HomeMy WebLinkAboutINNKEEPER: THE CAREER OF CAL BOYKIN by Joe Pickle THE PERMIAN HISTORICAL ANNUAL
Volume XXIX December 1989
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51
INNKEEPER: THE CAREER OF CAL BOYKIN
By Joe Pickle
By all rights Calvin Clay Boykin should have been a farmer;
instead, he achieved a career as a polished innkeeper. Hand-
some, gregarious and almost always impeccably dressed, he
played out his role in a setting far removed from the sod.
Early in life, however, his perceptiveness led and kept him
away from the farm. He was the youngest of nine children when
he was born August 4, 1903, to Byrd Alexander and Mary
Catherine Kornagay Boykin at Robert Lee, Texas.' His parents
moved to Miles in Runnels County soon afterwards, and it was
here that Calvin achieved his meager schooling, "getting my
foundation in that wildcat one -room schoolhouse - learning
reading, writing and arithmetic. Mr. Pappawall taught me
penmanship -- muscular motion."
What seemed more practical, however, was laboring in the
fields. One day he and his brother, Tommie, were shocking oats
almost frantically, but when Tommie looked around, Calvin
had disappeared. So he went to the house and found Cal cleaned
up and dressed, with his scant belongings packed in a bag.
Mystified and fearful of an emergency, Tommie asked: "What's
going on ?"
"I'm through," Calvin announced bluntly. "There's got to be
a better way to make a living."
Thus, at the ripe age of fourteen years, he took off in the
direction of Amarillo where a brother lived. There he found
52 The Permian Historical Annual XXIX (1989)
employment as a callboy for the Santa Fe railroad. Later he took
a job with King Candy Company, but stirring hot candy wasn't
much more appealing that shocking oats. He and his cousin,
Brian (Biney) Kornagay, had noticed posters in front of the post
office. Over pretty Hawaiian girls in grass skirts was the legend:
"Join the Navy and see the world."
They not only did not get to see the world, they didn't even get
to see the Navy recruiter who had gone for the day. So, they
stepped across the hall to the Army recruiting office and signed
on.
That is how Calvin came to be a part of the 157th Field Ar-
tillery, training first at Fort Bliss, Texas and serving at Fort
Lewis and Fort Casey, Washington.
When he was discharged on October 3, 1921, Calvin had
mastered basic skills in typing, record keeping, organization,
chain of command, etc.' Besides, he had $204.41 in travel pay in
his pocket. Instead of returning to Miles, he stopped in
Amarillo, and he and Biney talked about boarding a tramp
steamer and really seeing the world. But when the ship sailed,
only Biney was aboard; Calvin had taken a job in a hotel owned
by Col. Ernest Thompson. He was little more than a busboy at
first, but soon he was making salads in the dining room. Next he
was a night clerk, then a cashier.
By this time, however, he was lonesome for home. Returning
to Miles was a fateful decision, for it was there that he met
Rubye Opal Heath, formerly of Rochelle (McCulloch County),
and they were married August 12, 1921, in Miles.
At first, he worked for Price Tailor Shop; then his father -in-
law, Tom Heath, a travelling salesman, persuaded him to open a
clothing store appropriately named Boykin & Company. Hardly
had he become established in this enterprise than Heath in 1922
called from Roswell, New Mexico, where he was staying. There
was an opening for a young man with hotel experience with the
Nickson -Todd Hotels. Calvin interviewed for the job and was
hired at the Gilkerson Hotel, and his career as a hotelman was
on its way.
He and Rubye relished the life, especially the emoluments of
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Innkeeper / Pickle
53
the position, including use of a summer cabin at Pine Lodge,
New Mexico. Later, Cal became fast friends with Jim White,
discoverer of Carlsbad Caverns.
Over in Carlsbad, A. J. Crawford, a crusty, penurious ran-
cher and entrepreneur, had heard of Cal. On the basis of glow-
ing reports about the young man and his ability to remember
names and faces, he made Cal an offer to join the Crawford
Hotel in Carlsbad.
Cal's recollection of the first meeting with Crawford was
when he went to the ranch for the interview. He found the wiry
rancher, clad in coat and striped pants and starched laid -back
collar, working livestock in a corral. He had a .45 caliber
revolver strapped to his waist, this not being uncommon in that
day. The rancher left off his chores long enough to talk with
Cal. He made him an offer. Before Cal could resign, however,
Nickson -Todd, aware of the Crawford proposal, gave him a
substantial raise.
This was an annoying if not painful development for the
frugal Crawford, but when he crawled off a trainload of his cat -
tle bound for market and contacted Cal at Roswell, he grudging -
ly topped the offer and declared: "You're not working for
anybody else anymore! "'
In the meantime, Calvin Junior had been born in 1924 to Cal
and Rubye at Roswell, so the three of them moved over to
Carlsbad. They were just settled into a comfortable situation
when their second son, Robert (Bobby) was born in 1926.
A group of boosters from Big Spring, Texas, where oil had
been discovered on the H. R. Clay ranch in November, 1925, by
Fred Hyer, who was to become a close friend of Cal's, called on
Crawford to urge him to build a hotel. They had a quarter of a
block at the northeast corner of the intersection of Third (U.S.
80 highway) and Scurry (then U.S. 87 highway) and across from
the courthouse and city hall (on U.S. 80). When they offered to
donate the land, Crawford could not resist.
Crawford confided with Boykin about the new undertaking
and asked: "Guess who's going to Big Spring ?" Cal had no
idea, and Crawford tapped him on the chest and said: "You!"
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Innkeeper / Pickle 53
the position, including use of a summer cabin at Pine Lodge,
New Mexico. Later, Cal became fast friends with Jim White,
discoverer of Carlsbad Caverns.
Over in Carlsbad, A. J. Crawford, a crusty, penurious ran-
cher and entrepreneur, had heard of Cal. On the basis of glow-
ing reports about the young man and his ability to remember ?
names and faces, he made Cal an offer to join the Crawford
Hotel in Carlsbad.
Cal's recollection of the first meeting with Crawford was
when he went to the ranch for the interview. He found the wiry
rancher, clad in coat and striped pants and starched laid -back
collar, working livestock in a corral. He had a .45 caliber
revolver strapped to his waist, this not being uncommon in that
day. The rancher left off his chores long enough to talk with
Cal. He made him an offer. Before Cal could resign, however,
Nickson -Todd, aware of the Crawford proposal, gave him a
substantial raise.
This was an annoying if not painful development for the
frugal Crawford, but when he crawled off a trainload of his cat-
tle bound for market and contacted Cal at Roswell, he grudging-
ly topped the offer and declared: "You're not working for
anybody else anymore! "
In the meantime, Calvin Junior had been born in 1924 to Cal
and Rubye at Roswell, so the three of them moved over to
Carlsbad. They were just settled into a comfortable situation
when their second son, Robert (Bobby) was born in 1926.
A group of boosters from Big Spring, Texas, where oil had
been discovered on the H. R. Clay ranch in November, 1925, by
Fred Hyer, who was to become a close friend of Cal's, called on
Crawford to urge him to build a hotel. They had a quarter of a
block at the northeast corner of the intersection of Third (U.S.
80 highway) and Scurry (then U.S. 87 highway) and across from
the courthouse and city hall (on U.S. 80). When they offered to
donate the land, Crawford could not resist.
Crawford confided with Boykin about the new undertaking
and asked: "Guess who's going to Big Spring ?" Cal had no
idea, and Crawford tapped "You!"
pped him on the chest and said:
•
54 The Permian Historical Annual XXIX (1989)
So as construction began on the seven -story hotel in early
1927, Cal and Rubye moved their family into temporary
quarters in the dilapidated old Wyoming Hotel, but no matter, a
room in Big Spring was a treasured possession in those boom
days. Cal oversaw building of the hotel, and when it was partial-
= ly completed, he and Rubye and the boys moved to the second
floor. Cal, at age 23, now became its manager.
When the handsome structure was completed, it was called
"the finest between Abilene and El Paso." Crawford paid
$600,000 in cash for it, and instructed his protege to get busy
*VA, fi earning back his investment.
From the moment the hotel opened in 1928, it became the
center of community activity and always was filled to overflow-
Y' ., ing. Oilmen made instant deals in their rooms or upon a hand-
shake in the lobby. Indeed, some who later became millionaires
but who were at the moment broke used the sidewalk out front
as a site for carrying on business. There were other enterprises
and spontaneous eruptions that created problems.
There was no way to prevent gamblers from infiltrating and
starting a high- stakes poker game. Similarly, "ladies of the
night" registered as guests, then entertained guests in their
rooms, or, with a pimp, they posed as husband and wife to
register. Somehow bellboys always knew how to procure a half -
gallon of white - lightning from bootleggers. Cal at first hired
house "dicks" (security persons) to control the situation, but in-
evitably they succumbed to bribes and began to run their own
operations. So he fired them and reached a tacit understanding
with the sheriff and police chief that he would hold the lid
down.`
On the first floor, on the east end, there was a sparkling new
coffee shop. Except when he inherited operations, Cal avoided
running the restaurant, preferring always to lease it on a com-
mission basis. He absorbed enough to master the basic
mechanics, and he had a fast rule with his operators: bring in the
totalled tickets for the day and pay the hotel's ten percent in
cash. When the cafe manager missed an appointment or had a
sad story, Cal knew he was in trouble.
Innkeeper / Pickle 55
To the north of the cafe was a ballroom which served as a
place for town gatherings and civic clubs, as well as for gala and
sometimes riotous dances. Across the hall west from the
ballroom was a tier of offices snuggled back of the hotel desk.
At the west end and facing south on Third were spaces for the
Chamber of Commerce and a drugstore, also a tailor shop. The
lobby contained facilities for Virginia Earnest, a public
stenographer, who was constantly overwhelmed typing oil deals.
There was no let -up in the instant congestion that followed
the hotel opening. Hardly a day passed without a fight or brawl
in the lobby. People were raising hell with Cal for a room, or
showered him with complaints. He grew homesick for the tran-
quility of Carlsbad and asked Crawford to transfer him
"home."
Crawford came to the point: "I sent you to do a man's job. I
Now do it." Later, when Crawford did need him at Carlsbad, he
(Crawford) was presented with a petition by a delegation of Big
Spring leaders to keep Cal there.
From the start, Cal accumulated a stable of capable staff
members. Among the "old timers" were Elmer Dorsett, night i `" �' . .' • clerk, and on the day desk, Paul Liner. Walter Green was cap-
tain of the bellboys. They ran a tight ship and were privy to ' 1 A
many of the town's secrets.
A penthouse was added in 1929, and the Boykins moved to the
quarters on the roof called the "Ranch." When Calvin wanted
to escape the frenzied activity below, he left word at the desk
f „
that "I've gone to the Ranch." They almost abandoned it in the '
summer of 1931 when an early- morning earthquake shook the
area. j '�
The Ranch was a place of miracles, for in spite of all that
anyone could do, Calvin Jr. and Bobby y insisted on using the
roof as a playground. Watching from his second -floor dental of- 41 ''
fices half a block to the north in the Petroleum Building, Dr. E.
0. Ellington often grew so nervous he could hardly hit a
patient's mouth. Time after time, he picked up the phone. •
"Cal, my God! You've gotta do something with those boys!"
Finally an iron grill was put around the parapet, but it proved q
ir
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': !1 The Permian Historical Annual XXIX (1989)
f
-: E skills. Moreover, they
. .:,�
fi an instant challenge to the boys c Once Calvin Jr. set up
getting were constantly into other things. Cloverine salve. Not wanting to
shop in the lobby selling iris, Cal bought the entire stock and
discourage an enterprising on t
sp had
to
<_ : persuaded his son to retire from the retail d n the a he and
make similar accomodations for Bobby, laces to raise
Rubye conceded were shipped off to her mother's
two boys. Cal Jr. and Bobby so far as the
�` farm at Rochelle. It was like an answered prayer that a hotel was not the best of p Jo Anne,
. t " boys were concerned, but they did miss their sister,
x to become
u .= who was born in 1933. It did not take her long
"Queen of the Crawford."
e boom
Cal had become so enmeshed in civic oticedlthe hi s o stock had such momentum that he scarced organize the Kiwanis Club
`# market crash of 1929. He had helped organize AF &AM in
and become a master Mason, having joined
Carlsbad. He appeared in hometown theatrics, style
sh and
made endless celebrations. Cal and his hats in
Wasson, were the first to dare to wear spats and derby
the late 1920s. in the spirit
At Ackerly, he and his cronies were so caught up
of a rodeo that they entered the bull- riding event when Andy
's impressario, offered $50 to anyone
Brown, the community ens. Even Houston
who could ride the meanest bull in knew better than to crawl
Cowden, noted for his excessive thirst, st ain at the moment and was
aboard, but Carefree Cal was p P
dashed instantly and violently to the hard arena of r So ow
he struggled to get out of bed and eventually
White Hospital in Temple for back surgery. con
enticing As the boom cooled, Cal
e of the first major
quarter to head -
ventions to boost revenues. Ass had
quarter at the Crawford was the West Texas Druggists had
tion, about the wildest group extant because the pharmacists
access to pure grain alcohol to fortify
their beverages. The West
Texas Hotel al be be e preey dent of the Big Spring Chamber of
In 1939, Cal cm pes
Commerce, although its offices had been moved east of Third to
Id
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Innkeeper / Pickle 57
I .
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Calvin C. Boykin, Manager of the Crawford Hotel, Big Spring,
Texas, in 1930.
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the thirteen -story Settles Hotel.' Speaker at Cal's installation
1 banquet was Elliott Roosevelt, son of the President. W. T.
; (Tanlac) Strange, temporary manager, had returned to his ar- I"
; chitectural calling and J. H. (Jimmie) Green succeeded to the of -_"
I fice. He and Cal made an indefatigable pair. They importuned
the Civil Aeronautics Administration to sanction a north -south
, - airline from San Antonio to Denver, via Big Spring. With Floyd 1
,- Hardesty, oil operator, Cal flew to Tampico, Mexico, seeking a
L - sub- border airline anchor. He maintained a ticket office in the
d hotel when American Airlines commenced service in 1931. Fre-
st quently he was scurrying to the airport to greet such celebrities e •
as Will Rogers, Eddie Rickenbacker, and Eleanor Roosevelt. r,
p f His hotel also was entertaining such personalities as Gen. i '
10 John J. Pershing, Gene Autry, Douglas (Wrong -Way) Corrigan. 1
i.
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58 The Permian Historical Annual XXIX (1989)
Among more pleasant duties was presenting a bouquet of red
roses to Linda Darnell, the movie starlet, in 1937. He had other
experiences in this field, having been named in 1936 to shepherd
the Texas Centennial Belles, a bevy of beautiful young women.'
He was in on the campaign to obtain what became the Big
Spring State (mental) Hospital and later the Big Spring Bombar-
dier School, which banished the Depression for the hotels and
eclipsed even the demands of oil boom days for rooms. The
Crawford also became the home of Radio Station KBST when it
went on the air October 10, 1936.
Not only was he active at home, but Cal was a leader in the
West Texas Hotel Greeters and in the Texas group which
honored him as one of its outstanding managers, as did the
Hotel Greeters of America. Small wonder that in 1933 Cal
received an invitation to be interviewed in Dallas by Conrad
1
Calvin Boykin in 1972.
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3 Innkeeper / Pickle 59
I
Hilton. Cal had a conflict and declined, but Hilton wrote:
I "Regret you were unable to come for the interview. Make
s another date and come at our expense. I would like to talk with l
you. "
In that same year the East Texas oilfield had skimmed the
cream from the Howard - Glasscock oil boom, especially in the
face of competition from the larger Settles Hotel. Ironically, he
and Rubye were later to move to the Settles penthouse when he
became part of a coalition with Frank Hofues and others in a
four -hotel operation just before and during the World War II "1
years.
A. J. Crawford, ever ready to pluck a bargain, bought the old
i Llano Hotel in Midland in 1939 and made Cal a partner. They '
poured $150,000 into remodelling and refurnishing, and just in I
time, for Midland was named home of the first Army Air Force II, "? , -'
Bombardier School in Texas. Rooms were at a premium. Later 11
the hotel, renamed the Crawford, was converted largely to of-
fices during a feverish postwar oil boom.10 III ' � -
When Calvin came to Midland to take active management of ' 4 z
the Llano (Crawford), he was greeted by the wealthy rancher �'
and civic leader, Clarence Scharbauer, Sr., whose name was
borne by the leading hotel across the street. Cal was nervous I
about what might be in store. "Glad to have you," said Schar-
bauer. "If you need anything or help, just let me know." 1
About the same time, Hofues had acquired the old Hotel Col -
orado in Colorado City and left management up to Cal. With ;i �;
experience he gained with the military in Midland, Cal had i,:
previously turned the Settles into a military -civic center which I € ,
became known world -wide as fledgling bombardiers were ferried i
to the European and Pacific theatres. There was a story of a l
young bombardier graduate stationed in London who remarked 1
about the speed of the hotel's elevator, whereupon a voice from
the rear piped up: "Ever ride the Settles elevator ?" ! !.
After the war, Cal and Rubye settled back into management
of the Crawford at Midland. He became a member of the First
Methodist Church and the Rotary Club and was featured on the d
cover of the Texas Hotel Association magazine. He became a
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60 The Permian Historical Annual XXIX (1989)
captain in the Midland Sheriff s Posse and the (Chamber of
_ s Commerce) Wranglers."
He and Rubye acquired ten acres just outside of Midland and
named it the Circle B Ranch, indulging in Palomino quarter
� horse breeding and boarding a few horses for friends. With a
j
,� touch of farmer still in his blood, he p lanted two hundred peach
and other trees and in good years showered friends with fruit.
The Boykins might have taken root in Midland had not the city
limits been extended beyond their tract and a livestock ban im-
posed on them.' pressure
They sold to oilman Bum Givens and, exhausted by p
of the war and oil -boom days, elected to try something less hec-
tic. They signed a two -year contract Hotel o loraodoo
in Glenwood Springs, Colorado, and turned the
resort hostelry into a year- around operation. It was a case of be-
ing ahead of times because the era of winter sports had not
dawned. by
With the contract expiring, Cal was ripe for an approach
Duward H. (Tiny) Reed, whom Cal had ko n from dehad
days as a school administrator in Big Spring.
become dean and then president of Eastern New Mexico Univer-
sity in Portales which felt the need for a first -class hotel. Civic
leaders there offered to name the hotel the "Cal Boykin" if only
he would operate it. There was one hook; Cal had to pump
$90,000 of his own money into furnishings. Cal Boykin Hotel
was such a fine facility that Gov. Edward aseac Meacham came
the e
dedication on July 14, 1951. As popular
outset, it soon began to fade, for the hard fact was that it was
bracketed by the larger cities of Roswell and Carlsbad which
were wet, and, alas, Portales was dry." just in time to
Cal struggled with it, but in 1953 he gave up, j
hotel enterprise in Levelland,
take over another community on April 15, 1953. Meantime,
the Cal Boykin in Portales was palmed off for a
(again, the Calvin Boykin), ,
Texas (ag time as a men
ti
dormitory for ENMU.
In Horn, utilizing 1950s, g the food and Rubye
rvc e talents he had mastered in
Ho out of
rnutilizing
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61
/ Pickle
0 " } ` they had also
in hotel management. Before long, moved brief -
d e to San Angelo to op
�f s s ed neg ement of the hotel there. Later they
assumed m operate the old Naylor Hotel which had been
urbished and renamed The o"�n � Ina
h The thought of
a ref was uppermost
retB Cal dabbled as a booking agent for Lewis and Lewis
t
1 - • B of Chicago, operating under the name of Boykin and Lewis.
mon entertainers he listed were the Harlem Globe Trotters,
Y A and Lawrence Welk.
� Li He turned an Spring for one of the Globe Trotter
re
He turned back to Big OW fell on the evening of the game•
bookings, but a heavy ear, Cal was obliged to I ,
Because Cat's ticket taker didn't app
to
come both cashier and ticket - taker. a was s bsor in his
work that he did not see Sheriff Jess ease
him. The sheriff stuck his finger in . his of an dbe Trot "Stick 'em
�" Calvin jumped higher than any
)t uP e had settled in San Antonio. Their
Meantime, Cal and Ruby Gid Smith, was operating a
next -door neighbor, Gilbert L.
' minature railroad at Brackenridge Park, billed as the "world's
d
longest minature railroad." Cal was in d and bo nto
r- it, and he gloried in donning his overall He also o
!C tooting the whistle for the "Brackenridge
l hilosophiesdfd not always dove -tail
Y doubled in brass as station His 1963, he
P of the management. P slit in 196 ,
those of his partner, so that when they p it in
in a 63, he
with t P
:.1 e citizens wanted
e hustled off to Laredo where
�e
railroad. But border economy and habits were such that the ven-
s ture was doomed. Thus,
with Cal's health failing, Rubye took
apartment complex there."
h over management of an
Calvin Jr. thought this w'aLo °OOmuch 0 College Station where
0
mother, so he persuaded them
there were better medical idst of the move, was easier for him
' watch after them. In the they learned that A.
s
J. Crawford, their mentor - benefactor, had died at the age of 101
years."
a part of Rubye's makeup, for soon she was
Idleness was not p and No. 2 apartment complexes
f managing the Monaco No. 1 an
62 The Permian Historical Annual XXIX (1989)
and, with the help of Cal, the Posada del Rey. Just as his health
was improving, the units were sold by Allan Zidell of Dallas to a
penny- pinching Florida group. Weary of contention with the
new owners, Cal and Rubye quit."
They paused in 1972 to be honored at a fiftieth wedding an-
niversary celebration given by Calvin Jr., Bobby, and Jo Anne.
This was followed for a time with easy days in which Cal concen-
trated mainly on his activities in the Brazos Shrine Club. Once
more they decided to move, this time to Austin in 1974. A chain
of familiar events repeated, and Rubye succumbed to an offer to
manage Woodcliff Apartments. As his strength returned, Cal
took over the operation. This time it was Rubye who fell ill; she
died in 1976.
Perhaps some mysterious homing instinct brought him back
to Miles, some strange urging to re- identify with his beginnings.
He had broken these ties as a youth to find satisfaction and
fulfullment in another field. This brief return proved but a rein-
forcement for him that there still was a better way to make a liv-
ing than farming.
So he shook the dust of his homeland from his feet and head-
ed
back to a more lively setting in Austin, and a new experience
for him in real estate development.
There remained some attachment to his roots as he watched
big machines sink plows and blades into the soil. Waiting
around for arteries of utilities to be buried and streets carved out
of the undulating hills was not for Cal. The spick- and -span en-
trepreneur mounted to the driver's seat of a crawler -type tractor,
and he roared off in his personal conquest of "Mt. Cat," as he
put it.
Ultimately, time and jostling over the rough terrain uncovered
a latent problem that was diagnosed as prostatic cancer. Thus
began a season of confinement in hospitals and convalescent
homes with interludes of respite in Jo Anne's apartment. One
suspects that had he been in his prime, he would have found
some way to convert hospitals and homes into hotels - -with
himself as manager.