HomeMy WebLinkAboutSouth Side Panel Group 09My name is Bill Lancaster. Today is March 24, 1995. I am
interviewing for the second time Mr. Clint Matcek and Mrs.
Locke. Uh this interview is taking place in room 103 of the
Conference Center at 1300 George Bush Drive, College
Station, Texas. This interview is sponsored by the Historic
Preservation Committee and the Conference Center Advisory
Committee of College Station. It is part of the Memory Lane
Oral History Project. Each person, have each person
introduced themselves with the voices identifiable on the
tape recorder. All right, so will you introduce yourself
Ms. Locke.
Ms. Locke - I'm Georgia Shaw Locke and I'm talking about
some North Gate Business.
Bill - will so is Clift This is good
Ms. Locke - first of all I'll start with my father. He was
George B. Shaw and he operated what was then called the
Campus Sandwich shop and it was located behind Hall.
He began his operation in 1933. The sandwich shop was
started in 1923, I believe. And it was under the
directorship of the Athletic Department. And all the rent
from the shop went to the Athletic Department. The business
was very prosperous. He had it from 1933 to 1949. That's
the year he died in 1949. All during the war years, and
this picture I have, oh, I think it was, it must have been
April fools day. The way the boy has one of his pant legs
cut off and he has what is suppose to be a sword and he is
holding him up for a hamburger. So definitely dad is
holding his hands up and he has the hamburger. So he loved
the business it was something that he and the boys enjoyed
and the commendation that he received from the mayor of
College Station, Ernest Langford in 1949 and he said Mr.
Langford said we wish to congratulate you on the showing you
made at the inspection on November 19 1948. The grade that
you received on that inspection was 92 and the average grade
for this community was 90.6. You no doubt have heard that
this is the first time any town in the state of Texas has
had an average grade of 90 or over. So this community is
justifying in taking pride in that showing in which you
contributed so much. We know you will continued your
cooperative efforts to serve this community and we wish to
express our appreciation of the effective efforts you have
in showing in our city endeavors. Sign by Ernest Langford,
Mayor of College Station and H. L. Boegner, Colonel,
Chairman of the Sanitary Board. And this was dated the
fourth of January 1949.
Bill - That's wonderful
Ms. Locke - So that's what I had on my father. They called
him Pop Shaw and nice little guy. I got from his scrap
book. And then I have another story, I don't know how much
time I have.
Bill - We've got till noon, you go right ahead.
Ms. Locke - In 1947, my father built a building, it was then
called Sulphur Springs Road, now it is called University
Drive. And it was located behind the old Shulman Theatre
and that was the only building there for a long time and
then someone built a barber shop out next to it. They
called it Don's Barbershop. I don't know if it is still
there or not, but any way in 1947, my sister started the
Aggieland Flower Shop and this is one of the early pictures.
I don't know what year this was, but I can tell that it was
a long time back because of the way that they are all dress
and it looks so old too.
Bill - Now that's not Ruth's picture.
Ms. Locke - Yes it is
Bill - OH is it
MS. Locke - I think that was sometime in the late 40's after
1947
Bill - I can tell who the boys are
Ms. Locke - You can tell who the boys are
Bill - This is George Rogers over here
Ms. Locke - Really
Bill - Now I don't know who this is, this is George Rogers
Ms. Locke - Was that Raymond Rogers son
Bill - No its oh what's her name, she's still living, uh, my
minds blank. She lives on Bolton Street
Ms. Locke - Now she tells a funny story about a boy coming
in to buy flowers for his girlfriend and she always ask the
color of the dress the girl was wearing. You know they had
a senior ring dance in all the falls and the spring but then
there was Mother's Day and all the occasions like
Valentine's Day and graduation. And they were very big
occasions. I would come up from Houston, we were living in
Houston at that time and I would come to help. Sometimes
we'd stay up all night getting ready for the next day and
the boys would just line up up in front. This was the only
flower shop out there at that time. And
Bill - Now when was it open
Ms. Locke - It was open in 1947
Bill - 47
Ms. Locke - She sold it to the present owners in 1971. She
was there almost twenty five years. She decided to put in
gift shop instead and this is a picture of some of the
students leaving the shop. This was in the 60's about 1961.
And then this one
Bill - And that Ruth this looks more like her.
Ms. Locke - Looks more like her. People change over the
years.
Bill - Yea they do I'm afraid so.
Ms. Locke - Here she is, kinda looks like her
Bill - That's the Ruth I remember. This has got the 40, 41
all college calendar, no 60, 61 all college calendar.
Maybe we can get copies of those pictures
Ms. Locke - They'd be nice for a scrapbook
Bill - It would indeed
Ms. Locke - Anyway the boy, she ask him the color of his
girlfriends dress and he said "Oh she told me in a letter I
just don't remember, I am going to go out and get the letter
and see. Just as he got to the door he turned around and
said "I remember, he said it was the color of organdy ".
Organdy is a material. I don't know what she said, but she
told that story a lot
Bill - I bet in her very patient way she smiled
Ms. Locke - I bet she did
Bill - Will that all right
Ms. Locke - And she was telling about the first customer
they had when they opened the shop. She said he didn't know
he was the first customer. He walked in there like it had
been there always and just ordered his flowers like he was
professional at it. Then she said I don't know whether he
ever found out that he was the first customer she ever had.
Bill - Did she keep his dollar
Ms. Locke - I am sure she did.
Bill - You usually keep that first dollar.
Ms. Locke - First dollar. She has an old dollar that is
framed there but it's from the gift shop. There are a lot
of things that she saved memorabilia and things like that
and I thought these would be
Bill - Oh yes,Those are wonderful, maybe we can get copies
of those and put them in the scrapbook. Will all right
we've got some more questions to ask in a little bit let's
let Clift Matcek.
Clint - I'm not Clift, Clint
Bill - Clint, I'm sorry
Clint - That's no problem
Bill - Ok
Clint - I'm Clinton Matcek, some people pronounce it Motcek.
Bill - I'm sorry
Clint - Ok, Uh I haven't been in this area all that long. I
came here in 1948 uh and I worked 2 years for the Dr. Pepper
Bottling Company here until, I took an exam and got on at
the North Gate Post Office in 1950. Uh basically what I
have is, It's a historical survey of the Post Office of
College Station and most of the things in here parts of it
is rather lengthily but it gives dates the first post office
when it was established and the post master. Uh the first
post office by this was at Old Main Drive and Well -born Road
Bill - Old Main and Well -born Road
Clint - I don't know how they got Old Main cause old main I
thought was there right across from the post office which is
there now. That was Old Main, right?
Bill - Now there's some confusion on that and I ran into
this just a couple of days ago. There is a College Station
Main Street which is the street the one you are talking
about and then on campus there is an old main.
Clint - Will I think that's probably what they
Bill - The one that goes by the Albritton Tower
Clint - yes
Bill - And then goes to the Academic Building, I think all
old Main, Oh I know what it was just recently when the water
line broke, you know, this paper it said there was a problem
at Old Main and Wellborn Road and I think that was what they
were talking about . Now that my interpretation, I maybe
wrong I think
Clint - I believe that's correct from what I've heard I
Bill - but the street goes north toward Bryan from the post
office there I think it call College Main technically. Is
that right?
Clint - Right
Bill - Ok
Clint - It saids here that the first post office was started
in 1877, his name was H. T. Parsons, The second one was A.
B Pugh which served from 1878 to 1883 and the third one was
Johnny Smith evidently A B Pugh didn't stay but a few year
in 1883 to 1884 was John B Smith and then from 1884 to 1887
seemed like they change quite often was a Samuel Hoffman.
And the fifth one from 1887 to 1992 which was a lengthily
stay was W. C. Boyett. And from 1922 to 34 was a Ms.
Florence Guyer from 1934 to 44 was Mrs. Analee Smith now she
was the post master just before I started with the post
office. The next one was a post master from 1945 to 53
which was Dr. T L Logan Sr., he was the post master when I
started after that we had N. L. McCalla from 53 to 55, he
was acting post master after that we had Homer B Adams in
1955 to 1961 which was a acting post master job. After that
we had Ernest Greg took over from 1961 to 1972, from 1972 to
73 we had an officer in charge which was Stan Sartain who
was just there when the post office change from US Post
Office to Postal Service they had. In 1971 I came in and
worked with him as an Officer in Charge you might say and
then I got the Post Master ship in 1973 , I stayed aboard
until 1989, and retired in 89. We have a lot of things in
here
Bill - Is it possible to get a copy of all that
Clint - Sure there's some pictures here. We've had some old
photographs of when the post office at North Gate was built.
It then it was started in 1936, it was finish in 37, uh for
some reason those photographs have disappeared. I went to
the post master to try and get him to help me find them
because they were there in some folders at the post office
when I left now I don't know what they did with them. I
have a feeling that the people in Dallas that keep up with a
lot of this stuff if they find out that they were there,
they probably took them. But I can remember some of the
pictures of the construction site that by University Drive,
there were still tracts of the trolley
Bill - I'll tell you about that
Clint - But huh evidently I don't when they were taken out
but, the only pictures they show
Bill - Those tracks, it wasn't the trolley tracks there was
a railroad a regular railroad loop around the whole campus
there. Those tracks would take railroad cars took coal to
the power plant back over there and also there was a branch
off of that that backed up besides Sebesta hall and they'd
unload carloads of supplies for the dining hall on campus.
That's how it would get, you know the railroad cars run
next to Wellborn Road but there was a branch off of that
that veer around and came between the building you were
talking about and University Drive that went clear on around
to where the power plant is now and huh that was what that
was for. It would bring coal to the power plant in the
early days you see it converted to gas back there somewhere
and it didn't need coal any longer but they left the line
there because it did carry food supplies to the dining hall.
There use to be a set of tracks just up against the dining
hall on the north side there at Sebesta Hall where they
would back in box cars and they would unload all the food
took up but that's where those tracks. It would be
interesting to have pictures.
Clint - I don't know where they have disappeared to but
they did. When that office was remodeled in it was built
36, 37 in 1961 this was some time when I started in 50 and
in 1960, 61 it was finished in 62 we moved out of the office
and moved into a building that was right back of Loupot I
don't know who own that building but we were in that for
about a year or more until we move back and they remodeled
the North Gate Post Office and added more boxes
Bill - What year was that?
Clint - In 1962 some stories in here I think of the opening
after the remodeling they had Senator Ralph Yarbrough came.
I can remember that but I don't know too much about it. I
have an invitation, a copy of an invitation that was sent
out. They only had about 30 people working for the post
office. At that time Mr. Greg was the post master and Mr.
McCalla was the assistant and the superintendent mail was M
C Hogg and then we had an assistant Roger Jackson . And hub
Mr. Edmonds was Station Superintendent which was at MSC.
Back then we only have 30 employees. Actually until 1953 up
until 1953 they had no city delivery therefore
Bill - I was wondering when that was 53 is when the city
delivered
Clint - yes and they had as far as I can remember they had
two carriers one on the east side of 6
Bill - good nite. Two carriers,that was all the carriers
Clint - yes and that was it and they had I think they had a
parcel post truck that took parcel and naturally he carried
those with him but huh then huh it started growing through
the sixties and seventies it grew like wild fire
Bill - You retired in 1989 then
Clint - yes
Bill - How many workers in the post office then
Clint - probably about 100, well it went from two carriers
to 34, 35. Actually the post office in College Station,
because they had no rural delivery, we actually had a 2 cent
postage for local mail. As far as I know it was the only
city in the United States that had that. And that was for
like Bryan /College Station and huh. When I look back on
that it makes you wonder
Bill - It sure does. You got done overnight too.
Clint - Oh yeah
Bill - No problem
Clint - But now I think they have, when I left there they
had for rural routes that were transferred from Bryan
Bill - then up to 50 was all the rural route done out of
Bryan
Clint - Yes it was and that was the thing when people would
ask where does so and so live or they give their location.
We live south of College Station on highway 6 or you know
there abouts.
Bill - Their address is Bryan
Clint - How come your address is Rt 4 Bryan and so they
corrected that in 79
Bill - Well that's amazing, Huh now, I remember when the
house delivery started most everybody had boxes on campus.
I expect it was a slow process to convert from the on campus
box to having your mail delivery at home. It was for us.
It was a slow process we had # 5316 wound up at the MSC well
Clint - I remember dropping mail to you
Bill - Oh that's terrible. I remember that number, 5316
Clint - The funny thing about it. The Battalions use to
come out and be delivered to the post office each day late
in the afternoon, usually it was around 3:30, 4:00 and huh
I was a part time clerk so when they needed help they would
call you and they could call you up for 15 or 20 minutes and
they called me down to Aggie Land Station to box the
Battalion which would take me about 20 minutes.
Bill - Oh me I tell you. Well now you came to College
Station from where?
Clint - Basically from Houston huh I finished high school
in Snook, went to Houston when I was 16. Work for use tool
company for a couple of years went into the military. I was
in the Air Force for two years served in the Allusion
Islands, came back and worked for the Dr. Pepper Bottling
Company
Bill - But your a native of Burleson County
Clint - I lived in Burleson County yes
Bill - Were you a Snook Bluejay
Clint - Well yea we use to call them the Jay birds
Bill - The Jay birds ok all right ok good. Now back to
you Ms. Locke, your father started this in 1933. Ok when
did he, did he come to this area then.
Ms. Locke - He was a native of Brazos County. He was born,
grew up in Steephollow
Bill - ok
Ms. Locke - and huh he had business in Bryan, five different
places before he left for College Station. He began in 1916
with a place on Main Street and he had locations in
different places, there were two that I can remember at
different times. On 26th street there was on then 25th and
they changed the name and it was over there just across the
street I guess you'd say it was across the street from where
the parking area is for the Court house and tax office.
There was a building there a large building that's the last
one he had in Bryan before he went to College Station and he
loved the work.
Bill - I remember that, I'd been in there lots of times.
Ms. Locke - Oh have you
Bill - Oh yes indeed it wasn't as big as this table
Ms. Locke - yea a small place
Bill - Yes sir I remember I bought nickel hamburgers in
there lots of times
Ms. Locke - They didn't cost must. That was the only fast
food place. They didn't have fast food places
Bill - Ok no
Ms. Locke - he was the only one that I know of
Bill - They didn't have any slow food places either. It was
either Pop Shaw's or the Aggieland Inn. That was about it.
yes sir ree bob.
Ms. Locke - And he enjoyed it very much. But he had
started in Bryan in 1916.
Bill - So you grew up in Bryan
Ms. Locke - Yes. I am too. I'm a fifth generation Brazos
County person not on dad's side but on my mothers side.
Bill - Well that's wonderful. Now your husband is Lonnie?
Ms. Locke - No it's Jessie Garden Locke. He was from
Houston. I met him in Houston
Bill - Now is he kin to Lonnie?
Ms. Locke - Kin to nobody here except myself. His father
came from Tennessee and I met him when I went to Houston to
go to Business College after I graduated and we were married
in 1935. Soon be sixty years.
Bill - Oh my goodness that's right it sure is
That's wonderful, that's great. Well you've seen a lot of
changes then in this part of the world
Ms. Locke - I really have. Daddy wouldn't believe all this
about the university.
Bill - He died in 49?
Ms. Locke - 49.
Bill - my father died in 1950.
Ms. Locke - I suppose they were well acquainted then.
Bill - they were indeed yes sir.
Ms. Locke - Daddy knew everyone out here.
Bill - I can remember your father quite well in that white
building.
Ms. Locke - I'm glad.
Bill - All the nickel cokes, nickel hamburgers.
Ms. Locke - I think the hamburgers were a dime I'm not sure.
Bill - Probably so, they were good.
Ms. Locke - He said he had a secret recipe.
Bill - Well, whatever it was I can attest to the fact.
Ms. Locke - The buns weren't as large as they are now, they
were about that big around, I guess
Bill - Well at my age back in 1933, I was 5 years old so
lets see someone who's 6,7,8, years old, they were big then.
Ms. Locke - I know. when your a child that gives me one year
older than you are they're big people. My sister was two
years older than I, I thought she was big because she was
larger than I was.
Bill - I knew Ruth very well. When did you come back to
Bryan then?
Ms. Locke - We came back when my husband retired. He
retired in 72 and we moved back in 73.
Bill - Ok so you've been here quite awhile.
Ms. Locke - I have been here soon be twenty -two years in
June since we came back. I left when I was 18 to attend
business college in Houston and then after we were married I
went to the University of Houston, majored in music. I'd had
piano all my life, my mother started me when I was six.
Bill - Oh my.
Ms. Locke - So I went and studied piano and major in piano.
I taught piano for 38 years.
Bill - In Houston?
Ms. Locke - Most of the time there, after we moved here I
taught for 9 years before I retired.
Bill - My mother taught, well my wife did too, taught music
it would be before that. My mother died in 75.
Ms. Locke - I remember your mother. She gave a good talk to
the music teachers association.
Bill - Did she?
Ms. Locke - It was either music teachers of the DAR. I
believe it was the DAR it would be our Christmas program and
she had such a wonderful program.
Bill - She loved it.
Ms. Locke - Oh we enjoyed it so much and I know your wife
too from DAR and from visiting out at the church with my
sister.
Bill - Right, right oh we knew Ruth real well, of course she
played out at the church.
Ms. Locke - They started her when she was about 8 years old
and got the piano and they didn't intend to start me until
I was about 8, but I started playing by ear. The teacher
told them it would be a good idea for me to start.
Bill - Get this child harnessed in the right direction.
Ms. Locke - I still play by ear.
Bill - Well that's wonderful that you can.
Ms. Locke - You just can't help it if you can play by ear
you just gonna do it.
Bill - It's a gift. Well Clint, what are you doing in
retirement?
Clint - Well kind of taking it easy really
Bill - Good, ok.
Clint - I retired in Jan. of 89. I took care of honey do's
and did a lot of fishing for 9 months. In November of 89 I
was lucky enough to go back to work part -time for the City
of College Station and I am still doing what I use to do in
the post office every morning and pick up the mail. I
distribute to every office in City Hall and the outlying
area.
Bill - And I bet they get a lot of it.
Clint - Yes the do, they sure do. That I really enjoy I get
to see people that I worked with and I get to meet people
that are with the city.
Bill - Do you live in College Station?
Clint - Actually, I live in Bryan , but just barely.
Bill - Barely, ok.
Clint - Barely, I feel like I should live here because I've
worked in College Station since 1950 and I've always lived
in Bryan, but it just happened to be that I guess.
Bill - When the property is available, of course if you
lived in College Station you'd of worked in Bryan and vice -
versa. This has been most enlightening, if you all have
anything else you think historians would like to hear or be
a part of there's an awful lot I think that you've
contributed your families through the years to be included
here in this. It seems strange to reach back in these
times to try to recall what all there has been and what all
has been done. You know both of you have seen so much
change here in this town. You know how many students were
here in 1950, 6000's, 7000's
Clint - They did good to have around 6000's.
Bill - And now this is the 3rd largest university in the
United States with 42,000 students. You know that's hard to
believe when you remember back, when mail, local mail was 2
cents. And knew everybody, you probably knew all the names
in College Station and what not.
Clint - You may not have known them, you knew them by the
names in their box number, really.
Bill - That's right.
Clint - You give someone a hand full of mail they knew
exactly who they were. Even though some people they may not
even have a box # on it. 20 or 30 thousands.
Bill - Well, I should think so.
Clint - After the students and basically North Gate is in
the station now and basically that's what it's for is the
student. Now there's still a lot of the old timers that
still kept their box they were use to having that address
and they don't care to change.
Bill - That's right . Well of course the boxes, if you're in
a hurry for mail it gets put up quicker. If you don't mind
going to the post office and getting it.
Clint - I can remember back then when huh University no it
wasn't University National Bank it was College Station State
Bank . When it started it was in a and then
they built the concrete slab that has just been remodeled.
Bill - Pizza Parlor
Clint - No it's been a pizza parlor and that's been
remodeled and I think it's now an Aggie Credit Union.
Bill - I guess, I don't know but that was a fancy building.
Clint - Yes it certainly was. My wife worked there at the
time they went into the new building and you talk about a
bunch of proud people, hey
Bill - It didn't have a nickel's worth of parking but it was
a nice building. It was a beautiful place. Yes I remember
that little wooden building right next to the Red Gardens
Coop store. It was really once you got inside you couldn't
turn around, it wasn't much more than 8' or 10' wide at the
most.
Clint - Mr. Burgess had a hand in that and in the Community
Savings and Loan.
Bill - He sure did.
Clint - He was something else he was. I thought the world of
that man.
Bill - Mr. Burgess and Bill Fitch have done remarkable
things to make this community grow in the right direction
and they need to be remembered for that. Bill Fitch of
course has had a hand in all the development you know all
the street things laid out properly, utility all this kind
of stuff. If somebody back there hadn't had a hand you know
guiding the stuff it can get out of caliber in a hurry.
Clint - You know Bill Fitch was the one that put in the,
what I am trying to say, South Oak Wood. I mean off of 2818
all that area. In fact he was the one that owned the lot
that the post office got from him to build a new office.
Bill - Well I don't have anything else. If you all can think
of something. Now I'll tell you what we'll do, this will be
typed up, written up and you will be given a copy of it and
you can all review it to make sure you didn't say anything
you didn't intend to say. I don't think we had any of that
today and then if you think of something in the meantime
that can be added to it just write it on the back and to it,
will be real helpful if somehow we can some how get copies
of some of the pertinent stuff you listed all those post
master back in the 1890's that pretty well does away if they
had post master back then I don't see how in the world this
group could ever have gotten anything.
Clint - Well maybe that was huh some side stories.
Bill - Well it was an interesting story I know that. Bill
Scoates was out here he might remember something about that.
That fact they had official post masters back in his time.
The building I remember in fact I've got a picture of it
here doesn't quite show. You know the street Joe Route
Blvd. in front of G. Rollie White going west, you cross
Wellborn Rd. and just across if you drive down there at
night going west on that street, lights would shine on a
little building that I remember as a post office will be
bit south as that says as Old Main Drive. The railroad
station is where Old Main Drive you know where the bell
tower is now, you cross the tracks there and there's 2 rail
way stations sitting there. This building was south of
that, as I say, just across from Joe Route Boulevard is the
building I remember as the post office and I am wondering if
that's what they are saying.
Clint - Most of this was put together I think I'm not real
sure. It's got some names in here who had written to get
this information.
Bill - Tell me this.
Clint - If it would help ya'll are welcome to take this and
copy it and make anything out of it that can be useful and
copied.
Bill - Well yea I'd like to just take it to a copier if you
don't mind.
Clint - No don't mind at all just don't lose it I kept a
copy of this for my own.
Bill - was there a building at the North Gate? In fact I
know there was a building at the North Gate because it's on
all the pictures of the City of College Station if you are
standing in front of the current post office looking North
through Old North Gates there's a building that says US Post
Office. Is that mentioned here in this list of places? Do
you know what I'm talking about? You've seen the picture I
know, it's got snow on the ground the gates are swung open
wide, the real North Gate was there and there's a building
in that picture that's called the US Post Office off to the
left. In fact it's probably sitting out here in the hall
some of the pictures out here we can go look at it in a
minute and see if.
Clint - That I don't know, I don't know how up to date, how
authentic this is.
Bill - I'm wondering if there was a building where that
current building is there a post office there. That was the
first time the post office was there did it mention that I
guess.
Clint - It didn't say all right I'm not sure it could have
been.
Bill - I remember that building being built but I can't
remember what was there before that time. And I don't
remember the building I'm talking about in the North Gate
Area but I've seen it a bunch of times in pictures setting
there. I bet in the cases out here there are probably some
pictures of the one I'm talking about. I know it's in the
pictures just recently painted and given to George Bush,
what not, of all the College Station scenes in that. Here's
a picture taken in 1929 that's just crept off it doesn't
even show the rail way stations. It just crept off there
maybe it does it's pretty hard to tell.
Bill - Well listen, Thank You much you all have done well
here. you get an A+ on this. Go out and get some more
goodies here. Maybe some of the others are through and
visit with them if you want to.
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reel,6 ce - � v , /rri /D3
Date tape received in office 3/.?4 # of tapes marked /
Original Photographs Yes I No # of photos /' Date Rec'd
Describe Photos q //Q Y 4 /
g --- 4 ii u `1-
1-- // X9
sal f9rm,:
9S Received Yes
Restrictions- If yes, see remarks below. Yes
(name)
Pages
Pages
Pages
Pages
Date
/-2 579S
Date
Date
Date
Date:
Date:
Date
Date
Date
Date
No
No ✓
Date 7 //793 —
i S
Date ! l �. 1
Date
-brOt,upq
Remarks:
Memory Lane:
Sent to interviewee on
Final copies: Typed by
City of College Station
Memory Lanes Oral History Project
Oral History Stage Sheet
Interview No.
Name / /�( Interview date /.2'/ /9S 9S
Interviewer Q „ l vi length
Interview Place o /tT�Ak� Zed , /03
Special sources of informat on
Date tape received in office 3/.2 V/9S # of tapes marked
Original Photographs Yes No ✓# of photos Date Recd
Describe Photos
Interview Agreement and tape disp
Given to interview a on
Date Signed 3/ L�
Transcription:
First typing completed
4./
First audit check by , .0a
Proofread by:
Indexed by:
Sent to binptery by
Received from bindery
Deposited in archives by:
sal form:
Received
yes X No
Restrictions- If yes, see remarks below. Yes Nom
g •
5 'J
\ a ( _
Received from interviewee on / Q�
Copy editing and second audit check by
(name)
2)
Photos out for reproduction: Where to:
Original photos returned to:
Pages
Pages \L )
Pages
Pa
,-taz
I Pages
Pages
-66?/0
l47 .2 e
Date:
Date:
Date
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Tnaa
Date 4
Date J I \ a \
Date
Date6� f f
Date
City of College Station
Memory Lanes Oral History Project
This is Wit LA NA 4-s ,r,& Today is 114,4-x_ , /' 5
(month) (day) (year)
I'm interviewing for the 02. t4 a time ma r r / 1 447 - t k
(Mr., Mrs.,
1Md5 oD46 LoQ,LE
Miss, Ms., Dr., Etc.)
This interview is taking place in Room r 3 of The
JOE Fffei dE,v:T,t.
at 1300 George Bush Dr.
College Station , Texas . This 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 Lane Oral History Project.
Have each person introduce themselves so their voice is
identifiable on the tape recorder.
The City of College Station, Texas
Memory Lanes Ora/ 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 determined, y
I have read the above and voluntarily offer my portion of the interviews
with _I i jr / /4 r_e_El< . / !? S: Een/ /A
(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 to visory Co mittee.
Interviewer (signature)
Date 2- V_ 15—
Interviewer (Please Print)
HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE
City of College Station, Texas 77840
ORAL HISTORY DATA SHEET
hereby give and he nd grant to the HISTORIC P RESERVATION he re, Texas, for whatever u RESERVATION COMMITTEE,
Station,
of this oral history purposes may be determined, the tape recordings, ity ti College
original photos, documents, maps, etG useful permission t is hereby � transuplicatio and
original ph releases, relinquishes and etc. useful
CITY, its officers, project giv for any ed unharm ed,
of
history project t be returned unharmed. agents and employees, from all
claims, demands, and causes of action of eve
thereof, for any injury to, including the cost of de ense thereof for any injury to i c dit of defense
any person, whether that person be a third arson 'y
parties hereto, and any loss of or damage to P � Interviewee or an en�PloY�cofde'thereof they
g 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 c onnection with
Interviewee provision of historical information, whether or not said claims, demands
action in whole or in part are covered by insurance
/ /174 and causes of
_Chw -r-;, L . Te. Eft
Interviewee (Please print)
n!d •
L4 N e rgit_
Inter iewer (Please Print)
ta 0 0-6 - /
L
Signature of Interviewer
Place of Interview
Signature of Interviewee
Name
Address
Telephone _ 846_ (sego
Date of Birth R zb_ 24
Place of Birth
INTERVIEW STATUS: Completed
List of photos. docu eats. ma s. etc. In progress
F r7 / — , ,4 6rC,L , a At 5 I Q / Pi tot Oiial
Date
Initial
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 perso 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 v--11--
HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE
City of College Station, Texas
ORAL HISTORY DATA SHEET �7g40
hereby ereby give and grant to the HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE,
St o this oral history i purposes may be determined, the tape recordings, t Cransccy ipti t College
original nterview. Also, permission is hereby t r ons, and
photos, documents, maps, etc. useful to the histo hereby given for any
CITY, its officers, agents y duplications of
claims, demands, r 3 project t be returned , o unharmed.
Interviewee releases, relinquishes and di all
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
any person, whether that person be a third e
parties hereto, and any loss of or damage to p rson' Interviewee or an employee c of d e'the e of the
h h of third a g property, whether the same be that either of the parties
hereto e
Interviewee third
on parties, of ,caused informatiod to be caused b y, arising out of action in whole or in part are covered by insurance. whether or not said claims demands and causestof,
E I /A SH frk 1,0 ai'l �
Interviewee (Please pr4.._t
Signature of Interviewe
ki 64 r4 a 4-fr rot_
Interviewer (Please Print)
Signature of Inte 4,
rviewer
r/t Ni rV
Place of Interview
List of photos. documents. mans
Name
Address
Telephone _ '74 a 9
Date of Birth 97/Sy 5,s
Place of Birth � yQ �
a
Date
Initial
INTERVIEW STATUS: Completed
x � O In progress
P, f �t
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.