HomeMy WebLinkAboutNorthgate History Information HISTORICAL COMMITTEE QUESTIONS
FOR NORTHGATE PRESERVATION
Resource Name:
Address:
Owner:
What was the role that the owner / church / person played in the history of Northgate?
How is the building related to the development of the community in Northgate?
What were some historically significant events and / or patterns of activity associated with
the property?
General description of Northgate during the periods when it achieved significance.
Who were the main active personalities involved with commercial, churches, residential
areas?
Are there any documents on the buildings and Northgate? Historic photos, old drawings of
the outside of the building and the inside , maps etc.
Who were the persons responsible for the design or construction of the property?
What is your opinion on preservation of the area and the buildings, and on the demolishing
and rebuilding of the area?
Are there any specific buildings that you feel need to be preserved?
HISTORICAL COMMITTEE QUESTIONS FOR NORTHGATE PRESERVATION
Resource Name: A and M United Methodist Church
Address:
Owner:
1. What was the role that the owner /church /person played in the
history of Northgate?
When Texas A and M first opened its doors in 1876,the college
provided Sunday morning chapel services for the student body with
attendance compulsory. Students assembled by companies on Military
Walk and marched to the old chapel which stood where Hart Hall now
stands and later to Guion Hall for services. Ministers from
denominations across Texas conducted services at the chapel which
families in the community also attended. The nearest Methodist
Churches were located at Union Hill (halfway between Bryan and the
college); Wellborn, located 5 miles south; and Bryan where First
Methodist had been established since 1868. Shiloh Methodist, 2
miles south was no longer active. In the 1918 -1919 period A and M
College President Dr. W.B. Bizzell, asked ministers of churches in
the Bryan community to provide religious services for students of
their respective denominations. Methodist residents of College
Station as well as students at the college welcomed the prospect of
organizing their own Methodist Church.
2. How is the building related to the development of the community
in Northgate?
In late 1919 First Methodist Church in Bryan offered a $500
budget surplus to the Texas Conference to begin a missionary -like
church for A And M students. In 1920 the first religious person
assigned specifically to College Station was King Vivion, a
Methodist. He was charged with developing Sunday evening services
and discussion groups to support the already established campus
chapel program. That same summer Rev. R.L. Brown was sent to start
a Baptist Church, and a few weeks later Rev. W. H.Matthews arrived
to minister to the Presbyterian group. When chapel services were
discontinued on campus in 1932 Sunday morning worship services
joined existing Sunday School classes at A and M Methodist.
Soon after Rev. King Vivion's arrival, W.C. Boyett deeded a
lot to A and M Methodist for $1,000. About the same time the south
half of the block was purchased for $1000 from Boyett by the A and
M Masonic Club. On church property Vivion built a parsonage using
scrap planks which stood in the spot of the present church
courtyard. With extensions and additions it served as parsonage and
Sunday School space until 1927. Masonic Club member W.A.Duncan
Director of the College Subsistence Department determined that the
south part of the block should be sold to the church. He guided
negotiations made more difficult by the fact that the Masonic Club
had become inactive. The church acquired the property from the
club for $10,000. The 1923 Quarterly Conference announced that
temporary- makeshift building, known as the Tabernacle, was being
constructed. It was to served as the church for the next 40 years
when more suitable and permanent facilities were erected. The
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Tabernacle stood between the present education building and the
sanctuary in a north -south direction. Its interior was of uncertain
design with swaying arches and sidewalls. Windows lined the walls
at upper and lower levels providing good ventilation while creaky
floors were always cold in the winter. Gas heaters replaced wood
stoves in 1928 and improved the heating slightly. On the sides of
the main worship area a battery of hinged doors opened to provide
more seating space or closed to conserve heat. After 1951 when a
new sanctuary was constructed, it served as a Fellowship Hall and
home to Wesley Student Foundation until it was demolished in 1964.
East of the Church and Tauber St. intersection, a second
parsonage was built on the south end. It seemed adequate to serve
as a pastor's home from 1927 to 1957. When vacated in 1957 it
served as the youth center until it was moved in 1962 to provide a
site for the current Wesley Foundation and chapel building.
During World War II, it became evident that an educational
building was needed, but the war effort had placed a moratorium on
civilian construction. A special dispensation was granted to the
church because of the large student population in a university
community. Slow constructions during wartime delayed occupation
until 1946. The plan provided for ductwork large enough for
heating, but not for cooling. Thoughts of installing larger ducts
to serve for both were dismissed when the consultant gave
convincing testimony that "air conditioning of a building that size
and use would be exorbitantly costly, utterly impracticable, and
would overwhelm the church budget." Twenty years later a central
heating - cooling system was installed with larger duct at
considerable expense. In 1957 it was dedicated to J. Gordon
Gay,long time Sunday School superintendent and YMCA General
Secretary.
In the late forties, Texas Methodists over the state gave
generously to fund the construction of the Gothic sanctuary erected
on the south end, former site of the A and M Masonic Club.
Completed in 1951, its formal opening worship service was conducted
on November 11, 1951. Rev. James F. Jackson the church's sixth
minister served during the construction period. Inside plain white
plastered walls support the vaulted and beamed ceiling. The
central aisle leads to the chancel and elevated altar with 6 stain
glass window on each outside wall. On the south end, overlooking
the campus, high above the altar is a large stained glass Rose
Window. Above the north min entrance are 3 tall Trinity Windows.
A small casement window in the northeast corner below the balcony
is dedicated to the memory of a workman electrocuted during
construction.
The Fellowship Hall and connecting link between the Sanctuary
and J. Gordon Gay Education Building was constructed in 1967.
3. What were some historically significant events and /or patterns
of activity associated with the property?
When Shiloh Methodist Church closed, the pioneer cemetery
located on the church site became the property of the Methodist
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Episcopal Church,South. Because A and M Methodist was the closest
Methodist Church to the cemetery, by church law, it became
responsible for its administration. Technically the cemetery
became the responsibility of the A and M Methodist Church the
moment it was organized in 1923. An inventory of its property at
that time read: one cemetery. In 1947 A and M Methodist conveyed
Shiloh Cemetery to the City of College Station for the price of
$1.00.
In 1926 A and M Methodist Church minister Jesse C. Thomson
participated in the opening service of the newly- constructed Saint
Mary's Catholic Church at the invitation of Father John B. Gleisser
which began a friendship and cordial relationship of the churches
for many years. Years later Saint Mary's Catholic Church held its
1971 Vacation Church School in the A and M Methodist Church
building serving 90 of the parish's children.
Until the late thirties, several denominations held a hope
that space would be provided on campus for their buildings. In May
1938, the A and M College Board of Directors denied a formal
request by Presbyterian Church for a building site on campus. The
Board reaffirmed a long established policy to permit no
organization to erect buildings on campus. The Methodist group
accepted this action as final and made no additional pursuits of
this nature.
4. General Description of Northgate during the periods when it
achieved significance.
Early photo taken from campus with Bolton Hall in the
foreground shows the temporary tabernacle building built in 1923
and the second parsonage across the street that was completed in
1928. Nothing was beyond the Tabernacle northward to Bryan.
The Baptists had a "spacious" parking lot a block from their
church, across the street from the Methodists and often was used by
both congregations. For a while the area where the present
sanctuary is now located was designated by the Methodists as their
parking lot was equally assessable to both Baptists and
Methodists.
5. Who were the main active personalities involved with commercial,
churches, residential areas.
King Vivion -- 1920- 1924 - -first minister assigned to Methodist
students and families in College Station, erected first building- -
crudely built parsonage
W.C.Boyett - -owner of land purchased by church
Jesse C. Thomson - 1924 - 1932 -- minister during occupancy of
first temporary building, the Tabernacle, and second parsonage
A. D. Jackson -- charter member, chairman of the board, Board of
Trustees, Church school superintendent
P.L. Downs, Jr. - - "Mr. A and M" layman for 25 -30 years, usually
walked to church from his home a mile away, directly through
dormitory area, post office, Northgate -- visiting all along the way-
- arrived at regular place in the Sanctuary - -2nd row back, west
side.
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Ministers: King Vivion -- 1920 -1924
Jesse Thomson -- 1924 -1932
R.L. Jackson -- 1932 -1936
James Carlin -- 1936 -1942
Walton Gardner -- 1943 -1944
Raymond Terry -- 1944 -1947
James Jackson -- 1947 -1952
Nolan Vance -- 1952 -1957
James Argue -- 1957 -1961
Byron Lovelady -- 1961 -1964
Walter McPherson1964 -1969
Jack Sparling -- 1969 -1971
James Brannen - -1971 -1979
Bob Waters -- 1979 -1987
Bill Armstrong -- 1987 -1994
6. Are there any documents on the building and Northgate? Historic
photos, old drawings of outside of the building and the inside,
maps etc.
First Parsonage -- Brison, Fred R.,The A &M United Methodist
Church, The First Fifty Years:1923 -1973, p.49
Tabernacle -- Brison, p.28, 42
Northgate -- Brison. p.24, 86
J. Gordon Gay Education Building -- Brison, p.93
Sanctuary (outside) Brison p. 56,93
(inside) Brison p.54, 72,
Wesley Student Center -- Brison, p.46
7. Who were the persons responsible for the design or
construction of the property?
King Vivion designed and built the first parsonage.
A.D. Jackson was chairman of the building for the second
parsonage
Tabernacle
J. Gordon Gay Education Building
The Sanctuary -- Ernest Langford, supervising architect, F. R.
Brison, building committee; Clarence Andrews, builder
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NORTHGATE HISTORY
Northgate had its humble beginning as a downtown during the 1930s.
This was a period before the incorporation of the City of College Station (which incorporation
was voted by its citizens on October 19, 1938.
In fact, during the 20's, the United States Post Office and Boyett's, a local business, claimed
the earliest beginning roots of business development.
Also, prior to incorporation of College Station, it could easily be argued that the city
"downtown" existed before the incorporation - a rather unique development.
To support that proposition, in addition to the Post Office, there were numerous businesses
that developed and flourished, some of which continue to flourish to this day.
Those businesses included a pharmacy, cleaners, barber shops, tailors, and restaurants.
Specifically, by name, these businesses included Aggieland Pharmacy, Lipscomb's Pharmacy,
Luke's Campus Grocery, The College Inn, Holick's, and Loupot's.
But it was during the 40's that its crowning glory as a downtown was solidified.
Namely, the main Business District flourished and consisted of cafes, grocery stores,
confectioners, jewelers, a dentist, photographers - and the magnificent structure which should be the
cornerstone of Northgate - The Campus Theater - built at a cost of $65,000.00, it seated 628 people
and had the "most modem movie equipment available."
Even a bank opened in Northgate on May 1, 1946.
Finally, in December 1947, the College Station, residents celebrated the opening of its new
City Hall in downtown College Station.
This property, although leased to a successful restaurant, is still owned by the City.
Finally, to close, to my utter surprise, there are at least 5 homes in Northgate that are nearly
100 years old:
318 First
Owner: Estate of A.P. Boyett, Sr.
Erected: 1911, Sold 1941
Identification by: George H. Boyett, February 1, 1986
Caroline MVTitchell, January 16, 1986
Style: Small sized Queen Anne, minor modifications
Previous residents on campus:
RF. Smith, 1922, professor of mathematics
E.P. Humbert, 1924, head, department of genetics
400 Boyett
Owner: Charles E. Harris, Jr., 307 Greenway, Bryan
Erected: 1902, Sold 1954
Identification by: Dr. Bardin Nelson, Sr. retired TAMU sociologist
Style: Medium sized Queen Anne, considerably modified in
recent years
Previous residents on campus:
RP. Marstellar, 1924, former Dean of School of
Veterinary Medicine
402 Boyett
Owner: Charles E. Harris, Jr., 307 Greenway, Bryan
Erected: 1902, Sold 1955
Identification by: Dr. Bardin Nelson, Sr. retired TAMU sociologist
Style: Originally a Medium sized Queen Anne, by badly burned in
the 1960s and so renovated, it is difficult to tell that it was
once a twin to the house at 400 Boyett.
Previous residents on campus:
Designated both in 1913 and in 1921, as the "surgeon's house"
in the minutes of the Housing Committee
500 College Main
Owner: Donald Eppley, 18210 Spellbrok Drive, Houston
Erected: Date and campus location uncertain; style suggests about 1900
Sold: Date uncertain, probably 1948 -49 according to records in
Tax Assessor- Collector's office.
Identification as a campus by George H. Boyett, whose father purchased the house
and moved it.
Style: Small sized Queen Anne with neo- classical features; apparently
close to original condition, few modifications
recent years
Previous residents on campus: ?
415 Tauber
Owner: Howard C. Nelson, 12410 Cobblestone, Houston
Erected: Perhaps 1910 -15; this dating is from design evidence
Sold: Probably 1953 -54 according to tax records
Identification by: Bardin Nelson
Style: Cottage, considerably remodeled and modified since move
Previous residents on campus: ?
The plan for Northgate needs to be accomplished in conjunction with input from and financial
cooperation with Texas A &M University.
Lexington Photos - Show before /after
This is a project that has historic implications for our community. More importantly,
implementation of a Northgate plan will have a positive impact on economic development, of which
tourism is now a number one resource, according to the Texas Department of Commerce.
The timeliness of this project is also enhanced by the approaching development of the George
Bush Library, which will bring thousands of new tourists to our community. It is time to take our
most visible eyesore, and turn it into the community treasure it can become.
Happy to answer questions