HomeMy WebLinkAboutHeritage Brazos Spring 2009Spring 2009
Heri'tage Brazos
BRAZOS HERITAGE SOCIETY
ANNUAL
MEETING
OF
THE BRAZOS
HERITAGE
SOCIETY
Saturday
May 2, 2009
10:00 -12:00
Bryan Public
Library
The Meeting Will Feature the
Lecture
"An Early Attempt to
Tame the Brazos"
by
Wendy Patzewisch
Ph.D.
Come and hear the
fascinating story of the
Burlson County levy, an
important but little -known
chapter in the history of
American civil engineering,
blues music, and the
heritage of the Brazos
Valley. Business meeting
will follow. Refreshments
served.
President's Column
I'm afraid members may have the impression that the Society has been dormant
since it hosted the Independence Day celebration in Heritage Park last July. We
were, I must admit, thrown off our stride by the regrettable resignation of our
Executive Director, Amanda Hermes, in August, but the Board has pressed ahead
with several projects. We reviewed plans to improve plantings and fixtures in
Heritage Park, implementation being contingent on funding. We rescued the
Heritage Society web site from Internet limbo, and contracted with Bronius
Motekaitis to renovated, expand, and maintain the site. We continued to support
restoration of historic districts, most recently endorsing a $2,000 Brownfield
Cleanup Grant application (since approved by the EPA) to convert the old
Foodtown site on North Main Street to a park. We were also a major underwriter
for the Brazos Valley Regional History Fair, held this year at Washington on the
Brazos. Perhaps our greatest accomplishment, though, has been enlistment of a
new Executive Director, Ulrike Smith. Ulrike will introduce herself in the next
article. The fact that Ulrike and I share the same last name is no coincidence,
since we are, as they say, man and wife. Ulrike's connection to the Heritage
Society is, it so happens, more longstanding than my own, as she has in past
years helped with Independence Day celebrations, house tours, and Holiday
Teas. When Amanda resigned, the Board was for some time dumbfounded as to
where we could find someone with the requisite energy, organization,
personality, and commitment to history. Eventually it dawned on me that my
wife is the most energetic, organized, and personable person I know, who also
happens to possess a BA in History from TAMU, to have lived in the East Side
Historic District for more than a decade, and to be an unparalleled champion of
Historic Downtown Bryan. So I nominated her, leaving the decision to the other
Board members. I applaud their choice, and trust that our members will come to
understand and share the confidence we have in Ulrike.
Jonathan M. Smith
President
From the Executive Director
Let me introduce myself. My name is Ulrike Smith and I am excited about my
new position with the Brazos Heritage Society. I was born and raised in Graz,
Austria. My home town is a beautiful, well- restored medieval city, with an old
town center that hosts a magnificent number of well - preserved houses, shops,
streets and parks. Most Austrians are very proud of their heritage and I certainly
was raised that way. While I was dating my now husband, I attended the Karl -
Franzens university in Graz, where I studied law. Once I was married and moved
Brazos Sharecroppers, 1930s
3 ' - r- 3
to Bryan, I went to T.A.M.0 and earned a degree in history and international
studies. I have always cared for and loved history in aal its forms. I believe in
protecting and preserving heritage, especially nowadays. We live in a world
where everything is changing very rapidly, and this makes us vulnerable, because
we often don't know where we belong. We need to` make the younger generation
aware of the past, it's significance, and the importance of protecting it. I am a
mother of three young children, and I want them not only to understand heritage,
but to care about it. I have been a stay -at -home mom for the past nine years and I
feel this position will let me have an outlet for my interests, while not interfering
with family life, which is very important to me.
My hope and goals for the immediate future of the BHS are as follows:
First, the web site needs to be up dated. A person has been contacted and
hopefully we can get that started in April. Second, we need to focus on
educational programs for young and old. Hopefully the Heritage Society will be
able to work closely with schools to help children be aware of our local heritage.
Third, I see a need for the Society to participate in the First Friday events that are
held monthly in downtown Bryan — possibly sponsoring historic walks. I will
describe some more ideas in the next newsletter.
I look very much forward meeting members at our annual meeting on May
2 "d , and to getting to know my position better. I very much appreciate any input
or ideas you might have, and hope that you will not hesitate to contact me. My
telephone number is 822 -5326, and my e-mail address is ulrikesmith(c)-msn.com
Ulrike Smith
Executive Director
Books
Published by the Brazos
Valley Heritage Society
If you don't already own
this beautiful and inform-
ative books, you may pur-
chase them at the Annual
Meeting on May 2. Or order
them from the BHS.
Get Ready
for the
Annual BHS
Independence Day
Celebration
In
Heritage Park
Carnegie Echos
The Carnegie History Center, being a part of the Bryan+College Station Library
System, may have its roots and main interests in the past, but we also have to
keep up with the present. To that end, the Library System is migrating (an
interesting use of the word, specially because we are not physically moving
books) to another online library vendor. The new system is called Polaris. By the
first of May our online web pages should have a new look with the same
functionality. Beginning the first of March our cataloging systems were placed
on hold, and will not restart until the new system is "up and running." We at the
Carnegie are not involved with system administration and its concomitant
headaches, for which we are exceedingly grateful!
In my usual persona, and looking back to the time we first "went on line," I
am very grateful to, first, not be an administrator; second, to remember the main
library fire as being back in the distant enough past; and third, to be very grateful
we have had the interim years of experience in working with an online system.
We went online with guidance, but much about online systems (like genealogy
and local history) can only be learned the hard way (by the "seat of the pants. ")
Sounds like life doesn't it?
Please be patient with the library system as we grow. The libraries will need
to be closed for several days in April in order to install some computer
components and programs, and to train staff in the usage of the new system. If
you should encounter problems once we "go live," please do let us know and bear
with us as we endeavor to undo the inevitable kinks.
Nan Ross
Carnegie Librarian
A Visitor to Bryan in 1869
The following extract
appeared in an article
published in the Houston
Union on April 4, 1869. The
Union was a Republican
newspaper and the
correspondent had traveled
to Bryan to organize a local
branch of the Republican
Party. This was not a
popular undertaking in
1869 —hence the note about
being "Ku- Kluxed " —but he
did manage to enlist around
40 "Union men. " In 1869
Bryan was the terminus of
the Houston and Texas
Central Railroad, and so
the market for all of central,
west, and north Texas
"Bryan, from its situation
and surroundings, is one of
the finest places we have
visited on this route, having
a population of about five
thousand, all apparently
wide -awake and energetic.
Trade is brisk at this point,
judging from the constant
activity and good nature of
the business men. Wagon
trains from the country are
continually arriving with
cotton and hides, and
returning freighted with
merchandise for the enterior
[sic]. The country about
here is rolling, well wooded
and picturesque: the
location high and healthy.
The objectionable feature
we have noticed is rents and
overcrowded hotels, and the
bad temper of old Boreas,
who had been holding a
grand carnival for the last
day or two. We should like
to hear a geological report
on the past conditions of
this country, as we cannot
fail to be surprised at the
number and variety of
petrified objects with which the place abounds. Wood, converted to solid stone, is
everywhere abundant, besides which we were shown some fungus, and enormous
egg[s], also petrified —the soil is a sharp sand, filled with pebbles whose worn and
polished surface shows them to have been at some time subject to constant actions
of the waves. It seems a pity that so fine a place should be abandoned as it will
comparatively be when the CRR [Central Railroad] shall be extended to Calvert,
which by the way we are informed by a gentleman highly connected with the road
will be effected in almost one month, though we doubt very much if business will
be transferred to that point before fall .... Court is sitting here this week, in
consequence of which the gamblers have been pouring out of town and the
lawyers into it for some days past. We have not been Ku- Kluxed as yet"
. ............................. ...............................
Membership Renewal
The Brazos Heritage Society depends on its members to sponsor events and
promote historic understanding and historic preservation in Brazos County.
Membership dues are tax deductible. Please indicate your membership level,
complete the membership form, and return it with your check at your earliest }
convenience. «
}
Family Membership $15
Individual Membership $10
Business Membership $75
Heritage Club $100
.Name: y
■ Address:
■ Phone: E -mail
Check here if you would like to volunteer at BHS events
Can you spot the towns that no longer exist? (Source: Route to Texas [Detail] International and Great
Northern Railroad, 1878)
Brazos Herita e Society .a
W.
B O. x 1776 ° y
ryan,4Texas 77806
r SI
' y
M' N3!
2UU9
� 7 Q
Bud and Nancy Schwart
2302 Devonshire St.B
Bryan,TX 77802
USA42
gr
- -� =:�= i•��_i ��:�� ► il:, ii,,, ii„ isii„:„ i, i,,, ili ,i,,, +l,i,,,liil.,,,
Immigrants to Texas, camped in the woods near the Brazos. (Source: Taylor, Through
Texas, Harpers Magazine, 1879)