TexasEscapes.com We Take Texas Personally
A Texas Travel, History & Architecture Magazine
SITE MAP : : NEW : : RESERVATIONS : : TEXAS TOWNS A-Z : : FEATURES : : COLUMNS : ::ARCHITECTURE : : IMAGES
HOME
SEARCH SITE
RESERVATIONS
Hotels
Cars
Air
USA
World
Cruises
TEXAS TRAVEL
TOWNS A to Z
Towns by Region
Ghost Towns
TRIPS :
State Parks
Rivers
Lakes
Drives
Maps
LODGING
TEXAS
FORUM
FEATURES :
Ghosts
People
Historic Trees
Cemeteries
ARCHITECTURE :
Courthouses
Jails
Bridges
Theaters
Churches
Gas Stations
Water Towers
Monuments/Statues
Schoolhouses
Post Offices
Depots
IMAGES :
Old Neon
Murals
Signs
BOOKS
COLUMNS
TE Site
Site Information
Recommend Us
Newsletter
About Us
Contact TE
 
 Home : Forum
October 2004

Texas Forum | Travel Forum

This Forum for the exchange and sharing of travel/Texas information.

Anyone wishing to add to this forum, please send your message to webmaster@texasescapes.com. We reserve the right to edit your message. Only messages suitable for publishing would be posted here. Thank you.
  • Westphalia, Texas
    Here is a picture of the Church of the Visitation located in Westphalia, Texas. I enjoy your site very much. - Beverly Reid, October 31, 2004

  • Flomot, Texas
    The man who ran the little grocery store in the late 50's - early 60's was Harrison George. He is deceased, but his wife Oma Lee still comes back to Flomot for homecoming, which is held July 4 weekend every third year (Next one will be in 2005). I graduated from Flomot High School in 1969. My father and grandfather, Wayne and Horace Hunter, ran a cotton gin there. My mother, Jimmie Speer Hunter, grew up in Flomot and taught school there for a few years. It was a very good place to live. There are fewer people living there now, but they are still the best people you could hope to meet. Mary Ellen ("Dude") Barton still lives there. She was inducted into the Cowgirl Hall of Fame in Ft. Worth. - Anita Hunter, Lubbock, Texas, October 31, 2004


  • Newton, Texas
    The Sylvan Nature Trail, a Temple-Inland property, has been renamed Horse Sugar Nature Trail. This trail was renamed because it is now famous for its state champion Common Sweetleaf, also known as Horse Sugar. - Pam Wright, Volunteer Newton County Chamber of Commerce, October 28, 2004

  • Texas Ghost Towns
    I am a Texas Genealogist and love your section on Texas Ghost towns and I think your website ought to be linked to a Free Genealogy site such as www.Rootsweb.com for other genealogist to enjoy your articles. It sure can help with researching towns in Texas that no longer exist that are named on Texas Census Records. ... Please by all means continue this Great Site - Debra Kiggans LaMel, Wichita Falls, October 27, 2004


  • I only recently discovered your site. I think it is fantastic! I have not even scratched the surface of all that is in there, I'm sure! Bravo! - Mary Vonzastrow, October 26, 2004

  • Middlewater, Texas
    The original school for Middlewater was two wood structured buildings. In August of 1930 a $12,000 dollar bond election was held to build a new school, which is the brick structure still standing today, well, sort of standing. The brick school house opened in 1931 and classes were held there until around 1960 when most of the smaller school districts were consolidated to the larger towns. The original wood buildings were sold to local ranches and moved there for bunk houses. A great reference for this is the "Tale of Two Counties, Dallam and Hartley County". Also see "Panhandle Pilgrimage", it has a photo of the Rock Island Railroad Depot on page 300.

    The original cattle shipping pens still stand where they loaded and shipped cattle via Railroad. Also still there is the old water pump jack used to refill the old steam engines. - Randy Johnson, October 24, 2004


  • McDade, Texas
    Your web [page] for McDade Texas mentions a search for the grave of James W. McDade, the man who founded McDade. James Wilkins McDade apparently never lived in McDade -- his founding of the town named for him being to support his railroad interests. He also co-founded Hempstead, Texas along with Dr. Richard R. Peebles, and that is where he died and is buried. The article your page quotes about McDade Texas notes this fact: "the town was officially platted and named after James W. McDade, who lived in Brenham". James W. McDade's gravesite is supposed to be in his family cemetery that was on the edge of his estate on the outskirts of Hempstead (not in or near McDade, Texas). Mr. McDade also donated land adjacent to his family cemetery for a cemetery for Union soldiers who were interred there during the Civil War. That cemetery now seems to be lost, though there is a marker on the road for the old Union Soldiers' Cemetery. - Tom Cloud, October 24, 2004

  • Kilgore, Texas Theaters
    There was the Crim Theater, and the one you don't have named was Texan Theater.......all interior was done in western style decor. - Jean Broussard, October 24, 2004


  • Oakville, Texas
    My dad was born and raised in Oakville(born in 1935). As a child living there I remember the Rosebrock's that lived in the jailhouse. It is also rumoured that the big oak tree on the lot is the old hanging tree.

    I really wish the state could restore the place for future Texans.It derserves a place in our history. Thanks for the Site - Kim Harrod Ratliff , October 16, 2004

  • Lotta, Texas
    J. E. Mclemore was my great grandfather and he indeed named the community after his beloved wife. They were third cousins and had 12 children. He bought 10 thousand acres of peach orchards. (That is what I was told). His oldest daughter was Mozelle and when she was 18 he appointed her as postmistress to the post office at the train station. There was a huge house built with only four rooms [including] a dormitory for the girls and one for the boys. The dining room table always had 25 or more to eat and was in the hall. There was a teacher and a German couple that ran the smoke house and helped with the cooking. The family was from Dallas and was very wealthy. Mr. McLemore was not skilled to run a large peach plantation and the family lost the largest part of their money on this venture. Mr. McLemores sectretary was Mr. Martin Luther. He was a salesman, an honorary Colonel, a great spokesman and author of at least one book on salesmanship. He was also the fastest telegrapher in Texas at the age of 21. - Holly Swanson, Saginaw, Texas, October 15, 2004

  • Rosebud - Mayer Kola
    My great grandfather, GL Mayer, had a soda pop bottling company in Rosebud from 1904 to 1926. I would be very interested in getting any information about the company and hearing any local stories about Mayer Kola.

    I am one of but a few Mayers left so I don't have any family to get information from. If the gentle people of Rosebud could help me out I would be sincerely grateful. - Marilynn Cullison, October 22, 2004

  • Loyola Beach, Texas
    From about March, 1961 through March. 1962, I was in the US Navy stationed at the Riviera Beach Radar Site #55. We made excursions, when we had money, to all of the local communities. Riviera and Luke`s HWY 77 Bar...most of the floor was gone from it...a Mexican bar just across the tracks, 2 restaurants, neither of which I can remember the name of. The one on the north side of town was owned by 2 sisters, I believe, and other relatives of theirs were always there, including the two brothers/cousins? who operated the gas station/garage. A one room barber shop next to Lukes, in about the same disarray. The grocery store, owned by a man whose son was a star football player for Riviera High School. The other restaurant, operated by a lady and her boyfriend, mostly a BBQ joint, located on the South end of town. Riviera beach, a bait stand and beer joint, operated by a treasure hunter, his wife and about 5 kids. Their last name was Brown.... Vattman, or Loyola Beach, as we called it..Henry Kush, his wife and ex-wife operated The Green Frog, sold and drank lots of beer..and Henry and his red headed British wife could cook just about anything. And cook it good. The Bayview Inn, on the water, mainly a beer joint, the little Trading Post, and, of course, The King`s Inn which had about the best sea food I have ever eaten. The rest of the village was a collection of dilipidated tourist "courts", a rusted trailer or two and a few homes here and there. I had a fine year there, even if I can`t remember the names. The school principal`s mother lived out near the Site and would bring us fresh grapefruit from her trees.... - Wayne Sims, October 10, 2004

More
HOME
Privacy Statement | Disclaimer
Website Content Copyright ©1998-2004. Texas Escapes - Blueprints For Travel, LLC. All Rights Reserved
This page last modified: December 22, 2004