HomeMy WebLinkAboutAggie Annex-1
Texas A&M Corps of,Cadet,members Christopher Slmmet'rlblvlll
Klentzy and Nick Gonzales stand ready as Dick B1rdweU, from
Eagle photo/Gabriel Chmielewski
the~){$M llltiis of '53, . thrrC-n1l'flloliOr of the four
classes of AggIes thatUved off-campus from 1950-53.
Aggies recaBdays?at'mihex
Plaque dedicated to students crowd~d out ofeampus dorms
By KRISTY GILLENTINE
Eagle Staff Writer
Skip Joimson Jr. was 18 years old
when he arrived in 1949' at the Texas
Agricultural and Mechanical College.
Not long out of high school, he said, he
never expected the conditions that
awaited him.
The temperatures dipped just below
zero that day, but to make it worse, he
learned that he'd be moving not onto.
the main campus but into a barracks
without heat miles away where about
700 other men lived.
World War IT recently had ended, so
by 1946 enrollment at Texas A&M was
soaring. Returning veterans. aided by
the G.t Bill, came to the college to con-
tinue or start their education, but there
was no room. To manage the oyer-
crowding, the college made use of an
inactive U.s, Air Forceba$ein Bryan
that's now known as Riverside Cam-
pus.
Over the next four years; about 5.500
men lived, studied, ate, showered and
attended classes at the Annex, where
the walls were made out of black tar-
paper.
Ea, photo/Gabriel Chmiel""",kl
Ed RlChardl!On,' Ran NeWl!l~n a!,d ollnn
White look .at a dlagJ'am o!the An!,ex
Complex on Saturday afte'l',oon at the
Texas A&M Rlversln (:ampu$.
Johnson's old home away from home
was honored Saturday with the dedica-
tion of a plaque as a permanent record
of those experiences. one by one, for-
mer students who graduated more than
five decades ago lined up to reminisce
about their lives in the Annex: Even
though it wasn't the first-year ~llege
experience they dreamed about, .it
ended up creating memories and bonds
cherished to this day.
"Icaljl~in January, stl I lmly lived(in
tl1e Armexl for one semester," said
Johnson,: who eventually jotued the
~ational Sec~ity Agency and later
l'!rtired in College Station. "But I lived
"vvitl1 all. tl1e freshmen wl10 had been
there a'Yhole ,se'l'ester before me. They
took .~.~. of .me and showed me
the ro~.) 'Yl\S l).lcky."
The Annex was built in 1942 and
. designed to stand four years. When stu-
dents began living there in 1946, the
building already was in poor shape,
according to Lufkin resident Jack
Irish, who graduated in 1950.
"We .were isolated by ourselves out
here on the Brll-Zos River bottom.
crammed into rooms with 15 to 20 other .
guys," Irish said. "It was defmitely not
what we expected."
Bob Conn said he arrived at the
Annex one year after Irish and saw the
same conditions: a single mess hall,
remote shared bathroom facilities and
no heating or air conditioning.
"I was a typical 17-year-old coming
out of San Antonio. .1 had never been to
the campus of A&M before, so I didn't
See ANNEX, Page AU
Annex
Annex impress
me much in the w8,yof college
life," Conn said. .
Very few sindents then had
vehicles, so hitchhiking
became the preferred way to
travel outside of the Annex,
Conn said, adding that he
remembered being instructed
on how to conduct himself
while thumbing a ride on
Texas 21.
Conn also recalled pranks
the men played on. each other
at the Annex.
"Guys collected syrup from
the mess hall and they mixed
it with whatever they could
fmd - water or mayonnaise
- and used it fora drown-
out," he said. "They also did
water drown-outs. I woke up a
time or two with a bucket of
water in mY face. It wasn't
uncommon to see a line of
mattr~s!le!l4ry!ng' on the
roof." .,: .. .... ,
the A,ggiesha9,to~he(iwe
their fun aroll1l!l strict sindy
regimeI)s, th~Y;ill' recalled.
Each sindentwas required to
sindy from 7 to lO.p.m., and
they attendeqdas~es lll).qlaps
~.Mondaythrough.sajUrday. .
"Studying was difficult
because there was. no room
and we were all' crl\mmed . in
there, but I did wen with my
grades. I guess th~re really
wasn't anything. to 9,0 besides
sindy," Johrison sai!l.
The sindying paid off for
many of the men, The Annex
ended up producing. more
than 4,000 military offic~rs'
18 distinguished alumni, 28
generals, seven presidents of
The Association of Former
Students and. two A&M Sys-
tem regents, officia,Is said.
"There was always a strong
bond between those of us who
lived out here, and there
.'
always will be," said Lee
Howard, a retired Air Force
lieutenant colonel and 1952
graduate of TlJxas A&M. "We
didn't know what we were
doing, but we were deter-
mined to become Aggies no
matter what it took."
. Kristy Gilientine'se-mail
address is kristy.gilientine@
theea,gle.com.