HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980s Arts Council of the Brazos Valley Oral History Project Proposal Section I
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Introduction
The Arts Council of the Brazos Valley, a non - profit organization so designated
by the Internal Revenue Service, has supported the development of historical
awareness in the community for the past ten years and has a membership of
1500. The Council successfully administered a $350,000 5 year grant for
cultural enrichment in the public schools. A further $30,000 in grants have
been used for community projects, including historical interpretation (see
appendix A). The Council is now moving into a major support of the last
area. One such project was the preparation of an historic map of Bryan/
College Station with the assistance of the Texas Commission on the Arts and
Humanities and a major local bank (see appendix B). There is a commitment
from faculty members at Texas A &M University to provide professional assistance
in the interpretive effort (see appendix C). The council will focus on the
collection of oral histories, the preparation of television presentations,
with the assistance of local television stations (see appendix 0), a publication
series (see appendix E), and appropriate museum exhibits to serve the seven
county region (see appendix F).
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Section II
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Problem Statement and Documentation of Need
The problem which this proposal addresses is the lack of awareness by residents
of the Brazos Valley of the vital contributions made by the diverse flow of
ethnic groups into the area in the nineteenth century and the complex forces
of technological and social change that have been at work to produce a land-
scape of considerable historic character.
Documentation of Need
Although a rich amount of archival material is known to exist in the area its
usefulness is being diminished in four ways:
(1) Outmigration from the rural parts of the Brazos Valley, in particular
to large southern cities, is resulting in the dispersal of artifacts
of local historical importance, as well as of family archives. In the
last census period (1970 -80) rural population in the area dropped
percent.
(2) The most valuable resource for oral histories, the older members of the
community, is reduced every year.
(3) Existing Archival sources and compilations are at present highly
dispersed in local libraries, museums, historical societies, and private
hands. A centralized collection of such material, in either original or
copied form, properly cataloged, would make research on the area much
easier. The substantial amount of material at Texas ARM University Library
will be included in the cataloging process. Letters are included in
appendix - on the need for such a centralized catalog from area school
teachers and from appropriate Texas A &M University faculty.
Co" (4) Demographic growth in the Bryan /College Station area has been extremely
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rapid. Population has risen from in 1950 to in 1980.
Bryan /College Station alone now accounts for percent of the
population of the seven county area. Some percent of the present
population was born outside the State of Texas and usually has no clear
understanding of Texan culture, in particular that produced by the
complex ethnic mix that settled in the Brazos Valley. This lack of
understanding of the material culture with which they come in daily
contact means that a rich heritage is inaccessible to many new residents,
in particular children of school age. Letters are included in appendix
from area school teachers and appropriate Texas A &M University faculty.
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Section III
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Objectives
(1) To complete an archive of material culture (artifacts and photographs)
for use in exhibitions and for research.
(2) To complete a file of tape recorded oral histories of the seven county
area.
(3) To provide an accessible data source and publications on the principal
ethnic groups that have settled in the area (Southern Whites and Blacks,
Germans, Bohemians (Czechs) and Italians) and their respective settlement
strategies.
(4) To provide an accessible data source and publications on the impact of
changes in technology (transportation, agricultural machinery and
organization) and social structure (emancipation, the direct immigration
of European groups) on the development of the area.
(5) To hold three in- service workshops for some five hundred area teachers
on the historical interpretation of the landscape and material culture
of the seven county region.
(6) To disseminate findings to the widest possible range of the local pop-
(re ulation by the preparation of N museum exhibits, N television programs,
and a series of published and subsidized monographs on local history.
(7) To locate the site of the Carter Homestead, the house site for the first
Spanish land grant in the Brazos Valley, to acquire archeological land-
mark status for it, and to acquire the surrounding area as the site for
a regional historical facility.
(8) To locate a historically suitable building, remove it to the site area,
and renovate it for permanent use as a regional historical facility.
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Section IV
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IL ? Methods
Objective #(1)
The executive director of the Arts Council of the Brazos Valley, Jody Bates,
will form a committee composed of representatives from each county (Brazos, yr
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Washington, Burleson, Robertson, Leon, Madison, and Grimes) who will act as `I,'
a liason person for collecting materials in that county. Gifts of artifacts
(with appropriate authenication) which were in use during the settlement
period will be solicited from local families. Such have already been volun-
teered but discouraged because of the lack of an appropriate facility. A
secure temporary storeroom will be made available at the headquarters of the
Arts Council. Where such historical material as (photographs, maps, leases, ck1
deeds etc.) is available for loan to the Arts Council, but not as a gift, it
will be copied by Dr. Peter J. Hugill. All material will be microfilmed for
long term storage.
Objective #(2)
Mrs. Roy Pledger will chair the committee on Oral History which will identify
senior citizens to be interviewed by Junior High School students. Transcriptions 0. 10
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of tapes will be undertaken by Senior High School typing students and will » L ✓
form part of the data collection housed at the Regional Historical facility. .ip". L'
Oral histories collected for the Texas A &M University Department of Geography
Bicentennial project will be reproduced for addition to the main collection.
Objective #(3) b
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Dr. Peter J. Hugill will direct Beverly Kremenak and Debbie Lange, graduate
students in geography at Texas A &M University, in the collection of data on I � � ,,,n
ethnic settlement from the original census returns (for which Texas A &M
University Library is a regional repository); on resources available in the
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seven county courthouses in the area (deeds, wills of significant settlers,
plat books, tax rolls); on data available from land abstract companies; on
church membership and other records (where available); on private and family
archives; and on local newspapers. Material that may be removed or copied
for inclusion in the Regional Historical Facility will be identified. Maps
and a five thousand worn report on the history and pattern of settlement
of each of the five major ethnic groups (southern whites and blacks, Germans,
Bohemians (Czechs), and Italians) will be prepared for free distribution
to area public school teachers as well as to interested citizens at cost. ,
A report will be published on resources available in each county court-
house
on a similar cost basis.
Objective #(4)
Dr. Peter Hugill will direct John Diem and David Wilson, graduate students
in geography at Texas A &M University, in the collection of data on the
development of systems of transportation in the area, the social and
economic pattern of settlement in the area, and changes in agricultural
technology and the organization of labor. Maps and a five thousand word
report will be produced on each of these. The relationship of changes in
these three forces to the value of agricultural land will be analyzed in
a fourth report. Reports will be made available free to public school
teachers and at cost to other interested persons.
Objective #(5)
Teacher in service workshops will be conducted in co- ordination with the
several independent school districts in the area. Each of three identical
IL workshops will serve some one hundred and fifty teachers and will consist
of morning lectures, an afternoon field trip, and a planning workshop P P 9 P on
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local projects. Lectures will be iven b Dr. Campbell W. Pennington o
9 Y p 9 on the
ethnic composition of the area, by Dr. Peter Hugill on the impact of tech-
nological change on the settlement and use of the area, and by Dr. Clarissa
T. Kimber on the development of a distinctive regional character, material
culture, and landscape. Short field trips for small groups will be led by
Margaret van Bavel to Boonville Cemetary, and/or by Dr. Paul Van Riper to a
restored Victorian house, and /or by Dr. Peter J. Hugill to the old Bryan
Utilities diesel engine electricity generating plant and with WPA Reservoir
and /or by Professor David Woodcock to the Bryson Park historical homes
district. The group will reassemble in late afternoon for a workshop on
the use of local field trips to development student awareness of historical
resources in their own parts of the service area.
(be' Each workshop participant will receive the set of reports produced under
objectives 3 and 4 as well as material on archaeological sites, the
architectural history of the area, and local field trip planning.
Objective #(6)
Findings of the Regional Historical Facility will be disseminated in three
ways other than through the public schools.
The Facility will co- ordinate an exhibit on the material culture of the
area within nine months of the beginning of the project. This will last two
to three months at an appropriate local facility, such as the Brazos Community
( Center of the Memorial Student Center of Texas A &M University. Arts Council
members will be involved in the creation of this exhibit and as docents during
the period of exhibition.
Two television programs will be developed and aired at four months and
eight months after the start of the project on the local commercial, educational,
r . .
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and /or cable channels. The first will deal with an exploration of the Carter
grant (objective 8), its homestead site, and the acquisition of this by the
Arts Council and the City of College Station. The second will present the
findings of the oral history project (objective 2) stressing the value of
contact between older and younger generations of the community, and conclude
with a preview of the exhibition of material culture.
The monograph series on local history will begin with John W. Diem,
"Place Naming in Brazos County as a Social and Historical Process," and be
followed by Beverly Krernenak, "Cemetery Associations and the Preservation
of Community." These will be made available at cost.
Objective #(7)
The exact site of the Carter Homestead will be located using existing aerial
photographic coverage followed by a ground survey in which members of the
Arts Council will work under the supervision of Dr. Peter Hugill. Dr
of the Department of Anthropology, Texas A &M University, will provide
archaeological verification. Archaeological landmark status will then be
applied for.
The present owners of the site area, Tenneco Corporation, will be approached
with a view to their donating the site of the homestead to the City of College
Station. It is further proposed that the City, which is short of park space
in relation to its population, consider the acquisition of the land around
the homestead as a city park to provide an appropriate setting for the
Regional Historic Facility.
A suitable building will be located in the area, acquired, moved to the
homestead area, and renovated as a headquarters for the Regional Historical
Facility. Several y e eral such buildings are known to exist.