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HomeMy WebLinkAboutGalveston Seawall Ike stirs memories of grandfather hen I was a little Wgirl and visiting my grandparents in Dickinson, I remember that my grandfather, Domenic Victor DePasquale, would go to work every weekday morning, usually driving a pickup truck as he backed out of his long gushed shell driveway. He dressed nicely, some- times in a sports coat, tie and straw fedora. He had a little pencil-thin mustache across his upper lip that tickled when he kissed me. One of my favorite things to do was play in the dark, dusty workshop he had in his garage. It smelled of oil and gasoline. His tool sharp- ener whined like a siren if you had the energy and muscle to crank it hard enough. That entertained me for hours. But it was much later, after my grandfather's untimely death in 195a that I was old enough to under- stand what he actually did for a living. He was county engineer for Galveston County. He had graduated from A&M College in 1924 with a degree in civil engi- neering and had gone on to Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y., for his masters in civil engineering. That's where he met my grand- mother, Genevieve "Jean" Elizabeth Teti. My grandmother told me one time that Grandma nant with my grandfather when the Great Storm hit Galveston on Sept. 8, 1900. Jean recalls Grandma DePasquale telling the story of crawling through the muddy, rain-soaked fields with little Mary Ann in tow and my grandfather in her womb. They were trying to escape the rising waters and devastation of the Great Storm. Later, they moved to Steel's Store (Mudville) in rural Brazos County to farm cotton. My mother told me stories of her grandfather, Rosario DePasquale, carry- ing my grandfather on his back through the mud to school each day. So impor- tant was their education that he thought nothing of the effort. He did this for all three boys and for Mary Ann. The family fmally settled in Dickinson. My grandfa- ther must have heard the same stories time and again in their family's Sicilian dialect. The story must have made quite an impression on him in later years. As county engineer, the first series of projects he directed were the Galveston Seawall extensions and additions during the late 1920s through the 1950s. He also created the first water district for Dickinson. And as a private citizen, he saw to it that African-Americans in the area had their first real school buildings and a decent chance at education. During the summer of 2007, I revisited Galveston and brought my grandchil- dren to see their great-great- grandfather's work. They walked along and played on the seawall. Later, I showed them how his work had been commemorated by a series of bronze monument plaques that list his name. So here I am, awaiting another great storm and thinking of my grandfather and his dedication to the well-being of citizens in Galveston County. And, that, is the rest of the story. Take care of yourselves this weekend, and thank you to all who give of them- selves in times of need. Anne Boykin manages the city of College Station's her- itage programs. ~r rn w N 0 8 My Take Anne Boykin Photo courtesy of Anne Boykin Domenic Victor DePasquale with his granddaughters, Anne Boykin (left), 6, and Karen Boykin, 8, at the East Gate Memorial on the A&M campus, about 1955.