TexasEscapes.com HOME Welcome to Texas Escapes
A magazine written by Texas
Custom Search
New   |   Texas Towns   |   Ghost Towns   |   Counties   |   Trips   |   Features   |   Columns   |   Architecture   |   Images   |   Archives   |   Site Map

Columns








Counties
Texas Counties

Texas Towns
Texas Towns

Contributors

Robert G. Cowser

Robert G. Cowser

Columns

  • Ma Perkins Moments 12-1-22

  • Boots Pickett's Grocery at Greenwood 1-17-22

  • The Post Office Drug Store at Saltillo, Texas 11-9-21



  • Using the Web to Discover a Family's Past 9-4-16



  • The First Armadillo 5-4-15



  • Pausing by Reelfoot Lake 11-1-14
  • One Poet's Journey to Peace 9-12-14
    Alicia Galaz Welden, poet and scholar



  • A Young Man Who Went West 12-30-11
    My father, Roy Cowser, spent two consecutive harvest seasons in the cotton fields of West Texas just after he turned twenty...
  • The Surprising Effects of Henna 12-10-11
    Since I have been bald for more than forty-five years, it is surprising that anyone would remember that I once had hair.
  • An East Texas Psychic 9-20-11
    Before I ever heard or read the word psychic, I heard of a man with psychic powers. He lived on a farm near Mt. Vernon during the years of the Great Depression.
  • The Power We Longed For 8-23-11
    In the years just before and during World War II two unpaved roads led south from Saltillo. Those of us who lived on the road that started from the east side of town used kerosene lamps and wood-burning heaters and cook stoves. Those who lived on the road that ran from the west side had the benefit of power supplied by an Rural Electric Administration co-operative in Greenville...
  • Cotton Production As It Once Was 7-23-11
    Reflecting today on the sight of the cotton plants, I am reminded that one hundred years ago my father boarded a Cotton Belt train at Saltillo on his way to the cotton fields of West Texas...
  • Our Time With Zophar 7-12-11
    An elderly man with stooped shoulders and a craggy face comes to my mind almost every time I drive past the little park near the post office in Martin, Tennessee.
  • A Cameo From Inside 6-24-11
    Recently for one year I taught first-year composition classes in a college program in a state prison one hour from my home in Tennessee...
  • Defending Popular Music of the 1940s 5-17-11
    As a child on a farm near Saltillo in the 1940s, I depended on radio as the only contact with the world beyond our community. We had no telephone. The only newspaper we received was a local weekly.
  • Daddy's Potato Patch 4-18-11
    I grew up on a farm during the 1940s. The farm was located south of Saltillo in the region of loamy soil just south of the crescent of prairie land that extends over the eastern part of Texas.
  • The Caudles: A Family of Entertainers 3-29-11
    A memory of chipped Kewpie dolls and other chalk figures comes to me when I recall the Arthurs’ farm house...
  • Saltillo's First and Only Football Team 2-21-11
    In its seventy-five years as an accredited high school, Saltillo fielded a football team only one year. The year was 1945, the year I enrolled there as a ninth-grader. The Japanese had just surrendered unconditionally a week or so before our term began.
  • Childhood Explorations: Wordsworth's and Mine 1-6-11
    After I asked the students in a literature survey class I was teaching to write a comparison of a few of their childhood experiences that compare or contrast with Wordsworth’s experiences as described in Book First of The Prelude, I began to reflect on a few of my own contacts with the natural world.



  • Selling the Calves 11-22-10
    In the late 1940s cattle auctions were common in the towns of Northeast Texas. Each town picked a different day of the week so as not to compete with nearby towns.
  • An Unsolved Mystery from The World War II Years 7-16- 10
    While walking across our pasture near Saltillo one rainy afternoon in 1944, my father noticed a steel bar standing askew in the damp soil...
  • Sunday Jaunts with the Family 6-18-10
    Most of the roads were narrow dirt roads. Sometimes overhanging branches would scrape the top of our car, or a small boulder in the road might damage the car’s oil pan. Some of the wooden bridges were in disprepair and probably should have been condemned.
  • World War II Musings 5-7-10
    By 1942, almost all of the young men in the United States were in uniform. Most of these men were in hastily expanded training camps, three of which were located near Saltillo, the town nearest our farm...
  • Wash Day: Drudgery Through the Centuries 4-1-10
    When I read Letitia Barbauld’s poem “Wash-Day,” written in the eighteenth century, I was struck by certain similarities between the plight of the laundresses in the poem and my mother’s struggle to provide clean laundry for our family of five...
  • Special Delivery 3-15-10
    When I began the seventh grade at Saltillo, Paul Dodson, our teacher, told us that the State Department of Education would present a certificate to those students who read and reported on thirty books during the school year...
  • Red Wing 2-9-10
    Although Betty McCoy was one-half Choctaw, she was once given a leading role in a school play at Saltillo. That happened in 1940, the year I was in the fourth grade and Betty was in third. Except for a few Native Americans, all of us were Caucasians. Black students attended separate schools in Hopkins County...
  • She'll Be Comin' By Greyhound 1-16-10
    Probably all of us recall foolish acts that we regret moments or even years after the incident. When my younger brother, our cousin John, and I were teenagers, we once privately ridiculed the behavior of some of our relatives at a family reunion.



  • When Hollywood Came to Wharton 12-13-09
    I do not regret sending the photographs my brother R. L. took of Lee Remick and Steve McQueen to the college library in Wharton...
  • Reflections on Jefferson, a Historic Town 10-5-09
    I first heard my father mention the town of Jefferson when I was quite young. Jefferson is located approximately forty miles southeast of the farm in Hopkins County where I grew up...
  • A Clerk's Tale of Murder 8-29-09
    Years later when I reflected on the experience I realized a person’s life might end anywhere at any time.
  • Listening to the Tumbleweeds 8-1-09
    My purpose in contacting Willard was to get permission to hear his string band, the Tumbleweeds, perform at the nursing home. Once a month the band plays bluegrass and gospel music for the residents of the home. Willard is the lead guitarist; he is accompanied by two men on amplified guitars and another on an acoustic guitar. Each of these three musicians is in his late sixties.
  • Segregation in Two Texas Towns 5-28-09
    More than twenty-five years ago Bill Moyers won an Emmy for a PBS documentary featuring the “two worlds” of Marshall, Texas, his home town. The film focuses on life in Marshall during the Great Depression and World War II, the time of Moyers’ boyhood. As a youngster, Moyers was hardly aware of the black community in Marshall, though it made up approximately 50% of the population...
  • The Claims of the Wilderness 5-9-09
    "As I stood on the site, I realized that the land that day may have looked much the same when the Caddo Indians built their village..."



  • Memorial Day Services at Old Saltillo Church 2-10-08
  • Remembering Claire Perry 1-15-08


  • A Few Degrees of Separation from John F. Kennedy's Death 12-1-07
    Forty-four years after John Kennedy’s assassination is a time for those of us old enough to remember hearing first-hand a report of that event to reflect on its impact on almost every citizen...
  • Competing with Elvis in the Classroom 11-15-07
    Elvis Presley and a band called the Blue Notes performed on the stage of the Humble Oil Company’s recreation building in Hawkins one evening in January, 1955...
  • Entertaining the Rotary Club in Mount Vernon 10-8-07
  • Familiar Ground 9-6-07
    When I was younger, I could never quite understand how anyone could be devoted to the town where I was born...
  • Plumbing the Past 8-3-07
  • The Sounds of Home 6-30-07
    In one of his essays Scott Russell Sanders writes that in centuries past Japanese villagers were cautioned never to wander so far from their homes that they could not hear the village drummer...
  • An Influential Visit 5-28-07
    "As a junior, I found myself on the teacher-certification track, preparing to observe classes at the only high school in Commerce."
  • Gram and Daffodils 2-1-07



  • Recollections of Talco During the Oil Boom 8-18-06


  • More Columns

    More Contributors

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


    Texas Escapes Online Magazine »   Archive Issues » Home »
    TEXAS TOWNS & COUNTIES TEXAS LANDMARKS & IMAGES TEXAS HISTORY & CULTURE TEXAS OUTDOORS MORE
    Texas Counties
    Texas Towns A-Z
    Texas Ghost Towns

    TEXAS REGIONS:
    Central Texas North
    Central Texas South
    Texas Gulf Coast
    Texas Panhandle
    Texas Hill Country
    East Texas
    South Texas
    West Texas

    Courthouses
    Jails
    Churches
    Schoolhouses
    Bridges
    Theaters
    Depots
    Rooms with a Past
    Monuments
    Statues

    Gas Stations
    Post Offices
    Museums
    Water Towers
    Grain Elevators
    Cotton Gins
    Lodges
    Stores
    Banks

    Vintage Photos
    Historic Trees
    Cemeteries
    Old Neon
    Ghost Signs
    Signs
    Murals
    Gargoyles
    Pitted Dates
    Cornerstones
    Then & Now

    Columns: History/Opinion
    Texas History
    Small Town Sagas
    Black History
    WWII
    Texas Centennial
    Ghosts
    People
    Animals
    Food
    Music
    Art

    Books
    Cotton
    Texas Railroads

    Texas Trips
    Texas Drives
    Texas State Parks
    Texas Rivers
    Texas Lakes
    Texas Forts
    Texas Trails
    Texas Maps
    USA
    MEXICO
    HOTELS

    Site Map
    About Us
    Privacy Statement
    Disclaimer
    Contributors
    Staff
    Contact Us

     
    Website Content Copyright Texas Escapes LLC. All Rights Reserved