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HomeMy WebLinkAboutFrank G. AndersonRE - ?MARKS B Y FRANK G_ ANDERSON, JR_ AT THE DEDICATION OF A TEXAS HISTORICAL MARKER COMMEMORATING FACULTY AND STAFF HOUSING ON THE CAMPUS OF TEXAS A&M COLL APRIL 8 , 1 988 I am sure that many who lived in faculty and staff housing on campus join me in thanking Doctor Va n Riper, the Brazos County Historical Commission and the City of College Station for working to preserve this aspect of the history of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas_ The institution was more isolated and much smaller than it is today_ Because of the isolation many services were provided on campus — groceries at a college store, dairy products at F8cB and the creamery, frozen food storage at the Animal Husbandry building, laundry service at the college laundry, ice at the college power plant, swimming at Downs natatorium, riding classes at the stables_ Campus children could receive education from the first grade through high school at Pfeiffer Hall and another building_ A number of children were born in the faculty houses as the college physician was allowed a private practice for a number of these years_ The environment was not limited socially, recreationally or culturally_ The campus houses provided the setting for many of these activities_ Dinner parties were more frequent and often more formal than today — men wore tails in the teens, tuxes in the twenties and suits in the thirties_ Bridge parties, music practice and performance, po composition, painting, discussions and visiting were significant parts of life in many of these houses_ In earlier years visitors to ABcM not infrequently were guests in these houses. T he campus was not without eccentrics_ Doctor Asberry may have held the record in this regard_ His house was surrounded with multiple rows of oil rig —like towers and trellises on which climbing roses grew_ His intent apparently was to develop a black rose_ Although Doctor Asberry became deaf he continued to have several pianos which he enjoyed having played in unison_ His bathroom is said t have had paintings on the ceiling_ From the viewpoint of a child the campus was a great place to grow up_ The environment was safe, generally houses were left unlocked even in the absence of the occupants_ Our elders were on t whole tolerant of most of our behavior and we coexisted with the Aggies without any major problems. The upper level high school and college age daughters of the faculty dated Aggies and not a few became the bride of a young A8c8cM graduate AB&M provided many interesting events from the viewpoint of a child as well as an adult_ A visit by Franklin Roosevelt, a national champion football team whose games we watched from 25 cent seats in the Knot Hole Gang section in the U of the stadium and cavalry charges at the Cadet Corps reviews as well as a variety of demonstrations and discussions were stimulating experiences_ We played touch football outside the walls of Guion Hall and watched movies inside that visually impressive edifice. Our bicycles carried us with jolts and bumps over the terraced sidewalks in front of the New Administration building and our feet carried us through mazes of shrubbery in games of hide and seek and chase_ About t he third grade when I finally accepted the fact that the educational process also applied to me I began reading books actively_ First I read the books in our library and then that of the Gammons and then ventured the four blocks down Houston Street to the Waltons. Mrs. Walton usually rewarded me with an elaborate cool soft drink. I would like to tell two stories about the children of our next door neighbors. I will preface the first by saying that Mary Leland, a member of the Brazos Symphony, is the younger sister of one of the subjects_ Tom, her brother, demonstrated an affinity for chemistry even before becoming a teenager — having a lab in part of the Leland's garage_ I once asked too many questions about the contents of his bottles. He replied one was Deuteronomy and another was Leviticus_ I retained these names long enough until the Sunday school experience in the basements of Guion Hall and the Assembly Hall gave me new insights into their meaning_ Tom later became the head of the Chemical Engineering department at Rice University. Clod fights, acorn fights and firecracker cannon battles were a major activity for the campus boys of the 1930s_ Once Billy Gammon and I held off the rest of the neighborhood from the workshop behind the Gammons house. Our opponents were marshaled behind a piece of plywood which Sam Rae, Billy's brother, supported u pright with the aid of one finger exposed to our view_ A direct hit on that finger by an acorn fired from our firecracker cannon resulted in the complete collapse of our opponents fixed instillation_ This event may have pointed Sam Rae toward diplomacy_ Before his state department retirement he had become an ambassador_ In thinking back about these years from an adult's perspective I can remember only two faculty members who lived on the two blocks where my parents lived who left A for reasons other than retirement_ One went to Iowa State where he became president and the other some years after the general exodus off campus moved on to a position as a member of the United States Federal Reserve Board. I believe this says something about the quality of life in the campus community in those years_