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  • Texas Escapes Online Magazine

    February 2012 Issue
    For people who like this sort of thing
    This is the sort of thing they like.
    Helena
    Schoolhouse/Courthouse/Vintage Photos
  • Helena Schoolhouse - Former Karnes County Courthouse Photos courtesy William Beauchamp & Barclay Gibson 2-29-12
  • Enloe
    Towns
  • Enloe Delta Co Photos courtesy Jeff Duncan, Clara Foster Slough Museum 2-21-12
  • Dayton Liberty Co TE photos 2-28-12
  • Notrees Ector Co Photos courtesy Bronson Dorsey & Charlene Beatty Beauchamp 2-24-12
  • Vigo Park Swisher Co 2-21-12
  • Stony
    Ghost Towns
  • Snow Town San Jacinto Co by Paul Latour 2-14-12
  • Stony Denton Co Photos courtesy Don & Ellen Wilson 2-12-12
  • Pyote Ward Co 2-28-12
  • Rexville Austin Co 2-29-12
  • Belgrade Newton Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 2-27-12
  • Battle-of-the-Alamo
    History
  • The Battle of the Alamo by Jeffery Robenalt
    After the defeat of General Cos at the siege of San Antonio, Texans thought their independence was won. They failed to understand that General Santa Anna was enraged over the disturbances at Anahuac and Cos's surrender. The dictator would never rest until his soldiers either killed every Anglo-American and Tejano rebel who openly defied his rule or drove them across the Sabine River and out of Texas for good.
  • Column
  • Best western was not always best by Delbert Trew 2-28-12
    Until the driving of The Golden Spike in 1869, signaling the coming of The Railroad Age, accommodations along the various trails, stage routes, freight routes and river routes were a tragedy to most travelers.
  • Part III
    Animals
  • Twelve Days of Christmas: the Lone Star version - Part III by Bonnie Wroblewsk 2-27-12
    Seven swans a-swimming, Eight maids a-milking, Nine ladies dancing
  • Snow Goose - Cartoon by Roger T. Moore 2-27-12
  • Column
  • Heavyweight Champ Jack Johnson by Bob Bowman 2-27-12
    Heavyweight champ Jack Johnson was arrested for boxing in 1903 in Galveston.
  • San Antonio's Blue Book by C. F. Eckhardt
    'The Blue Book' is the legendary directory of a city's 'red light' district...
    Guest Column
  • Country Living in the Mid-1900’s - Chalk Mountain by Bruce Martin 2-23-12
    Growing up in the suburbs of Houston, I looked forward with excitement the opportunity to visit my grandparents “in the country”
    Columns
  • Amarillo by Airmail by Mike Cox 2-23-12
    “Dear Brother,” it began, “I am mailing you this letter by air mail. This is the first trip that the air mail makes direct from Amarillo...
  • Sawyers and Flatheads by Bob Bowman 2-22-12
    In the Northwest, they were called lumberjacks, but in East Texas they were called “sawyers” or “flatheads.” A hardy breed with a broad streak of independence, they were as colorful as they were hard working.
  • Feb. 16, 1926 - Will Rogers Cartoon by Roger T. Moore 2-22-12
  • Gunny sacks save the day by Delbert Trew 2-21-12
    For a long period of time in the old days, almost everything ordered from suppliers and hauled on freight wagons either came packed in a wooden crate, a wooden nail keg, a wooden barrel or a gunny sack. Once the items reached the frontier, the crate, keg, barrel or sack became a commodity just like the items packed inside.
  • Franny Kay
  • Cooking With Scissors by Maggie Van Ostrand 2-20-12
    As a defense against the frustrating packaging from the supermarket, what do I take every time I go into the kitchen? A toolbelt, that's what.
  • The Story of Franny Kay’s Bout with Lew’s Piano by Bill Cherry 2-19-12
    Over the years, Lew Harris’ song, “These Are the Things I Love,” has been recorded by Judy Garland, Frank Sinatra... But to Galvestonians, the most memorable version was sung by Robert Goulet, because it was the theme song for Lew Harris’ wife, Frances’ 54-consecutive year radio program for the Island’s KGBC-AM.
  • Sam Houston's Duel by Mike Cox 2-19-12
    Something that started in Tennessee and spilled over into Simpsom County, KY on Sept. 23, 1826 could have changed the history of Texas.
  • Ghosts in East Texas by Bob Bowman 2-19-12
    To paraphrase a quote by the Marquise de Deffand in 1774, I don't believe in ghosts, but I have a healthy respect for them. You would, too, if you've ever stood on the banks of Bouton Lake when the fog rolls in from the Neches River bottomlands.
  • February 13, 1991 - Peyote Cartoon by Roger T. Moore 2-14-11
  • Columns
  • Indian Jim by Mike Cox 2-13-12
    Barely 50 years after the U.S. Cavalry drove the last hostile Indians out of the Panhandle an Indian from New York made page-one news in Pampa and across the nation.
  • Stealth Weapon of the Confederate Navy by Murray Montgomery 2-10-12
    H.L. Hunley, world's first combat submarine
  • The Carnegie Libraries by Bob Bowman 2-10-12
    When Tyler’s historic Carnegie Library building celebrated its anniversary, the event reminded East Texans of the legacy Andrew Carnegie left before his death in 1919.
  • Lizzie Hay and the Demise of the Lone Highwayman by Mike Cox 2-9-12
    Sometimes, no matter how good the story, a compelling tale gets forgotten. That’s sure the case with the Texas outlaw known in his day as “the lone highwayman.”
  • Super Bowl for Women Maggie Van Ostrand 2-9-12
    No matter what they say, men do not want women in sports... Women know this. Women do not care. Women will do it all anyway...
  • Columns
  • Robin Hood of the Tonkawa by C. F. Eckhardt
    The original teller of this story, John C. Jacobs, told it in Pioneer magazine in the teens of the last century...
  • Desdemona by Clay Coppedge
    "Of all the nastiness that might be found in Texas oil boom towns during the era of discovery in the early 20th Century, Desdemona was reported to be the nastiest."
  • Learning news lingo as 2nd language by Wanda Orton
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