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  • Texas Escapes Online Magazine

    November 2011 Issue
    For people who like this sort of thing
    This is the sort of thing they like.
    Rising Tide
    History
  • The Rising Tide of Revolution by Jeffery Robenalt 11-1-11
    Mexico's independence from Spain and the Mexican Constitution of 1824 brought a new wave of American immigration to Texas. Not only did the settlers have to cope with the usual hardships of beginning life in a new land, but they also had to adjust to living in a country with a set of customs and laws that were alien to their own.
  • Mount Gilead Cemetery.
    Cemetery
  • Mount Gilead Cemetery Tarrant Co Photos courtesy David Cole 11-3-11
  • Lamesa Lobos
    Vintage Photos
  • The Lamesa Lobos by Steve Pinto
    Baseball in West Texas 1948 - 1950
  • Lobo
    Ghost Towns
  • Lobo Culberson Co Old photos courtesy Wayne Bailey 11-25-11
  • Klondike Dawson Co 11-27-11

    Towns
  • Klondike Delta Co 11-27-11
  • Fredonia
  • Trent Taylor Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 11-19-11
  • Fredonia Mason Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 11-18-11
  • Hawkins Wood Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 11-7-11
  • Big Sandy Upshur Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 11-7-11
  • Keller Tarrant Co Photos courtesy David Cole 11-3-11
  • Twin Wells
  • Tarkington Prairie Liberty Co 11-28-11
  • Vincent Howard Co 11-27-11

  • Ghost Town
  • Twin Wells Dallas Co Photos courtesy David Cole 11-22-11
  • Trinity County Courthouse
    Trinity County 11-8-11
  • Groveton (Present County seat) Photo courtesy Terry Jeanson
  • Pennington (Third county seat) GLO vintage map
  • Trinity (Second county seat) Photos courtesy Marilyn Tomalavage
  • Sumpter (First county seat) Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson
  • Trinity County Courthouse Photos courtesy Terry Jeanson, Jim King & Barclay Gibson
  • Brazos
    Bridge
  • Waller/Austin County Line - Brazos River Railroad Bridge Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 11-18-11

    Courthouse
  • Cooke County Courthouse Restored - New photos courtesy Terry Jeanson 11-20-11
  • Columns
  • Life in Frontier Texas by Mike Cox 11-30-11
    Too bad Eleanor Jane Hobbs didn’t put more of her recollections down on paper, but at least she wrote what she did.
  • Domino could have been lost, carried in flood by Delbert Trew 11-29-11
    Extremely worn and battered, it appeared old as the hills. The black dots were barely discernible, as well as the color.
  • Creating a Gospel Classic by Bob Bowman 11-28-11
    Songwriter Stuart Hamblen, the son of an itinerant East Texas preacher, wrote hundreds of successful songs during his lifetime, but his most enduring composition was a gospel classic inspired by, of all people, John Wayne.
  • Cartoons
  • No Littering by Roger T. Moore 11-29-11
  • Thin Gravy by Roger T. Moore 11-24-11
  • Dead Animal Hauler by Roger T. Moore 11-16-11
  • The Shortest River in the U.S. by Roger T. Moore 11-2-11
  • Centennial
  • The Incredible Jorney of Burnam's Ferry Centennial Marker - Conclusion TE photos 11-23-11
  • Things
  • The Old Bugle in Fort Stockton by Mike Cox 11-23-11
    Someone made a startling find: A battered but still useable military bugle. The instrument was found stashed beneath the flooring of the old residence. Adding to the mystery is that it was discovered in an officer’s residence. Being a bugler was an enlisted man’s job...
  • Columns
  • Cowmen use stock pen logic by Delbert Trew11-22-11
    Most old cowmen and cowboys have worked in hundreds of corrals during their lifetimes. Some pens were built with new welded pipe, galvanized panels and were painted. Others were built of used...
  • Freemasonry in the Republic by C. F. Eckhardt 11-21-11
    The first Masonic Lodge in Texas was formed in March of 1835, approximately a year before Texas declared independence from Mexico. Although there were Masons in Mexico—Santa Anna was a Mason—the Catholic Church frowned on Freemasonry. The Knights of Columbus was established to counter the appeal of Freemasonry for Catholic men...
  • The CCC parks by Bob bowman 11-20-11
    During the 1930s, the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) designed and constructed dozens of state parks throughout Texas...
  • Columns
  • The Pitchfork Kid by Mike Cox 11-17-11
    A cowboy’s cowboy, the Kid sat a horse well and had the reputation of being the best roper in the Panhandle.
  • Some fight mesquite, others find use for it by Delbert Trew 11-16-11
    Once upon a time, not so long ago, there was almost no mesquite in the Panhandle of Texas...
  • Town names with a twist by Bob Bowman 11-16-11
    When it came to naming their towns, East Texans were not shy about their selections. Consider these examples. Jumbo, in Panola County, got its name from an elephant in P.T. Barnum’s circus...
  • Poetic Justice by Mike Cox 11-10-11
    A tale of true poetic justice lies in a well-worn but seldom-opened docket book in the Travis County district clerk’s office.
  • Top dollar paid for Texas cattle in 1870s by Murray Montgomery 11-9-11
    A newspaper becomes an eyewitness to history as it documents the story of those cattle drives and markets in 1874.
  • Barter way out of shame, curse by Delbert Trew 11-8-11
    Some call it bartering, trading, horse-trading or just plain old begging. After all is said and done, you tried to buy it cheaper than it was priced...
  • Columns
  • The man who killed Lincoln by Bob Bowman 11-7-11
    "Painted inside on one wall in the restaurant is a drawing of John Wilkes Booth. I’ve often wondered why the drawing was there until I read a book, “Unsolved Mysteries of the Old West” by W.C. Jameson..."
  • Storm Cellars by Bob Bowman 11-6-11
    In the midst of a recent tornado outbreak, an oldtimer called and asked if I remembered storm cellars...
  • A Lesson in the Sociology of Galveston Commerce by Bill Cherry 11-6-11
    A story of George and Magnolia Sealy's mansion The Open Gates, and Daniel Serrato's pushcart of freshly made hot tamales...
  • “The Great Western” by Clay Coppedge 11-4-11
    Mention the Great Western to most people and they might think you are trying to start a discussion about “Lonesome Dove” or “True Grit.” Others will assume you’re referencing a railroad. Actually, you would be talking about a woman known by many names – Sarah Bowman being the last – who was better known by her nickname, “The Great Western.”
  • Columns
  • Royalty for a Day by Mike Cox 11-3-11
    For a man who had lost an arm to a rifle bullet during the Mexican Revolution, Alvaro Obregon seems to have been a bit lax with security matters. That attitude, born either of bravery or naivety, would prove costly, but it also set the stage for an experience that Ruth Wilkerson Henderson remembered the rest of her long life...
  • Businesses, job workers cope with economy woes by Delbert Trew 11-2-11
    When relating stories about good times and bad, and the many varied remedies and solutions people offer, I tell the following stories to illustrate my points...
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