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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZeno Philips - Marshall Pease - Homer Rea House 0 ZENO PHILIPS - MARSHALL PEASE - HOMER REA HOUSE by ® JOY REA 810 EAST 30TH STREET BRYAN, TEXAS 77803 (NO TELEPHONE) MARCH 23, 1992 110 L ZENO PHILIPS - MARSHALL PEASE - HOMER REA HOUSE by JOY REA 810 EAST 30TH STREET BRYAN, TEXAS 77803 (NO TELEPHONE) MARCH 23, 1992 Records indicate that in 1826 Zeno Philips built and lived in the house now known as 810 East 30th Street. Zeno Philips wrote to Leona Vicario, Governor of Coahuila and Texas on December 31, 1830: I, Zeno Philips. . .one of the Colonists lawfully established in the First Colony of the Empresario Austin...would represent that I received in said Colony as settler, one league of land; that my family is very large, being composed of more than twenty persons, that I need land to increase my breeding of stock, having quite sufficient means for that purpose, and whereas I have built in the (pr Colony and operating cotton gin, besides other improvements, I...pray that you...grant me one league of land in class of argumentation, with the understanding that...I offer to cultivate and settle it as the law directs, to effect all payment therein prescribed, and to comply with "all obligations thereof, as well as those of the other laws of the land.(1) This letter was written from "Town of Austin ", as was the letter of Stephen F. Austin three days later, December 4, 1830: In regard to the settle of the applicant in the foregoing petition: I have to say, that his statements are true; besides, he is a gentleman of very good moral, civil, and political qualifications, honorable and respectable, and has quite sufficient means for cultivating the tract of land for which he is applying.(2) Governor Leona Vicario received these letters in Coahuila two months afterwards, and on February 11, 1831, he replied: I grant to the petitioner the league of land which he claims, in the locality which he designates...The commissioner for the distribution of lands in the Colony to which the tract claimed by the petitioner may belong...will put him in possession of said league of land and issue the respective title, after having assessed the quality thereof, for establishing the amount to be paid by him to the State, for which payments I L allow him the installments specified in Art. 22nd of said law.(3) A year later in "Town of Austin ", Zeno Philips applied for the title to Miguel Arciniega in town of San Felipe de Austin, February 16, 1832: ...the Supreme Government of this State was pleased to grant me, in class of argumentation, one league of land which bears date February 11, 1831...you may be pleased to give me possession of one league of land, which is situated East of the Brazos River and North of the Navasota Creek, adjoining and southwest of the John Austin league, being on the plan No. 7. With the understanding that I offer to settle and cultivate it.(4) A week later, February 24, 1832, in town of San Felipe de Austin, Miguel Arciniega replied: ...I grant and confirm upon the said Zeno Philips, and put (ove him in real and personal possession of one league of land, which tract has been surveyed by Horatio Chriesman, previously appointed...This tract belongs to the class of arable lands in 2/25 part and to that of particular (pasture) lands in 23/25 part, which serves as a clarification for the price to be paid by him to the state. Within one year he must build permanent monuments in every angle of the tract, and must settle and cultivate it.(5) The requirement to settle and cultivate within one year was a matter of form, because Zeno Philips had already done this in 1826 to fulfill the requirement that "colonists must reside on the soil six years" to get title, which title Zeno Philips got in 1832.(6) On December 1, 1830, Zeno Philips testified that he had already built on the league and had a cotton gin and other improvements.(7) The Handbook of Texas says that Zeno Philips was assigned his league on July 19, 1824, and that the March 1826 census listed him as a "farmer and stock raiser, a single man between twenty -five and forty, with one servant and twenty -two slaves. "(8) The average number of slaves was five or less.(9) In March, 1829, "Philips and L John R. Harris were partners in one the of first large contracts for cotton in Texas, when they bought about a hundred bales from Jared E. Groce. "(10) Zeno Philips died in 1837, and at a special term of the County Court of Brazoria County, October 2, 1837, William O. Hill petitioned to be Administrator of the Philips estate (11), and on November 28, 1837 Hill and Columbus R. Patton signed a bond for $51,000 for Hill to make an inventory of the estate.(12) I conclude that the estate which required a $51,000 bond included a house that Philips "had built in the colony" and that during the twelve years it took to make the inventory, the house went into disrepair. The cost of administering the Philips estate was such that the balance due Hill was $8,000.(13) The Philips League had to be sold at auction at the courthouse door in the town of Brazoria on the 1st Tuesday of July, 1849.(14) E. M. Pease made the highest bid at #3,500.(15) Why was E. M. Pease the one who made the highest bid for the �L Philips League in 1849? In 1848 he originated the probate laws in the First and Second Legislatures.(16) The probate laws must have brought an end to the long Philips probate. Pease may have bid on the League on an act of friendship and admiration for Zeno Philips./ ) In 1857, as Governor, Pease appointed an Austin doctor, Dr. William Philips, his Secretary of State (17), and one may conclude that Pease was friends with men who spelled Philips with a single 1. In 1849, Pease had a distant cousin, Lucadia Niles in Connecticut, who was waiting for him.(18) He could have bought a home in Austin for L his bride- to -be. In 1845 he was issuing homestead patents for homes in Austin.(19) But he waited until a year after he bought the Philips League to marry Lucadia and bring her to Brazoria.(20) I conclude that he brought her to the Philips League, that the house on it was not in disrepair and that the Philips League was either in the Brazoria District (Western District)(21) and /or adjoined a town named Brazoria, but later named Bryan to avoid confusion with the town of Brazoria at the mouth of the Brazos River. Such a change in names happened with the two towns named San Felipe. To avoid confusion with San Felipe de Austin on the Brazos, San Felipe on the Rio Grande changed its name to Del �∎' Rio.(22) I conclude that the house Pease brought his bride to was not in disrepair because in 1849 Pease's builder /friend Abner Hugh I Cook was making trips from Bastrop to Huntsville to build the 1 / Penitentiary.(23) It would not have been out of Cook's way for him to repair the Philips -Pease House. It may have been at this time that the house got its Greek Revival front door, characteristic of Cook. Women describe houses. Lucadia Pease and her visiting sister, Juliet Niles, described the Pease house in letters home to Connecticut, and the return address on their letters was Brazoria.(24) E. M. Pease would have chosen the Brazoria that adjoined the Philips League for several reasons. When Pease came at 23 to Texas on January 3, 1835, he lived in Mina (Bastrop), II: where as a member of the Mina Committee, he "knew first hand the evolution of the government of Texas completely. .(25) I conclude that he went down the OSR, at that time called the Mina Road.(26) i.... 2 .., • S , The present marking of the OSR 8 miles north of Bryan disagrees/ V with the 1837 map showing the OSR going through Bryan.(27)- I 1 1 conclude that when E. M. Pease went down the Mina Road, he saw the ] house on the Philips League and liked it. Zeno Philips was still alive and prominent in 1835.(28) That the Philips -Pease Brazoria was not shown on maps does not mean it was not there. The anonymous 1831 visitor to Texas said that the maps did not show things right: "The road (OSR) laid down on maps as a road is however a mere route, marked out by notched or blazed trees. "(29) "The OSR, ordered by the King of Spain in 1691, was the most famous Texas road and was used for many years. By 1911, it was realized that the famous trail would disappear, and the DAR began to try to 4 110 make markers for the road.(30) Stephen F. Austin knew the commercial value of this famous road, and when he and his friends got first choice on the 7- square mile leagues granted by Mexico, he took 9 and 10, through which I conclude the famous trail ran, which on the 1885 city maps of Bryan seem to me to follow Madisonville Road over to Washington Street turning right on Burleson Street (now 27th) (31). Zeno Philips chose league 7. t *p 7 * Where I conclude OSR to have been. (32) 4::' * *Where I conclude Philips built. A house on the King's Highway, the OSR, was reason enough for Pease to buy it for his bride, from which she wrote letters with a the return address Brazoria. This Brazoria house had 7- square miles with it. If the house had been in Brazoria on the coast, it would have been on a 1/8 acre 4 lot . (33) But it would have been a big house on a 1/8 acre lot; Q whereas, the Pease house was too small.(34) Had the house been on 4 the coast, the Gulf Breeze would have made it dry by convection, kl . but on the Philips -Pease League it was damp - damp enough to cause / a family illness that made Pease resign from his 1851 nomination }"�/ for Governor . (35) Damp enough to make them plan to build a new �� house of oiled bricks to prevent dampness.(36) Brazoria on the V coast had shops with a great variety of articles for sale in ]� 1831.(37) But the Brazoria on the King's Highway of the 1850's was c t a town of quiet life (38), quiet life that continued in Bryan 1,5 through the 1950's. As Ernest Langford, long -time head of A & M's re _) Architecture Department used to say, "That's the way we want `) t it. "(39) 4 is In 1831 the houses in Brazoria on the coast were made of logs vi (40), the 50 houses in San Felipe were "all built of logs, except one, which is framed and very comfortable, "(41) but the Philips house as later described by the Pease women was a small frame house.(42) In 1831 the "route from Brazoria (on the coast) to San Felipe usually occupied nearly 3 days, "(43) but from Brazoria on the King's Highway to San Felipe took only one day. When Stephen F. Austin made a speech in that Brazoria, he rode home in time to eat supper in San Felipe.(44) His speech must have been at the 41 , mercantile store of his brother James Austin and distant relative John Austin, who were using Stephen's money.(45) After 1839, it took even less time to get from that Brazoria to the capital at Austin and later at Washington -on- the - Brazos. Which Brazoria to live in was a question that paralleled the quarrel between Sam Houston, who wanted the Capital at Houston, and his opponents, such as Pease, who wanted the Capital in the Western District.(46) The hatred for Houston was especially great at Caldwell on OSR.(47) The roads of the Philips -Pease Brazoria were muddy (48); where the roads of coastal Brazoria were hard: i d9i_ wh �� T-(z r iN 624-- f The only really good avenue of transportation lay along the C lti beaches of the Gulf. Mrs. Holley travelled along a section and described it as "nearly 30 miles long and as hard and smooth as a floor." But the beach never was a great highway of commerce. The flow of traffic was into the interior (OSR) and not along the coast.(49) Muddy roads are one thing that Juliet Niles complained of about the Brazoria Pease house: "I might get stuck in the mud and I , take root and grow in this boasted productive soil. "(50) The soil that she complained was not as productive as boasted to be, locates the Brazoria Pease house in Brazos County. Brazos and neighboring counties have always had the reputation of having productive soil, and this is one reason for the location of Texas A & M University here. Although it did not turn out to be true, early settlers in 1839 thought that since weeds grew 15 feet tall, the soil was i 4, productive and other plants would also grow to be 15 feet tall: %, J In their wee or weed prairies, the counties of Robertson and Milam possess a characteristic of the soil peculiar to t themselves. These prairies, unlike most in other I ) localities, are covered with a thick growth of weeds instead of grass. The weeds are from 10 to 15 feet high, almost 6 unDenetrable to man or horse, resembling in some respects 1 10 the cane -brake of the alluvial region The settlers highly estimate the productive power of the weed prairies.(51) The tall weed prairies were like islands in thick forests and were "called islands by the people of the county. "(52) The forests were so thick that Herman Ehrenberg in 1835 said that the forest were destroyed to make Washington -on- the Brazos.(53) The 1831 sketch of thick woods at Brazoria, so tall that the man on horse is miniature, could picture either Brazoria. The 1831 sketch of thick woods by the author of & Visit To Texas 1831 is reproduced in Del Weniger's The Explorers Texas as a "canebrake forest ".(54) Cane was thick in the alluvial Brazoria, but also thick in Brazos County. Today scattered around Bryan are stands of canebrake, but there were more standing in the 1940's and 1950's. Cane surrounded the big Cavitt House, and the only time that the Cavitt sisters got off their horses to talk to Homer Rea, Sr. was when they asked him how to weed - control their cane. But a dense forest with tall unpenetrable weeds was more characteristic of Brazos and Washington Counties than of alluvial Brazos. In 1845 Brazos County was described as wooded.(55) In 1836 Colonel W. F. Gray wrote of Washington -on -the Brazos: Glad to get out of so disgusting a place. It is laid out in the woods...only one street, which consists of an opening cut out of the woods. The stumps still standing. A rare place to hold a national convention in. They will leave it promptly to avoid starvation.(56) Disgusting is how Lucadia Pease's sister Juliet found Brazoria (Bryan) in 1853. Disgusting made Carrie Bel Rea say, "Why did they put A & M College here ?" A 1992 visitor to Bryan said that "the best thing about Bryan is leaving it! ". The artist who made the 1831 sketch wrote: II; Mr. John Austin, the first settler of Brazoria, went there in 1828. The place for the village which had been since cleared of the forest trees which then overspread the county, and, at the time of my visit they had been cut away to about the distance of half a mile.(57) m The 1831 author did not visit John Austin, but rather the cheat - William Austin, both of whom were only distant cousins of Stephen - F. Austin. The league of John Austin was No. 8, adjoining the league of Zeno Philips. (58) yl��J Since I conclude that the Brazoria Pease house was the Zeno `� r Philips house, and since the Pease house was a small frame house, I conclude that the Zeno Philips house was frame. Zeno Philips's friend Jared Groce imported lumber from Alabama to build a frame house in Eagle Lake for his daughter Sarah An G oce Whartf� n a d son -in -law Willi Ha ris Wharton. conclude that in 1 6 /7t AID /)1-M" we Philips might also have imported lumber to build a frame house. William Wharton's younger brother John Austin Wharton also lived in the frame house at Eagle Lake. E. M. Pease studied law in John Wharton's law office, was admitted to the bar in April, 1837 and in December became Wharton's law partner in Brazoria.(60) John Wharton, more than Sam Houston, directed the 15- minute battle of San Jacinto (61), one of the decisive battles of history. At his funeral in 1838, David Burnet called him "the keenest blade on the field at San Jacinto. "(62) On modern maps Eagle Lake is below Bernardo, which is down the road from San Felipe. As the crow flies, Eagle Lake is as near Bryan, as it is near Brazoria on the coast. So there is still the question of which Brazoria, or of belonging to both Brazorias via steamboat on the Brazos. On the other hand, Zeno Philips might have gotten the lumber ID for his house from John R. Harris, his partner in the cotton business, who came to Texas after he met Moses Austin in Missouri. (bro Harris had a saw mill at Harrisburg, that sawed from three to five thousands pieces of lumber a day.(63) Jared Groce's houses, whether of frame or of logs, were built by slaves. A Groce wrote: "There were many expert carpenters and brick masons among slaves. "(64) Since Zeno Philips had 22 slaves, I conclude that they built his house, cotton gin, and other improvements on his league. The Philips- Pease -Rea House, despite its periods of disrepair and repair is better built that most houses. Those who have inspected the roof say that it is well supported. The high pitch of the roof is like that of the French Legation in Austin except old photos show what it still has: a roof that curves up like this: Ar It has the shiplap like that of the buildings of the Waterloo compound, built by the sons of Philips's partner John R. Harris in Waterloo (named for his hometown of Waterloo, New York), which became Austin in 1839. I conclude that the Philips- Pease -Rea House was built by slaves. In Washington County the 1834 Samuel Seward house was built by slaves. Like Pease, who descended from a family that had five members in the British Parliament (65), Samuel Seward descended from the Seward that "led the Birnam Wood attack on Dunsinane in retaliation for the murder of King Duncan by MacBeth 4E: in the Middle Ages. "(66) Tradition has it that houses of early Texas were put together with pegs. This was not true for the Philips house nor other houses. Nails came by boat from New Orleans.(67) The Philips house was a dog -trot house, but its dog -trot was only 8 feet wide, half as small as the 15- foot -wide dog -trot of the 1822 Bernardo Bachelors' Hall. It did not have a bathroom or closets. it did not have many windows, and its only doors were those which enclosed the dog- trot.(68) The Philips house did have a cotton gin. The location of this gin had to be either to the side or back because the house was too close to the road to have anything in front. Today this house is one room (16 feet) closer to the street than the other houses on 30th. I conclude that this house once stood alone on its road, and that this road was part of the Air -line Road that led to the Brazos River.(69) Air -line was the name of the route that John R. Harris's boats had between the Brazos and New Orleans.(70) On this route Harris with Philips as partner in 1829 shipped 100 bales of cotton that they had bought from Jared Groce. The year before, 84 bales of cotton went via this route on The Rights of Man.(71) Since Zeno Philips had the cotton and cotton gin, even if Harris had the boats, I conclude that they were partners in 1828 as well as 1829. It is possible that they had been partners in Missouri before they came to Texas in 1824.(72) That the Philips house and gin once stood alone on the Philips League is supported by the fact that the road in front of this house forced all the streets in the Philips Addition to meet Texas Avenue at an angle, but streets in other additions are perpendicular to Texas Avenue. Jared Groce has been called the father of Texas agriculture because he planted the first cotton in Texas and erected the first cotton gin in Texas in 1825.(73) His brother -in -law Edwin Waller (who in 1839 directed the building of Austin and became its first mayor) (74) in 1831 shipped cotton down the Brazos to New Orleans on a schooner, which "means of transportation has made cotton the king crop of Washington County. "(75) (which then included Brazos I FY- 2 -- 1 7 . % i Ld 2 u 2 2.aQ.■/4,6- / f One reason that Groce and Philips came to Texas to plant cotton was that "cotton root rot had already begun to endanger Southern cotton. "(76) This danger to Southern cotton was partly responsible for the Federal Government's act after the Civil War to I set up land -grant colleges with Experiment Stations to study cotton IL root rot.(77) At that time E. M. Pease was Governor of Texas for k V t he third time. He had known both Groce and Philips and their \" v success with cotton. The Groce Plantation was much nearer the Q / W Philips League than most maps show.(78) It was because this was V" the cotton growing area more than a possible desire to have a land- i (i� grant college on or near the Philips -Pease League, that led Pease l ¢ �\ to use his influence to determine the location of Texas A & M ` ) College. Agriculture and Experiment Stations were of much interest ji to all the Pease family. It was at an agricultural fair that Pease Nir and others formed the Texas Historical Society.(79) At A & M a quarrel arose over who was going to get the Experiment Station money. Until the 1960's the Experiment Station got the most money and the best men. Even the A & M Library got more money because of ii ty its connection with the Experiment Station.(80) The best man of A & M's Class of 1922 was Homer Rea, Sr., (81) and in 1925 he was appointed the youngest superintendent ever of the Temple Experiment Station, where he did research on cotton root rot. In 1937 he was transferred to College Station to be the first and for years the only man in weed research. When asked who was the one person most known in the Experiment Station, the answer was always Homer Rea. He was the essence of the Experiment Station - a pioneer in agricultural research, as his son was to become a pioneer in computer research. And he came to live on the "boasted productive soil ", first renting 814 East 30th from 1939 to 1950, then buying 810 East 30th, the house of Philips and Pease, who were almost as interested in cotton as Homer Rea. But not quite, because when Homer Rea asked William Albert Thomas for the hand of Carrie Bel Thomas, all he talked about was cotton.(82) The first indications of a house on the Philips League are the words "built" and "other improvements ". Such words are not mentioned again in the abstract. Only in 1883 is the word "property" used, when on October 2, 1883, the railroad trustees sold to W. R. Cavitt, title to "the land, lots, and property, in Block 10, Philips Addition for $1,000. "(83) If Pease in 1849 bought the whole League for $3,500 and in 1883 Cavitt bought Block 10 for $1,000, I conclude that Block 10 had a house worth $1,000 on it. In 1876 Cavitt had built his big, brick house on the next block and had paid $5,000 for it.(84) With the idea of building a big, brick house and of developing the Philips Addition, E. M. Pease on December 29, 1852, sold 2,436 acres of the Philips League for $2,436 to Columbus R. Patton, the one who had signed the $51,000 bond for William G. Hill to be Administrator for the Philips League.(85) Witnesses to the sale were William G. Hill and B. C. Jones, listed with Zeno Philips as pioneers of Brazos County.(86) This acreage included the frame house that the Peases were living in, but they in turn bought lots out of acreage the on which to build a big, brick house, including Blocks 11, 17, and 23, next to their house on Block 10.(87) They never built a house on one of these lots, because they moved to Austin in December, 1853, when Pease was elected Governor. Later he sold Blocks 11, 17, 23, 31, and 33 to W. R. Cavitt.(88) After his death, Lucadia Pease sold Blocks 8, 9, and 21 to W. R. Cavitt.(89) A June 29, 1909, map of the Philips -Pease League made for Fred Cavitt by Attorney F. L. Henderson shows that the E. M. • Pease estate still owned 1,008 acres in one section, 521 acres in another section, and still had title to the 103 3/4 acres, which Cavitt was in the process of paying for.(90) As early as the 1851 nomination, Pease knew that he would be Governor and would be leaving the small Philips house and developing the league into a town and hopefully a university, like Baylor University at nearby Independence, where the value of land i n the 1850's was $35,000 an acre!(91) So, the December 29, 1852 V // ( sale of Pease acreage to Patton was the beginning of Brazoria's ___J becoming Bryan. But within five years Patton was dead. On July 1, Ye_.L "/ 1857, John Adriance gave bond for $265,000 to be Administrator of the Patton estate (92), which after 12 years the court ordered him to sell on July 6, 1869, to the highest bidder - a J. 0. • Jackson.(93) On July 29 Jackson paid $2,500 for the acreage, and on August 2 Jackson sold it for $3,804 to the railroad trustees W. • c R. Baker, Abraham Groesbeck, W. J. Hutchins, and T. A. Rice, all of Harris County (94) and all of whom (including their representative Elgin) had streets in the Philips Addition named for them. Newspaper stories have shown that the town of Bryan began on April 9, 1860, when William Joel Bryan deeded land to the railroad trustees, in return for which they named the town Bryan. • tr anted or % ' I i .m. . B r y aii Tilemo y� ` • to .) le n, GI . '; p e d i t i on h The site and name of Bryan arei.the village of Bryan was hated in'ptunity was a "hummer," Composed, osely linl.ed with the early his - 11866 and 1867, and at that time It of a• mixture of saints and sinners,. of lexus since the land first was the terminus of the tailrcad. ,',But as the railroad w$s built fur- '''et aside•r`fu tlto?':city uas Cart of Before the close 'of the Civil war tiler north, to such points as Bearne •ague No 10 of the grant to the read had been built to Svlil }ican, and Franklin, and on toward Dallas, tcphen F. Atritin oy. the Republic then a thriving community and the the element that had followed the Texas. The village was named starting place for the Sanger family, rails to Bryan continued to follow, r William Joel Bryan, who roar- which later becamf widely known and the community became more •3 into the Austin family, in Texas mercantile circles. But normal village, but still retained i l'Vihiam Joel Bryan was the father when Bryan became the rail head, Faith trade territory, • the late. Guy M. Bryan of Hcus the fate of Millic:an.was sealed. .When Bryan was founded the ter- : Bryan quickly developed a popula- try it served. was the stantpi,,g ` a ,tbe grandfather of T avia" tiou of rzrx?tit 500, and it became the ! ground '1 of duns, and of 17ar: '.IC ,j president of the Fttsi � trading point for a , seat area in gango. The Old San Antonio trail -, R ttk 'of Bryan, lie camel w ;Texas. Merchandise of all sorts as the King's highKa3 ' `',vvittcit tan exai with the second Austin shipped to Bryant by rail and then through, the northern seetion'of the • " >`pedttion landing. at the mouth of sent 'by ot;= ,vagen .teams to aucn county, was often used by these a: Brazos in 18$1, places as \vac:o, Dallas Corsicana groups, as well es by Mexican trad- On April 9, 1800, Bryan deeded a and Denison antf,'of course, to inter- ers going between San Augustine ;tart of League No 10 to A. Ctoes- mediate points. and San Antonio, with their . burro ,ek and R. Baker, trustees for the 1�roi i reports that have come trains, loaded with merchand se i and T. C.,-railroad. On this plat',do v..n, the. yetra ttie yokng cctm• atad S ome siive aitd gold. But William Joel was only one of three Bryan brothers, who inherited land from their uncle, Stephen F. Austin, who had accumulated 70 leagues!(95) He never lived in Bryan. His brother Moses, who interpreted Santa Anna's surrender speech, lived at Independence (96), and his younger and more influential brother Guy Bryan, Sr. was Senator in Austin when Pease was governor. They were close friends (97), and worked in Austin together to bring the railroad through leagues 7, 9, and 10, by passing Harvey Mitchell's `r Booneville.(98) William Joel named his son Guy Bryan, Jr. This Guy lived in Houston, but was buried in Bryan. • The first real estate boom of Bryan - fed by Federal money granted in 1866 for land -grant College - was the Philips Addition. Although Texas A & M did not open until 1876, planning for it began kk during Pease's 1867 -69 term as Governor. Pease had more to do with k choosing the general location than Harvey Mitchell, who as agent tl manipulated the exact location, which remained 5 miles from Bryari %. ` X until after the Kennedy assassination, when Bryan "moved" to d College.(99) I always heard that the reason for the 5 miles was to 4 keep the boys "down on the farm," but the reason was that Harvey 1 Mitchell was Irish.(100) Had the location been chosen on the Philips -Pease League, Pease would likely have donated the land.(101) Pease waited for the location to be chosen before opening the Philips Addition. Then on August 21, 1871, Pease came to Bryan from Austin, and he and Harvey Mitchell stepped off the blocks and named the streets for Texas heroes, who were personal friends to Pease.(102) Monroe Street (30th) was named for President Monroe, whose 1823 Monroe Doctrine prepared the way for the 1824 Texas Magna Carta. Pease immortalized Zeno Philips by naming the Philips Addition. Pease Street is the only place that Pease named for himself. He could have had the town of Bryan named Pease. In 1871 the Austin architect Laramour came to College k � Station to start the slow job of building A & M's main, t nCJ building.(103) Since where Laramour went, Abner Cook went, I Y t conclude that he came, too. Since they were both friends of Pease, I conclude that Pease got them the job. The Philips Addition could 416 not be stepped off until there could be a Partition Deed, which could not be made until the Patton part was probated, which took 12 years. During that time the Philips -Pease house in the Patton part must have been vacant and in disrepair. When Pease sold the acreage to Patton in 1852, it was agreed that the partition would be made at a later date, which turned out to be August 21, 1871, when the value was $21 an acre.(104) If the value was still $21 an acre in 1883 when W. R. Cavitt (Mitchell's brother-in-law) bought Block 10 from the railroad trustees for $1,000, the 4 acres of land were worth only $84, which means that Block 10 had a $1,000 house on it, which I conclude to be the Philips -Pease house. For 19 years this house was a Cavitt house, a half -block from the big Cavitt house. Since the old photograph that I have of the C1 � house was taken from the roof of the big Cavitt house by Howard I conclude that they considered the house theirs, even us after they sold it on August 1, 1902, to investor Tom Castles and C. A. Adams, then foreclosed and sold it to G. W. Brown on December 12, 1902, for a total of $689.(105) This photograph shows the dirt Cavitt tennis court, the dirt Monroe Street, and 810 with its dirt yard and outhouse. Also shown is 814, which Gainer Jones, whose parents Columbus Jones and Mary Gainer Jones owned it from 1914 to 1930, told me in the 1980's had been built in 1912 by a cotton buyer from the North. This dates it after 1912 and before 1918. Also shown is a brick building in the right background. Some say that this was the Bryan Music Academy, torn down in 1909 or 1910, but it seems to be one of the dormitories of the Bryan Baptist Academy, which taught art and music. This explains why some called it the Bryan Music Academy. It operated as Texas Women's College from 1905 to 1909, when it became the co -ed Bryan Baptist Academy from 1909 to 1918, when Eugene Edge bought it and turned the two dormitories into the Edge Apartments, occupied mostly by A & M faculty families. The physician for the Bryan Baptist Academy from 1910 to 1918 was Dr. S. C. Richardson (106), who lived in the small house that the Cavitts sold in 1902 to Tom Castles and C. A. Adams, who after paying off the foreclosure sold it in 1910 to Mrs. John Impson of Coleman County for a rent house.(107) Mrs. Impson's first renter seems to have been Dr. Richardson, who must have rented it in 1911, before he moved his bride Erma Lou into it in 1912.(108) Erma Lou was her husband's assistant. She was intelligent and had a love for what was no longer called the Philips -Pease house, but was called the Richardson house. I talked to her on June 7, 1973. She showed me a 1912 photo of the house, which was hidden by plants. She apologized for having lived in the small house, saying that then houses in Bryan were hard to find, and there was no place else to live. She said that they rented the house from 1912 to 1918, when they bought it because the owner did not want to pay for the 1918 paving of the street. But that year the Bryan Baptist Academy closed when the merchant Eugene Edge bought the property for apartments, and Dr. Richardson had to get a job in Dallas. They returned in 1936 and rented the new stucco house that later became the English Professor Hedgecock's house, next door to 810. Both the Richardson boys were born at 810, and the girls from the Bryan Baptist Academy would wave at them from the boardwalk across : the street. Mrs. Richardson said that they were too busy living in 810 to remodel it. The ceilings were high, and the whole house was heated by two beautiful wood stoves. There was no fireplace, and the north room where the fireplace was put in, in 1932, was a bedroom. The living room was on the south side. There was an outhouse.(109) When Dr. Richardson left for Dallas, he "sold" the house on January 30, 1919, to just- out -of- medical school Dr. L. 0. Wilkerson, who before leaving for China to be a missionary, executed the vendor's lien note for $4,460.(110) Officially Dr. Richardson sold the house to Wilkerson's parents -in -law, the Ed S. Wickes, who moved up from Houston to live in it and put their three boys through A & M. When Dr. Wilkerson came back from China in 1926, with his two Sara Ednas (wife and baby daughter, who is now Mrs. Joe Holmgreen, sister -in -law to County Judge Holmgreen), he did not have the money to pay off the 810 note and also buy the stone house at 603 East 31st.(111) So he began to sell the house back and forth to bankers and BB &L officers, all the while his in- laws were living in it. On July 21, 1926, his father -in -law Ed Wickes released it to him. (112) On October 9, 1926, he sold it for $5,000 to banker W. T. Crenshaw, who sold it back to him for $5,000 on May 3, 1927, the terms being $2,000 cash in hand and $3,000 vendor's lien.(113) On May 5, 1927, he sold it on the same terms to Robert Thomas of BB &L.(114) On June 11, 1927 Thomas sold the $3,000 note to BB &L.(115) On June 7, 1930, Thomas sold it to S. L. Boatwright, the son of the banker Boatwright who made his son -in -law Travis Bryan, Sr. President of the First National Bank, for $3,000 plus taxes and insurance and a $778.52 note due in 3 months.(116) S. L. Boatwright at 810 was then a neighbor of his sister and brother -in- law, the Travis Bryans, who lived a block up the street in the big yellow house across Hutchins Street from the big Cavitt House. April 12, 1932, Boatwright made a Mechanics Lien to W. W. Hall & Co. for $400, who transferred the lien to Postmaster Wilson Bradley on October 5, 1932, who transferred it to BB &L on June 8, 1934.(117) The 1932 Mechanics Lien was for remodeling 810 East 30th.(118) Women describe houses. From my having visited 810 as an 814 renter - neighbor from 1930 to 1950 and having lived in 810 as the daughter of the owners Homer dnd Carrie Bel Rea from 1950 to 1972 and as the owner by inheritance from 1972 to the present 1992, I have intimately seen how the remodeling was done to 810 in 1932. My observations have been supplemented by the observations of Mrs. S. C. (Erma Lou) Richardson from 1912 to 1919, which she told me on June 7, 1973, at her house around the corner at 506 S. Haswell, and by the observations of Mrs. L. O. (Sara Edna) Wilkerson, who from 1912 to 1918 was one of the Baptist Academy girls who waved at the Richardson boys from the 30th Street boardwalk and who visited her parents in it from 1919 to 1930 and herself lived in it in 1926, when she and her husband and baby returned from China - which observations she told me in July, 1986, at the home of her sister, Mrs. W. C. (Lila Wickes) Mitchell, 3510 Cavitt Avenue. The 1932 remodeling was: 1. Lowering the high ceilings from 11 feet 3 inches to 9 feet 3 inches, making a 2 -foot space between the 2 ceilings, which space encloses damp, stagnant air, making more dampness than in the days of Zeno Philips e and Marshall Pease. 2. Placing concrete stones under the north foundation to enclose the underneath of the house to keep the wind from blowing out the gas pilot of a large, ground -level gas furnace. A large trap door was made in the floor to install the furnace. In 1973 I had the leaking gas furnace taken out. In 1950 these "stones" of unknown origin were all over the yard. We had them hauled off, but some are still behind the garage, which puts the blame on the 1932 Boatwrights, because Mrs. Wilkerson said, "I had my first vegetable garden in the back." 3. The planting on the sides and back a tall privet hedge • to supplant a fence of barbed wire and posts. Three of these old fence posts still stand at the extreme back of the land that 814 owners now claim. An old post on the extreme back on the 804 side along with the privets were dug up by the 1979 804 owner to erect his wooden fence on what had been considered 810 property. In 1950, Homer Rea, Sr. had 2 concrete survey markers embedded in front to try to prevent encroachments. 4. The building of a driveway and garage with a room, which room has always been called "the little house ", like a garconiere. The room had a shower and commode, which in 1950 didn't work. The driveway was moved southward from the old location, from which wagons and horses and cars had parked on the front yard. When Monroe Street (30th) was paved in 1918, an opening in (L, the curb was left for the old driveway, which opening still exists on 804 land, but mostly on 810 land. With the 1918 street paving came sidewalks. By 1950 the sidewalk had been "uprooted" by tree roots, and a new sidewalk was built. 5. Arbor vitae hiding the front porch replaced the climbing roses and trellis that hid the front porch in the Richardson days. In 1950 Carrie Bel Rea asked Homer Rea to cut these down, thus exposing 810 to the glaring sun, as it was in the days of Philips and Pease. She did not ask him to cut down the front cedar tree, but I had it cut down after I inherited the house in 1972. IL „ 6. The front porch was changed from a floor -level wooden one with steps to the dirt to a ground -level red -dyed cement floor with steps at the front door. A gutter was attached to the flat roof of the porch - the only gutter on the house until I had some put on in 1984 to try to keep water from collecting under the house. 7. Bermuda grass was planted not - too - successfully on the dirt yard. The fig tree that Dr. Richardson had planted in the back yard was left and kept producing until an "I- can-do- anything -I -like" yardman that I had in the 1970's cut it down. In 1950 Carrie Bel Rea and I hauled dirt on the wheelbarrow and planted St. Augustine grass on the dirt. We brought the grass from our 814 lawn, which Carrie Bel had started in 1939 with one sprig from the Conoco station at Texas Avenue and 29th, the "social cry club" where men gathered to talk after supper. This Conoco station still stands across from City Hall - dilapidated, but a symbol of slow, social life that does not now exist. 8. The front room that extends 15 feet closer to the street than other houses changed from a bedroom to a living room. The old photograph shows that the north wall had one window and no chimney. In 1932 this window was taken out and a fireplace and chimney put in its place. Then a window was put on either side of the fireplace. Normally, breaking up a wall like this weakens a house, but the slaves that built this house were so expert that • they made it a "you- can -do- anything- to -me- house ". Mysteriously, the women who lived in this house - Lucadia Pease, Erma Lou Richardson, Carrie Bel and Joy - have been "you- can -do- anything- to -me" women, who stand, no matter what is done to them. Other 1932 things done to this room were to put a south window facing the front porch, to replace a regular interior door into the hallway (dog -trot) with a door -less arcade and to cut a large opening in the interior wall dividing the living room and dining room and fill it with glass French doors. In 1950 Carrie Bel Rea preceded the 1990 Federal Barrier - Free Act by asking Homer to take out these doors, leaving an empty space, and to install them as separate exterior • doors at the back of the house. 9. The hallway (dog -trot) was divided in 1932 into a large front vestibule, a large middle closet, and a large bathroom. So that this bathroom could have closets, a large opening, a little larger than the one for the French doors, was made between the dog -trot and 10. the kitchen. Adjoining the closets opening into the bathroom, but sticking out into the kitchen, was a china closet with glass French doors opening into the kitchen. This meant that a new door opening had to be made between the dining room and kitchen. A wooden swing door was installed. It always swung shut unless propped. The one kitchen window was taken out, and installed were two small windows below which was installed the kitchen sink. • In 1950, to make more room, Carrie Bel had the small sink changed from the exterior wall to the interior wall next to the chimney. That made it easy to take the pots from the gas cookstove on the other side of the chimney to the sink. And that made it possible for her to stand at the kitchen windows and ask her husband who was outside with me, "What's Joy doing ?" The chimney on the kitchen side had an upper hole for the gas hot water heater and on the dining -room side, a lower hole for a wood stove. Before 1932, there had been a chimney in the dog -trot, the only remains of which is a patch in the ceiling, but the exterior chimney can be 110 seen in old photographs. If a wood -stove had been connected to this chimney, women could have cooked on it, making a kitchen out of the dog -trot. The dog -trot c before 1932 had been a bedroom, because Mrs. Wilkerson said, as if it happened yesterday, "Sara Edna and I came home from China before my husband, and the first thing we saw when we walked up to the front door were my parents asleep in bed." 11. Sometime between the Richardson outhouse and the Boatwright bathroom, a Wilkerson bathroom was put in. Mrs. Wilkerson said that to get to the bathroom, one had to go through the kitchen door onto a narrow back porch into the bathroom. She said that she used to swing her baby girl on this narrow back porch. One can look at the outside of the back of the house and see that 1930 lumber („ is interspersed with older lumber in a way to indicate that some of the older lumber had been torn off to make a narrow lean -to back porch and bathroom, which was taken off in 1930, enclosing the dog -trot again with 1930 lumber and 2 small 1930 windows. When this was done, 12. the back bedroom acquired an east window, and east exterior door with small wooden porch and steps. In addition it acquired three south windows instead of two, another instance that the original house had few windows in the old pioneer fashion of having few windows as a protection against Indians or bandits. In 1950 the wooden porch was rotten, and since two replacement porches rotted between 1950 and 1972, I never replaced (ir the porch after I inherited the house. In 1950 Homer Rea replaced the exterior door with one of the glass French Crie doors, which has made that back door a "picture window ". 13. A wide lean -to back porch was adjoined to the kitchen in 1932. This back porch also had an exterior door (which Homer Rea replaced with the other French door) with a small, always- rotting porch that I never replaced after I inherited the house. The wide lean -to had small 1930 windows on all sides. When I asked Lila Wickes Mitchell about the 1932 remodeling of 810, her comment was "The Reas did it over." and almost anyone I talked to would tell me that Mrs. Marshall Peters (the Rea's neighbor) told them: "More work was done on that house and yard than any house in town." What the Reas did, consisted of undoing the expensive 1932 remodeling and doing it themselves. Having no ladders, Carrie Bel and Joy were standing on tall boxes papering the ceiling of the living room, when banker Ellen (Mrs. Marshall) Peters walked in and announced for us to get our furniture out of 814 immediately, because she had just called Fred Burt in Vermont and bought 814 over the telephone. Fred Burt was the A & M geology professor from whom the Reas had rented 814 from 1939 to 1950, when they bought 810 from him. Fred Burt and his mother, Lucy J. B. Burt, winter - camped in 810 from 1934 to 1950. They did not consider it living, because, as A & M's Geoscience Professor Earl Cook wrote in his 1983 lecture Marooned in Aggieland, the A & M professors from out of state, instead of appreciating their A & M faculty privileges, considered that they were marooned in Aggieland. The Burts were from 123 Union Street, Bennington, Vermont, where they lived in the summers. try They had nothing good to say about the South. Lucy Burt always said that Southerners dig their graves with their teeth but that Vermonters, who eat apple pie for breakfast, live to be 100. That turned out to be true, because Fred Burt, who was older than Homer and Carrie Bel Rea, outlived them and wrote to me: "What was mine is now yours." The highest compliment that Lucy Burt could pay, she paid to Carrie Bel Rea: "You're the smartest woman in the South." Fred let the Reas rent 814 for $35 a month, because Carrie Bel was the only one who could please his mother, who demanded afternoon visits as part of the rent. Carrie Bel took her sewing with her on these visits. I remember a teal sweater that she knitted for me and an evening dress with silver bows all over it that I wore to the upstairs Maggie Parker Dining Room on the corner of Bryan and 26th. The Burts had lived out at College at the corner of Burt and Dexter Street next to the log cabin, where the artist Marie Haines painted, met Fred secretly, and waited for Lucy to die so that she could marry Fred. Lucy used to say, "People say that Fred will marry Marie after I die, but he won't." He did. In 1950, at 65, he came down from Vermont to claim his 65- year -old Marie. The wedding was on Dexter at the home of Marie's sister, Ruth Haines Clark and her husband Wheezy Clark, so called because he wheezed during his lectures on Economics. Chicken mousse, instead of cake, was the wedding dish. Marie used to hope that she would live in 810, but Lucy didn't die in time; so Marie and Fred had to live in Vermont. They had to wait for Lucy to die, because t or she was the one who had inherited railroad money, which - although not enough to support a daughter -in -law - was enough for Fred to (by buy 810 from Boatwright for $3,500 on December 26, 1934, and later to buy 814 for $4,000 in time to rent it for $35 to the Reas in 1939. Burt's professor's salary was not enough because he was not in agriculture, then the only high - paying field. Although faculty in agriculture were the highest paid, it still was not enough. Faculty privileges took the place of money. Ernest Langford let Homer Rea's children Homer and Joy spend the summers in his 4th floor Architecture Department. (Homer would have been an architect if WW II had not pressed him into engineering.) Homer Rea, Sr. (who cared for cotton and weeds, not books) had a Faculty Library Card, which Carrie Bel and Joy used to check out books for "H. E. Rea ". The A & M Library clerks would say, "Mr. Rea reads more books than anyone in the College." Carrie Bel was so smart at stretching Homer's faculty salary that he asked her, "How do you pay the bills ?" She said, "I robbed a bank." That is how "The Reas did it over," with little money and how - after the Reas died - Joy continued to "do it over" with no money. The 1950 "doing it over" undid the expensive 1932 remodeling. Carrie Bel had Homer take down the chandeliers and take out the ceiling -high ornate mantlepiece and put a simple frame around the fireplace. Her taste, like that of her son Homer, was "simple, almost severe," as she described it. Although Homer was destined to live in California and not in 810, 810 was his. He paid the $3,500 cash for it - the first time in all its history that cash was paid. In 1985, when the City Inspector told Joy that she would (r, be forced to sell her house or go to jail, Homer called from California, asking anxiously, "Are you going to sell it? Are you ?" Homer, without objection, allowed Joy to inherit 810 and their parents' savings of $110,000, which she lost in the oil boom of the 1970's and 1980's by digging 3 oil wells and 1 water well under the supervision of the "I- can -do- anything -I- like" yard man- oil man. But all the while she continued the doing -it -over. Having inherited Carrie Bel's desire for barrier -free design, the first thing Joy did after inheriting the house was to make a door out of the middle bay window, making an easy exit from the house. During Carrie Bel's thirteen years of cancer, entrance into and exit from the house were difficult. As she and Carrie Bel had done in 1950, she alone took down the deteriorating wallpaper. But there was no money to buy new wallpaper, because what money she had, had to be (b used to try to keep the stripper oil wells from being stopped up with paraffin. She invented a way to stop the stopping -up by flowing the wells with air. To demonstrate this invention with the hope of selling it to the then INVENT Department of A & M, in 1981 she dug a 400 foot water well in 810's front yard and flowed it for 9 years without ever having it stopped up or pulled. Also in 1981 she had built a carport for her truck, because the yard man -oil man occupied the garage and little house. On September 6, 1983, the fight with the City of Bryan began. The neighbors called the City to have the water well taken down because it was not historical, and when the City Inspector and Historic Commissioner came and asked the yard man -oil man about the well, he said, "I had nothing to do with it," and died from fear at the well a few hours later. The next day I built a fence of landscape timbers to protect the well from the city. For two years the neighbors called the City daily to have the fence and well taken down and to force me to sell my house or go to jail. From October 18 to November 4, 1987, the City had me on trial, asking for a $10,000 fine to be put against my house as a lien. City Attorney Andron asked (without objection from Attorney Cofer) and obtained from Judge J. D. Langley a ruling that the jury not be told that I was poor "because that would be highly inflammatory" and because "her house is worth a lot of money ". Cofer, whose father had been an A & M English professor since 1910 and the first College Archivist, had offered in September 1984 to protect me, my house and fence and the water well, and my two pet goats. He said, "It's a clear case of harassment by the Historic District." He was my charity lawyer for six years. But it was his little joke. By July, 1990, I understood that he was like his father, who boasted in Observations of A & M in 1910 of a "little joke" he had in telling a lady that he would pay for her meal if she would sit with him and then when the bill came, telling the lady to pay for the meal herself.(119) Seeing that I had no lawyer to protect me, I let anyone who would, take down the carport and the fence for the landscape timbers in it. All this time I was living on $100 monthly food stamps. Part of the "little joke" was a new bathroom that the lawyer had me build out of landscape timbers in 1987 to "comply" with the City Code. Also, since he had told me that I could fix up my house with money that he would get me by suing the city, I had taken out the wooden floors of the living room and of the kitchen in 1985 with the expectation that I could soon replace them with concrete III floors that would prevent the dampness of the house suffered by Lucadia Pease and the women after her. Cement mixed with lime (which most contractors forget to do) prevents both dampness and the "sweating" of cement. Cement floors in historical houses have been accepted. The 1850 farm houses that were moved to Museum Headquarters in Fort Worth were all given cement floors, and this Museum Headquarters was described as a "gateway to a place where you may reach back to another time and, with greater knowledge of how far you have come, be better able to choose which way you will go. "(120) For seven years, both the house and I have been in disrepair, which makes a house ineligible for a historical marker.* Two weeks • ago a black carpenter nicknamed J. J. said to me, "I can't stand to see you living this way. God sent me. I am going to take your house out of disrepair." He had the City turn my utilities on. Surely, he descends from the expert slaves who built the house. A week ago, God sent me someone else: Linda Williams, who put this narrative on computer so that I might get a historical marker. Dying, Carrie Bel said to Joy, "I could never have made it without you. Who will take care of you ?" Now she knows. Linda Williams and Jesus -like carpenter Robert Densey. If those who read this wish to donate, even a small amount, to help buy materials, please send donations to: Robert Densey 1706 Scanlin Bryan, Texas 77802 • Telephone: 409-822-7703 * I applied for an individual grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and I need a historical marker before such a grant might be awarded to me. i■ 4 • < -•f.i, lRfl /.11!!11 {ili The Homer Rea Family in 1955 - In Front of A & M's MSC • or, ••• - . �4Ze t • � ; } r i s 3_ .;" 4, h _ 0 ., It„ , , . , ' r t. ' j :0 ,," .r, . s 1 '" • : . • • Y y .s. y e s , . • . if ' ' .. 4;% 7t, ,,-- '" IN 't • 11 01111 i • t 1 .. • ... . :::4'1.1°711111 14 ° A 1 „11,� •. �N T 'i. .. �' ' ! ;.ri.•�- .. a ` 4 '''' . . ' 0111 Rr T .1 -- i", ' Z • Alf._ _1i +.y' r$. • � -r . �' i • �- ` - "4: ..- --,, • / ,. t ♦ 111117 1 .... 4� "lam . . 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No one except Sam Houston lived to serve Texas more during the last days of Mexican rule, � .4 under the independent Republic, and during the ; T '`'' early period of statehood in the American Union. a °.'” . 0 ■ Although never achieving general acclaim com- . ,,,„,,, . mensurate with his accomplishments, there are a ` 1 ` 4 1` '+ • few historians who have been more generous in ,, ,i • their praise. For instance Francis R. Lubbock, him- -'' '' • t;. a self an outstanding contemporary, wrote: , .,, _ : , Pease ... was considered a fine constitutional `� lawyer, a great statesman, and patriot of in- corruptible integrity. Besides this, Pease was . , wideawake and progressive in his views of public policy' Benjamin Miller, in a master's thesis at the Uni- versity of Texas at Austin in 1937, wrote: Elisha . I. Pease No other man was officially connected with , Governor Pease was truly an extraordinary , so many phases of its development from the man. His long, useful career besmirched by organization of the Mina committee to the no shadow of scandal, no dereliction of clutv inauguration of the regular constitutional ... His monument is found in the enduring • government, with Houston as the regularly laws he framed and procured; in the splen- chosen president. If any man knew at first did institutions of charity and education that hand the evolution of the government of the he founded and fostered; in the public edi- Republic of Texas completely, that man was fices that he reared for the housing of his E. M. Pease. State's officials; in the magnificent railroad system that knits together the remotest sec - James T DeShields, in his book about all Texas dons of the commonwealth in a community 111 presidents and governors up to 1940, said of Pease: of commerce and internal development.' 55 THE TEXAS GOVERNOR'S MANSION 0 Gone To Texas ` , A : �+' - -I E. M. Pease was born in Connecticut on January i. , � t • 3, 1812. The Pease family was a distinguished one, x- both in England and America. It is said to have had �► i ` y five members in the British Parliament. After re- 1'► , ceiving such education as was then available in New England, as well as some business experi- y ence, Pease became an extensive traveler in New ,'. England and states between there and New Or- r t ti �x leans.3 , ' -. The pioneer spirit of seeking adventure and for- ,/ r. i . tune lan him in Texas on his twenty-third .....,, birthday, January 3, 1835, with a friend, D. C. Bar- • . rett. They settled at Mina (now Bastrop), and took • . - the oath of allegiance to the government of Mexico `t; ! . on April 13, 1835. They became members of the IN first "Committee of Safety" organized at Mina, and .. t . y Pease served as secretary. Pease was at first loyal • ', to Mexico, being a member of the "Peace Party," ' : _•- as distinguished from the "War Party." However, Lucadia Pease this did not last long. The tyranny of Santa Anna caused him to join those who favored indepen- • dence, and he engaged in the first clash of hostil- Elected Governor ities at Gonzales in October 1835. Pease was named secretary of the general coun- In 1853 it was a different story Pease received cil to the provisional government at San Felipe in the Democratic nomination and ran first in a field November 1835. There he drafted the document of eight candidates. His opponents included for- providing for the government • ad interim, later mer Governor Wood, General Thomas Jefferson serving in it as chief clerk of the Navy p De artment Chambers, J. W Henderson, and W B. Ochiltree. Pease received 13,091 votes out of the 36,152 votes and acting secretary of the treasury. He was cast, Ochiltree was second, followed by \food and elected assistant secretary of the Constitutional Chambers in that order. In 1855, he had already Convention of 1836, but he was replaced by a new been reelected before his family moved into the delegate before the Constitution of March 2, 1836 Mansion. This time his principal opponent was was adopted. Pease was a member of the House Lieutenant Governor D. C. Dickson, Governor in the First Congress, which assembled in Colum Pease won with 26,336 votes to Dickson's 17,968 bia, and thereafter was appointed by Sam Houston votes . to serve as comptroller in his presidential adrnin- Governor and Mrs. Pease had a devoted and lov- istration. - ing marriage, as evidenced by their continuous • • After annexation, Pease served in the House of flow of interesting letters to each other and to rel- Representatives of the State legislature, where he atives. Among Texas' first families, only Sam and was chairman of the Judiciary Committee. In this Margaret Houston came anywhere near in their art capacity; he helped enact many laws beneficial to of letter writing. The Marshall and Lucadia Pease the courts and to the public. In 1849 and 1850 he correspondence, part of which has been pub - served in the State Senate. In 1850, he married a lished, reveals intelligence, culture, class and a distant Connecticut cousin, Lucadia Niles, and certain amount of sophistication along with brought her to Brazoria. After becoming one of the friendly hospitality:` State's outstanding attorneys, he announced for It is through extensive quotations from those • governor in 1851 but withdrew because of illness letters that the story of the first occupants and ac- in the family quisition of furnishings can hest he told. • 56 C • * T . . .4 : /k., . it 3 "6. I # . t4= •..,.$ ii. ' i i ,; .11 ' 4 -4 , , lik, , . - - : . 3 "- , ''‘ + i "• I t ,,J...s , 1 co 'T I L 1 ,,, ,, , .. , ,• i.. 1 A i ti44:1 fi t{ 0- 3 1 ' . ' :' 1 ..4 .4, I -r . a 2,s , ° $ +� t .1 ! z / % i 1. , , It, t H P .r !' 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'. - • ' • , . lit 1444 $ • 4 • , . • ..; , , • ... ::,,,,:4111151112,11‘ . , , , • . , • 1 i. a ! r . . . ,/ y- • , . / a house In the yard, � - .T , ,. she no ',• - R w -.s , t;. ti' , � • lir wallflower a .,- . -1 ;,, ..„4,;..,•:"..,,, s °1 Associated Press � `wr 11 , -� $ . BRYAN — A woman who built • .;/}' 1 r ` 7 • 4 , .: a 5- 5-foot-tall log wall to enclose a � �r *; � �i�.?'' '' } I yard filled with goats, chickens ,,,„,a»^ -' • i , L land piles of dirt has angered it ;.:,,.4.,,..4. .,` *:: 7: 2 H .A r ,r tl Y u e 1 neighbors and created controversy '"'t 17 t � s . } s i ' .�.y ' �a "" _ "� . t ,'''A l t ; i.N 4 on the edge of ed Bryuis Fiat Side ,i4 tk: , � .4 e - le " * " , r .r+ >y� 4 4 r# : , � 4 r , ..t• But Joy .Historical Re a 56- year -old Phi ,.a -"",. , n ,t .l + f t � ' f + �; � , I t t : R ea, " r �. s "„ F r ..,.'..41:1.1.41,'., 'k 'Fi, .Beta Kappa, said she couldn't care • ,,/..'"� '11.:, „ [3 t " y � ° , 4 .. "" V isvi [ Pr ' ltas what. others think of her ' 1 t. ° t' d. to . r 4 ' , VA , ` t ;, * t home, a century-old, two-story ., 3 <,. 4, :; < + - a a* : t [ " , . / I , i , ` i E+.�k .. `. house that has been painted with ,V..✓ i'•l t a -: ` • 1'+� d • . ti I s� ,. ..241 1,14 't 1 'i , black crude oil. f ' Y u sto i • - ,.7, • She said she just wants to be , t * ; i •t ' � ; -,. b t 3 z ';1 ,. ' + x allowed to w her gardens and n w h a r j to keep her flack of chickens, her ' ; r " ` 4 ' Zi ',, � ' ' i re.,,' e ' '"" . : i '" ' L in ., .. + L , $ P . i , ,, �'1[ � - l�j „ yj� . k • : two goats and to live w. with a coffin on the front porch ; ' 1 r y �- i ,� a .+ '; l � }y ` ; w - ' ' 4 * " tc., , + t and a yard covered with piles of ar • t ..• ' y i, �.r . , p „ 1 w F�a " w �" ,. y ` ° -" � ' dirt. , -•• k ,, t > u 1 rs is one of the things my " '' ' i 0 t ; c i � .,. w . - " r • • j .. D - yjr • neighbors are complaining about, • `•, , ,, `• ''`p„n 1 4 e• .:.. ' . .., ' . ` N 't • she said of the Brazos River but K '�' t toinLund soil that she buys for $44 a it cubic yard. "I like dirt. I'd rath- r••=s er spend money on dirt than 1 . ' ° . t<t. .. , . dresses. i . ' - . . :. dc� {i _ e °' • ' _.. ;. .. • • - 4 The Bryan City Council, re- , • • .ei........: .. 44oeatai PM spending to oompL■ints, passed A Jo Re who has an r ef of her rte z , pets o e of her, ts. 2Ps4 4.4., zoning rdinance t hat will require • y�, �d�gfnn�' 1; r� �{ d q y µc•Ct �.�,,,t,�ic, ,0,. - f-+ "0 - Fi 1-4 -4. �r..w �G -v ✓.i l'� C t-• Rea to dismantle the tall fence by � „ >I o f „� 1,L.,� --e . `( 4.44. S G V .wt - ' Fy�fXa' �' `t'r> eZ /' u f / s i �4 `` G ai _ RRnt sassikt Oct. lo. � t from the nearest neig r. sand a nrib but ho � ed not to Bryan Councilman John Mob- City housing officials inspected be identified. "When he was alive, ley voted against the ordinance, Rea's water well, along with the Dirt is one of the things that house was beautiful, just which p d, 4 -3, although he log wall and a water tank that sits my neighbors are beautiful. He had beautiful flow - admits, "Joy really has overdone atop it. She was not ordered to complaining about. ! ens and trees and grass. It Looked ' it. change a thing. like n � k.' 'I've had three residents of the \ ltea permits her two goats, Pyg- like dirt. 1 d rather Said another neighbor. "The district tell me, 'For goodness' my and Toggenberg, to roam tree- spend money on dirt house has become an embarrass - sakes, don't make her tear down ly about her house, and the chick- , ment and it hurts our property • that fence. We don't want to look ens are either penned in the yard than dresses. values. If I wanted to sell, there's at what's back of it. "' or in what was once her father's no way I could get out of my Neighbors have asked some city bedroom. — Joy Rea house now what I put into it." inspectors to look behind the log The front of the house has When her parents were alive, wall. weathered to a silver gray, but Rea had a promising academic ca- I William C. Lewis of the Brazos the back is black from the crude plants. Besides, crude oil doesn't reer. She earned bachelor's and County Health Department, an- oil used as a wood stain. contain poisons like paint does." master's degree from the Univer- swering complaints about the ani- "The house was white to begin Neighbors recall the house sity of Texas. She was nearing orals. went to Reas home and with, but the paint started peel- when it was a showplace. completion of work on a doctorate found the situation was legal. The ing." said Rea. "Well, I guess yuu "Her father, Homer Rea, was in linguistics from Tulane Univer- property had the 12,000 square could say I fell in love with crude an agronomist (at Texas A&M sity when she returned to Bryan feet required for two goats, and oil. I like plants and that's what University in nearby College Sta- to care for her mother during a the poultry was kept at least 50 crude oil was to start with — lion), and he was a perfectionist." 13-year bout with cancer. 0 FOOTNOTES (A Method Approved by Del Weniger) Footnote Numbers Bibliography Number (1) Abstract, 1, p. 4. (The page numbers are taken from a xerox copy, which should correspond with the original in the College Archives. (2) Abstract, 1, p. 4. (3) Abstract, 1, p. 4. (4) Abstract, 1, p. 5. (5) Abstract, 1, pp. 5 -6. (6) Visit, 23, p. 53 (7) Abstract, 1, p. 4. (8) Webb, 26, p. 372. (9) Plummer, 16, p. 6. (10) Webb, 26, p. 372. (11) Abstract, 1, p. 7. (12) Abstract, 1, p. 7. (13) Abstract, 1, p. 9. (14) Abstract, 1, p. 12. (15) Abstract, 1, p. 12. (or (16) Abstract, 26, p. 351. (17) Abstract, 26, p. 372. Zeno Philips, like William, was in politics. in 1829, he was defeated as a candidate for Regidor (Governor). (18) Pease, 15, p. 2. (19) McBee, 13, p. 60. (20) Pease, 15, p. 2. (21) From 1857 -1859 Guy Bryan was Representative for the Western District (Bryan and Austin) of Texas in the 35th Congress. (22) One reason that the name of Bryan before it was Bryan has not been known is that Bryan's old City Hall on the corner of Main and 26th burned down February 20, 1909. "Many city records for the years before 1849 were lost." Ragsdale, 17, p. 9. (23) Williamson, 30, pp. 39 -40. "One -story Greek Revival houses are the older form, evolved from the design of the double log house with gallery and dog -trot. Their galleries (porches) have columns or posts; the dog -trot is now an enclosed hall; there is the inevitable door with sidelights." Williamson, 30, p. 37. (24) Pease, 15, p. 6. (25) Texas Governor's Mansion, 20, pp. 55 & 56. (26) Dietrich, 5, p. 17. (27) Dietrich, 5. p. 17. (28) The abstract shows that he died in 1837. (29) Visit, 23, p. 203. (30) Miller, 14, p.88. (31) When I indicate Washington, I mean also its short neighbor Regent Street, which I conclude by its name to be the street that Regidors took to the Ayuntamiento at San Felipe. Zeno Philips was defeated as a candidate for Regidor in 1829. (32) Abstract, 1, p. 3. (33) Visit, 23, p. 30. (34) Pease, 15, p. 6. (35) Texas Governor's Mansion, 20, pp. 55 -56. (36) Pease, 15, p. 10. (37) Visit, 23, pg. 34. /Schmitz, 19, p. 44. (38) Pease, 15, p. 9. "We do not go out much and live as quiet as snails." January 5, 1853. (39) From the 1940's through the 1960's, the Homer Reas visited the Ernest Langfords on Sunday afternoons. This is one thing that Mr. Langford often repeated, and his wife, graciously serving coffee and cake, agreed. (40) Visit, 23, p. 31. (41) Visit, 23, p. 213. (42) Pease, 15, p. 6. (43) Visit, 23, p. 205. (44) I cannot locate the page reference. (lew (45) Creighton, 4, pp. 28 -31. James Austin's son Stephen F. Austin, Jr., died at age 8 at the home of W. G. Hill. (46) Schmitz, 19, p. 41. /Williamson, 30, p. 23. (48) Pease, 15, p. 8. (49) Schmitz, 19, p. 96. (50) Pease, 15, p. 8. (51) Weniger, 27, p. 10. (52) Weniger, 27, p. 4. (53) Weniger, 27, p. 53. (54) Weniger, 27, p. 34. (55) Weniger, 27, p. 34. Harvey Mitchell said that the Carter land (A & M's future location) was "unbroken canebrake ". Brazos County History, 2, p. 1. (56) Weniger, 27, pp. 33 -34. (57) Weinger, 27, pp. 33 -34. (58) Abstract, 1, p. 3. (59) Creighton, 4, p. 36. The house was called Eagle Island, which I conclude to be the modern Eagle Lake. (60) Webb, 26, p. 351. (61) "As the battle line swung over the rise, the boy with the fife played, Will You Come To The Bower." The Whartons were so proud of the battle that they changed the name of Groce's Retreat to San Jacinto. Texas Heritage, 21, pp. 49, 139. (62) Creighton, 4, p. 36. (63) Visit, 23, p. 75. (64) Bertleth, Rosa Groce, "Jared Ellison Groce," Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 20, 1916, p. 360. (65) Texas Governor's Mansion, 20, pp. 55 -56. (66) Plummer, 16, p. 107. (67) Williamson, 30. p. 9. /Schmitz, 19, p. 44. The March 28, 1837, Telegraph & Texas Register, tells that Blandon's Brasoria store is typical with its "super fine and fancy clothing, sugar, coffee, brandy, fruits, hats, bridles and stirrups." But no nails. To get nails, one must have had to go ula the river. A common Texas expression in 1842 was: "If you put 10- penny nails in the ground, you will have a crop of iron beets." Hollon, 9, p. 287. (68) Jordan, 11. Attached old photo shows (except for the bay window) only one window to a wall and no back porch. (69) Abstract, 1, p. 34. The 1909 map of the Philips League made by T. L. Henderson shows Air -Line Road running through the Philips Addition (Cavitt's Homestead) at the same angle that the streets were laid out by Pease in 1871. 4L, (70) I lost the reference, but remember that in the effort to oust steamboats, railroads stole the name Air -Line from the steamer routes. (71) Webb, 26, p. 775. (72) Webb, 26, p. 775. (73) Dietrich, 5, p. 76. (74) Williamson, 30, p. 8. (75) Dietrich, 5, p. 78. (76) Creighton, 4, p. 28. (77) Creighton, 4, p. 28. (78) Wallis, 25, p. 271. "Houston marched his little band to Groce's Crossing of the Brazos, and Providence was to help him, for he found there the only steamboat on the river, the Yellowstone, which was up the river for cotton." Up. the river was cotton area. Guy Bryan came up the river to Washington-on-the - Brazos, Marshall and Lucadia Pease came up the river to Brazoria. Ug the river is 100 miles from coastal Brazoria, from where, said Clarence Wharton, one man walked 100 miles to join Houston at Groce's Crossing. John Lockhart tells that in 1853 the steamer Magnolia was up at Washington and loaded with cotton 3 miles east of Chappell Hill. Wallis, 25, p. 86. (79) Personal correspondence with Ron Tyler, Director, Texas State Historical Association, July 24, 1991. (80) When I was a student at the University of Texas in the 1940's, I used the A & M Library for my research, because it had more and better books that the University Library at Austin. (81) In those days, Genetics was the hardest course, and E. P. Humbert, the Professor of Genetics, told me that of the 3 best men in his classes, Homer Rea was the best. (82) The date for this was Christmas, 1942. Homer Rea, Sr. and Carrie Bel Thomas were married in Austin on June 7, 1925. (83) Abstract 1, p. 33. (84) Brazos County History, 2, p. 361. (85) Abstract, 1, p. 16. On this document, Pease puts his sea, "the seal being a scrawl." (86) Smith, 18, p. 107. P. 158 lists Zeno Philips as a pioneer of Brazos County, and p. 81 lists his cotton partner John R. Harris as one. W. G. Hill is also listed as one, and Hill Street in the Philips Addition may be named for him. (87) Abstract, 1, pp. 29 -32. (88) Abstract, 1, pp. 29 -32. (89) Abstract, 1, pp. 29 -32. (90) Abstract, 1, p. 34. (91) Dietrich, 5, p. 39. (92) Abstract, 1, p. 17. (93) Abstract, 1, p. 22. (94) Abstract, 1, p. 23. (95) Visit, 23, p. 222. "Austin acquired land, first, by locating 5 league tracts, and secondly, in the following manner. Settlers who could not pay the $150 expense on a grant - in advancing it for them, he had taken a lease of the land for 99 years. He now has about 70 leagues." Jared Croce had the next most tracts, with 10 leagues, having to pay taxes on 67,000 acres. Austin did not have to pay taxes on the leased leagues. (96) Plummer, 16, p. 81. (97) Texas Governor's Mansion, 20, pp. 55 -56. (98) Miller, 14, p. 98. Pease was elected Governor in 1853 on a platform of railroads vs. steamboats. (99) Mitchell taught school in the canebrake on Carter's land next to the Rector land that Mitchell got A & M located on. In 1952, someone told me that Bryan would move to College. Since Bryan was 5 miles from College, I thought this impossible. But it started happening in the 1960's. (100) Henry Hobhouse in Seeds of Change, New York, Harper & Row, 1986, p. 225, says that the Irish were and are motivated by hatred for Anglo- Saxons and Anglo - Americans. Being Irish, Mitchell had to be motivated by choosing an anti -Pease location. (101) Pease would have donated the land because of his love for education. He would have liked A & M to have been at Bryan what Baylor University was at nearby Independence: a place of scholars. The University of Texas professor Frederich Eby, who taught Carrie Bel Thomas in the 1920's and whose short recommendation of her was "Get her if you can. ", wrote of the Baylor Scholars: "Carey Crane had no peer as an educator in the South and was first in Texas. It is doubtful whether any man in Texas ever surpassed him." Waco Baylor never equalled Independence Baylor. Texas Heritage, p. 145. (102) Abstract, 1, pp. 29 -32. (103) Austin: Its Architects & Architecture (1836- 1986), Austin - American Institute of Architects, 1986. (104) Abstract, 1, p. 29 -32. (105) Abstract, 1, p. 37. That 814 in the Cavitt photo was owned by Columbus and Mary Gainer Jones is one more reason why 810 was the E. M. Pease house. Columbus P. Jones was born February 4, 1843, and must be the son of B. C. Jones, who witnessed the 1852 Pease to Patton sale. Thus, Columbus Jones would want to buy 814, next to the house of his father's friend Pease. I talked to his son Gainer Jones on the telephone and after his death to his wife in 1968 at a Historic District meeting. She said that the Jones Bridge is named for their family, that when the old Jones Bridge house burned down, the family moved to town and bought 814, but that she and Gainer had built their retirement home on the old Jones Bridge location. She also told me that Gainer had the largest collection of Civil War books in the South, now with their son in Houston. (106) Mrs. Richardson told me this and more on June 7, 1973. (107) Abstract, 1, p. 45. (108) 1973 conversation with Mrs. Richardson. (109) 1973 conversation with Mrs. Richardson. (110) Abstract, 1, p. 48. (111) Sara Edna Wilkerson Holmgreen told me that her parents bought the house. I have known her all my life. (112) Abstract, 1, p. 49. (113) Abstract, 1, p. 50. (114) Abstract, 1, p. 53. (115) Abstract, 1, p. 55. (116) Abstract, 1, p. 59. (117) Abstract, 1, p. 63. (118) 1973 conversation with Mrs. Richardson. (119) Cofer, 3, pp. 49 -50. This reference is not Observations of 1910, but Brief Sketches of Staff Members. "Once about 1912 when a certain young bachelor, whom Professor Smith, now in his middle fifties and an old bachelor, had taken under his protective wing, remarked on seeing so pretty a visitor to the Old Shirley dining hall, "Professor Smith, we could afford to pay that girl's board to have her sit at our table," Professor "Bobby" replied, "Well, we will see what can be done about that. He did see about it, for at the very next meal the pretty young visitor from Mississippi and a sister of a faculty wife boarding at the hotel, was seated by Mrs. Neff, the manager of the Shirley, just to the right of the young bachelor and on the left of the old bachelor at the head of the table. For the next two days these three - the old bachelor, the young bachelor, and the beauty from Mississippi - with their sparking, light conversation and with entertained Dean Charles Puryear, who regularly sat at the table, and Chaplain Alexander, another regular diner there. But this was not the end of Professor Bobby's joke! Two days later when the Shirley monthly board bills came out that young bachelor found five extra meals, two dollars and fifty cents, for Miss H- added to his twenty dollars. This young fellow, however, was quick- witted enough to draw a red pencil line through the $2.50 charge and say to Mrs. A. J. Neff, the manager, "Mrs. Neff, I should not object at all to paying this part of my bill, but the lady might object." (120) Jordan, 11, p. 1. Bibliography 1. Abstract of Title for Frederich A. Bunt to the Following Tracts of Land in the W. R. Cavitt Sub - Division of the Philips Addition to the City of Bryan, Brazos County, Texas. Being Lots 5 and 6 in Block 10. Prepared March 29, 1938, by W. T. MacDonald, Sr. In the possession of the Homer Reas until March 23, 1992, when Joy Rea gave it to the A & M College Archives. 2. Brazos County History, Bryan: Brazos County Heritage and History Council, 1986. 3. Cofer, Brooks, D. Sr., Fragments of Early History of Texas A & M College, College Station: Former Students, 1953. 4. Creighton, James, A Narrative History of Brazoria County, Brazoria County Historical Commission, 1975. 5. Dietrich, W. O., The Blazing Story of Washington County, Wichita Falls, Quanah Press, 1950, 1973. 6. Heritage Society of Austin, Historic Austin, Austin: Heritage Society, 1981. 7. Holley, Mary Austin. Texas, A series of letters, Baltimore, 1883. 8. Holley, Mary Austin. Texas, Reproduction of 1836 ed., Austin; Stech Co., 1935. 9. Hollon, W. E. and Ruth Butler, William Bollaert's Texas, Norman: University of Oklahoma, 1956. 10. Ikin, Arthur, Texas, James Day ed. of the 1841 ed., Waco: Texian Press, 1964. 11. Jordan, Terry G., Log Cabin Village, Fort Worth: Tarrant County Historical Society, 1980. 12. Kemp, L. W., The Signers of The Declaration of Independence, Houston: 1944. 13. McBee, Sue Brandt, Austin, The Past Still Present, Austin: Heritage Society, 1975. 14. Miller, Thomas Lloyd, The Public Lands of Texas, 1519 -1970, Norman: University of Oklahoma, 1972. 15. Pease, Lucadia and Marshall and Juliet Niles, Pease Porridge Hot, ed. by Katherine Hart, Waterloo Book 2, Austin: Encino Press, 1967. 16. Plummer, Betty, Historic Homes of Washington County, 1821- 1860, San Marcos: Rio Fresco Books, 1971. 17. Ragsdale, Mrs. Charles, Brazos County Historical Tour, Bryan: Wallace Printing Co., 1976. 18. Smith, W. Broadus, pioneers of Brazos County, Texas, 1800- 1850, Bryan: Scribe Shop, 1962. 19. Schmitz, Joseph William, Texas Culture, 1836 -1846, San Antonio: Naylor Co. 20. Texas Governor's Mansion, Jean and Price Daniel, 1960. Austin: The Texas State Library and Archives, 1984. 21. Texas Heritage, Vol. III, No. 1. A. Garland Adair, Austin: Von Boeck Mann - Jones, Nov., 1961. 22. Thrall, Homer S., A Pictorial History of Texas, St. Louis: 1879. 23. Visit to Texas in 1831, anonymous. Facsimile Reproductions of 1834 ed., Austin: Stech Co., 1952. 24. Van Bavel, M. Lips, Birth and Death of Booneville, Austin: Nortex Press, 1986. 25. Wallis, Jonnie Lockhart, Sixty Years on the Brazos, The Life and Letters of Dr. John Washington Lockhart, 1824 -1900. Waco: Texian Press, 1967. 26. Webb, W. P. and H. B. Carroll, The Handbook of Texas, Vol. 1 (A -K), Vol. 2, (L -Z), Austin: Texas State Historical Association, 1952. 27. Weniger, Del, The Explorer's Texas, Austin: Eakin Press, 1984. 28. Wharton, Clarence, "Early Judicial History of Texas ", Texas Law Review, XII, April, 1934, pp. 311 -325. 29. White, Raymond, "The Texas Cotton Ginning Industry, 1866- 1900:, Texana, 5, No. 4 (Winter 1967), p. 346. 30. Williamson, Roxane Kuter, Austin, Texas, An American Architectural History, San Antonio: Trinity University, 1973. i i k i outlined below will remain in effect. Copies of the bill are available from the THC. Please contact the Division of Architecture if you have any questions about how the new law affects your local preservation program. RECORDED TEXAS HISTORIC LANDMARKS 1 The Recorded Texas Historic Landmark (RTHL) designation is awarded to historic structures deemed worthy of preservation for their architectural integrity and historical associations. Authorized by the Texas Legislature under the Texas Government Code (Chapter 442), RTHL desig- f nation is the highest honor the state can bestow on historic structures in Texas. Properties so designated are afforded a measure of legal protection and I become part of the recorded history of the state's built environment. In conjunction with federal and local designations, RTHL status for a community's historic structures can be an effective planning and preserva- f tion tool. 1 . The RTHL designation process is administered as part of the THC's f Local History Programs office; designation is conveyed by an Official Texas Historical Marker and comes only through participation in the marker process. The landmark status is denoted by any of the following: * the Official Texas Historical Building Medallion *the Official Texas Historical Building Medallion with accompanying I C interpretive plate * an Official Texas Historical Subject Marker when the final line of the 1 inscription reads "Recorded Texas Historic Landmark" CRITERIA FOR DESIGNATION • 1 In order to qualify for RTHL status, a structure must be at least 50 years old and should retain its architectural integrity from a period of at least 50 years ago. The structure should be in a good state of repair and should be an exemplary model of preservation. In no case can a structure be considered for RTHL designation if it has been moved in the past 50 years or if artificial (aluminum, asbestos, vinyl, etc.) siding has been applied to the exterior. Structures should also reflect the appearance they exhibited during their association with a significant person or event. Recorded Texas Historic Landmark status can be attained for any manner of historic structures, including but not limited to bridges, commer- i cial buildings, churches, residences, and schoolhouses. Whether vernacular or architect- designed, if the structure has retained integrity and if its history can be documented and presented according to State Marker Policy guide- lines, it is a likely candidate for designation. If you would like a preliminary 1 opinion on whether a particular property meets RTHL criteria, please send snapshots of all sides to the THC, as well as a cover letter giving a brief history of the building. As mentioned earlier, designation comes only through participation in the marker process. For additional information and guidelines, refer to Chapter 6. a