HomeMy WebLinkAboutSouth Side Panel Group 06Group 6
Bill Scoates
Charles Haltom
Willie Belle Johnson
Dorcus Haltom
Moderator:
Transcriptionist:
Interview Group:
South Side Memory Lane
March 24, 1995
Ellen Horner
Pam Einkauf
Bill Scoates
Charles Haltom
Dorcas Haltom
Willie Belle Johnson
A few things recorded here to begin with, my name is Ellen
Barwitz Horner. I taught school at the junior high school
under the name Ba witz. Today is March 24, 1995. I am
interviewing for he first time Bill Scoates, Willie Belle
Johnson, Charles Halton, your not going to be interviewed?
Sure you are, and Charles's wife Dorcas Halton. This
interview is takiig place in room 106 of the College Station
Conference Center
Station, Texas. his interview is sponsored by the Historic
Preservation Committee and the Conference Center Advisory
Committee of the City of College Station, Texas. It is part
of the Memory Lan Oral History Project. Right now I would
like for each of
Belle we'll start
Willie Belle Johnson
Charles Haltom
W. D. Bill Scoates
Dorcas Haltom
and I'm Pam Eink.uf
and David Gerlin running the camera
at 1300 George Bush Drive, College
ou to introduce yourselves. And Willie
with you, introduce yourself.
Ellen - ok the fi st thing I would like to ask each of you
is, how long have you been in the College Station area? How
long have you bee a resident?
Willie Belle - I ived in Bryan all my life. I worked at
A &M for 28 years
Charles Haltom - 's what?
Willie Belle - In the architecture building with Mr. Ernest
Langford.
Ellen - O.K. Char
Willie Belle - Do
Bill - I took a
Willie Belle - I
Langford as a secretary.
Ellen - And your dad was?
es.
you remember him?
ourse under him in 1935, '31.
started work out here in 1932, with Mr.
Charles- I was b.rn and raised in Bryan, I attended Texas
A &M in 1938. My dad worked in the chemistry department for
about 35 years.
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Charles - T.H. Ha tom
Ellen - O.K., Dorcas?
Dorcas - I was bo n and raised in Bryan. Married Charles 52
years ago. Then w
back to Bryan to retire
Ellen - And Bill?
Ellen - Well befo
talking to Mary J
you've been here
the house on the
Quality Road. I
It's so long ago
were in the service for 28 years. Came
Bill - I'm Bill S oates. I came to Bryan, I mean College
Station in 1919. So I've been here 75 years that will be in
September. We ca e from Mississippi State. I was born in
Mississippi state and my father had been there for 9 years.
And he came over here, head of Ag engineering dept.
e when you first came in, Bill, you were
ne and me about where you lived. I think
he longest, lets start with you.
Bill - O.K. We came here in 1919 and we had a short stay in
Bryan, our furniture had to be shipped. And they gave us
campus, at the end of what they call
don't know what street you call it now.
since I've stayed up there.
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Ellen - Now you said that they, that means the officials at the
university? The university gave it to
Bill - Yea, the u iversity. So it was the it was supposed
to belong to the etimology department. But Dr. , head of
the department wa not married, and it had been used by Dr.
F and his wife died. But its the house that is on the
corner of Bush an Pershing right there. It was like I said
it was an apartme t. Most of the houses on the campus were
dedicated to a de artment of some sort. The head of the
department, he ha a house. And if you went up the road
there you'd find ut that we were the ones on the west side
and then the Waltons were the second one. Later became
president. The n xt one belonged to the house, the Ag
experiment statio , Then if you came back on the east side
of the house, there was the Frants and then the next one was
Dr. Ball and then across the street, north, Rev. Matthews,
leader of the religous things. See we had no churches here.
Sunday school we had chapel and they'd march all the
students in the hapel. And then the next one was the
commandants and he house on the corner belong to the
military. I don't know who lived in that house
Ellen - Now when
Bill - Yes.
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Ellen - Can you gve us some memories of how school was
like?
Bill - Oh yes. Well, the first year I was here I went to
school right ther
on campus in the ag building. The ag
building and I flunked the first grade.
Ellen - Did they old you back?
Bill - Yea. So ti en they built that white building that
some of you reme her right behind. Between Dr. Ball's house
and Dr. Reverend i atthews, they went east, they built a
school there. I was two story and everything including, I
guess the high school, I am not sure. They had a high
school. I went hrough that to get my elementary school
diploma.
Ellen - O.K. let's turn to Willie Belle here for a minute.
Willie Belle whe did you first, were you born in this area?
Willie Belle - Yea I was born in Bryan.
Ellen - Born in $ryan, O.K.
Willie Belle - I have always lived in Bryan. I worked in
• the town in Brya for about 15 years and then I came to
5
Cr" college in 1932 a
secretary. Yes, I remember some of the
talking about. I also remember that my
e building that lived
school in that sa
college. You see
Station that was
Ellen - Who was your grandfather?
Willie Belle -An rew Jackson Tabor. And many times the
students would walk from College Station there to his farm
and sometimes
granddaughter th
It was
Do you
Do you
before
g
remember
remember
Architecture dep
Caudell went on
lot further back
dairy foreman ou
lived on the cam
his family on campus. They had just a little one room
school house on Campus at that time. And that's where his
children went to
Ellen - And what
d I was working for Mr. Langford as
y grandfather owned a farm in College
about two miles from college.
in his watermelons. Grandpa Jabor had a
t graduated from Consolidated School here.
they built what they called the Chicken.
hen they called them Little Chicken Houses?
hose little ones? An instructor in the
rtment named designed those. William
o larger things from a pm can. I remember a
than that. I had an uncle that was the
here and that was in the 1900's. They
us. He was killed by a bull. He raised
school.
was his name?
things, he's been
cousin went to
on Farm Halow in
6
C Willie Belle - Co
Bill - No.
Willie Belle - We
Bill - It was the
Station. They w
Willie Belle -
and was living
Bill - Ethel Walton.
t Smoot.
Ellen - O.K., was Coot his given name or a nickname?
Willie Belle - Hi name was Coot Smoot. The school was
moved on campus t• that building that you are talking about.
Charles - Yea the, took...
Willie Belle - Entimology?
11 it was...
• Willie Belle - Yes I knew her.
head quarters for the Ag Experiment
re only there one or two years. I ask...
is where it was when my cousin graduated
the farm.
Bill - I ask, see we've got another one around here, Ethel
Walton, she is still alive?
7
Willie Belle - My
brother who was a
Bill - Turner Hil
Bill - Yea Turner
Ellen - Was that Walton?
large man, but h.
wanted somebody t
could get up and
little boy said,
Willie Belle - I
president. Going
dairy barn
for cattle. And
owned by Mr. Coo
just a pasture.
cousin went to school Ethel Walton's
doctor, Dr. T.T. Walton.
Willie Belle - His son was also a doctor.
, I knew him well.
Bill - Dr. Walton came here as the head of the ag extension
service or no, yda and he later rose to president. He was a
s claim to fame was that whenever you
o speak just call on Dr. Walton. And he
put you to bed. Those words were like a
they really didn't mean a whole lot. But
he was a real nige man and he did a good job as president
came out here to work while he was
back to my uncle Coot, and the dairy, the
was located where the Administration building is
now. The one that faces the highway. All of that was area
then College View across Farm Road was
er it was all vacant it wasn't anything but
That was before your time.
8
Bill - The Colleg
Willie Belle - Ye
Bill - Oh yea.
Willie Belle - T
man, Cooper. He was a great gambler. He owned a lot of
property, down t•wards Navasota and in Brazos County. Of
course I didn't •o to school out here, I went to school in
Bryan, I started school in Bryan I guess in 1905. Lamar
School is now kn.wn as Fannin. We lived on 29th street in
the 6th grade, a d I had to go to the west side because we
had moved to the west side. The next year we had to come
back to the high school. It was the same old building, not
the one that was built before this, it was the oldest
building. I have a picture of the graduates of that school
of one year. I think Charles's aunt Hattie graduated from
that school.
Ellen - And what
View.
Did you have any particular.
across the highway.
at was, most of that belonged to an old
do you remember about the students at A &M?
•
Willie Belle - Well, of course I didn't know much about the
students. I was a little girl at my grandfather's farm.
Sometimes the students would walk from college to his place
9
and get in his wa
walked from Colle
they used to have
Ellen - Sand batt
Willie Belle - Sham Battles they called them. I don't know
whether anybody i
It was down military, what do they call that down towards
the tower?
Ellen - The drill field.
Willie Belle - That was the drill field. There wasn't
anything on one side of the drill field. They'd have the
Sham Battles eac1 side. I can just remember a little of
that, but I thou4ht that was exciting.
Charles - I am jst wanting someone to clarify the times,
was that before he 1920's?
Willie Belle - W
Bill - That's be
Willie Belle - 0
ermelon patch. And some of my folks have
e Station to grandpa's. I remember when
Sham Battles out here.
es?
s living that remembers those or not.
11 sure. It was in 1900.
ore they built Hollywood.
I guess it was, yes.
1 0
Bill - By the tim
C
Willie Belle - Thy had houses all around the ball field for
faculty.
Bill - Probably cut that out because it got too dangerous
with blanks.
Willie Belle - My
first president wiat was his name? L.S.R.
Charles - Ross.
Willie Belle - R
those dormitorie
Bill - He was bu
Willie Belle - Arid they moved that little cemetery across
the railroad on the west side.
Bill - By where Duncan Hall is. I remember that cemetery
out there, yea.
Ellen - Well where is it now?
Bill - It's moved across...
these people know what Hollywood is...
uncle was buried out here and what was the
ss and my uncle were buried out there where
are. What do they call those dormitories?
ied about where Duncan Hall is.
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Willie Belle - Th0y moved it across from the railroad.
Charles - Wellborn Road.
Ellen - Right, but is it there now?
Charles - No.
Willie Belle - I really don't know.
Bill - No, they moved all that. They had to move it on
account of that they put the new area they...
Ellen - Did they
Ellen - O.K.
Bill - No, its a .eparate cemetery. Its on the other side
of the railroad, about...
Willie Belle - I eally don't know, I was always wondering.
ove them to the College Station cemetery?
Ellen - Is that o' the road going out to Easter wood?
Bill - No it's on Wellborn Road.
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Bill - You go down there to some where in that area and
there's a road that goes something like this and its on the
right side. Just
Ellen - That woul
there or not.
Ellen - There ar
s soon as you get across the railroad.
be south of 2818?
Willie Belle - I don't know if there is any identification
Bill - They're trying to get A &M into a Cemetery.
Ellen - Is that north or south of 2818?
Bill - It's. .
Willie Belle - It's kind of west.
Bill - Just the o her side of the railroad. Its about a
mile, a mile and a half or maybe two miles on the north side
of 2818.
wonder where it as in relation.
lot of apartments there now and I just
Bill - I haven't been out there in a long time. It was one
of the few openi gs over by the railroad tracks below where
the train stops. Where the train stops at will you go down
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there, and its abut the only opening there and then I think
it goes clear on
all those rigs th
David Gerling - I 's right there just of Marian Pugh right
there where there's a dirt road. I think it's right there
where by that old railroad crossing that they took out,
because that girl got killed there and they closed it. But
there's not a rai road crossing there, but it's that dirt
road just to the outh of that current train station.
Ellen - You know
own to 2818. To the west, but they moved
re during '39.
where it is?
David - In fact, I stumbled across it. I guess there's
three head stones and a little bit of an iron fence still
left. It doesn't look like anybody has done anything to it
in years.
Bill - They had to do that, when they built that new area up
there in 1939.
David - Was that in '39 when they moved?
Bill - Yes, it must have been in '39.
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•
Willie Belle - M . Langford was instrumental in getting this
cemetery here fo• College Station. My grandfather and
grandmother and ncle are buried right there.
Shiloh.
Ellen - The one •hat your talking about?
Willie Belle - Yes, Cory Cemetary now.
Ellen - The one on, College Station Cemetery?
Willie Belle - It's on the other side of what they call
Ellen - My first husband is buried there.
Bill - Did they, they have a Shiloh club in there?
Willie Belle - I really didn't know.
Bill - That was
Willie Belle - I
Bill - Did they
fraternal organization.
didn't know if it was that.
ave any burying?
Willie Belle - Well, most of the Bohemians and the Checks
and a few colored people.
1 5
Charles - Did they bury people there by the Shiloh?
Ellen - That property originally belonged to the Methodist
Church.
Wille Belle - Tholt was the only place to bury people, down
this part of the county, I mean from College Station. That
was the main cemetery.
Bill - Where, the Shiloh?
Willie Belle - Ix Shiloh, the main cemetery. It wasn't
called Shiloh at
Bill - I didn'
in there while t
Willie Belle - Y
Bill - You see t
that time.
that's what I'm asking did they bury people
e Shiloh club.
s, I imagine so. There was a dance club
further west which was called Shiloh.
ere was a church there and there was a
fraternal organization both?
Willie Belle - Well, that was later.
• Ellen - You're beyond me, I know where it is.
16
Willie Belle - T e Kreneks later years had a home right
across the stree from the cemetary. They had a real pretty
home. John Stas y taught the first school and it was in a
little frame school house near that location. My older
brothers went there to school for a short time. That was
around where the Krenek home was.
Bill - The only ay you could get to it would be to go out
what is now 6 bu highway 6 in those days was nothing but a
dirt road.
Willie Belle - That's what it was. I've see Mr. Cooper and
his wife with his big white horse and buggy drive down it
many times.
Bill - And there
there.
Willie Belle - They use to call it a Branch. It borders on
my grandfather's farm. They call it now something else what
do they call than
Ellen - There's
Willie Belle - I
was dirs from way over here clear down
bee creek that goes through there.
s slighted down from where my grandfather
i lived, I've been down to the creek many times.
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Bill - That was
Willie Belle - I
It doesn't look
Willie Belle - N
but they were no
settled over the
grandfather came
the one child, m
voting precinct too.
don't suppose anybody remembers all that.
amiliar to me at all now. It use to have a
little negro church down there on the corner of
grandfather's property.
Ellen - Now what was your grandfather's name?
Willie Belle - Apdrew Jackson Tabor.
Ellen - O.K. now that was Tabor for Tabor Road?
, they might have been distantly related
really close kin. Grandfather Tabor
e about 1876. I was born in 1896. My
over here from Georgia in 1873 and just had
mother. She remembers coming over in
wagons and by train and by boat to Texas. They settled over
near Chrisman. That's a little place, just a wide place, in
the road near Caldwell. They nearly starved to death.
There was nothing they could do, and my mother, I often
heard her say I don't know why we moved from Georgia. We had
a nice home and 4 good well of water and we came over here
and we had to drink tank water. She use to tell that with a
lot of gusto.
18
yaw
Helen- Do you think she really meant it?
Willie Belle - W 11, she may have . I went back to Georgia
at one time with Charles. He took us over there and we
passed the place where my mother used to live, they had good
water over there and Texas didn't have good water until
later on I guess, I don't know.
Helen - We still don't have very good water.
Willie Belle -
Helen - It still
the water where they were was terrible.
Willie Belle - Bu A &M doesn't get their water on campus.
The main water is out some miles from A &M.
Dorcas- She alway had a good relationship with the students
in the architectu e department.
Helen - Did the students come to you for all kinds of
advice?
Willie Belle - Well more or less, I was just sort of a big
sister, because I
boys. That was o
was older than girls that were dating the
e of the reasons Mr. Langford wanted an
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older woman was because he had one girl in the office, he
said wouldn't stay in the office. I didn't know any better
so I stayed in the office and answered the phone. It was a
nice place to work. Good people to work for or with.
Helen - How large was the department then? Do you remember?
Willie Belle - Well, just guessing, it was not more than 200
or so students. A freshman class of 50 to 60 students and
then I don't know. Some would drop out during the year.
Helen - Now Bill lets return to you for a minute. What was
your occupation when you were in your adult years?
Bill - My occupation, I finished A &M as an Ag engineer. I
taught two years at Tarleton then I went to Iowa State and
got my masters degree. Then I came home and worked for my
dad and he died in 1939. I went to work for rural education
administration in Richmond, DC and then after one year of
what they called apprenticeship or training they put me in
Nebraska, Wyomin
We traveled, my
went. And huh w
Mexico and then
, as a Depot turnbic irrigation specialist.
ife and I. We were married just before we
traveled all down there to west Texas, New
rizona. and huh we were...
Helen - And when did you return to College Station?
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Bill - In 1946, after serving 3 and 1/2 years in the Air
Force, as a meteorological weather but I was always at
the University o Chicago where we built two instruments
that are still b ing used today. So then I went to work for
the engineering experiment station and ones of the jobs they
gave me was that of testing fans and from that, since 1946,
that's all I've ever done is work with fans & one that are
still active
still out a company in Shreveport now.
We build fans for cooling towers and all sorts of stuff.
And I have a small business here, I built all the patterns
and do all the engineering.
Ellen - Are these mostly industrial fans?
Bill - Yes, cooling towers and industrial . Its a good
. But do you want to get back to what the college part
looked like?
Ellen - Sure do.
Bill - Well, my father there was the Birches, I don't
know what his first name was,
father
Willie Belle - F. B. Clark?
Bill - F B Clark and. .
& Lancaster, the Dr & my
21
Willie Belle - Hensel's. .
Bill - No there was only five and they bought from the
Hardlicka's yeah they bought 60 acres as a rectangular
tract.
Willie Belle - Did Clark buy that from Hardlicka?
Bill - These five men did. They formed what you'd call the
South side Development Company and they developed through
those 60 acres. It starts just over there the other side of
the church to the park.
Ellen - Now which church?
Bill - The Episcopal.
Ellen - Oh St. Thomas Episcopal.
Bill - St. Thomas is not on the College park property and it
goes clear acros
Ellen - Fairview?
s over to Fairfield
Bill - Fairview and they went clear back in there and then
the south corner. They took out of the south corner a tract
22
let
•
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of land, right on the highway. I don't know how many acres,
but not very many and they let Lincoln build houses on that
corner, on that tract of land.
Ellen - Over there where Lincoln Center is now?
Willie Belle - Where that first school was built?
Bill - No, Linco
Park that lit
and another several people. My father built at least three
houses and they paid them off. One of them, when they got a
divorce, they actually went in there and saved the house in
half.
Ellen - Is that still here?
n center is beyond College Park College
le name of & financed it for them
Bill - Yeah, you go over there I bet that house is still
there, but they actually did it. They had a little
community over there and they'd sing and they'd dance and I
mean they had a church. They had a little church there.
But then when they we had built a lake there. The lake
had been built at the time that we bought the property and
they built a lake. College Park Lake. But there was a
place right in front of where Bill Lancaster lives. That
was it sloped off real easy and it was just right and the
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colored people came over there and ask permission to have
their...
Willie Belle - What did they ever do with that little lake?
Bill - They cut it.
Ellen - Is that where Brison park is now?
Bill - Yes.
Ellen - That's where the lake was?
Bill - They'd go in there and have their dunkings for
whatever purpose they wanted, they'd get out there and
sing stand in the water and they'd come out hollering.
Great fun.
Ellen - Willie Belle, sorry do you remember that?
Willie Belle - I remember that little lake and I remember
F.B. Clark's home faced that lake too?
Bill - Yeah it faced the lake and. .
Willie Belle - There was another family.
•
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Bill - Well, what happened was that later on, Gib Gilchrist
he found out that we didn't have a health permit to build
that lake, some state law that he dug up and it's a bigger
problem right now than it was then, but I've seen that lake
completely frozen over to where they skated'on it but I
saw McHughes, he was a big man and we had about 1 1/2 inches
of ice, which you could see him skating on it and that ice
would go down like this as he skated.
Willie Belle - I didn't know they ever did that.
Bill - I think it
was in the 20's.
Willie Belle - Must have been in 1920's.
Bill - Yeah it was in the 20's. It just wasn't no fun when
it happened over a few days it froze. But it was a nice
lake, we use to go fishing in it.
Willie Bell - Well, who built the little log cabin that was
out there, Maria Haines had a office there, art office.
Bill - And Dr. Clark built that and that's the one of the
first that had been built. That was one of the first houses
that was there. That house and...
I, Willie Belle - And that log cabin is still there?
25
Bill - No it's been gone about 4 or 5 years. It was built
by the Czech's. There was a bunch of Czechs and
Dubovanys moved in. I don't think Dubovany had any problems
had built that...
•
Willie Belle - The Zaks.
Bill - Zaks Oh yeah, probably the Zaks.
Willie Belle - And I have a little post card, a water color
painting that Marie Haines did of the first chapel. I
imagine they'd have some of that in the main library. I
don't know it's just a little postcard size of the first
chapel that was here & I've been to it when they had their
commencement exercises. In those days, commencement
exercises was one exciting time for the country people to
come. And I've gone there and seen the graduates, and then
the next thing they had was in the Farmers Congress they
called it, later in the summer. That was another thing that
was like a festival. The people from surrounding counties
brought cattle and things for prizes like they have now at
what they call the festivals. They didn't have a rodeo but
they had other kinds of things. I think they still have a
horse calvary out here.
Bill- Yes.
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c
•
- Its out on 2818
Bill - Now that chapel that you're talking about.
Willie Belle - Well that was the first one built on campus.
Bill - Yeah I know and I was in it. Do you know what they
used it for later? A rifle range.
Willie Belle - What?
Bill - A rifle range.
Willie Belle - Well they may have. I've wondered if Guion
Hall built in about that same location?
Bill - Yeah Guyden Hall was built and huh that building is
right almost smack across Guyden Hall. It's where there's a
dormitorio there now. They tore it down, its on this end of
Military Walk on the East Side. It face west and it was on
Military Walk and it was huh two story thing, down stairs
they had like a church inside.
Willie Belle - And what do you call it, towers or something?
27
Bill - On the inside it was a church and then they, put up
on the top it was all open and they'd go dancing up there I
guess.
Ellen - Do you know who Guyden Hall was name after? Guyden
Hall was named after David Guyden, who was one of the early
Texas day composers.
Bill - It was the biggest, it seated about 2500 people. It
was the biggest place between Houston and Dallas in the
central Tx area where you could gather people together.
Ellen - And it stood where Rudder Center is now. The
Memorial Student Center.
Bill - It was right smack on the end of Military Walk. You
went right down Military Walk into it and they every Sunday
morning they'd put them out in uniform and they'd put them
in there. Then the only thing you'd wonder about they looked
kind of stuffy you know. And when they'd get in there well
they had a collar up like this...
Bill - That stopped, I don't know when, I don't really know
when they stopped marching in there. It's when the churches
started building around here they discontinued the chapel.
It must have around 1935 or something.
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Ellen - Well you know you mentioned that you were here in
1832 you started what was, I mean 1932, excuse me I've been
through so much genealogy that I'm back in the 18th century.
Do you remember any of the effects of the depression on this
area, and maybe in particular on the school?
Willie Belle - Well, yes because that was before the World
War One.
Ellen- It was right after World War One....the crash in '29.
Willie Belle - Well I wasn't out here then of course but I
knew the campus pretty well because we visited out here a
lot. My mother knew the first teachers, some that were out
here, some of their daughters were good friends and that
was...where did they, what did they call that where the
professors lived in old houses?
Bill- They called it Quality Road...
Willie Belle - What?
Bill - Quality Road.
Willie Belle - That's where the faculty families lived, in
those old houses.
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Bill- They called it because that's where the..that's where
the people that really run the college were they lived
there...
Willie Belle - There were five teachers, professors or
whatever you want to call them and they were all fired at
one time but then they... Mr. Langford has written a
reminiscence about when the A &M started and it's probably in
the library I don't know whether he brings that out or not
But I've heard my mother saying....that...
Charles- To answer your question, you asked of her..
Ellen - About the depression?
Bill - About the depression. A &M was extremely fortunate
because of this two year budgeting. It got started just,
the depression started after the second the two year budget
was approved. And so in other words during the 20's the
salaries went up. My father, I think, came here when he was
earning about $1800 dollars a year and he was head of the
department. And it was going a little bit up... but I think
that the last one before the early 30's, he was making about
4000.
Ellen- Well that was a lot of money..
30
Bill - That was a lot of money in those days and it carried
over those two years.
Willie Belle - There was nine months where they just had
nine months of a salary....
Bill - Lots of the constructors, lots of the associates.
Willie Belle - Some of the. .
Bill - They were all on nine months basis, I know when I
taught, I taught for nine months, a 150 dollars a week, uh a
month for nine months, that's what I got.
Ellen- It's only until recent...
Bill - And that was in '35 and '36.
Ellen - It's only recent years to where they've gone until a
department has a twelve month salary.
Bill - Oh, most of these departments, most of the heads of
the departments were on twelve months basis and most of the
constructors or others were on a nine months basis. Then
they all had summer school you could teach an extra..
31
(ir Ellen- Mr. Langford taught all the courses? Did he teach all
the courses?
Willie Belle- Yes, he had to because there weren't very
many. I had a picture of the first senior class sitting
around the Ross's statue. They got their picture taken and
there were six men in that class during World War II.
Ellen- O.K. let's talk for a few minutes to Charles. Were
youngsters aren't we?
Charles- Well I can't add too much to it because I've seen
my dad work in the chemistry department. I guess he got his
job there in the early 20's. He was a technical
administrator, he bought all the supplies. And I used to
visit him before I started A &M and I remember the old, old
chemistry building it was just an old wooden rounded
building. There were terrible smells in there from all the
chemicals.
Bill- The one on the other side of the library?
Charles- Yeah about that location and I remember when they
were tearing that down and were going to build them a new
one which I think was completed about '38 or '39 or
something. It was known for a... 20 years after that maybe
C r later as the "new" chemistry building of course now they
32
have additional buildings. I was in ROTC out here when I
entered in 1938 and uh we used to uh, Willie Belle was
talking about mock battles over there on the campus and we
used to go out here in this area of what's now in front of
the Academic Building and the golf course which was an old
scrub brush area filled, sandy, dirty, that's where we did
our combat training out there in that area most
everybody else did it in late spring and early fall and it
was pretty bad but uh that's about all I can remember. A &M
was a fairly small and we'd all walk to our classes in one
place to the other and it wasn't a problem at all to get to
your classes and now they've expanded across
(Side II)... I don't recall too much, my main purpose was to
bring Willie Belle here this morning.
Bill - Uh Oh.
Ellen- What's the matter Bill?
Bill- It was closed.
Ellen- Well I mean it was not
Bill -There were gates at the North gate, there was a gate at
the East Gate.
Ellen- That's way before my time...
33
c
c.
•
Willie Belle - They always called it the North gate and the
East Gate.
Bill- Yeah or the West Gate West Gate.
Ellen- Well these were checkpoints then?
Bill- Yeah.
Ellen- And you had to have a password to get by?
Bill- Uh I came in there, I don't remember, I know it was
before an SMU game.Now I came in there and I was driving a
Ford it was, a Ford maybe and uh I came in that North gate
area and it looked to be clear then all of the sudden the
minute I got to that gate there was about 50 cadets there,
and they just jerked me right out of that thing and I had
to.. I had to identify myself real good and I don't mean
maybe.
Ellen- They were afraid that some of those Texas- Exes....
Bill- No, SMU boys...
Ellen- Oh O.K. SMU boys...
34
•
S
Bill - Would jump over there and cause some problems and uh
I don't know whether they did or not but I uh I don't know
whether what I had on me that convinced them that I wasn't
anything.
Willie Belle - You remember when the students stopped the
train out here and going to Bryan on the train.
Bill - I never saw them do that
Willie Belle - They did on April Fools day, especially.
Bill- Oh yeah I wouldn't doubt that. I wouldn't doubt that a
bit in the world. And they had other tricks with the train,
see they'd go on a corps trip and they wouldn't be, they
didn't have any money. The students didn't have any money to
go places. So they finally got the railroad and there's
some, some one of them, uh they leased uh train with uh uh
what they called a side door pullman, it was cattle cars,
the side door pull was. They'd go somewhere, out to Baylor I
think or something like that but they, the railroad told
them to close it because somebody might get hurt , but it
was actually it was like that happened and they they were a
lot of fun people doing stuff like that.
35
Ellen- When were those gates removed? "Cause when I came,
S
I've only been here since '71 and there weren't any gates
here....So I was
Bill- No they've been gone.
this time.
just wondering when..
Willie Belle- They built the Methodist Church and
Presbyterian Church and Baptist Church and the Catholic
Church...
Bill - They moved. . . the churches went up there and so
then the college and then applied the , each one of the
churches had their own pastor for the students and then
they'd usually have another pastor for the congregation.
Ellen - Campus ministers, they still have that.
Bill - And that started let me see , I think back in '46.
Willie Belle - It must have started before then.
Bill- Yeah well I mean I'm trying to count back uh Norman
Anderson had been in that church for 29 years and
Willie Belle - I did a little typing for Mr. Burgess during
36
Bill - So I don't know that...
Charles -.... must have been gone before World War II
because I was class of '42 and it was in '38
Bill- They were torn down. .
Willie Belle - Well, W.S., my younger brother, finished in
'37.
Charles- 1930's or late 20's.
Bill- I think the one on the West side stayed longer than
the one on Northgate. There wasn't a whole lot of traffic in
the one on the West side. About the...
Willie Belle- Well they had a little grocery store and a
little variety store at North gate. I remember going down
there and I used to walk from the Academic Building down to
the Post Office and I'd have to get exchange money and all
to pay for foreign books. Post Office was down there too.
Bill- Oh yeah the main Post Office down by the train
station.
Willie Belle - Mrs. McGuire or Post Mistress.
37
`r Bill - Yeah, but
•
over there.
Willie Belle - I thought so...
Bill - You really did.
he had good service, she had good service
Willie Belle - Ohl yeah, and then they had the first
telephone office out here and was in the old Gathrite
building. They had a little room there and had set up for
phones and everything. We lived in Bryan nearby the woman,
her name was Johnson, but we weren't related. And she
worked at that telephone booth, until retiring. They just
had the one woman there.
Ellen - Was there a switchboard there?
Willie Belle - A what?
Ellen - A switchboard?
Willie Belle - Yes. She worked at the switchboard, and that
was in old Gathrite Hall.
Charles - Do you know what year that started? What year?
38
C
Willie Belle - Oh heavens no, That's years ago, I don't
know. It was in the 1920's. That was disposed of of course.
Bill - Well then there was....the other thing that you see
you had two railroads, the SP went right straight on where
it is now. But the Engine came in on this side and crossed
over about where the baseball park is now and they had a
tower there.
Willie Belle - Yes.
Bill - This is where we would get Western Union telegrams
and during the off hours they had a telegram for, Western
Union had a little office somewhere, oh it was up at the
train station so then we, if you wanted to send a telegram
you had to go down to the tower.
Ellen - Willie Belle, we would like to get your parents
names.
Willie Belle - William Samuel Johnson and Lydia Tabor, she
just had one name. And her father was A.J. Tabor. He
married right after the Civil War, he was in the Civil War.
I have his picture.
Ellen- O.K., and how many brothers or sisters do you have?
39
Willie Belle - Three brothers, one, the younger is living,
and the eldest, I had one sister, Charles' mother.
Ellen - O.K. that was another question, what is your
relationship to Charles?
Willie Belle - His mother was my sister.
Ellen - And what did your father do?
Willie Belle - First, he was a Singer machine agent in
Bryan, they didn't have retirements or anything like that.
Ellen - He quit.
Willie Belle - Yes and had bought some lots on the west side
of town and that was on the wrong side of the tracks.
Ellen - That's right.
Willie Belle- But he built an old frame house over there in
1909. And that's when we had to go to Bowie School. Mr.
Bethany was our teacher. So then the next year we had to go
back to Eastside. We had to walk back and forth from school
to this school over here.
Ellen- O.K., you said you were born in Bryan?
40
c
Willie Belle - Yes.
Ellen - O.K. were you born in a hospital or at home?
Willie Belle - Oh no, in 1896 they didn't have hospitals
around here. I had a real good black mammy. She was with
my mother for four of her children. She was a good woman.
A lot of years in between there.
Ellen- O.K., now Dorcas, we would like to have your maiden
name.
C Dorcas - Higgs. Dorcas Higgs.
Ellen - Would you spell that for us?
Dorcas - H I- G -G -S. My mother's name was Maggie and my
father's name was Wylie.
Ellen - Wylie was her first name?
Dorcas - Wylie was his first name. W- Y- L -I -E.
Ellen - Now were they from this area?
41
Dorcas - Yes. I was born at 604 East 24th Street in Bryan.
And I went to school to the you know, Bryan schools. Travis
and I went to Bowie School and I was with the first
graduating class from the new high school. Which is Stephen
F. Austin, now, yeah Stephen F. Austin. I have fond
memories of A &M because of Charles, we dated four years
before we were married, and our son Robert went to A &M and
graduated from A &M, '71. And he has a son Christopher that
graduates this May.
Ellen - Now what were their majors? What was your son's
major?
Dorcas - What was Robert?
Charles - Business and Marketing.
Dorcas - And Chris is?
Charles - Industrial Distribution.
Dorcas - I forget all of these titles. I just want to get
them through.
Charles - Industrial Distribution.
Willie Belle - And that's Chris?
42
Dorcas - Yeah.
Ellen - And what did your father, what kind of business was
he in?
Dorcas - My father was a farmer. He owned land out in the
Brazos Bottom. He also worked for the American Steam
Laundery which was down in old Bryan for many years, but he
was primarily a farmer.
Ellen - Did he farm, what did he farm?
Dorcas - He had cotton and maize and cattle.
Charles - He was a big vegetable grower.
Dorcas - Yeah. And that type of thing.
Ellen - Did he have a gin on his property? Or did he have
to.
•
Dorcas - No, no. Took the cotton down to Steele Store which
is down in the Brazos Bottom. And we still own some land in
the Bottom down there. We always called it the Bottom.
43
Ellen - Well sure, that's what it is. O.K., I believe that
takes care of that, now did you have any brothers or
sisters?
Dorcas - I have a sister. She's still with me. And we have,
we have three children. Two daughters and a son and eight
grandchildren and two great - grandchildren. And Charles and
I, I say I because I was with him, we were traveling around
over the country in the Air Force for 28 years. They were
very interesting years of our life and he was a prisoner of
war of the Germans and when he retired from the Air Force,
we chose to come back to Bryan because his mother was still
living here and we had the property so I guess I. .
Willie Belle - Dorcas' mother died when in England.
Dorcas - Yeah. Mother died when we lived in England.
Father died when we lived in Germany.
Ellen - This area, being a newcomer, I'm really kind of an
infant here, but it seems to have a magnetism that draws
people back to it.
Dorcas - I kind of think so. Like we lived all over the
world and I think out of every state in the United States,
and we often said well, why did we come back to Bryan? You
know? Why did we come back?
44
Ellen - Well, you didn't come back for the weather, but you
came back for the people.
Dorcas - Why? You know. Why didn't? Why in the world did
we come back to Bryan? But I think you're right, it was
home.
Bill - We have the best weather around here there is.
Ellen - I was going to ask you Bill, something about the
weather. Have you noticed have you noticed any appreciable
change in the weather patterns from many years ago today,
C r it's not warmer today than it was?
Bill - No.No. The changes come in the cubicles we live in.
Ellen - Our homes with the air conditioning.
Bill - Well, you take that old house I talk about we live
in. That booger where it was off the ground, it was up off
the ground high enough where the kids could crawl under it.
I mean, and when they hazed the students, we could hear them
boom boom boom underneath that house They would haze the
freshmen and they'd come running down there and crawl under
our house and stay there 'till morning. But that one had a
45
single plank floor in it and you talk about getting awfully
cold. That's the difference I think.
Ellen - Well, you'd mentioned that the lake over there had
ice on it. I don't think we would have ice today.
Bill - No that's unusual. What I'm saying, there are
unusual things in the weather that can, but I think what I
know about this area here, we've only been experienced two
tornadoes that I know anything about. One of them that
these people don't know anything about. It happened, it
happened before 1924. I know and the Ag Engineering
department was built, was a big old wooden building on the
place where the library is now, exactly. The Chemistry
building, that was that way, straight up towards the back of
that. When we came here there was a longer building behind
it, where what I call the Agriculture building is now. The
one that faces the Blocker, that was built in 1924. And
prior to that, so that dates what, this and we they'd had
another building where the engineering building is beside
Frances Hall, and it was full of full of implements, it was
two story full of implements, and that wind caught that
thing or the tornado caught it and took the entire roof off
of it. Took it over and this building , the Ag Engineering
building, over the Pavilion, and landed it in the horse
fields out here. The whole roof. Well, then the building
went flat like this, bam bam! The end went down like this
46
and that top floor looked just like rounded off like this
and all the implements you know, plows, they were like
sliding off. Now, now if you don't call that a tornado, I
don't know what is. And that happened prior to 1924 and I
know because there are pictures. I don't have any pictures
of it, but there was one other in 60's and 70's that came
through Bryan but I...
Ellen - There was one that came through College Station in
the mid 70's.
Bill- Yeah, but that's all that I know anything about. So
outside, this is a pretty general area to live in. Really,
it's not too really no too wet. You have wet feet every
once in a while.
Charles - Except for last year.
Bill - And you can get dry here. '23 and '24 we only had 18
inches of rain in about 18 months. And it was dryer around
here, but the year before,they had made one hell of a cotton
stock. And you were talking to her about cotton, this whole
county used to be nothing but cotton fields. And I own 40,
almost 30 acres out there now and I know there ain't nothing
but cotton fields. Because there's only about that much soil
out there. So that was the there was little families
living, a family not little, but they were living in small
47
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plots. It wasn't too bad, some of them had acreage, 200 or
300 acres, they weren't little but they, the land didn't
make it very much, that was the biggest problem.
Ellen - Well, I think the whole Bottoms area is no alley
farm is. I mean that's about all you see down there is
cotton.
Bill - Yeah well now it is but your machinery....
Charles - It's maize and stuff down there now, because
cotton...
Bill - Maize is about that high this morning. On Farm 60.
I was out there just this morning.
Willie Belle - Bill do you sometimes want to correct our
weatherman on our TV station?
Bill - No, well let me say this. I've got a, I've got a
degree in meteorology from the University of Chicago and I'm
telling you these boys do a hell of a job. I mean they do.
But they've got things I've never even thought of. I know
we have a barometric measuring device in our office.
Listen, I flew during the war and if you got over 33
thousand feet, over 29 you were doing real good. Because you
48
couldn't get much higher, but you can get on a commercial
airline and he'll put you in 39 thousand feet.
Ellen - In just a few minutes.
Bill - And it's one of the most beautiful things you ever
saw. So in these pictures they get nowadays, boy they're
gorgeous. All them cloud formations and they can see
everything, they got tools I didn't have and we considered
if we could get 50% of forecast for tomorrrow we were doing
real good. I mean if we had the 50o for tomorrow. .
Charles - You think they do better than that around here?
Bill - What?
Charles - You think they do better than that around here?
Bill- Oh yeah, oh yeah.
Ellen - Well what amazes me is on the Stormtracker where
they can tell you exactly where a storm's gonna be and how
many minutes it's gonna be there.
Bill - You see the stuff that you've never seen before.
49
Ellen - Without my asking it you have answered one of the or
talked about one of the questions, how has technology
affected our lives today that you didn't have yesterday? So
the weather....
C of Charles - We've come a long way with insulation...
c,
Bill - The weather is one, but our living, our living, the
areas we live in are getting better and better and even
today, there's stuff, we've got stuff on the farm you
wouldn't even believe in. I got buildings out there I heat
with just one of them little electric heaters, sitting on
the floor. I got a shop that's got a thousand square feet
and that's a small house. And I heat it with a . ..
Bill - And it makes a big difference and it will continue
that way for quite a while. But it's expensive, expensive
now there's another thing that's coming on too, automobiles
are getting a lot better too. If you don't right now, if
you drive an '86 model or later that has fuel injection,
that's a 200 thousand dollar.... if you don't get that out
of it, you've lost money. And you've given somebody
else You purchase another vehicle... I just bought one
I'm serious about that, that's one of my feelings anyways,
I've fooled with that all my life. I mean all my life. I
was raised in those engine labs up at A &M, they used to run
me off. I could walk in there and tell the kids anything
50
they wanted to know about that engine. But they'd run me
off, so that's where my life.... but I enjoyed it. You have
grown enormously in this country, and you've still got a lot
to grow. I think this country, this county will be what I
call a bedroom county. There won't be anything in this
county except for the Bottom. Where they got real power
farms, the rest of it's gonna be houses, people gonna live,
it's gonna be a nice place to live. You got all the
facilities here, all the necessary shows, the entertainment
whatever you want. And we see less and less of the kids
going away from here, at least I do. Never used to.
Ellen - I believe they used to on the weekends, campus would
just empty, now it empties up during Spring Break and during
holidays.
Willie Belle - Wasn't a decent place to go eat out.
Ellen - Now there are too many.
Willie Belle - The students didn't have a place to bring
their girls on extra occasions and all. They had to stay in
the homes of different people. We have a lady out at
Crestree, well she's in the nursing home now, she's 105
years old and came to Texas from Mississippi in 1912. And
this main building was rebuilt and her memory has been very
good until the last year.
51
L
Ellen - Is that Mildred? Mildred Sullivan?
Willie Belle - She'll be 106 her next birthday if she lives,
but she's in the hospital right now.
Bill - Margaret right? She was a Morgan. She had a son
that was the same age I was.
Willie Belle - Lucius?
Bill - Lucius.
Willie Belle - Well she lost one of her sons right after
World War II.
Bill - Yeah that's Lucius.
Willie Belle - Lucius died after I came to Crestree in 1986.
Bill - Well, we were good friends, real good friends.
Willie Belle - She was a Morgan.
Bill - Yeah, she came here as Mrs. Morgan.
Willie Belle - After Morgan died, she married Sullivan.
52
Bill - What did Mr. Morgan do?
Willie Belle - He was in I thought that he was in was it
Agronomy, one of the agricultural schools. He came here as
head of that department.
Ellen - Well Charles, when you and Dorcus when you all
retired from the Air Force did you come here retired I mean
did you do any type of work or did you just play?
Charles - Back in '68 I worked for A &M for about 4 years,
and then my wife and I decided we'd open up a small shop.
C ur She was an expert in ceramics. She was studying with a lot
of fine ceramics teachers across the country and so we felt
we could make a go of that because we both loved doing it.
We took our old home over on 24th street and converted it
into a ceramic shop. Initially we taught a few
instructions,
sold green ware and all the painting stuff
that goes with it. Then as soon as we had everybody pretty
well trained and it began to slack off we went into the
wholesale business manufacturing porcelain figurines and
antique reproduction dolls and we did pretty well on that
for about seven or eight years. We had an outlet here in
Bryan and an outlet down in Houston, one in the Galleria.
And then unfortunately in 1984, she came out in the yard to
help me work, she pinched a nerve in her back. That put her
53
down for some time and you know when your trying to paint
all those figurines you sit there for hours its very very
tedious work and she just couldn't do it. Still would love
to get back to it. You can't sit still that long to be able
to do it and when you have to continue to get up and this
and that and the other. I did all pouring, cleaning of the
green ware, the firing of the dolls, I cut out all the eyes
and all the little teeth and this and that and the other. I
thoroughly enjoyed it but we couldn't continue because she
was the key to the whole operation. She still has quite a
few molds down in storage that we hope to get to one of
these days, we've began to wonder about that. That's what
we're, we're not doing anything in particular now.
Darcus - I was trying to take care of myself.
Charles - I'm an usher at the church.
Ellen - And that is. .
Charles - The First Baptist Church in Bryan. I've been
going there since I was born and raised here and I was
baptized in that church and married in that church. This
has been our home. Maybe it'll be like Central Baptist.
Maybe they'll get to where they build a new one before long.
I hope not. The present sanctuary we have now is very nice.
54
C
Because we're involved and sometimes it's hard to get
through a closet or two.
Ellen - Well, when you're through, you can come and go
through mine. You're farming, is that right Bill?
Bill - Well, I have a farm. Yeah, that well in '72 my boys
came on when they wanted and we realized that we had to do
something for them so they wanted to get FAA, FFA, youngest
got in there. So we found a piece of land and we worked it.
I've got eight cows, a bull, and two heifers, and about
seven small calves. I used them because I like them. We
have to take care of them and I think the cows know how to
do that better thai I do so I ain't gonna interfere. And we
really do, I can't even touch it. I can walk through them
but I can't touch it but they keep the place clean. We have
a nice operation. We'd raise enough hay to take us through
the winter. But or about four acres of that property have
got my own shops to do. I just keep busy with that and keep
out of my wife's hair.
Willie Belle - You can't fix walkers can you?
Bill - I just bought my wife a motorized scooter.
Willie Belle - You're not interested in hand walkers?
55
Bill - Hand walkers? Well yeah, I've got one.
Ellen - Willie Belle, we're almost coming to an end here,
can you think of anything else that you would like to have
recorded?
Willie Belle - Well, I don't remember anything I've said
that's worth recording.
Ellen - Well, would you like future generations to know?
Willie Belle - Well, I don't know, I'm busy taking care of
myself. I still try to answer letters, do almost all my
financial work, still do a little, not too much, 'cause I
can't see well enough, can't hear well enough. My hearing
aid now is supposed to be in repair....
Ellen - And this is all modern technology isn't it?
Dorcas - Ellen, she has a knowledge of a lot of old poems
and old time sayings.
Willie Belle - Oh not too much.
Dorcas - Yes you do Aunt Willie. And her mother taught her
these things. And through the years she has kept a book
and kept it written down so that's a treasure to all of us.
56
Ellen - That's something to look in to. I belong to the
Research Ramblers and Mary Cooper is in there.
Dorcas - But she has all kinds of sayings and Grandma Liddy,
her mother just had the most interesting stories and
comments about things you know and Aunt Willie has those
written down and she also has some of her own you know.
Ellen - They're in longhand?
Dorcas - Yes.
Bill - The Heritage Book that's out of Washington D.C.
really has a lot. They sell books, all kinds of books of
genealogy.
Dorcas- We have always thought Aunt Willie was so special
because of her attitude towards people and to life and her
remarkable memory. In fact, I understand that one of the
men from the business mens Bible class has just donated a
book of poems and sayings to the Crestview Library in her
name. She's quite frisky!
Ellen - This is just one more question, when you worked on
campus, did you live on campus as well at that time or did
you. .
57
Willie Belle - No, I lived in Bryan and had to catch a ride
to college. I got up at 7:30 and to get out here, I have
come to C.S. and gone into the library and you remember that
little rotunda up there? Well, they had a place that you
could sit there if you wanted to. You'd have to get up on
the ladder to see. I'd watch them walk into the mess hall
at breakfast time as they marched in during day light
savings.
Bill - They had a trolley from Bryan to College but more
than that many of the college, they lease cars they had old
cars. A group of them, I know the Carvers and the people
over there, you know they had where they 5 or 10. No, no
they had a car come from Bryan to College.
Willie Belle - Yea it was electric, it was electric wasn't
it?
Bill - No these were gasoline the later models and they'd
buy a van and they operated it a group of people. Which I'm
sure she did too. I know because I drove from College to
Bryan all that time and I'd meet those people coming there.
And Judge Hail, do you remember him?
Willie Belle - Hail.
58
Bill - Hail.
Willie Belle - I remember the old Boyette store here, it
was across the road from the Railroad station. They had the
first store was across the railroad. That was the first
store out here then. That was the main store out here and
he was an influential character around A &M.
Bill - Oh yes.
Willie Belle - He owned a lot of property by the railroad,
and across an eastside railroad.
Ellen - Dorcus, is there anything you can think of that Aunt
Willie...
Darcus - Well, I remember Aunt Willie and Sybil her sister,
Charles' mother talking about the unpaved streets in Bryan
and how when the First Baptist Church was formed. It was
formed in a saloon in downtown Bryan.
Willie Belle - Every other store was a saloon.
Dorcus - I remember those things from times past, some of
the things.
59
Willie Belle - They had grocery stores and Haswell's,
Jenkins drug stores.
Ellen - If you just think a minute of the things that she
has seen in her life time from unpaved streets in Bryan to
practically skyscrapers out here in A &M and the man going on
the moon and the space things you know.
Willie Belle - I don't know enough about it.
Ellen - But you've seen it, thought it, Aunt Willie, so
trains and cars and everything like that, I just think its
remarkable.
Charles - Downtown Bryan when it rained before main
street,before it was paved, it had the widest main street in
the state of Texas I guess, unpaved.
Willie Belle - And 'you'd slop across that street in galoshes
on rainy weather.
Charles - They had wooden bridges they'd try to throw across
that it was almost impossible to get across.
Willie Belle - You talk about cold weather, when I was
working in town it was cold. Golashes when you'd have to go
to work.
60
Charles - They didn't have proper heating.
Ellen - Or insulation or anything else.
Charles - Well, I think you women have a better memory, my
wife, she can tell me things I did 25 - 30 years ago, where
I was and what happened. I've already forgot all about
that.
Willie Belle - Do you remember when Ms. Roundtree, the
Editor of the Eagle, had twenty five years ago, will that's
what the old people look for now. They don't have it now.
Charles - She was quite a lady.
Willie Belle - Yes she was. She found out the news on the
main street.
Ellen - I think that for today we will draw this to a close
and I have some forms here that I need to have you all sign.
Charles - We have to sign a release.
Ellen - You have to sign a release.
61
r
•
62
Remarks:
Memory La
Name
interviewer
Interview Place
I
City of College Station
Memory Lanes Oral History Project
•
Oral History Stage Sheet
/,
AMNIgras
Special sources of inf• mation
Date tape received in office—V./V/9 C # of tapes marked
Original Photographs Yes ' No # of photos Date Recd
Describe Photos
First audit check by
Copy editing and second audit check by
Final copies: Typed by
Sent to interviewee on 5) Le 1 (name)
Received from interviewee on & f 1 G/ S
Proofread by:
Indexed by:
Sent to bindery by
Received from bindery
Deposited in archives by:
Interview date
Interview length
/o
(name)
Interview No.
Date
Interview Agreement and tape disposa form:
Given to interviewege o 2 S Received Yes No
Date Signed 3/2/ 9 Rest{ ictions- If yes, see remarks below. Yes No
Transcription:
First typing completed .af ' Pages Date
(name) D
Pages Date
Pages Date
Pages Date
Pages Date
2 ,
Photos out for reproduction: Where to: Date:
Original photos returned to: Date:
Date
Date
Date
Date
Date ( 4 7/21416
Remarks:
First audit check by
Sent to interviewee on
Received from interviewee on
Copy editing and second audit check by
Final copies: Typed by
GX5gq- z&cl7
��M
- 4
of College Station �'�rn cQ
City Y 9r ( /2o
Memory Lanes Oral History Project 1
Oral History Stage Sheet
Memory La G �%f/G
Interview No.
Name d i i / Interview date V S / %9.S
Interviewer ,o // Interview length
Interview Place 42 / aye L' r_ A.. •. /D G
Special sources of in mation
Date tape received in office # of tapes marked
Original Photographs Yes 'No # of photos Date Rec'd
Describe Photos
(name)
(name)
Date
Interview Agreement and tape dis sal 0 jn:
Given to interviewe on .25 Received Yes No
Date Si ne 3 ..2q/ 9 S Res If es see remarks below. Yes No
9 ye First typing completed s,
Pages Date
Transcription:
(name)
Pages Date
Pages Date
Pages Date
Proofread by: 1) Pages Date
2' Pages Date
Photos out for reproduction: Where to: Date:
Original photos returned to: Date:
Indexed by: Date
Sent to binplery by Date
Received from bindery Date
Deposited in archives by: Date
Remarks:
Memory Lan
City of College Station
Memory Lanes Oral History Project
Name 4 , i4 'Yt/
Interviewer
First audit check by
Final copies: Typed by
•
Oral History Stage Sheet
Interview Place ! 4_ / Ge, 6� /
Special sources of inf' , ation
Date tape received in office S/2yfi ( # of tapes marked
Original Photographs Yes No # of photos Date Rec'd
Describe Photos
Interview Agreement and tape dispo al for
Given to intervi e e on 3 2 S Received Yes No
Date Signed /2 /9 _ " tions- If yes, see remarks below. Yes No
Transcription: / J
First typing completed b /�
+- Gy�i�+[� �� Pages Date
(name)
( (name)
Sent to interviewee on 7 t l
Received from interviewee on 01 Cr S
Copy editing and second audit check by
Proofread by:
(name)
2 i
Photos out for reproduction: Where to:
Original photos returned to:
Interview No.
Interview date
Interview length
Date
Pages Date
Pages Date
ages Date
ages le i Date
Pages Date
Date:
Date:
Indexed by: Date
Sent to bindery by Date
Received from bindery Date
Deposited in archives by: Date
Remarks:
I
Memory La
City of College Station
Memory Lanes Oral History Project
Copy editing and second audit check by
Oral History Stage Sheet
Interview No.
Name ( G ) Interview date 3/2 V9S
Interviewer ✓ ,./17.€2...-- Interview length
Interview Place Cr, (`tom, /OG
Special sources of i ormation
Date tape received in office .:57-2-1 # of tapes marked Date
Original Photographs Yes No # of photos Date Recd
Describe Photos
Interview Agreement and tape disp sal f rm:
Given to interview a on...? S Received Yes No
Date Signed ,;2 5t 9 Restrictions- If yes, see remarks below. Yes No
Transcription: '
First typing completed
First audit check by II
Sent to interviewee on (2
Received from interviewee on
Indexed by:
Sent to bindery by
Received from bindery
Deposited in archives by:
(name)
; (name)
(name)
Final copies: Typed by , Pages Date
Proofread by: 7) —Pages ti ( Date ��L
Pages Date
2 i
Photos out for reproduction: Where to:
Original photos returned to:
Pages Date
Pages Date
Pages Date
Date:
Date:
Date
Date
Date
Date
The City of College Station, Texas
Memory Lanes Oral History Project
INTERVIEW AGREEMENT
The purpose of The Historic Preservation Committee is to gather and
preserve historical documents by means of the tape- recorded interview. Tape
recordings and transcripts resulting from such interviews become part of the
archives of The City of College Station Historic Preservation Committee and
Conference Center Advisory Committee to be used for whatever purposes may
be determined.
I have, read the above and voluntarily offer my portion of the interviews
with Co 0 +
(Name of Interviewee)
In view of the scholarly value of this research material, I hereby assign rights,
title, and interest pertaining to it to The City of College Station Historic
Preservation Committee and Conference ter Adviory Committee.
Interviewer (signature)
q , /9&C
E //e,v l " 6" /"6)WS — % / 02 V R
Interviewer (Please Print)
Interviewer (Please Print)
Signature of Interviewer
HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE
City of College Station, Texas 77840
ORAL HISTORY DATA SHEET
I hereby give and grant to the HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE, City of College
Station, Texas, for whatever purposes may be determined, the tape recordings, transcriptions, and
contents of this oral history interview. Also, permission is hereby given for any duplications of
original photos, documents, maps, etc. useful to the history project to be returned unharmed.
Interviewee releases, relinquishes and discharges CITY, its officers, agents and employees, from all
claims, demands, and causes of action of every kind and character, including the cost of defense
thereof, for any injury to, including the cost of defense thereof for any injury to, including death of,
any person, whether that person be a third person, Interviewee, or an employee of either of the
parties hereto, and any loss of or damage to property, whether the same be that either of the parties
hereto or of third parties, caused by or alleged to be caused by, arising out of, or in connection with
Interviewee provision of historical information, whether or not said claims, demands and causes of
action in whole or in part are covered by insurance.
WI (> s zaA -rES
Intervi,lpwee ( ease print)
/)/ //c
Signature of Interviewee
e,s•
Place of Interview
List of photos, documents. mans. etc.
Name
Address
, W7Te I
Telephone s _L1_o`117
Date of Birth 1
Place of Birth c{�. /z ✓r lie
his s,s rfi-1
INTERVIEW STATUS: Completed
Date
Initial
In progress
Interviewee agrees to and shall indemnify and hold harmless CITY, its officers, agents and
employees, from and against any and all claims, losses, damages, causes of action, suits and liability
of every kind, attorney's fees, for injury to or death of any person, or for damage to any property,
arising out of or in connection with the use of the items and information referenced aboved by
CITY, its agents, representatives, assigns, invitees, and participants under this grant. Such
indemnity shall apply where the claims, losses damages, causes of action, suits or liability arise in
whole or in part from the negligence of city.
3/a Lk! os'
k;
Place of Interview
List of photos, documents, maps, etc.
HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE
City of College Station, Texas 77840
ORAL HISTORY DATA SHEET
I hereby give and grant to the HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE, City of College
Station, Texas, for whatever purposes may be determined, the tape recordings, transcriptions, and
contents of this oral history interview. Also, permission is hereby given for any duplications of
original photos, documents, maps, etc. useful to the history project to be returned unharmed.
Interviewee releases, relinquishes and discharges CITY, its officers, agents and employees, from all
claims, demands, and causes of action of every kind and character, including the cost of defense
thereof, for any injury to, including the cost of defense thereof for any injury to, including death of,
any person, whether that person be a third person, Interviewee, or an employee of either of the
parties hereto, and any loss of or damage to property, whether the same be that either of the parties
hereto or of third parties, caused by or alleged to be caused by, arising out of, or in connection with
Interviewee provision of historical information, whether or not said claims, demands and causes of
action in whole or in part are covered by insurance.
I I e i a ,u 6-,e
Interviewer (Please Print)
Ailtdiga■-
Signature of Interviewer
t`. C LTV
ewee (Ple -se print)
Signature of Interviewee
C /7"7 /7 - L \
Na e
D / 7J2 / Ii CA,es d n .
Address
Oe -i/ . .7 --7-7(5-49
Telephone t e c t o 6 2 3 6.
Date of Birth FE i`3 �. 9 /S 2
Place of Birth a R.v 1).c
INTERVIEW STATUS: Completed
In progress
Interviewee agrees to and shall indemnify and hold harmless CITY, its officers, agents and
employees, from and against any and all claims, losses, damages, causes of action, suits and liability
of every kind, attorney's fees, for injury to or death of any person, or for damage to any property,
arising out of or in connection with the use of the items and information referenced aboved by
CITY, its agents, representatives, assigns, invitees, and participants under this grant. Such
indemnity shall apply where the claims, losses damages, causes of action, suits or liability arise in
whole or in part from the negligence of city.
31241 9
Date 6 ye
Initial
I hereby give and grant to the HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE, City of College
Station, Texas, for whatever purposes may be determined, the tape recordings, transcriptions, and
contents of this oral history interview. Also, permission is hereby given for any duplications of
original photos, documents, maps, etc. useful to the history project to be returned unharmed.
Interviewee releases, relinquishes and discharges CITY, its officers, agents and employees, from all
claims, demands, and causes of action of every kind and character, including the cost of defense
thereof, for any injury to, including the cost of defense thereof for any injury to, including death of,
any person, whether that person be a third person, Interviewee, or an employee of either of the
parties hereto, and any loss of or damage to property, whether the same be that either of the parties
hereto or of third parties, caused by or alleged to be caused by, arising out of, or in connection with
Interviewee provision of historical information, whether or not said claims, demands and causes of
action in whole or in part are covered by insurance.
n /Z <•. /t .s / y/+ � - 7` D /4
Interviewee (Please print)
Signature of Interviewee
)1$26 410,2,AIGR
Interviewer (Please Print)
Signature of Interviewer
r n , i ;
Place of nterview
HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE
City of College Station, Texas 77840
ORAL HISTORY DATA SHEET
Name
/rte -GQ.At /�/ ' /V Gt�� U
Address 9a y °
Flo/
Telephone X09 - I/ — Co a 3 C.
Date of Birth .fie '7: /q9,-
Place of Birth ,ceez..,, , . 7'....e -424. ,
INTERVIEW STATUS: Completed
In progress v
List of photos, documels. maps. etc.
-E'...t.. , (t ?., . ,.4 A r , J ' � 4"
Interview a agrees to and shall indemnify and hold harmless CITY, its officers, agents and �.
employees, from and against any and all claims, losses, damages, causes of action, suits and liability
of every kind, attorney's fees, for injury to or death of any person, or for damage to any property,
arising out of or in connection with the use of the items and information referenced aboved by
CITY, its agents, representatives, assigns, invitees, and participants under this grant. Such
indemnity shall apply where the claims, losses damages, causes of action, suits or liability arise in
whole or in part from the negligence of city.
4//f _
Date / '
Initial �p
0Q t,
List of uhotos. documents, mans. etc.
HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE
City of College Station, Texas 77840
ORAL HISTORY DATA SHEET
I hereby give and grant to the HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE, City of College
Station, Texas, for whatever purposes may be determined, the tape recordings, transcriptions, and
contents of this oral history interview. Also, permission is hereby given for any duplications of
original photos, documents, maps, etc. useful to the history project to be returned unharmed.
Interviewee releases, relinquishes and discharges CITY, its officers, agents and employees, from all
claims, demands, and causes of action of every kind and character, including the cost of defense
thereof, for any injury to, including the cost of defense thereof for any injury to, including death of,
any person, whether that person be a third person, Interviewee, or an employee of either of the
parties hereto, and any loss of or damage to property, whether the same be that either of the parties
hereto or of third parties, caused by or alleged to be caused by, arising out of, or in connection with
Interviewee provision of historical information, whether or not said claims, demands and causes of
action in whole or in part are covered by insurance.
P, --,c) K A) 67c
Interviewer (Please Print)
t..4___ _
Signature of Interviewer
Place of Interview()
w i II 5 N
Interviewee (Please print)
Signature of Interviewee
Name
7-be e /4
Address 7 Yoct
Telephone 7 7 'P./
Date of Birth, q , l R eT
Place of Birth' d ? .., , , , .u_......_ --
INTERVIEW STATUS: Completed
, LI 4 /qT
Date
Initial
In progress
Interviewee agrees to and shall indemnify and hold harmless CITY, its officers, agents and
employees, from and against any and all claims, losses, damages, causes of action, suits and liability
of every kind, attorney's fees, for injury to or death of any person, or for damage to any property,
arising out of or in connection with the use of the items and information referenced aboved by
CITY, its agents, representatives, assigns, invitees, and participants under this grant. Such
indemnity shall apply where the claims, losses damages, causes of action, suits or liability arise in
whole or in part from the negligence of city.