HomeMy WebLinkAboutA&M Campus Housing 073103TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
DEPARTMENT Of ENTOMOLOGY
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS 77943~2475
AC 409-~5~2516
October 22, 1996
Mr. Paul McKay
Bryan
Bryan,
Professor D.G. Woodcock
Architecture
A&M
Station,
Gentlemen:
I've worked
list -of the
at the Ag
I was
in the
on A&M
and made a
was about
the material
[ with a 1935
Page
and Mrs.
had come to
B.Do
Houston
Houston. In
Marburger.
Also in
houses
at the
to the
and
room New
been so
remained ·
campus still
over in 1938.
into th
, In any
by Dr.
Francis
on Houston: 210
'20s at 210
of A&M
oi houses
in 1938
Cheap
a five
have
and had
few on the
gravy train was
Texas Agricultural Experiment
Texas Agricultural Extension Service
Mr. Paul McKay
Professor D.G. Woodcock
Dr. Paul Van Riper
October 22~ 1986
Page 2
In 19#0-19#1 the diaspora was frantically underway, and perhaps in late
19t~0 the first of the campus houses were purchased and moved; by the middle
of 1941 they had begun carting them off seriously. Time was running out in 1941.
World War II would shut down building completely.
The J.K. Walkers remove was on July t~ 1940 and we were one of the first
families to leave the campus, the last item for the movers to
consider that day ... father was never be more than five minutes
away from news bulletins. In many ways the collapse of Europe that summer
brought a far darker hour than Pearl Harbor. There seemed no hope at all as
I remember now.
We didn't take the New
father had built a home in
with us that July ~ -- instead
North Oakwood.
Page 366: Spence - Bolton House -- This house was not located at the Rudder
Tower site. It was on Tnrockmorton. The Rudder Tower is located on Lubbock
Street (Joe Routt) and covers parts of the space once occupied by Guion Hall
and the J.K. Walker residence.
Students.
About 1926 Ike Ashburn and family had resided at this home on 220 Lamar;
but his wife suddenly his position as secre-
tary for Former He returned to A&M
once more in the 1930s.
It is possible that between the departure of Ashburn and the arrival of
the McQuillens, in the late '20s, students could have lived at the home. But
they were not there in the '30s.
Those are several items that I wanted to comment on. I would add a few
words about "Quality Row". While in A&M's more formative years the seat of
power may have rested in the homes near the Drill Field, by 1920 there [sa
much greater concentration of the stuff on Throckmorton Street. Why, there
is not an assistant professor to be seen there. Throckmorton is some distance
from the Drill Field.
It may not be entirely evident from my map and street listings, but there
was an ordered segregation in campus housing, segregation even more pronounced
than that suggested by the absence of assistant professors on Throckmorton.
All those folks on Ireland and 5utphur Springs were carpenters and painters and
Mr. Paul McKay
Professor D.G. Woodcock
Dr. Paul Van Riper
October 22, 1986
Page 3
plumbers. Only in rare instances were their likes seen on other streets. Such
were the times and our ghetto.
The phone book I used to establish the locations of residences here arrived
at the C.H. Winkler home on Throckmorton in the Fall of '34, joining previous
year's directories and recording snippets of various data and information as the
years passed. In time, it was put away and forgotten; a few years ago one of
the Winkler grandchildren discovered it at the bottom of a trunk, resting there
with all of the pressed flowers of yesterday.
It is indeed a period piece and a testimonial of that common place: "a simpler
time ".
But, it was simpler: if there were no yellow pages, who cared? Everybody
in the community knew who sold what. You don't need yellow pages in 1935.
And fires and crime ...? You simply pick up the receiver of the phone on
the hall stand, and when the operator says, "number please ", you ask for the
1 C fire station or police.
People notoriously record things on phone books. Mrs. Winkler left us with
the following mysterious formula on the back of the directory:
1 pt. gas
1 T salt
1 T salt peter
1 g camphor
Mix and let stand 24 hrs.
She left not the slightest hint of what it was used for.
Sincerely,
J. Knox Walker
Professor of Entomology
J KW:eaa
♦r
1935
Unnamed Street
77 78
Office
Ireland Street
75[ 70
71
72
73
74
Ross
NORTH
DRILL
FIELD
14
A&M
Consolidated
Highway 6
(Wcltbom)
Lubbock (Joe Rout0
20 33
34
FIELD
25
26
27
Houston
Street
8 2 Grade School
9 3
10 4
11 5
12 6
13
Throckm )rton Street
(To College Park)
List of Streets and Residences
Texas A&M Campus, 1935
Walker
The following is a code of houses and their location at the College. As
a child I thought the campus was a place all employees lived; after putting
this together I realize now that, by and large, it was the higher voltage sorts
that were enjoying the dirt cheap housing. One had to be in charge of something
to avail himself of this perquisite. One exception stands out: Wood Street is
occupied in 1935 by staff people who, with a single exception, are teachers only.
^
At other locations also, several other non-administrative types had houses. The
USA military, ROTC, teachers, are all on Henderson, with the exception of Col.
Emery, Head of Military Science. Emery has made it to Throckmorton.
As I have indicated the craftsmen at the College, people Ireland, Sulphur
Springs and Ross. Only Albert Haneman has penetrated to the academic west
of the campus; Mr. Haneman, head of the carpentry shop, resides on Bell Street.
He lives right next to a engineering department head.
In 1935 domestics are commonplace on the campus, occupying, in many
instances, servant quarters: small homes at the rear of residences. A number
of these folks worked for years, and often were part of the family of the staff
residing in the campus housing. There is likely little record left of this body
of domestics at the College. Commercial laundries have not been fully accepted
in 1935, and commonly the laundry process is prosecuted in the backyard where
the weel~s accumulatior¢ of dirty clothes are stewed in great black pots heated
by kindling fires. Blueing is an ~tem on everyone,s shopping list.
Sulphur Springs Road, presumably, derived its name from the lofty wooden
tower that road in ~935. A gothic, brooding affair of clapboard,
the tower houses the pump that serves the College with its water: it is terrible
stuff, laced with hydrogen sulphide; efforts by the power plant to remove the
hydrogen sulphide by aerating the water in a kind of out-of-door swimming pool
are imperfect, and visitors to the often bring their own drinking water
(in fairness I should note that people who grew up with the water were oblivious
to its sulfurous character), water is located near
the depot, and a few on the campus visit it twice a week for drinking water.
Large cisterns that trap rainwater from roofs are found at several homes.
The rail spur on the map had carried the coal to the power plant. But by
1935 the plant should have been switching to natural gas. Some years after the
coal era, a steam locomotive, an archaic looking thing then in the 1930s, was
dutifully housed in a great elongate garage near the power plant. Campus kids,
with impunity~ celebrated this machine after its retirement; pulling levers and
switches, they thundered down the tracks on some never2never run. I believe
the engine was surrendered to that ubiquitous agency, the War Effort, as scrap
iron, after '42.
THROCKMORTON
1. Col. A.R. Emery, Head Military Sciences
2. O.M. Ball, Head Biology
3. C. Puryear, Dean (retired)
#. O.W. Silvey, Head Physics
5. ~V.H. Holzman, Comptroller
6. C.H. ~/inkler, Head Summer Programs
7. G.S. Fraps, State Chemist
8. F.C. Bolton, Dean, College of Engineering and College
9. A.B. Conner~ Director, Texas Agriculture Experiment Station
10. F.L. Thomas~ Head, Division of Entomology, TAES
1 I. H.H. ~Viltiams, Director~ Texas AgriCulture Extension Serivce
12. E.O. Siecke, Head, Texas Forest Service
13. S.~. Bilsing, Head, Entomology
Houses 2 and 6 were a kind of ersatz brownstone, probably plaster. Neither
could be moved.
LUBBOCK (Joe Routt)
14. 3.K. Walker, Branch Colleges
15. Homer Norton, Football Coach
16. T.D. Brooks, Dean, Arts and Sciences
17. Miss Bess Edwards, Assistant State Extension Agent
18. C.N. Shepardson, Head, Dairy Husbandry
19. 5.G. gaily, Secretary for Board of Directors
20. M.K. Thornton
21. E.L. Williams, Head, Industrial Education
HOUSTON
22. D.H. Reid, Head, Poultry Husbandry
23. W.L. Hughes, Head, Education
24. S.R. Gammon, Head, History
23. F.G. Anderson, Commandant
26. T.W. Leland, Head, Accounting & Statistics
27. R.E. Karper, Vice Director, Texas ute Experiment Station
28. W. Porter, Head, Mathematics
29. G. Summey, Head, English
30. W.L. Penberthy
3I. B.D. Marburger, Superintendant, s and College Utilities
32. C.C. Hedges, Head, Chemistry-and Chemical Engineering
33. 3.3. Richey, Head, Civil Engineering
34. Luther 3ones
33. Curtis Vinson, Head, Publicity
CLARK
36. H.R. McQuillen
37. J.M. Jones, Head, Range Animal Research for TAES
38. E.B. Reynolds, Head, Agronomy
39. S.A. McMillan
40. R.D. Lowery
Dan Russel, Head, Rural Sociology
D.W. Williams, Heady Animal Husbandry
J. Taubenhaus, Head, Plant Pathology & Physiology
LAMAR
E.E. McQuillen, Secretary, Former Students
Mark Francis, Dean, Veterinary Medicine
F.E. Gieseske, College of Architect and Director oi Engineering Experiment
Station
47. F.V/. Hensel~ Head, Landscape Arts
:I.G. Bagley~ Head, Textile Engineering
49. C.B. Campbell, Head, Modern Language
50. R.G. Reeves
JONES
51. T.O. ~/alton, President
52. J.E. Marsh, College Physician
R.P. Marstellar
E.3. Kyle, Dean, Agriculture
BELL
55.
56.
57.
58.
59.
A. Mitchell, Head, DraWing
E.W. Steel, Head; Municipal and
A. Haneman
W.A. Foodservices
Jack Shelton' Viee Directori TeXas AgricUltural Extensi°n Service
WOOD
60. 3.A. Orr, Munson Apartments
S.S. Morgan, Munson Apartmenzs
C.O. Spriggs~ Munson Apartments
61. E.D. Humbert, Head, Genetics
62. D.B. Corer
63. J.W. Mitchell
HENDERSON
6~4.
65.
66.
67.
68.
Capt. G.B. Troland
Capt. Raymond Orr
Thomas Mayo, Librarian
Lt. M.H, Marcus
Lt. Martin Moses
ROSS
69. W.E. Lewis
IRELAND
70. F.B. Brown
71. W.M. Smith
72. G.P. Ayers
73. L.D, smith
A. ThompSon
75. P.B. M°nosmith
76. Iqerman Krauser
UNNAMED STREET IN NORTHWEST CORNER OF CAMPUS; FACES SULPHUR
SPRINGS ROAD
77.
78.
C.W. Cra~,~rd, Head, Mechanical Engineering
R.T. Stewart
UNNAMED STREET NEXT TO HIGHWAY 6 (Wellborn)
79. E.3. Howell, Registrar
80. N.J. Dunn, Band Director
81. L.P. Gabbard, Farm and Ranch , Ag. Expt. Station
82. E.R. Alexander, Head, Agriculture Education
83. R. Treichler
SULPHUR SPRINGS ROAD
1935 phone book lists all occupants on this street and it is not clear who
is residing in houses on A&M land and who live in private homes. As I remember,
A&M homes were located between Bell and Ireland (south of Sulphur Springs),
and between Ireland and a point where Street is today. Again, these were
on the south side oi Sulphur Springs in 1935.
The following
are residents on A&M land on Sulphur Springs:
S.E. Asbury
H.R. Covington
3.C. Hotard
3.H. Stockton
~t/. D. Lloyd
C.Lo Gray
Layton Gregg
It is likely that there were a few others on the A&M part of Sulphur Springs.
APARTMENTS
Three apartments are located on the campus. Munson apartment is located
on Wood Street. Near the joining of Wood and Henderson there is an apartment
for military Science teachers; not far from this location sits the Bachelor Apart-
ment. In 1935 the following live in the latter.
V.K. Sugareff
C.E. Sandstedt
Well, thats about it. This piece accounts
were in 1935.
accuracy where they