HomeMy WebLinkAboutNorthgate Panel 3\W
Memory Lanes -North Gate
Interviewees:
Bill Boyett
George Calloway
Interviewers:
Mollie Guin
Mary Jo Lay
PRE DISCUSSION:
(The beginning is inaudible.)
Original Boyett home was at the corner of Boyett and University Drive.
Mr. Boyett: ...started construction in 39, they picked that house up, moved it
back a block, and set it where there's now, a pay as you go parking lot behind
the Deluxe. And the house was moved and sat there and it became rent
property, and it later burned to the ground. We've got a bunch of pictures of that
house, and it was a nice, large, old white home. It came originally from the
campus, but, it sat on that corner overlooking University Drive until they built the
theater.
Mollie Guin: Well the thing that I was so impressed about was when I came to
this town and my kids were small, uh, is that you would leave home on the
weekend, you wouldn't worry about locking your doors. The kids would ride
anywhere...
Mary Jo Lay: ...anywhere they want to on their bikes.
Mollie Guin: ...on their bicycles. You just give them a time restraint, because I
lived over where Mary Oaks lived. And all that area down there it was just, you
know, Blinns, and my kids...
Mary Jo Lay: I just thought it was wonderful.
Mollie Guin: I did too. And my kids could play all through there. They would
bury their cats and their dogs and have, you know, they took a sack and they
built a grave and bury the cat and rock the name and all this kind of stuff. It was
just, it was a really good town for kids to grow up in.
(INAUDIBLE)
Mary Jo Lay: Yeah. They think this is it. This is their home town.
Mollie Guin: uh huh
Mary Jo Lay: Why would you want to leave here? I don't want to leave. I love
it here.
Mary Jo Lay: That's right. That's right.
Mr. Boyett: You know it seems like everybody is in one of two schools of
thought. Either, they want to get away from here or they don't ever want to
leave. One of the two.
Mollie Guin: Or they'll leave and come back.
Mr. Boyett: Yeah, its perfect. I mean, I left twice after I graduated from A &M for
employment reasons, etc. And I wound up coming back, when I came back the
second time I said, that's it, I'm not leaving again. But then I've come from a
huge family and there, almost none of my family still live here. The original, my
great grandfather had 14 children. And 8 of those lived to be adults. And there
was only two of them living in Bryan /College Station. They all left the area,
every one of them. So my grandfather is one of only two of them that stayed in
this area. And the other one passed away at a very early age. So, my
grandfather was the only one of the original family that wound up living here.
They all spread out all over the state.
Mollie Guin: Well, I guess we can get started here.
BEGIN:
Mollie Guin: Um, as we've been talking about, the purpose of this um this
interview is to um let us talk about um what life was really like in the uh early
days of uh College Station. And uh the question I kinda feel like both of you,
and you can each give me your answer. We'll start over here with Mr. Calloway.
What was your first reaction when you heard that they were going to do
something like this? Alright.
Mr. Calloway: I thought it would be an interesting project....
Mr. Boyett: Basically, I have a personal interest in it obviously from my family
being here for generations. Its throughout my own family, as I said before, my
own family scattered greatly. Nobody has ever really put all this stuff together in
any kind of reviewable format, or anything. So, even though my family has lived
here for generations, I can learn a lot from the people who were just sitting in the
other room because they know a lot of things that I don't know and I was born
and raised here. All of the older generation of my family is now gone. The last
one passed away two years ago. We had boxes and boxes of pictures and
everything and we won't have anybody to tell us who's in some of them. And, to
me, that's a shame. So, that's the reason I'm here, because I want to try to put
together more of this and bring in our stuff. And I just met two or three ladies in
the other room that I'll bet can tell me who's in those pictures. Hopefully they
can.
Mollie Guin: Because I'm facing that same thing with some pictures that I have
- I don't know. Um, what kinda, I'll start with you, uh, Bill, what kind of business
was your family involved in in North Gate.
Mr. Boyett: My family has always been in the real estate business. Of course
this is all second and third hand information, but my great grandfather had the
first grocery store which was at the gate, which Mrs. Opersteny's father later took
over and it became Operstenys and it was its called Charlies for I guess 40 yrs,
even though it changed hands it kept Charlies name on it until just I guess less
than 10 years ago, Charlies was still there. It originally was just a clap board
building but it went on and on. But then my great grandfather was again, I'm
using second and third hand information, but I think he was the first post master
in this area, out here also. He's had a lot of just vacant land holdings. He had
cotton fields and everything in what's now North Gate. When the area began to
develop after he had already passed away, there was like 8 adult children at that
time, and the land was split up amongst those 8 living children. In the early
development stages, most of these buildings in the North Gate area were built
by one or more of those 8 living children of his. Not everyone of them but the
majority of the North Gate area wound up belonging to some part of our family in
one direction or the other. Including the large pieces of vacant land, that were
just like I said, they were cotton fields, so , as far as the specific business, I
would generally term it real estate because the family, through my grandfather
who was the one that wound up staying here throughout the years and he
bought back pieces of land from his own brothers and sisters and even though
various cousins do own a piece here and a piece there, he wound up being the
primary land holder. And we built commercial buildings and residential rental
buildings on the majority of the land that my grandfather owned.
Mollie Guin: What about you Mr. Calloway?
Mr. Calloway: I'd always lived with my grandparents. They were mom and dad
to me. They were the Ashfords, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ashford. He was in the
Building & Grounds Department of Texas A & M College for a number of years.
We first lived on the campus during World War I. The house we lived in was
right across from the old laundry. Our house was on the corner across from the
machine shops. We were there when the Armistice was declared on November
11, 1918. In fact, my mom was so excited because she had a son who faced
going overseas and into combat. He was in the service here on the campus,
and she was so excited about the war being over that she ran down the street
yelling about it. When she came back towards our house, she got in the wrong
house. An old sergeant lived there who was in the army. He was in a bedroom
putting on his trousers. (Hah -Hah!) It didn't bother him a bit. He just kept doing
what he was doing. She finally made it home. We use to have people come and
stay with us. We had a room we rented out to people who came to see their
sons while they were in service here. Down the street from the old machine
shops there use to be a row of barracks. On the upper floor of one of those
barracks was a fuselage of an airplane. I use to go there and play in that thing
all the time.
Mollie Guin: You mean they actually had the airplane up in the barracks?
Mr. Calloway: Yes, I had a lot of fun playing in it. But, I remember that
specifically because of that incident of my grandmother, or my mom. That was
the first place that I remember we lived on the campus. We later lived in a
house which was across from the old power plant.
Mollie Guin: Do you remember any of the, the addresses on these, the street?
Mr. Calloway: I do not. It's the same street now. There's still a street that runs
by the machine shop. Also the Power Plant is a place that I remember
particularly because we use to take our watermelons over there. That was the
ice house too. (hah hah!) We'd take our watermelons there to get them cold.
That was the second place we lived on campus. As I mentioned, my dad, my
grandfather, was an employee in the Building and Grounds Depatrment. He
worked for a Mr. Kraft. When Dr. Bizzel, President of Texas A & M College, left
here and became President of The University of Oklahoma, he took along some
of his people, including Mr. Kraft. Mr. Kraft in turn asked my dad to go along.
So we moved up to Norman, Oklahoma, for a year. When we came back here,
we moved back to Bryan. I could not get into the East side school, so I went to
the West side school. That was in the 7th grade. Then we moved back on the
campus. At that time he went to work for the Texas A & M athletic department.
Mollie Guin: Do you know what year this was about?
Mr. Calloway: About 1927 or 8 somewhere in there.
Uh huh
Mr. Calloway: He was provided a home by the Athletic Department. It was in
that clump of trees right next to the Omar Smith Tennis Courts. We lived there,
south of the athletic complex. And the back of our house backed up to the, the
old tennis courts, not the present Omar complex, you know. So, then when
went to A & M Consolidated, and I finished A & M Consolidated in 1931 and
went to A & M that Fall. During my, during this period of time, we went to the old
A & M Methodist Church. It was a frame tabernacle. It was in the North Gate
area where the Methodist church is now, but more to the west where there was a
tabernacle and a parking lot. I use to call myself half Methodist and half Baptist
because I went to Sunday school and church at the Methodist church and then,
because I had friends at the Baptist church I went to BYPUS church at the
Baptist Church. That's just one part I know about in the North Gate area. The
next part that I know about is that during quite a bit of the time I was in A & M. I
worked at the Aggieland Pharmacy. It was in that building across from Loupots
built by Mr. Sparks.
Mary Jo Lay: Do you know who owned that?
Mr. Calloway: Mr. Sparks owned that.
Mary Jo Lay: Sparks?
Mr. Calloway: Yes. Sparks who was part of Casey & Sparks that had the
confectionary in the basement of the YMCA. It was a very popular place,
because you know we didn't have anything like the MSC at that time. The
YMCA was the student "hang out." They had pool tables and ping pong tables
downstairs. They had a swimming pool which was later covered over. They put
in about six bowling lanes. I worked at the bowling lanes as a freshman. I also
worked at the Aggieland Pharmacy as a soda jerk. So that's my knowledge of
the North Gate area, the churches, Methodist Baptist, and through working at
Aggieland Pharmacy in the North Gate area.
Mollie Guin: So that was like Sparks Pharmacy, that's what that was called?
Mr. Calloway: Aggieland Pharmacy.
Mollie Guin: Aggieland Pharmacy.
Mr. Boyett: Now that would be in the 30s, or the 40s?
Mr. Calloway: That was in the 30s.
Mr. Boyett: In the 30s.
Mr. Calloway: Yes.
Mollie Guin: Now do you recall anything about this uh, the YMCA or anything?
Because...
Mr. Boyett: No, that was all before my time
Mr. Calloway: ...before his time. No, this was in the 30s. I don't know when
they started, uh, Casey & Sparks started it, but it could have been in the
twenties, in the late twenties. The confectionary was always referred to as
Casey's.
Mr. Boyett: Mrs., well her name was not Mrs. James, the lady that was talking
from the back left hand table in the other room, Mrs. Frances Kimbrough, Jim
James sister. Uh, she can really tie that together because her family was the
one she was talking about, James Drug had one on the corner downtown Bryan
and they moved out here and opened a drug store right across the street on the
other corner from where he's talking about. And it went through several names,
uh Sparks had a drug store there and James had one and I remember it
becoming Ellisons at some point.
Mr. Calloway: There was an Ellisons in there.
Mr. Boyett: Uh, and its the same Mr. Ellison that's in Bryan right now. They
opened a drug store on the opposite corner right across the street from the one
he's talking about later on. So where Loupots is. What's now Loupots was a
drug store also.
Mary Jo Lay: So there were two drug stores there?
Mr. Calloway: Yes.
Mr. Boyett: At one time, yes.
Mr. Calloway: At one time there were.
Mr. Boyett: ...and the one that he worked in became the campus photo center
years and years ago.
Mary Jo Lay: OK, so that's the building? OK.
Mr. Calloway: That's the building. Campus Photo Center.
Mr. Boyett: It became Campus Photo. And the other drug stores stayed open
until Loupots purchased that building. And this was probably when I was in
college this was probably in the 60s or 70s . Probably late 60s that Loupots
purchased well at that time I'm pretty sure it was Ellisons Drug.
Mr. Calloway: I don't know what year it came in. You know A. M. Waldrop was
the main men's store in down town Bryan. They came out and put a store in
where University Bookstore is now. On the opposite end of that block from the
pharmacy they had an A. M. Waldrop store in there.
Mary Jo Lay: I remember that. That was still here when I came.
Mollie Guin: ... becuase Waldrops was...
Mr. Calloway: Yes. Waldrops was there for years. I don't remember what year
they came in there because I think I was away when they moved in there. But
that was one of the big stores in down town Bryan, A. M. Waldrop.
Mr. Boyett: Yeah, all of those large bookstores that are there now at one time
were about two or three smaller stores and Waldrops had part of that and there
were several others in there. Bookstores over the years took in their adjoining
neighbors and expanded largely.
Mr. Calloway: Ivys Barber shop was in between those. I use to go to that shop
all the time.
Mr. Boyett: Uh huh
Mary Jo Lay: Uh, Bill, I would like for you to tell us where you lived, you know ,
you told us where you lived but I think your story is interesting too.
Mr. Boyett: Well, we actually lived in Bryan most of the time but when I was
born when I was very small, we lived in a small frame house on Nagle Street.
Right across from what's now called the Mud Lot. Uh this was in the late 40s
and in the early 50s they started construction on what became the Circle Drive in
Theater, which is whats now the Mud Lot was a Drive in Theater. And when I
was a child growing up, they were building it right across the street. Where we
lived was where St. Mary's Catholic Church is now, on that strip right in there.
Um, but we moved to Bryan my first school was Crockett, I went to Crockett
when I was in Elementary School and started when I was five. So, we didn't live
in that area but just a few years and then we moved close but over on right off of
Cavitt Street on Old South College.
Mary Jo Lay: And you said you have some pictures of that Nagle Street.
Mr. Boyett: Yes my family has some pictures of that area and the theater being
built there. And then we go back up to the North Gate area, and we've got a lot
of pictures from different parts of that up there.
Mr. Calloway: I remember those white apartments were the first large buildings
in the area.
Mr. Boyett: It supposedly was the first apartment building in Bryan /College
Station or in College Station, what became College Station. The building that he
made reference to in the video earlier that has gone through many changes that
was Two Pesos and is now being redone again, that building was built in 1928
and that was supposedly the first apartment building out here. And it was built
as apartments. Students called it "The Alamo."
Mr. Calloway: The terminal, of the old trolley, interurban as it was called, was
right near that.
Mr. Boyett: It was real close
Mollie Guin: When did they stop that trolley?
Mr. Calloway: I'm not sure. I do not recall when that stopped.
Mollie Guin: I've heard so many tales. Mr. Elders whose on the conference
board talking about how that cause he was at A & M and how they would get on
a trolley, and there was nothing in College Station for you to quote
* * *** * * * * * ** *they would get on a trolley and go to Bryan, which was a major you
know it was uh...
Mr. Calloway: The only road you had to go to Bryan was the Old College Road
That was the only road that you had.
Mollie Guin: So 6 wasn't there.
Mr. Boyett: No.
Mr. Calloway: 6 wasn't there.
Mr. Boyett: Roughly, what's now South College Avenue, that was the only road
that went all the way. I mean even 6 wasn't even there when I was a kid I mean
it was just it was a secondary street. It wasn't a main drag at all. South College
was the main road then all the early years.
Mr. Calloway: That used to be the main road to Houston. That used to run
down through Wellborn to Navasota and on to Houston.
Mollie Guin: Oh, OK. So that was, how would you ?
Mr. Boyett: See the original road. What's now called Old College Road if you
turn at the Chicken Oil Company. The road came there and then went down
what's now Wellborn Road. The old road didn't come through this way at all. It
made that big curve in there and came back out through there. And this is even
when I was a kid it was still that way.
Mollie Guin: When did they build that campus theater? Since there was no
entertainment you had to go to Bryan.
Mr. Boyett: The campus theater....
Mr. Calloway: It was after my time here. I don't know when it was built.
Mr. Boyett: I've got pictures of it and everything. I want to say it was completed
in the early 40s. Like 42, 43, somewhere right in there it was completed
before
Mary Jo: That was the only movie house in the area?
Mr. Boyett: Oh, no there were like four. There were three movie houses in
down town Bryan.
Mary Jo Lay: But, I'm talking about here in College Station.
Mr. Boyett: That and the drive in were the only ones that had ever been in
College Station.
Mr. Calloway: I have to add one more thing about this. They used to show
movies in the Assembly Hall which was located across the street and a bit more
north from the YMCA.
Mollie Guin: OK.
Mr. Calloway: An additional memory which was important in my life. In addition
to the Methodist tabernacle, The Methodist Parsonage was located in the area
near the church.
Mary Jo Lay: Near the tabernacle?
Mr. Calloway: Yes, near the tabernacle. That's where I met my wife. In the
parsonage. We've been married 55 years.
Mary Jo Lay: It worked then didn't it. It worked!
Mr. Boyett: Was it the gray house that was in the picture in there awhile ago
that the lady said that she grew up in
Mary Jo Lay: She said that was the mass the uh, what church was it though? It
was another denomination.
Mr. Boyett: Another one.
Mr. Boyett: Somewhere, in some of the family telling me stories. They told me
one uh roughly across the street from what is now St. Mary's uh where the
current student union building is there on Nagle Street, there was a gray house
that sat on that corner and somebody in history told me that that house had
been moved over to the corner that that lady is talking about. That gray house
which is now a rent house on the corner of Church and Boyett Street. Uh was
originally one of the parsonages. But I don't know which one.
Mr. Calloway: I don't know when they moved it.
Mary Jo Guin: Is the Methodist Parsonage still in the area?
Mr. Calloway: No it is not.
Mary Jo Lay: Its been destroyed.
Mr. Calloway: I don't know when that happened. It was a two story. Students
use to come there quite often, because as I said, that was the activity center.
Mr. R. L. Jackson was the pastor. He and Mrs. Grace Jackson had an "Open
House" for students at all times.
Mary Jo Lay: I saw a picture of the Westly Foundation too, of a wooden
building. Did you...
Mr. Calloway: OK. I don't know when that was.
Mary Jo Lay: That was later
Mr. Calloway: That was later.
Mary Jo Lay: OK
Mollie Guin: lets kind of center on and think about the businesses
there. Um, why don't you tell us something about uh the pharmacy even though
you worked there quote as the soda jerk. I had my first crush on this kid who
was really a jerk. He was a soda jerk. (Ha ha!)
Mr. Calloway: I was one of the soda jerks.
Mollie Guin: His name was Clyde and oh I was about 11 or 12 and I just
thought he just hung the moon. Um, but what were the business hours uh at this
pharmacy? Do you recall?
Mr. Calloway: I know I worked there at night quite often, especially when there
were dances at Sbisa Hall. That was the main place where they had dances,
and of course they'd all come there for the intermission at the dance. I
remember we were very busy.
Mollie Guin: Were they open five or six days a week? Do you recall?
Mr. Calloway: I think as I recall they were open seven days a week
Mary Jo Lay: Oh, on Sunday too.
Mr. Calloway: I think so. I, I may be wrong on that, but I think they were.
Mollie Guin: Cause we were talking about because I can remember when it use
to not and we could open, well business was for 6 days a week, it was just a
standard. Or at least five and a half
Mr. Calloway: Maybe not, I don't recall now whether I ever worked on Sunday, I
can't tell you.
Mr. Boyett: In Texas, the what they called the blue law was in effect, but I'm not
sure when it started. I know it was, they did away with it in probably the 70s.
That recently. But it was more or less illegal to be open on Sunday. For certain
types of businesses.
(INAUDIBLE)
Mary Jo Lay: And I suppose they delivered the, pharmacy delivered products?
Do you remember?
Mr. Calloway: Yes, we did.
Mary Jo Lay: Times have changed you know. Yeah.
Mr. Calloway: I used to work for a grocery store on campus.
Mary Jo Lay: On campus?
Mr. Calloway: On campus, yes. Right across form the old Exchange Store. It's
the personnel building now I believe. It was in that area down from the fire
station. I worked for a grocery store there. I drove the truck delivering
groceries.
Mollie Guin: Now these were like home delivery? You could call in?
Mr. Calloway: Home deliveries. You could call in
Mary Jo Lay: Well that, great. I wish they'd do that today. (Hah hah!)
Mr. Calloway: You could call in and we'd deliver your groceries to you.
Mr. Boyett: Didn't they call it the Commissary. It was....
Mr. Calloway: No
Mr. Boyett: It was like a military commissary wasn't it?
Mr. Calloway: No, it was a regular grocery.
Mr. Boyett: Oh
Mr. Calloway: Yes. It was a regular grocery.
Mollie Guin: And it wasn't...
Mr. Calloway: I remember one day a woman came in and asked me the price of
something, and I said "That's two bits." She went, "How much is two bits ?"
Mary Jo Lay: Well now Charlies grocery was at the North Gate and your
grandfather, was it your grandfather?
Mr. Boyett: That's right.
Mary Jo Lay: Grandfather?
Mr. Boyett: My great grandfather opened a grocery store there originally.
Mary Jo Lay: Well, can you tell us anything about the operation of that grocery
store?
Mr. Boyett: No. That was way before my time.
Mary Jo Lay: Way, but you haven't heard any tells?
Mr. Boyett: He, my great grandfather got out of the grocery store business or
whatever he leased it sold it, or whatever to Mr. Opersteny. Charles Opersteny.
Mary Jo Lay: Is that the one that's here today?
Mr. Boyett: That was, that ladies father, yes.
Mary Jo Lay: So, OK, Good.
Mr. Boyett: So uh it was Operstenys and it became called Charlies and it
stayed Charlies for life.
Mr. Calloway: Oh yes
Mr. Boyett: All the time I was growing up it was still Charlies until fairly recently.
They actually sold it to a man named J. E. Robins. But over the years, he kept
the name Charlies, and he went by the name Charlie and that wasn't his name at
all, his name was J E Robins. But he just let everybody call him Charlie, and he
even quit correcting people.
Mary Jo Lay: Well, you know, I'm kinda curious. I want to know just what was
North Gate like? I mean, what kind of feeling did you have you know? Today
its just so studenty. The students and everything seems to be oriented. What
was the
Mr. Calloway: We didn't have that many activities up there at that time.
Mr. Boyett: Its always been, its always been, you know, the vast majority, its
always been basically just students.
Mary Jo Lay: Students.
Mr. Boyett: ...to a very large degree.
Mr. Calloway: I remember Sosoliks up there.
Mr. Boyett: Yeah, and the Holiks
Mr. Calloway: and the Holiks.
Mr. Boyett: The Holiks have been there for a long time.
Mr. Calloway: I don't remember any other activities up there. We didn't have
the eating or drinking places up there.
Mary Jo Lay: But the Aggies were there. Students were always....
Mr. Boyett: Oh yea, the aggies were definitely there. But there was the Photo
Center, and a drug store and a grocery store, the first pool hall, well, no there's
been a pool hall there for years and years and years. It was actually upstairs
above the drug store. The original pool hall and was in what's now Loupots.
The whole upstairs was a pool hall when I was a kid growing up. But its like
everything else. It was different back then. First of all there was no alcohol in
the Brazos County.
Mr. Calloway: That's right.
Mr. Boyett: Everybody was friendly. Everybody was laid back. There wasn't
fighting and drinking and stuff going on all the time.
Mr. Calloway: I wouldn't say there wasn't any alcohol in the Brazos County.
Mr. Boyett: Well,
(Hah hah hah!)
Mr. Boyett: It was illegal in the Brazos County
Mr. Calloway: They use to make it over in the Brazos Bottom. We called it
"Brazos Bottom Rot Gut."
Mr. Boyett: Right, but....hah hah but even when I was a kid they, we had to
drive across the Brazos River. Of course there was a liquor store right on the
other side of the bridge. On both highways, and so everybody had to go out
there to buy beer or anything else. Uh, but it was always even when I was a little
boy growing up, the Aggies were all over North Gate. Uh, my grandparents
actually, on the other side of my family, had a place called the Campus
Confectionery. Do you remember that?
Mr. Calloway: Oh, yes!
Mr. Boyett: Which is right next door to what is now the Campus Theater. In the
very adjoining building.
Mollie Guin: Uh huh
Mr. Boyett: Uh, but it was along the style of what you see on TV now, it was a
true cafe'. It's down home cooking, and that kind of stuff. And I, that's were
grew up, places like that. Like I said, it was still 90% Aggies, but it was a quite
different atmosphere of course then
Mr. Calloway: A whole lot different. Not much activity there.
Mr. Boyett: Yeah. Well even at that time, right across the street from that,
there was a house on the corner where now you've got a bustling 7 -11 that's
suppose to be the busiest 7 -11 in the southwest, or whatever.
Mary Jo Lay: I didn't know that.
Mr. Boyett: One of my great uncles had a house on that corner right there his
name was Guy Frank Boyett. And he lived right there on University Drive on that
other corner until I was way up in school. So it hadn't really become just a solid
business strip even as late as the fifties. Back late in the fifties. So, it was a lot
quieter back then.
(Hah hah hah!)
Mollie Guin: What, like with this um the grocery store the Confectionery, were
you old enough to remember how uh they received there uh there shipments of
goods. Was it brought in from Houston or....
Mr. Boyett: No. I really don't. I was pretty young when they were running the
cafe',
Mollie Guin: Yeah.
Mr. Boyett: I was just old enough to talk good and my mothers, one of her
recollections, which I hate to hear her tell, and I hate to tell it myself, is
something about me coming in one day because I had been out on the front
sidewalk with a bunch of Aggies, and I came in and I announced that I was going
to be an Aggie.
(Hah hah!)
Mollie Guin: And she wasn't happy about that.
Mr. Boyett: She wasn't real thrilled with that idea right off the bat.
Mollie Guin: Well, Michael, this grocery store that you were talking about, um,
when that happen, did the people um, run like a charge account or something
and then pay on it?
Mr. Calloway: Yes they did. They ran tickets on it. They sure did back in those
days. The grocer had to put up with it because uh they didn't have the money all
along. They had to wait for payday to pay for their groceries. They ran tickets.
Mary Jo Lay: And, would that be the same way in the drug store?
Mr. Calloway: I don't recall them doing it in the drug store. They may have, but I
don't recall.
Mr. Boyett: I know that almost all the stores carried markers or tabs.
Mr. Boyett: Even the local service stations and stuff in the end of the 50's did
that. They used just a 5 x 7 card file, and everybody had a ticket in there. My
grandfather had a service station /beer distributorship in I guess in the 40s and
the early 50s which set on the corner where the overpass is now. It was taken
over by eminent Domain when they put in the access roads and they put the
overpass there at University Drive. It was Henry Jones's Filling Station. And the
filling station in the front had a warehouse built in the back and they distributed, I
think it was Grand Prize and Southern Select beer out of the back of the service
station. I've seen a lot of the old books and everything. And everybody back
then did things on credit, but it was just a little ticket book, you just rip off the
page and put it in a little card file, and everybody would come by once a month
and pay their bills.
Mary Jo Lay: It was a different world.
Mr. Calloway: Yes.
Mr. Boyett: And they didn't even sign for it. They'd just drive through and get
$2 worth of gasoline and the clerk would just write it down.
Mollie Guin: Well how effective were they in paying? Were they good? Was
the people good on their credit?
Mr. Boyett: Uh, well lets put it this way, there's still some unpaid bills in that
box.
(Hah hah!)
Mr. Calloway: I expect there were some who didn't pay, but ...
Mr. Boyett: well there was always hardship cases, but I don't think there was a
large number of people that did it intentionally, lets put it that way. If they didn't
pay there was a good reason why they didn't pay.
Mr. Calloway: I'd hate to do that today.
(Hah hah!)
Mr. Boyett: You wouldn't be in business for very long that way. Well back then
there was a real stigma attached to you, if you didn't pay your bills, or at least
didn't make an honest attempt to, you know, people thought a lot more back then
about their image.
Mr. Calloway: image
Mr. Boyett: Their image, their honor, their word. You know, basically it was an
honor system just like A &M's and the students who you know tried to maintain an
honor system throughout history. Its hard to do in our modern times.
Mr. Calloway: ...you didn't need a written contract, you just shook hands.
Mary Jo Lay: Isn't that wonderful.
Mollie Guin: Uh, wh.., in your dealing with the business part, you said now, you
were talking about, you know, you worked in the pharmacy, and you worked in
the grocery store when you were at A &M, Once you graduated from A &M, what
was your uh business association? Did you still stay in this area?
Mr. Calloway: No. I left the area. The first job after I graduated, I was a guide
at the Texas State Centennial (1836- 1936). I went from there to another...and
from there to the military service.
Mollie Guin: In the air force. OK. Um, so you were, when they um, when
World War II ended, then they were, you went over seas or something in this
nature?
Mr. Calloway: No, I was in this country but I was in the Air Force. U S Army Air
Corp rather...
Mollie Guin: Do you have
Mr. Calloway: I had a break in the service and then I went back in and retired
from the U.S. Air Force.
Mollie Guin: Do you recall anyone talking about um because I have my
parents, I don't remember it at all, talking about uh, when uh, World War II
ended. All the celebrations and all that. What kind of uh insight can you give on
that?
Mr. Calloway: Well, nothing other than there was a lot of "hoopla" and relief.
(Hah hah!)
Mr. Boyett: A lot of children being born.
(Hah hah!)
Mr. Calloway: Yes.
(Hah hah!)
Mollie Guin: These baby boomers that were uh yeah hmm
Mr. Calloway: But I was at McClellan Air Force Base then. They were just real
happy about it.
Mollie Guin: What kind of special events do you remember as as as a young
person growing up that uh made a big uh you know, made a big impression on
you.
Mr. Boyett: A special event. I cant think of anything that stands out in my
memory other than graduating from A &M as a single thing because I was too
young after World War II. I was still real young, so I don't think really any single
event stands out in my mind.
Mollie Guin: Well you made the declaration when you were small that you
wanted to go to A &M. Did you, graduate?
Mr. Boyett: Oh yeah and kept my word.
Mollie Guin: Kept his word.
Mr. Boyett: Yep. Never, never wavered. And we moved away from Bryan for a
period of time. In the 60s, we moved out to west Texas and lived in Big Spring.
I graduated from high school actually, out there. But I got harassed severely the
whole time I was in Jr. High and High School because I never wavered from my
plans to be an Aggie. I was living right in the middle of Red Raider territory, out
there, so I was the "Aggieman" all through school.
(Hah hah!)
Mr. Boyett: But as soon as I graduated from high school I came straight back
and went to A &M and went straight through. I never even considered going
anywhere else.
Mary Jo Lay: Well, now this is sortof along the line of that you asked, but its a
little bit different. What about holiday celebrations, can you remember anything
special about any of the holidays during this era that made, you know, that were
sortof unique to the North Gate area?
Mr. Calloway: I don't recall anything special.
Mary Jo Lay: Were there Christmas decorations? Did they decorate the
streets? Do you remember?
Mr. Calloway: Oh, I'm sure there were, but I don't recall anything specifically.
Mary Jo Lay: Do you, uh Bill?
Mr. Boyett: No, I don't either.
Mary Jo Lay: OK
Mollie Guin: Then what about, you know like, since you went uh at A &M a few
years back, how would you make a comparison between when you were in
attending and now? Could you make a comparison there?
Mr. Boyett: Between A &M now and then!
Mollie Guin: Uh huh, yea * * ****'--- - and I know you could, well, that
question to you in just a second too.
Mr. Boyett: Well the answer to that question usually winds up with a large
discussion of women being allowed into A &M, but I don't happen to be one of the
school that was ever against that. I think the university grew tremendously, and
improved in a lot of ways, after the women were openly admitted into the
University. There were women in A &M when I was there. But when I started
A &M in 67, there were only a very few hundred, and they were daughters of the
faculty, or wives or something of that nature. They were already admitting
women pretty much quietly. There were girls, you know I bet an average class
might have one or two girls in it. Especially since I was an
Agriculture /Economics major, and there was very little Liberal Arts at A &M at that
time. I guess the main difference between A &M now and A &M then is the
struggle that's going on to maintain the traditions. There was no question about
the traditions, you know, even 15 or 20 years ago. When I was going to A &M
the traditions were there and if you weren't into doing things the traditional ways,
then you were in the wrong place. You should have gone somewhere else. But
there wasn't very many people that felt that way. Over the years, a lot of the
traditions have thinned but not gone away. A &M, I think has done a remarkable
job of maintaining them to the degree that they have, with the growth rate that
they've experienced, and just with modern society. I mean, things just aren't the
way they were. I think probably the biggest difference now is that A &M is having
to, through legal ramifications and everything else, they have to bring everything
up to quote, 20th century standards, or whatever. The struggles that they have
gone through to maintain the traditions have been pretty impressive to me. I
mean, they've been able to maintain the vast majority of the traditions. And
guess the main difference in the school now and then is that its like there is a
group of students that go to A &M that don't partake in it, of the traditions. And I
mean part of that may be because, I don't know what the current numbers are,
but I suspect 20 or 25% of A &M's students are foreign students. And I'm not
saying that's a negative thing, Its not. But, compared to the way it was then, if
there was any kind of traditional event going on, you got almost 100% campus
participation unless the poor guy had to study for a final the next day or
something and they just absolutely couldn't. And now you've got such a big
kind -of a rift. A lot of the students are still very much into the traditions, but then
there's also a large number of students that go to A &M now which, they know the
traditions are there, but they just don't take part. But that's part of our changing
society, it brought that around. Its the same thing with family traditions, or
anything else. Its inevitable. In my opinion, its kind of sad. But, I think they are
missing out on a lot of what A &M is. I think there's a lot of students that go to
A &M that even though they go there three or four years and graduate, I think
there's a bunch of them that don't ever really quite get what the rest of us did
get.
Mr. Calloway: Of course during my time it was depression time.
Mary Jo Lay: And it was all Corps.
Mr. Calloway: And it was all Corp. Unless an individual had a physical
handicap and could not participate. I mentioned that there were some
girls...since it was depression time they started letting some girls in who were
daughters of faculty and staff. There were just a few, but there were that few.
However, we had girls in summer school, but not during the regular session....
remember when they started having seniors go back to their high school and talk
to students about coming to A &M. Their goal at the time was 2500....
Mary Jo Lay: Oh! (Hah hah!)
Mr. Calloway: 2500....
Mr. Boyett: Well there was only 13000 when I graduated in 71
Mary Jo Lay: I remember those days.
Mr. Boyett: So, the explosion came shortly after that. Because they actually, I
think publicly announced that women could enroll at A &M in 68 or 69. While I
was here, even though they had been letting them in for a long time and the
numbers were gradually grow.., that was the first time they'd publicly said that,
you know, anybody could apply for admission. But the explosion came in the in
the mid 70's.
Mr. Calloway: Of course we all wore the uniforms then. We didn't have to
worry about other clothes.
Mary Jo Lay: You were in the Corps?
Mr. Boyett: Yes, I was in the Corp. when I first came here.
Mary Jo Lay: Cause, I still think that ought to all be in the Corp.
(Hah hah!)
inaudible
Mr. Calloway: Well, I'm kind of surprised you were talking about traditions and
so forth and I'm still kind of surprised that the corp has the influence it still does.
I'm glad to see it, but with such a small number compared with the overall
enrollment, they only have about,.2000 now, 1900, somewhere around that
number.
Mr. Boyett: There's about 2,400 to 2,500.
Mr. Calloway: Is it up that far?
Mr. Boyett: I think so. It's actually on an increase again. I kinda wound up right
in the middle because the late 60s I guess as for the whole world was a time
when everything began to change so rapidly. So, on the corp thing I was pretty
much on the fence too because when I came to A &M my step father was career
Air Force. So, when I came to A &M I took all the test, went in the Corp, and
stayed in the corp. my freshman year, went through all the harassment and
everything because I wouldn't quit so somebody could tell me that I was a
quitter. But I got out of the Corp. my sophomore year. Because I was working
and going to school and...
Mary Jo Lay: It takes time.
Mr. Boyett: Trying to have a social life.
Mr. Calloway: Its hard...
Mr. Boyett: I had a social life and all those things and I know a lot of people
love them. And I decided that a military career wasn't going to be my thing
anyway, so I went through the Freshman nightmare and then quit.
(Hah Hah)
Mary Jo Lay: I want to get away from A &M for just a minute because something
just flashed in my mind. But there is a Boyett Street in College Station. And
which one of your relatives, or, I know you were in real estate, so how did that
street name come about?
Mr. Boyett: Well, I'm assuming that my great grandfather named it. His house
sat on that corner and I'm assuming that he put the street in, I'm sure he named
it. He owned nearly all that land on both sides of that street so
Mr. Calloway: It had to have been....
Mr. Boyett: It had to have been named after him.
Mary Jo Lay: Are there other streets that are named after your family?
Mr. Boyett: Yes, but all others are after first names and such.
Mary Jo Lay: So there's a number there?
Mr. Boyett: There's a number of streets back in there that came about later on.
They were named after different family members.
Mary Jo Lay: That just, I was just curious about that.
Mollie Guin: Well, you told me you were in the, in the Corps and at A &M during
the depression.
Mr. Calloway: Yes.
Mollie Guin: um what was some of the uh effects that the depression had on
the businesses and everything in general, in that area?
Mr. Calloway: One thing of course, as far as A &M's concerned, I don't know
where the money came from, but they did have some funds for student labor.
And they tried to spread the jobs around the best they could among those who
needed jobs. I pushed a mop many a mile in the old Chemistry building.
worked at the bowling lanes at the YMCA. There were others who did all kinds
of student jobs. That was one of the main things, that they did provide some
jobs for students at that time.
Mary Jo Lay: Do you remember the businesses? The effect they had on the
businesses? I guess I ask did the payroll continue at the university so that the
businesses did not suffer as much as maybe in other places.
Mr. Calloway: Well, I think you are probably right. I think that the university
was the main source of income around here.
Mary Jo Lay: Well, that's what I was wondering, how did that effect the
businesses?
Mr. Calloway: Fortunately, they still contributed to the community.
Mollie Guin: Cause there wasn't a great deal of business in the College
Station....
Mr. Calloway: Not a lot of businesses, just the few that we talked about.
Mr. Boyett: Now you can tell by looking just at the age of the buildings that
North Gate and that little literally one block strip of South Gate, that's all there
was. When I was a kid growing up even in the 50s, there were only a few other
businesses and they were basically on TX avenue immediately across from the
campus, there was a couple of cafe's and Arnolds BAR -B -Q, and just a few
places up and down the strip but again, immediately across from campus and
they've all been replaced obviously because of TX Ave and parts of the land. All
that was, has pretty much been removed and replaced with much larger and
newer structures. With the La Quinta and all that stuff right in there. I think
probably there are only a couple of older buildings still there. There's one next
to that Exxon station next to Red Lobster
Mary Jo Lay: ...where the drug store use to be, I can't remember was it Jones
Pharmacy? Is that the original building? I think there's a bicycle shop...
Mr. Boyett: ...and, uh,
Mary Jo Lay: ...furniture, or something like that.
Mr. Boyett: At what we call East Gate?
Mary Jo Lay: Yea.
Mr. Boyett: Some of that building right along there has been there for a long
time.
Mollie Guin: ...Dr. Boyton has been there a long time cause that was right next
to the service station cause I was there when...
Mary Jo Lay: Were there any physicians in the North Gate area? Do you
remember?
Mr. Boyett: Not that I remember.
Mr. Calloway: I don't recall any being there.
Mr. Boyett: I want to say there wasn't, we lived on Nagle Street, but I was born
at St. Joseph's Hospital, it was the only hospital.
Mary Jo Lay: Well, everybody was until...
Mr. Boyett: Yea, exactly. I mean, so.
Mr. Calloway: I know that we used to talk about the fact that there weren't many
eating places here when they had the big ball games, like Texas vs. A &M
games, people brought their own sack lunches and so forth so they'd have
something to eat. There just weren't that many eating places around.
Mary Jo Lay: And places to stay at.
Mr. Calloway: And places to stay. I remember that there was an Aggieland Inn
across from Sbisa Hall at that time. And not many others.
Mary Jo Lay: And that was on campus.
Mr. Calloway: That was on campus, right across from the Sbisa Hall.
Mary Jo Lay: I didn't realize that.
Mr. Calloway: Yes, the old Aggieland Inn.
Mr. Boyett: It was operated kinda like a boarding house...
Mary Jo Lay: And when did that close down?
Mr. Calloway: I'm not sure when they moved that
inaudible
Mr. Boyett: No, it was before my time
Mr. Calloway: It had to be in the 40s some time.
Mr. Boyett: It was already gone because they built, uh, they built, when, do you
remember when they built the first set of dorms there, that on this side of
campus, on the North side of campus?
Mr. Calloway: Well, we had, Walton Hall across from the YMCA.
Mr. Boyett: Walton, Puryear and all those. Yea, which were called newer.
Mr. Boyett: I'm thinking in the 40s.
Mr. Calloway: Earlier, all those were built in the early 30s
Mr. Boyett: Were they built that long ago?
Mr. Calloway: Yes. My outfit was in one of those.
Mr. Boyett: OK, then they began to build the other dorms, when they really
finished removing a lot of the old remaining structures that had been there, in
that main part of the campus, over there,
Mary Jo Lay: And the presidents house was over on that side wasn't it?
Mr. Calloway: It was, President Waltons place.
Mr. Boyett: It was right down the street from Sbisa too. See, when that original
road which is now dead ends into North Gate, that was the original road and I
don't remember what they called it.
Mr. Calloway: I don't either.
Mr. Boyett: It went through the campus.
Mr. Calloway: It ran all the way.
Mr. Boyett: It ran straight through campus.
Mr. Calloway: Yes.
Mr. Boyett: And, after you got past the post office and Sbisa, that was a
beautiful tree line, the old street, and it was lined with houses, and the
Presidents home, and there was a couple of, all I remember is they called them
guest houses. They were houses that were operated more like a boarding
house. Up and down that lane and there's a lot of old pictures around of that,
but that street ran straight through from North Gate to South Gate.
Mary Jo Lay: So that was just a major thoroughfare.
Mr. Calloway: Yes.
Mr. Boyett: Back then, yes.
INAUDIBLE
Mr. Boyett: It was the only thorough fare. And then everything else branched
off of that, but then when they very first began...which was late 60s, early 70's,
when I was in school, they began to close off the street.
Mary Jo Lay: Oh, Yes, because when I came here, you could drive, you know
that was just a short cut running threw the campus.
Mr. Boyett: Right.
Mary Jo Lay: It was the easy thing to do.
Mr. Boyett: Yea, when I was in school they closed that street and the other
road which was Nagle Street, I guess that cuts across right were the new, what
is it, Harrington, or whatever that, that new administration type building is, there
was another thorough fare later on, and then they closed it when they malled in
all the library. And then all the way down by the cyclotron, that street use to go
straight through even up into the 70's, then they closed it, they just closed them
all and saved it as they worked their way up the campus so that you can't drive
through at all anymore.
Mary Jo Lay: That's right.
Mollie Guin: I know if your gonna go see if ...
Mr. Calloway: There used to be a little park area there by the Presidents home.
The Aggie Band used to put on concerts there. That's right, on Sunday
afternoon people use to show up for the concerts.
Mary Jo Lay: I can remember a tractor circle there...
Mr. Calloway: Well, it was in that area.
Mary Jo Lay: Uh huh, yea.
Mr. Boyett: Where that fountain is now, right in there.
Mary Jo Lay: Right.
Mr. Boyett: That's where the circle was.
Mary Jo Lay: That's where the circle was, it sure was.
Mollie Guin: Alright, you were talking about when you were living on the
campus, now can you kindof recall how many houses or families were on the
campus back then?
Mr. Calloway: There were quite a number. There were homes along side the
current drill field and where the MSC is now, there were houses all along there.
Mr. Boyett: I think I read somewhere, it may have been in the you know but
there's a history of College Station, that book, I think it said that there were like
30 or 40 something houses that were actually removed from the campus when
they cleared the central campus.
Mr. Calloway: There had to be that many.
Mr. Boyett: I'm just guessing at the number. I think probably 40 or 50.
Mr. Calloway: As you come into the campus by the Bell Tower and turn back to
your left, there were houses along there.
Mr. Boyett: With that, with that curving lane, the curve on the outside was lined
with houses.
Mr. Calloway: Yea. There were several houses...
Mary Jo Lay: Well how did you get to live in one of those houses, you said you
lived in one. How did your family...
Mr. Calloway: Well, the one we had was provided through the Athletic
Department. The others were for faculty and staff, faculty primarily I guess.
That's how you got to live in those. Through what selection process, I don't
know.
Mollie Guin: So I guess if you were a faculty member, I guess you had your
own house then.
Mary Jo Lay: That would be nice.
Mollie Guin: That would be nice. They would certainly like that now days, you
know.
Mr. Boyett: I think probably the early reasons when they first began to do away
with that is because A &M grew to the point where they had so much faculty and
staff, there was a huge waiting list and everything, and with the campus growth
and they were building more buildings and they were gradually moving the
houses out anyway because they wanted to use the central space.
Mr. Calloway: I remember that was a period in time, too, when they built those
project houses South of College. That enabled a lot of students to go to A &M
that probably would not otherwise have been able ...I don't even know what they
charged to live there, but I know a lot of students lived in them.
Mary Jo Lay: I was just curious, can you, both of you if you can, can you think
of some really funny experiences that you had during this era of time, that you
might share with us. I don't know, that's probably kinda hard to do just on the
spur of the moment like that.
Mr. Calloway: A funny experience?
Mary Jo Lay: It might be interesting you know, maybe as you were a soda jerk,
or while you were working on campus.
Mr. Calloway: There probably were, but I do not recall any.
Mary Jo Lay: Well, I should have told you this way ahead of time, because, you
know, I think that might add to our
Mr. Boyett: No, my,the funniest experience I can remember was when I was a
freshman at A &M, and like I said, I was in the Corp, and the first sergeant in our
outfit was "hell on wheels" to put it politely. Well the first home football game
was about, oh I guess I had already been on campus for about three weeks, and
he had been constantly harassing me and three other guys which were all local
family connected, he had a little problem with that, so he had been ratting us
severely and doing everything he could to publicly humiliate us, And uh the first
home football game, he had been bragging to the entire outfit for weeks about
the gorgeous girl that he had coming in for the first home football game. And he
had his little scenario all set up, how he was gonna act a big shot when she got
here and everything, and uh he brought her out there where we all were right
before the football game, before we formed up and everything to show her off
and everything, turns out she was one of my old girlfriends from high school.
(Hah hah!)
Mr. Boyett: Of course when he found that out he really worked me over. It was
hilarious and humiliating at the same time. He wasn't real happy about that. He
had imported this beautiful girl from Big Spring.
Mr. Calloway: Of course we use to bring the girls in here from, what was then
CIA, now Texas Women's College. We use to bring the girls in for dances and
so forth because there weren't enough locally. That was one of the rights when
we were in high school, we had to compete with the students for girlfriends.
Mary Jo Lay: And that was true.
Mr. Boyett: Yea, even in the late 60s when I was going to A &M there was uh
just a mass exodus on weekends. On Friday afternoon the highways were
packed.
INAUDIBLE
Mr. Boyett: The Aggies "invaded all the little towns around here North, South,
headed every direction on Friday afternoon. This campus was just vacant
because if you consider how many girls there were in Bryan and Consolidated
high school, but most of thems parents wouldn't let them date Aggies anyway.
Mary Jo Lay: Let me, you went to school on campus, to public school, I mean
got your degree...
Mr. Calloway: I went to A &M Consolidated High School.
Mary Jo Lay: You've had all of your education on the A &M campus then.
Mr. Calloway: Quite a bit, quite a bit.
Mary Jo Lay: Pretty Much. Well tell us a little bit about that school, that's
interesting to me.
Mr. Calloway: Well, I think we had probably 21 or 22 in my graduating class.
Mary Jo Lay: Big class (Hah hah!).
Mr. Calloway; And it was the first consolidated school in the area. We were
fortunate in that A &M made available some of its facilities which enabled us to
have a real good school, you know, physics labs, and machine shops, and
things of that kind. And of course we had student teachers from A & M. I think
probably that the whole high school was some 100 students. All three classes
we did not have a twelfth grade. We had eleven. They brought students in by
bus. There were no blacks in the school; they had their own school. It was
segregated.
Mary Jo Lay: Was that Lincoln school at the time.
Mr. Calloway: I think it was. I'm pretty sure it was.
Mr. Boyett: They really didn't integrate local schools until Lincoln High School
burned to the ground
Mr. Calloway: I was a member of the first football team A &M Consolidated ever
had.
Mary Jo Lay: let me asked you a question I heard that they had originally
planned to name them "The Elephants ",
Mr. Calloway: I don't recall
Mary Jo Lay: The tigers won out, I'm glad.
Mr. Calloway: my class was given the credit for the tiger name.
Mary Jo Lay: OK, well good for you.
(Hah hah!)
Calloway: We didn't have a practice field of our own, and we had hand me
down uniforms from A &M, I think probably the largest football player we had
weighed 200 pounds.
INAUDIBLE - SIDE 2 OF TAPE
Mr. Calloway: It was a good school overall. We had good teachers. I've
always been thankful that we had the setup that we had because it was a small
number of students to teachers. We received more personal attention.
Mary Jo Lay: Did you graduate from high school before it was moved off
campus to the, well to here I guess. Isn't this where...
Mr. Calloway: Oh yes, it was in the old location.
Mary Jo Lay: OK.
Mr. Calloway: Yes, it was in the old location.
Mary Jo Lay: Now, did you go to A &M Consolidated schools, or...
Mr. Calloway: No, we moved away and I graduated from high school in
Richmond.
Mary Jo Lay: Right.
Mr. Boyett: Yea, I had gone to the elementary school and stuff in Bryan and
then we moved to west Texas and I went to high school there.
Mollie Guin: Can you think of any other questions?
Mary Jo Lay: I'm trying.
Mollie Guin: I'm trying to look at what we've gone through. Can ya'll think of
anything else that uh cause I know we had said that this is more of a kinda fact
finding mission you know for you and they wanted to kinda put this over on as
memories or just an association with North Gate and uh
Mr. Calloway: What's in my memory is prior to College Station being a city.
Mollie Guin: uh huh.
Mary Jo Lay: And that's important too.
Mollie Guin: And that's important. uh huh
Mary Jo Lay: We want that information. What year did you move?
Mr. Calloway: 1936.
Mary Jo Lay: What year did it incorporate?
Mr. Boyett: 39.
Mary Jo Lay: 39?
Mr. Calloway: I was away.
Mollie Guin: ...when you were, before you moved away, could you like just on
one hand name the businesses that were in the area?
Mr. Calloway: Gee, I guess I can. I only remember...the grocery store and the
pharmacy, barber shop...
Mr. Boyett: Holiks. Even though, the pictures that you see all around town like
at the Toms Bar B Q and everything, there's a picture that floats around that was
just uh taken through the actual gate at North Gate, I think its maybe 1917, well
there were like six businesses there even then. But it was all clap board and
they were all hooked together, I mean it literally, it was a pharmacy, a grocery
store, a post office, and a little clothing store or whatever, but there's only five or
six businesses in that one little group there at that time probably ...
Mr. Calloway: Probably that building that we were in, the Aggieland Pharmacy,
was the first brick building that was built in that area.
Mr. Boyett: Yes. Probably so, Because I know the one across the street was
built after that one.
Mr. Calloway: Yes.
Mr. Boyett:...Sparks building probably was the first brick building.
Mr. Calloway: I would think it might be.
Mr. Boyett: The other buildings down the strip, they're all concrete built
construction now, but I don't know at what point the various ones broke out and
changed. Most of them came into there current status in the fifties and sixties.
Like Loupots, he was in what's now the Dry Bean Saloon, that little bitty shop
down at the very end, he was in a really, literally about eight feet wide little bitty
thing.
Mr. Calloway: Well Loupot must have graduated somewhere around 31 or 32.
Mr. Boyett: 32.
Mr. Calloway: 32, yea, so he'd be...involved with the business.
Mr. Boyett: Yea, he moved into it then and been there ever since. I'd say he
moved into that little building that's just a little bitty shot gun thing. And he was
in that building when I started A &M in 67. So, he bought the old drug store
building down there and moved on into the corner, and that was in the late 60's,
early 70's. I think he was in that building, as a matter of fact, I know he was in
that building before I graduated because I bought books in both buildings. He
moved in the late 60's, after that. And all those other buildings in there have
changed hands over and over and over again. Charlies was probably the one
that stayed the longest. And when J. E. Robins retired, about eight or ten years
ago, he turned it over to Texas Aggie Bookstore, and now Charlies, part of it is in
the bookstore and part of it is in the burrito place. (Freebird's)
Mary Jo Lay: Oh, those are good.
Mr. Boyett: I can't even think of the name of that.
Mr. Calloway: ...My work was at the pharmacy. There was a store in that area
over there. I think sort of a variety store.
Mr. Boyett: I was fixin to say, it was probably a variety shop. (Taylor's)
Mary Jo Lay: So there was uh, we hadn't mentioned variety stores...
Tom Taylors father, there is a Tom Taylor on campus now...
Mr. Calloway: I don't know
Mary Jo Lay: I just kinda associate that. Well there's one question over here
that I don't know if you can answer, you probably can, George probably, it says
"describe a good work day ". So if you think back to when you were a soda jerk,
(Hah hah!)
Mary Jo Lay: I thought it was a good question. The next question was how was
a bad work day? (Hah hah hah hah!)
Mr. Calloway: Well, I think a good work day was most any day to tell you the
truth.
Mary Jo Lay: To have a job.
Mr. Calloway: Yea, to have a job. Because my dad was making $300 a month
when the "depression" came, they cut him to $100. So everything I contributed
helped.
Mary Jo Lay: I was just asking, did they give tips back in those days? I don't
even remember the drug stores...
Mr. Calloway: No, I don't remember any tips. Unless I didn't give good service.
Mollie Guin: What was your specialty that you could make?
Mr. Calloway: There use to be a popular malt that the Aggies came in and
bought. It consisted of vanilla or chocolate ice cream and malt all stirred up
together. There was a lot of malt.
Mary Jo Lay: A lot of malt. And vanilla ice cream?
Mr. Calloway: Vanilla, chocolate...
Mary Jo Lay: Whatever they liked.
Mr. Calloway: We use to make cherry cokes
INAUDIBLE
Mr. Boyett: You know the rapid escalation in wages and everything all
happened in the late 60s too because when I started A &M in 67 I worked at the
campus theater and wages then in a place like that weren't covered by minimum
wage laws. And of course the minimum wage was only like $1, $1.10, or $1 and
a quarter or something like that. But there was a tremendous number of jobs
that weren't covered by that. Wages at the Campus Theater were $4 for an
afternoon shift, and $7 for a night shift. The afternoon shift was like six hours,
and the night shift was like 8 hours.
Mary Jo Lay: So you were not making a $1 an hour?
Mr. Boyett: Oh, no. Not working at the theater. Now that was in 67.
Mary Jo Lay: Let me just...
Mr. Calloway: In the 30s I was making 25 cents an hour there at the pharmacy.
Mary Jo Lay: What was tuition when you went to A &M?
Mr. Calloway: I don't remember because mine was a different situation since I
lived on campus. A lot of the cost I did not have.
Mary Jo Lay: Yea, and what about the year you had, now what's the
difference...
Mr. Boyett: Tuition in 67, you could go to school for about $125 a semester.
(Less than $200.00 with a 15 -16 hour Toad)
Mollie Guin: Geez!
Mr. Boyett: And books cost about 20 to 30 dollars from Loupots...
Mr. Calloway: I think one semester I went to school when I only paid the lab
fees. That's all I had to pay.
inaudible
Mr. Calloway: But let me tell you about my salary at the bowling place. This
was one of the jobs that they parceled out ...I was the pin setter. They had a
semi - automatic pin setter machine. You had to pick up the pins and put them in
the machine;then pull it down to set the pins on the spots.
Mary Jo Lay: That was a dangerous job, wasn't it?
Mr. Calloway: It was dangerous, if some nut bowled while I was in the pit
picking up pins. Bowling cost 10 cents a line. They paid me 3 cents a line, and
they let me make $10 a month.
Mary Jo Lay: Let you make, huh?
Mr. Calloway: Let me make $10 a month.
Mr. Calloway: That's all I could make because they were trying to spread their
money around to different students who needed the money.
Mollie Guin: What was the average cost of a meal if you were quote going to
eat out?
Mr. Calloway: I beg your pardon.
Mollie Guin: What was the average cost of a meal?
Mr. Calloway: Of a meal?
Mollie Guin: Uh huh.
Mr. Calloway: mmmm. I, I'd hate to put a price on it cause I'm not sure. But it'd
be no more than $1. No more than a dollar and a half anyway.
Mary Jo Lay: Well did people eat out then, you know, everybody eats out now.
Mr. Calloway: Well, there were some. You know as I said there weren't that
many eating places.
Mr. Boyett: Yea, the only take out place that I can remember, course everybody
now delivers and takes out, and the only take out place I can remember that was
even here in 67, and there was a place called the Reo, R - - Which the little
building is actually still there, and its next door to the International House of
Pancakes, that little bitty building sitting there on the corner of South College...
Mary Jo Lay: little tiny building?
Mr. Boyett: ...on that corner there was a place called the Reo Burger, and
hamburgers were five for a dollar. And this is in 67'. Five, they weren't real big,
they were like a McDonalds burger, but they were five for a dollar at that place,
when I was going to A &M. Cause everybody would just whiz by there, out in the
parking lot everybody would slide to a stop, grab five hamburgers, and keep
going. But, that was for a dollar, so you could feed a couple of people for a
dollar.
Mr. Calloway: Of course ten dollars was a lot of money. I can remember when
our grocery bill, when we had one small boy and we had a boarder was less then
$25 a month. That's hard to realize that in this day and time.
Mr. Boyett: ...the movie tickets I saw in the newspaper, the movie tickets in the
40s use to go for like thirty cents. And then by 67' they were trying to break a
dollar, in 67', we still had the movies all the time at the Campus Theater that you
could get in for a dollar in 67'. A dollar and a quarter was a first run movie. That
was high dollar prices.
Mollie Guin: ...my kids in seventy, seventy -two, we went to the Campus
Theater.
Mary Jo Lay: When you were a student here, George, what was the main
source of entertainment? I mean, what did you do for recreation?
Mr. Calloway: Played a lot, Guion Hall was the name of the place to go at that
time. That's where they held graduation ceremonies, etc.. I remember at one
time Paul Whiteman's Orchestra came to Guion Hall. Events like that came in
there. And of course there were movies in the old Assembly Hall, which was in
the area where the current All Faiths Chapel is located. And I was just thinking
about something a lot of people don't know about. When A &M played football
games away, at the old Assembly Hall, they would set up a great big screen so
that they could put a football field in there. On the sides were the line -ups for
each of the teams, and then running underneath they'd have the different things
like, whether it was a punt, or a run, or whatever it was. Lights behind it that
would flash. And then the operators behind the board, when they got the
telegraphic, or telephone record, I don't know how they got it, would run the play.
With a flash light behind that screen, you could spot the ball. And when they
started the play, they would flash the light by the name of the boy that was going
to run with it, the type of play, and then they'd move that ball up and down that
field. And that's the way that we got the football games. It was very interesting.
They had a lot of people in there to see that rather than just sitting and listening
to the radio.
Mollie Guin: So that was your play by play...(hah hah hah)
Mr. Calloway: That was it play by play.
INAUDIBLE
Mary Jo Lay: Well now you were here, this was a latter era, so what about the
entertainment, or what did you all do? I know you said yall went away on
weekends, a lot of people...
Mr. Boyett: Well, in the fifties and sixties, movies were a really big deal. And it
had become a big part of everything around here. The Campus Theater would
seat like 700 people and it was packed a lot, even though in the late sixties the
Circle, the drive in was still operating and had been there for years and years
and years. Uh, the drive in, shoot, there was 10 acres in that one drive in and
probably three more in Bryan. At the height, there were probably six or seven
movie houses then. Movies were really popular. Guion Hall was still open when
was going to A &M, they tore the building down to build Rudder Center, where it
was at.
Mr. Calloway: ...do you recall when?
Mr. Boyett: They tore it down in the 60's, I don't know, maybe early 70's.
Mary Jo Lay: I think early seventies.
Mr. Boyett: Early seventies...
Mary Jo Lay: but I remember when it was...
Mr. Calloway: I got my diploma from high school and from A &M in Guion Hall.
Mr. Boyett: In Guion Hall. I don't think they tore Guion Hall down until maybe
my Senior year, until the time I graduated in 71' it was still there. The Grove out
there was pretty popular. I don't know at what time the Grove started.
Mr. Calloway: I don't know
Mr. Boyett: Do you remember when they started using the Grove?
Mr. Calloway: No, I sure don't. It was after my time.
Mr. Boyett: The Grove was pretty popular, especially with the dorm students
who didn't have transportation and stuff even up in the sixties. They could also
walk to the Campus and the Circle, the old drive in was a fairly high tech type
theater. It was a drive in, but on both sides of the concession stand there were
huge wings with seating areas built specifically because of the students across
the street. You could walk over there and sit in an air conditioned indoor
theater, even though you were at a drive in. And it probably could seat a couple
of hundred people in there, in these two big wings on either side of the
concession stand.
Mr. Boyett: A lot of my memories from when I was a really young child, we'd
bob around the two theaters because my family owned the Circle and Campus
both. My uncle ran the Campus and my father ran the Circle, so on any given
day I might have watched three or four movies. I'm still a movie buff.
Mollie Guin: Well I notice, I can tell you all are getting tired.
Mr. Calloway: I have to tell you about one funny story about "thumbing" rides.
Mary Jo Lay: OK.
Mr. Calloway: So many students use to go places by "thumbing rides." During
that period of time you would still pick up people. I wouldn't pick up anybody
today. I picked up a young man outside of Beaumont, Texas. He was thumbing
somewhere outside of Beaumont. Down the road a ways was another young
man thumbing a ride. A car came along and picked him up. Then the car
stopped and picked this fellow up. He was telling me this story. I think he was a
student at SMU, if I remember correctly. He said they were going along and he
kept watching the fellow who they had picked up before him. The fellow kept
looking at the woman in the passenger seat. And suddenly, this fellow leans
forward, turns her head around and kissed her. He said, I didn't know what was
going to happen then. As it so happened, apparently, he had been separated
from his mother. I don't know how long, but he happened to know who she was,
but she didn't recognize him. It was a mother and son.
Mary Jo Lay: What a story.
Mr. Calloway: So, everything was alright.
Mary Jo Lay: Well I feel I could just talk to ya'll all day. This is just totally
fascinating.
Mr. Calloway: We'll come back in a few years!
Mollie Guin: And I'm looking forward to all of the other "Lanes" that we are
going to pursue as we go along.
Mary Jo Lay: And, I think both of you can help us too on the others you know
as we, you know, continue this project.
Mollie Guin: This is why they wanted you to have a copy of these and that
shows you the different avenues or different lanes that we are going to take and
they have names on those and if you'd like to look at those and think of others
that you would like to add to, uh that that would help us with ...
Mary Jo Lay: And I can't tell you how much I appreciate the time you gave to
come and share with us today.
Mr. Calloway: Glad to do it.
Mary Jo Lay: Really, it was good of you to do that. And if you can think of other
people as we continue to do this, I know you said, George, had some
information, maybe he'll help us next time.
Mr. Boyett: George Boyett has got a lot of pictures and various bits of things.
You know George went to Consolidated and he can kindof fill the gap between
the two of us.
Mary Jo Lay: That would be very helpful.
Mr. Boyett: Because George is 58, somewhere right in that range, maybe,
somewhere around 58 yrs old. But, he went to Consolidated and he lived right
there in North Gate when he was a kid growing up and he went into A &M and
graduated from A &M and went in the Army. So, he can fill the gaps between the
two of us. (Mr. Calloway 30's /40's, me 60's /70's) He's got most of the
information and his mother just passed away a couple of years ago. I know he
hasn't even been through the information, but there's a lot of it. We do have a
lot of pictures and everything. Its just the question of digging them out, sorting
them out, and going through them. Seeing which ones have any real meaning to
anybody other than us. So.
Mary Jo Lay: Well, it was such a pleasure to meet both of you.
Mollie Guin: We certainly appreciate it.
Mr. Calloway: Sure, hope it helps.
Mary Jo Lay: There's food over there, that, we never did take a break.
INAUDIBLE - BREAK
Mollie Guin: Why is it called, originally, why is it called North Gate?
Mr. Boyett: There was actually a gate there. This area right back here was
called East Gate. I mean they had one at one time. The University is now going
back and you can see a lot of areas every time they redevelop part of the
landscape, they've gone back and built the brick walls with the wrought iron.
There was actually a fence around campus at one time. It was wrought iron and
it had gates on it at the entrances. The picture from 1917 that I was talking
about is of North Gate, but its taken from standing down that street in front of the
Post Office. The gates are there. They've got two big huge iron gates that latch,
swing and close that street...
Mary Jo Lay: Did they lock them in at night? (hah hah hah)
Mr. Calloway: I don't think so.
Mr. Boyett: I don't, I've never seen a picture or anything with those gates
closed. But there were gates on it. Yea, there were. The whole campus was
fenced in.
Mollie Guin: Was this because of military?
Mr. Boyett: I don't think so.
Mr. Calloway: I really don't know either.
Mr. Boyett: I've never heard anybody say.
Mollie Guin: Cause it was a military, you know,...
Mr. Boyett: I guess if they wanted to close the campus for any reason, at least
back in those days they had the capabilities of doing it. They could shut the
gate if they wanted to. Whoever researched the landscaping and built the new
fences, went back and researched all this. So they've gone back and tried to put
it back together a lot of the ways it was originally.
Mr. Calloway: One of the interesting things about that time was the fact that we
went on all of our corp trips by train.
Mary Jo Lay: Oh yes, we didn't bring that up did we. And that's how the girls
came, on the train.
Mr. Calloway: Trains, I don't know if they came by bus, but trains.
INAUDIBLE
Mr. Boyett: Anyway we could get them here.
Mary Jo Lay: Well, listen, thank you so much
Mr. Calloway: You're welcome.
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
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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,
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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
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Rate •�(
Ini 'i - --
77 c c)/
HISTORIC PRESERVATION COMMITTEE
City of College Station, Texas 77840
ORATE HTRTORY 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,
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27(52)2- (.?6 ? )
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�ST
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Interviewee agrees to and shall indemnify and hold harmless CITY, its officers, agents and
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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.
7 -27 �>
Date
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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. a L q
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Mrs. Marytama Wicker
2911 Broadmoor Dr.
Bryan, TX 77802
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P
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.