|
March
2013 Issue
For people who like this sort of thing This is the sort of thing they
like. |
| Ghost
Towns Cora
Comanche Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 3-25-13Bucareli
Madison Co 3-25-13 |
| Valley
Wells Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 3-23-13Talpa
Coleman Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson, Donna Chevalier, Jim
& Lou Kinsey, texasoldphotos.com 3-20-13 |
| Coke
Wood Co Photo courtesy Erik Whetstone 3-11-13 Stiles
Former Reagan Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson & Terry Jeanson 3-10-13Mikeska
Live Oak Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 3-1-13 |
| Towns
Emhouse
Navarro Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 3-28-13Rochelle
McCulloch Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson & Erik Hough 3-23-13Martinsville
Nacogdoches Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 3-20-13 |
| Carlisle
Lubbock Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 3-17-13 Wellman
Terry Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 3-16-13 Galloway
Panola Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 3-13-13Poer
Bowie Co GLO vintage map 3-19-13
San Diego Duval Co seat Photos courtesy Terry Jeanson
& Rudy Torres 3-11-13 |
|
Detmold
Milam Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 3-7-13Big
Wells Dimmit Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson, Old photos
courtesy Bill Armstrong 3-2-13
Rio Medina Medina Co Photos courtesy Barclay Gibson 3-4-13Slide
Lubbock Co 3-4-13 | |
Columns
Hey
SCOTUS by Maggie Van Ostrand 4-1-13 Extensive
media coverage about same-sex marriage has given me a new envelope-pushing idea
about a marriage commitment.A
Stagecoach Named Houston by Mike Cox 3-28-13
The General Sam Houston, a sturdy New England-built Concord stage capable of accommodating
nine, began carrying passengers between the relatively new capital city of Austin
and Brenham in 1841.
Legislators Cartoon
by Roger T. Moore 3-28-13 |
| World
War II George
Olsson Short (1920-2003) Chapter Three Surviving
WWII, and Arriving Home How his soldier brother became his savior and
how he managed to get home to a post-war Texas life 3-15-13 |
|
| Cemetery
Stiles
Cemetery Reagan Co photos courtesy Clinton Woods &
Barclay Gibson 3-10-13 |
The
Civil War in Texas Women
Bandits Hijack Cotton in Civil War Texas by Mike Cox 3-7-13 None
of the truly decisive battles of the Civil War took place in Texas, but in other
ways the bloody conflict between the North and South had a major impact on the
state. |
| Civil
War in the Southwest by Jeffery Robenalt 3-3-13 Civil
War battles fought in the American Southwest cannot be measured against the savage
struggles that raged in the east where tens of thousands of Union and Confederate
soldiers clashed and died. However, large or small, the size of the battles meant
little to the men on both sides who were wounded, killed or captured fighting
for their beliefs. | | | |