a Latin scholar. She tutored Butch
and me in Latin.
Herman was involved in the Galveston
politics of the old corporation form of government.
I remember one of his old campaign posters strapped to a heating
duct in their 24th and Avenue L home’s basement.
By June 26, 1941, Barbara Bornefeld had finished two years at University
of Texas, pledged Kappa, made her debut at the Galveston Artillery
Club, married Walter A. Kelso, Jr., moved into a new brick home
that her husband and his father’s company had built, and given birth
to Walter A. “Butch” Kelso, III.
Within what seemed like moments, again her life changed. World
War II was going strong, and Barbara’s husband, now a lieutenant,
was shipped out overseas.
Not more than days before the armistice was signed, Barbara became
a widow and contemporaneously Butch was without a father.
Barbara never remarried, although that didn’t interfere with her
social life. She was an active artist, sailor, Red Cross certified
swimming instructor, bridge player and spent most Sunday mornings
in her chosen pew at Trinity Episcopal Church.
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Barbara B. Kelso
Circa 1950
Photo courtesy Mark Kelso |
Throughout most
of those years after Walter, Jr., died, she was the assistant librarian
at the University of Texas Medical Branch.
Barbara died in 2001, leaving a significant vacant space in many of
our hearts.
After college, Butch married Judy Kobarg whose family emigrated from
Germany to Galveston
in the early 1900s.
Carl Johannes Kobarg became a delivery man for the famous grocer,
Peter Gengler. Anna Bilkernroth, who came to Galveston
in 1904, became the personal assistant and cook for Mrs. Waverly Smith.
Carl and Anna met when he delivered groceries to the Smith’s home.
The romance blossomed and when they announced their engagement, Mrs.
Smith was so pleased that she took Anna to New York by steamer ship
so that she could buy Anna a wedding dress.
Within a decade or so, the Carl Kobargs owned a major island dairy.
My family bought fresh milk from them for years at their downtown
Market Street store.
Butch and Judy’s son, Mark, graduated from the maritime academy at
Texas A&M, and he married another maritime graduate, Jennifer Beck
from Midlothian.
They now live, along with son, Drew, in the home that W.A. Kelso,
Jr. and Sr. had built for Drew’s great-grandparents. |
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Jennifer and
Mark Kelso with Drew
April, 2012 photo courtesy Mark Kelso
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The
jingle of cash registers of islanders paying bar tabs, restaurant
checks and settling up gambling debts was especially prolific during
the 1940s and early into the 1950s.
Lots of rather shallow reasons for Galveston’s
earning the moniker of Playground of the South have been advanced
over the years. But there’s one that has lurched in the background
but has never been spoken about, not even as loud as a stage whisper.
America’s troubles of those generations had passed down and compounded
almost as an accountant’s accrual.
The city’s balance sheet was full of a multitude of parents, grandparents,
sons and daughters, and friends who were either casualties of World
War I, or the financial despair of the Great Depression, the
five years of World
War II, even the Korean Conflict that immediately followed.
They played to forget.
While most of the members of those families have moved on, there
is a very special core that never will. This branch of the Kobargs
and Kelsos are a strong part of that special core.
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