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 Texas : Features : Columns : The Thirties in Texas
"The Thirties in Texas" series

Wester than Far West Texas
The Oklahoma Lane High School Senior Class Trip of 1936

(May 20th - 25th, 1936)

by John Troesser

"If you happened to be graduating from high school in 1936, you faced a bleak and uncertain future. If you were graduating from Parmer County, Texas the future was still bleak, but at least it was certain."

The Parmer County Historical Commission put together one of those 30-pound volumes of county history that we're so fond of here at Texas Escapes. This is where the real Texas resides - not in state history textbooks, not in the movies, and certainly not in chamber of commerce brochures. The real Texas is found in county histories.

In Parmer County it's easy to visit New Mexico without being fully aware of it.

If you happened to be graduating from high school in 1936, you faced a bleak and uncertain future. If you were graduating from Parmer County, Texas the future was still bleak, but at least it was certain. Oklahoma Lane was a community roughly defined as 10 miles square and about nine miles East of Farwell. The unlikely name comes from the former residence of the founding families.

One of the most entertaining entries in the Parmer County history was written by Harold Carpenter - a young man with an extraordinary eye for detail and a fully developed sense of humor. Harold took mental notes of the adventure and recalled the most minute details 50 years later.

The trip lasted five days and four nights with the students, bus driver, and teacher / chaperones journeying west to New Mexico, soaking up enough 'foreign" culture to last them a lifetime. One of the places visited was the University of New Mexico where Harold and his group saw "professors with foreign accents and accommodating manners." Another item seen at the "modernistic university" was an anthropological souvenir from Brazil - a shrunken human head described as being "the size of a dried apple."

Being at the halfway point of the Great Depression meant making some economic adjustments.

Camping was one. Sleeping just off the highway and eating pineapple out of the can were experiences the students could have enjoyed at home, but it was much more exotic to experience them in New Mexico. Breakfasts of scrambled eggs and canned salmon was another.

There were other unforgetable experiences like washing dishes in the Rio Grande (downstream from Indian ponies) and seeing one's teacher burn the front of her dress off on the campfire. On one occasion - they stayed at "a place owned and operated by a person with the astounding name of Valentine."

The trip was made more exciting by the actual bus ride itself. The driver - a man named Lester - "piloted" the bus downhill "with the switch off" for 11 ˝ miles on one occasion and swerved sharply to avoid a load of hay on another. The sudden redistribution of students in the bus frame left Harold with three "lacerated" ribs. Another student suffered a cracked bone in his neck. In West Texas in the 1930s - the average elementary school recess was good for cracked vertebrae and lacerated ribs, so since no one was paralyzed, the trip continued.

Stopping for lunch one day, they surprised a café owner who hadn't been expecting a busload of hungry students. He apologized, saying that the only thing available was ice cream in cones. The students reluctantly resigned themselves to eating every cone in stock - even getting down to the stale stock where one female student discovered a spider web in the bottom of her cone.

Since there wasn't enough live local entertainment in the evenings, they saw several movies on their trip. One night they "dressed up in their cleanest clothes" and went to a movie where "the talking apparatus stayed only fairly close to the film." The big surprise was running into a real Hollywood film in-the-making a few days later. Jack Oakie and Fred McMurray were on location filming The Texas Rangers. Like most Texas epics, it was filmed in another state. Harold observed that the film crew was feeding the Indians soup three times a day in order to "use their help as extras." Soup was a pretty popular dish in 1936.

A second surprise (not quite as exciting) was running into other Palmer Countians. The senior class from neighboring Farwell were taking more or less the same route.

The students visited Indian and Mexican villages where the teacher expressed awe at the native handicrafts, and hand-made furniture. Her appreciation came to an abrupt end when she asked one Indian man if he had made the wrought iron bedstead in his house. "Did you make this, sir?" "Hell, No!" the man replied - "we ordered it from Montgomery Ward."

Harold's narrative of the trip ended too soon. They headed back to Texas passing through Clovis, New Mexico at 4:30 p.m. and crossed the state line at 5:55 - a time that stuck in Harold Carpenter's memory. They were no doubt happy to get back to familiar territory and it would be safe to assume that they all went to see The Texas Rangers when it was released.

From A Parmer County History, The Parmer County Historical Commission, 1981

December 2002
© John Troesser

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