HomeMy WebLinkAboutMay is Historic Preservation Monthtime to enjoy our local history
to The Eagle
ANTHONY
ay is National Historic
Preservation Month and Col-
lege Station's Historic
Preservation Committee would like
to remind the community of the
importance of preserving our local ,
history. It holds value. for us today as
well as for our children and grand-
children.
Throughout College Station and
Bryan are a number of projects, pro-
grams and activities that are of sig-
nificant historical interest.
The American Mile History Trail
opens today at Veterans Park and
Athletic Complex on Harvey Road in
College Station. Activities to mark
the opening start at 11:30 a.m. in the
new American Pavilion. Taking a
stroll on the mile-long path offers
reminders of 231 years of history
important to our country, state and
local area.
Every 20 feet are engraved bands
inscribed with historical events for
each year, beginning with 1776.
For example, the marker for 1841
reminds its reader that the 10th U.S.
president was John Tyler, who took
office upon the death of President
,William Henry Harrison. That same
year, the Amistad mutineers were
freed by the Supreme Court because
they had been illegally enslaved, Bra-
zos County was established with
Boonville as the county seat, and
Harvey Mitchell taught school at the
home of Richard Carter, the firsf set-
tler in College Station.
The markers provide an excellent
educational tool for school children
and everyone who visits the park for
its many athletic and commemora-
tive events.
May is Historic Preservation
Month, making it the perfect time to
visit the American Mile and other
historical points in Brazos County,
College Station and Bryan.
Among the many local historical
sites is the Carnegie Center of Brazos
Valley History on Main Street in
Bryan. Built in 1903, it reflects the
classic Greek Revival style of arclii-
tecture. It's the oldest surviving
Carnegie Library in Texas and hous-
es acomprehensive collection of
genealogical materials.
Nearby, many lovely old homes
and a variety of other buildings built
in the later 1800s remain and have
also been refurbished.
For years, the Academic Building
at Texas A&M dominated the cam-
pus; the light burning in its copper
dome was visible for miles. Feeling
the need for target practice, students
occasionally. would shoot at it with
rifles in hopes of extinguishing what
was called "Prexy's Moon." Perhaps
these were the same rifles used to
hunt wolves along Wolf Pen Creek.
When a visitor walks flights of
stairs in the Academic Building, the
deeply worn marble reflects the
grooves created by the steps of past
and present Aggies.
Driving through the Oakwood and
Southside subdivisions near George
Bush Drive in College Station pro-
vides avisual reminder of the design
variety of homes moved from the
A&M .campus. By 1938, when College
Station was incorporated, more than
100 homes on campus housed faculty
and staff.
The A&M Board of Directors - as
regents. were then known -felt the
homes inhibited expansion for
instructional facilities and decided
they would be sold to their inhabi-
tants for sums varying from $200 to
$800. The same homes today would
probably sell from $100,000 to
$600,000. Beginning 1n 1941, pur-
chasers were required to relocate the
houses from their original sites.
Historical markers denote most of
them. The oldest is the home at 611
Montclair St.
Local cemeteries provide a wealth
of historic information. Visiting the
Boonville Cemetery in Bryan takes
you to the spot of the first county
seat, founded in 1841. The cemetery
is all that remains of the town. Read
the inscriptions at the foot of the
marker for the Johnson family and
you see the names of six children
who died within a short time of each
other.
Perhaps their deaths were from
yellow fever, which ran rampant in
the county during the 1860s, killing
hundreds. A disease such as yellow
fever creates a great appreciation for
the benefits of modern medicine.
Ten miles across the county is the
College Station Cemetery, which
incorporates Recter Chapel Ceme-
tery where early headstones are
written in Czech. It also encircles an
early cemetery named Salem where
many of the first African-Americans
in the community were buried.
Visiting Richard Carter Park off
Brazoswood Drive and the Earl Rud-
der Freeway frontage road offers the
opportunity to experience the land
where Carter's homesite stood on
more than 4,000 acres deeded to him
by the Mexican government in 1831.
Close your eyes to modern sights and
sounds. Let your mind imagine the
Carter family's life in their log cabin.
You can hear the call of coon dogs
hunting for bear in the cane breaks
near the Carter homestead as
described by Harvey Mitchell in his
letter titled "My First, Last and Only
Bear Hunt, Christmas Day, 1841." He
just as easily could have been hunt-
ing wolves, wildcats or cougars that
were prevalent in the area and a haz-
ard to valued livestock.
Listen for the squeal of the well
bucket on its pulley as water is
drawn or yelps of children playing
hide and seek in deep gullies just
north of the homestead. This acreage
today houses much of College Sta-
tion.
Another interesting and different
way to enjoy the history of the area
is to visit Project HOLD, an acronym
for Historic Online Library Database
at http://HOLD.cxtx.gov. This Inter-
net project allows you to enjoy the
contents. of old attics, photo albums,
letters, interviews and a myriad of
memorabilia from earlier days.
The database is provided by the
city of College Station with the sup-
port of its Historic Preservation
Committee. Donations and informa-
tion are welcomed by Ann Boykin,
director of the project.
During May, Channel 19 and other
area media will highlight Moments
in Local History. '
As a community, recognition and
appreciation of history leads to the
importance of preserving the local
heritage. Maintaining areas and
buildings from the past allows the
use of these assets for economic, edu-
cational and heritage tourism pur-
poses. They continually feed the
vitality of our unique home place.
Let's keep and maintain what we
have in the way of the past in our
own backyard. Enjoy and remember
it, especially during May, Historic
Preservation Month.
^ Marguerite Anthony is a member of
the College Station Historic Preservation
Committee.