HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Old Texas A&M Campus Houses; paper by Paul Van Riper
The Old Texas A&M Campus Houses
By
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Paul P. Van Riper
This is to request authorization of a Texas historical marker to commemorate the faculty
and staff houses once on the Texas A&M University campus, which, sold and dispersed, mainly
in the 1940s, now comprise the principal historic residences in the city of College Station, Texas.
This application was initially proposed by the Brison Park Community Association of
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College Station as its sesquicentennial project, and has been endorsed by the Citizens for
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Historical preservation of Brazos County. The immediate sponsor of the marker application is
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the city government of College Station, supported by Texas A&M University. It is expected
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that any approved marker would be placed on the Texas A&M University campus.
The supporting data to follow are divided into three sections: 1) the development of
faculty and staff housing at TAMU, 2) the removal of this housing, and 3) its present location,
ownership, etc. While there was housing erected on many segments of the Texas A&M
University property, both in College Station and elsewhere, this proposal and documentation
apply only to the housing once in the section long recognized as comprising the central TAMU
campus. This area is bounded by University Avenue (formerly Sulphur Springs road) on the
North, Texas Avenue on the East, Jersey Street on the South, and Wellborn road (old Highway
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6) on the West.
Development of Campus Housing
Founded in 1876, the early Texas A&M University encompassed close to 2,500 acres of
open country land more than four miles from the small town of Bryan, Texas. Of necessity, the
university, then a small college (the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas), had to
function much as a military post, with housing furnished and officially allocated to many faculty
and staff. That, as a land grant institution, the college’s curriculum included compulsory military
training only underscored the analogy.
Most of the school’s old building records were destroyed when the principal
administrative building, Old Main, burned to the ground in May of 1912. Nevertheless, the
growth of campus housing can be outlined in a general way.
The first houses were five brick faculty homes erected in 1876 on the East side of
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Throckmorton Street. These formed the nucleus of what became known for many years
thereafter as Quality Row along both sides of this street. However, the last of the brick houses
was demolished in 1949.
Additional housing was rapidly constructed from the 1890s on. By 1914 there were
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nearly 50 houses on the central campus. Construction of additional homes continued apace until
the middle 1920s. By then suitable housing for faculty and staff was rapidly becoming available
in the College Station area around the university. Moreover, it was becoming evident that it
would be necessary to use more and more of the central campus acreage for the needed
expansion of educational facilities to accommodate the rapid growth of the student body, which
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nearly doubled between 1917 and 1925 and then doubled again between 1925 and 1935.
In early 1913 the board of directors ordered the numbering of the faculty and staff homes.
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The initial numbering system was changed effective May 1, 1919, and all references to house
numbers in this proposal use the 1919 numbering system, which is also the system used in the
property records of the TAMU Fiscal Department.
By 1938 there were approximately 110 faculty and staff homes on the main campus, but
only two (nos. 251 and 422) hada been erected after 1925. Only the latter (no. 422 on
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Throckmorton St.) remains.
As for style and construction, there were no more brick houses after the initial five. All
the rest have been frame. Sizes have varied from largish two-storied structures to small cottages
of perhaps 1,200 square feet. The styles of those known to be in existence can be grouped into
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four main types, which can be designated as follows:
1) Queen Anne, most with neo-classical features, constructed between 1890 and
1910; this was the predominant style.
2) Cottages, smaller houses with a small porch and simple lines, erected here and
there over perhaps a forty year period, some of the earliest in a simple carpenter
Gothic, with the more recent very plain indeed.
3) American Four-Square (using terminology of the Old House Journal), relatively
plain and squarish two-story structures with a one story front porch, erected
between 1910 and 1920. There were at the most three or four of these.
4) Bungalows of varying sizes, but most smallish with square footages from 1,200 to
1,600, erected between 1910 and 1925. This style comprised the second largest
group.
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Early campus photographs confirm these main styles. It should also be noted that there
were no great mansions or fancy Victorian structures among them. These, even the university
presidents’ houses (see house no. 410) were essentially middle class types of housing, usually
well-built but, in no sense, ostentatious.
Of the known remaining homes, the ages vary from 1890 for house no. 222, now at 611
Montclair, College Station (and perhaps the oldest house in the city) to 1923 for two homes, no.
204, now at 502 Kerry, College Station, and no. 289, at 1004 Ashburn.
In the early years of the university, housing assignments were controlled directly by the
president and the board of directors. Effective in 1913, the directors authorized the president to
delegate this task to a Committee on Housing consisting of the deans. This committee met
several times a year from 1913 until 1939, when the board of directors decided to close out
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campus housing for faculty and staff. This committee developed an initial set of housing rules
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and regulations, which were approved by the board of directors on August 18, 1913. In main
outline, these rules guided housing use policy for the entire twenty-six years of the Housing
Committee’s existence.
Removal of Houses
With the formal incorporation of the City of College Station, Texas, in October 1938,
conditions were propitious for the disposition of campus housing for faculty and staff. On Sept.
2, 1939 the university’s board of directors adopted a resolution stating that “on or before
September 1, 1941, all campus residences be vacated and those that are vacated prior to that time
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be not rerented or occupied.” Excluded were residences of officers required to live on campus,
such as the president, the commandant, the surgeon and several others. It was ascertained that
many faculty and staff would like to buy the houses they lived in, or perhaps others, and the first
of several sales, via bids, was authorized by the board in March of 1941.
These initial sales involved some 35 houses, or about a third of those on the campus in
1938. another third were gradually sold off in the next twenty years, while the final third is
recorded as having been burned or otherwise destroyed or demolished, given to the Firemen’s
Training School for use, moved somewhere else on the university’s farm properties, etc. The last
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sale of a main campus house appears to have been in 1972.
In the early 1940s these houses were apparently a drag on the market. They had to be
moved and that was expensive. In the first echelon of sales, the houses went for between $200
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and $800. Not until the 1960s did houses bring as much as $2,000 to $3,000.
Present Location of Old Campus Houses
For the past three years the author and his associates have been attempting to locate as
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many of the houses moved off the campus as possible. The search has been seriously
hampered by the fact that the university’s records do not show, except in three or four cases, to
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whom particular houses were sold.
As a result, the search has had to be through a combination of inspection and interview.
The results of this search are summarized in the “list of houses” to follow. Altogether, we have
found forty-one houses for which the evidence is overwhelming that they were once on the
Texas A&M campus. Of these, the campus location of thirty-two is known with considerable to
absolute certainty. For nine of the forty-one the prior campus location is uncertain to varying
degrees.
Thirty-eight of the houses have been found in College Station. This group forms by far
the largest segment of the city’s historic houses, for there apparently are no College Station non-
campus houses which antedate the early 1920s. Of the remaining three houses, there are two in
Bryan, Texas, and the third nearly two miles north of Bryan and out in the country.
In addition to the forty-one identified houses, at least another four are known to have
been burnt or demolished after being moved off the campus. As approximately seventy campus
houses were sold at some time or other, this leaves the whereabouts of twenty-five or so
unknown. Nevertheless, during the last year of our fairly extensive and careful search—calendar
1985—we have been able to add only two previously unknown former campus houses to our list.
In the list to follow there is provided for each house information relating to these topics:
1) present address, 2) present owner, 3) date erected when known or explanation of probable
date, 4) location on campus when known, 5) year sold, 6) the evidence pertaining to
identification of the house as a campus house and its location on campus, 7) style together with
some comments on current condition of the house, and 8) such residents of the house when on
campus as have come to our attention.
The College Station houses are listed first, then those in Bryan and vicinity. Within each
city group, the houses are listed by present address according to an alphabetical arrangement of
street names. An asterisk (*) indicates that the prior campus location of a house is uncertain.
For a house listing by campus number, see Exhibit J.
For information about sources and related matters see the following Special Notes:
LIST OF HOUSES
Special Notes:
1. “Campus house numbers” in parentheses are the numbers assigned to each
individual house by the Committee on Houses, TAMU, effective May 1, 1919, approved by the
board of directors and used for identification in the property records of the university. Se
“Minutes, 1913-39,” Committee on Houses, p. 62, TAMU Archives. These numbers are the
same as those to be found on the campus maps of 1914 and 1938, attached to this application.
2. The dates houses were erected and the dates moved are from “Building Records,”
office of Ms. Ann Grady, Senior Staff Accountant, Fiscal Department, TAMU, unless otherwise
attributed.
3. Interviews have all been with the author on dates indicated.
4. Information about present owners is from the records of the Brazos County
Appraisal Office in Bryan, Texas, as of Dec. 18, 1985.
5. Style designations are keyed to those outlined in the text above and illustrated by
photographic examples in attached Exhibit E.
6. Names of persons living in houses and dates of residence (only the year a house
was assigned to the person is available) are from the “Minutes” of the Committee on Houses
unless otherwise attributed.
College Station
Ashburn, 1004
Manning Smith (resident) owner
Erected 1923 (campus no. 289)
Sold 1941
Identification by Mr. and Mrs. Manning Smith, Jan. 29, 1986; purchased by them and
moved to present location
Style: cottage, much modified in recent years
Previous residents on campus:
Homer Norton, football coach, 1933
Boyett, 400
Charles E. Harris, Jr., 307 Greenway, Bryan, TX, owner
Erected 1902 (campus no. 152)
Sold 1954
Identification by Dr. Bardin Nelson, Sr., retired TAMU sociologist, who purchased house
and had it moved here—April 28, 1983.
Style: medium-sized Queen Anne, considerably modified in recent years
Previous residents on campus:
R. P. Marstellar, 1924, former dean of School of Veterinary Medicine
Boyett, 402
Charles E. Harris, Jr., 307 Greenway, Bryan, TX, owner
Erected 1902 (campus no. 154)
Sold 1955
Identification by Dr. Bardin Nelson, Sr., retired TAMU sociologist, who purchased house
and had it moved here—April 28, 1983.
Style: originally a medium-sized Queen Anne, but badly burnt in the 1960s and so
renovated it is difficult to tell that it was once a twin to the house at 400 Boyett (just
above)
Previous residents on campus:
Designated, both in 1913 and in 1921, as the “surgeon’s house” in the minutes of the
Housing Committee
Marsh, an M.D., lived there for some years (from Dr. Nelson and from J. E. Marsh,
Jr., son, also an M.D. in Bryan, Jan. 15, 1986)
*College Main, 500
Donald Eppley, 18210 Spellbrook Drive, Houston, TX 77084, owner
Erected: date and campus location uncertain; style suggests around 1900
Sold: date uncertain, but records in Tax Assessor-Collector’s office for Brazos County
indicate probable date of 1948 or 1949 (see “Additions” books for 1943-48 and
1949-53, Boyett, block 23, lots 1, 2)
Identification as campus house by George H. Boyett, whose father purchased the house
and moved it, Feb. 1, 1986; confirmed by Caroline Mitchell, former registrar,
TAMU, now retired, who was long time campus resident, Jan. 16, 1986.
Style: small sized Queen Anne with neo-classical features; apparently in close to original
condition, few modifications
Previous residents on campus: ?
Fairview, 500
Laird E. Lawrence (resident) owner
Erected 1899 (campus no. 252); burned considerably in 1924; rebuilt in 1925
Sold 1942
Identification by Peggy Campbell Owens, born on campus and long time campus
resident, Jan. 16, 1986
Style: cottage, some modifications in 1925
Previous residents on campus:
D. W. Williams, acting president 1956-57 (Owens, Jan. 16, 1986)
Fairview, 501
George B. Dresser (resident) owner
Erected 1911 (campus no. 281)
Sold 1941
Identification as campus house by Mrs. F. G. Anderson, Nov. 8, 1983; identified by both
her and Peggy Campbell Owen, Jan. 16, 1986, as campus house no. 281. Mrs.
Anderson resided in this house on campus.
Style: medium-sized Queen Anne
Previous residents on campus:
Frank G. Anderson, former commandant of cadets, coach, and mayor of College
Station (Mrs. F. G. Anderson, Nov. 8, 1983)
N. M. McGinnis, 1937
*Fidelity, 300
Timothy R. Manning (resident) owner
Erected: 1911 inscribed on one wall (T. R. Manning, Jan. 31, 1986); also others of
almost exactly same design were known to be erected in 1911.
Sold: Some uncertainty, but Brazos County tax records indicate probably moved in
1941-42 (see “Additions” book for 1939-43, see below)
Identification as campus house: main evidence is great structural similarity to other
houses known to have been built on campus (e.g., 601 Montclair, 710 Montclair,
107 Williamson in Bryan, etc.); moreover, Brazos County tax records indicate house
could not have been on this lot prior to 1941 (West Park, block 2, part of lot 2, 3 and
4)
Style: small sized Queen Anne with neo-classical features; in process of restoration by
owner
Previous residents on campus: ?
First, 318
Estate of A. P. Boyett, Sr., owner
Erected 1911
Sold 1941
Identification by George H. Boyett, Feb. 1, 1986; Caroline Mitchell, Jan. 16, 1986
Style: small sized Queen Anne, minor modifications
Previous residents on campus:
R. F. Smith, 1922, professor of Mathematics
E. P. Humbert, 1924, head, Department of Genetics
Francis, 703
Arthur M. Smith (resident) owner
Erected 1915 (campus nol. 265)
Sold 1941
Identification as campus house: Manning Smith, Jan. 30, 1986 (see notes for 1004
Ashburn); “was Winstead house facing Welborn”
Style: bungalow, considerably modified since move
Previous residents on campus:
Blackwell, 1916; F. W. Hensel, 1917, Landscape Art
Gibb Gilchrist, 1937, Dean of Engineering, President of TAMU from 1944 to 1948,
then Chancellor from 1948 to 1953
G. B. Winstead, 1939
Glade, 1712
William D. Fitch (resident) owner
Erected 1914-? (records say 1919, but first assigned in 1914) (campus no. 418)
Sold 1965
Identification as campus house: this house is well known as a campus house; Mrs. C. B.
Edwards, niece of a resident, May 1, 1983; Caroline Mitchell, Jan. 16, 1986.
Style: American Four Square, with some recent modifications and additions
Previous residents on campus:
W. Newell, 1914, Entomology; L. B. Burke, 1915
E. B. La Roche, 1918, chm. Architecture and Arch. Engineering
W. A. Orth, 1935, system architect
E. O. Siecke, 1935, head of Texas Forest Service (Mrs. Edwards, his niece)
R. Henderson Shuffler, later, system director of Information and later head of the
Institute of Texas Cultures, San Antonio (Mrs. Edwards)
Grove, 100
Aubrey W. Arnold (resident) owner
Erected 1917 (campus no. 234)
Sold 1941
Identification as campus house: Peggy Campbell Owens, Jan. 16, 1986
Style: bungalow
Previous residents on campus:
A. T. Potts, 1917
Highland, 200
Richard K. Morrison (resident) owner
Erected 1897 (campus no. 226)
Sold 1942
Identification as campus house: Peggy Campbell Owens, Jan. 16, 1986; also identifiable
from old campus photos as one of five houses facing the campus drill field
Style: medium sized Queen Anne
Previous residents on campus:
E. J. Fermier, head of Mechanical Engineering, 1927
Highland, 201
M. Scott Samuelson (resident) owner
Erected 1916 (campus No. 207)
Sold 1942
Identification by Peggy Campbell Owen, Jan. 16, 1986, as D. H. Reid House, west of
Guion Hall; that “looks right” according to Caroline Mitchell, same date.
Style: bungalow
Previous residents on campus:
E. P. Humbert, 1916, head, Genetics
R. L. Pou, agricultural specialist in Dairying, 1920
S. W. Bilsing, 1922, Entomology
D. H. Reid, 1930s, Poultry Husbandry (Owen)
*Highland, 300
Patrick W. Castle (resident) owner
Erected, probably 1918 (probably campus no. 256 or 258, both erected 1918; location on
campus confirmed by Owens, Jan. 16, 1986, and by Mary Bolton Echols, Feb. 2,
1986, daughter of TAMU President Bolton, as on the west side of Clark Street; only
these two houses in that location are not fully identified; both similar roof lines in
aerial photos)
Sold probably in 1941-2; see Brazos County tax records under “Additions” for 1939-43,
West Park, block 9, lots 11 and 12
Identification as campus house: see just above
Style: bungalow
Previous residents on campus:
No. 256: C. A. Wood, 1918; J. T. L. McNew, 1930, head, Civil Engineering
No. 258: J. R. McDonald, 1918; J. R. Bender, 1925
Highland, 301
V. Shaw Wulfson (resident) owner
Erected 1914-? (no building record; first assigned in 1914) (campus no. 209)
Sold: no building record; probably sold same time as 300 Highland, its twin, that is,
1942; see also Brazos County tax records, “Additions,” 1939-43, West Park, block
8, lot 18 and part of 19
Identification as campus house: Peggy Campbell Owens, Jan. 16, 1986; W. L.
Penberthy, former TAMU dean of men, and Mrs. Penberthy, Feb. 1, 1986
Style: bungalow
Previous residents on campus:
C. A. Felker, 1914; F. B. Paddock, 1916; E. B. LaRoche, 1924 (see 1712 Glade)
W. L. Hughes, 1925, head, Rural Education
Highland, 304
Baptist Student Dept., P. O. Box 3376, Texarkana, TX 75501, owner
Erected 1917 (campus no. 208)
Sold 1948
Identification by Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Penberthy, Feb. 1, 1986, as their residence on
campus when he was dean of men at TAMU
Style: bungalow
Previous residents on campus:
Housing records show W. L. Penberthy assigned this house in 1938
Highland, 307
Steven J. Worley (resident) owner
Erected 1901 (campus no. 230)
Sold 1943
Identification: this house is well known as a campus house, confirmed by Peggy
Campbell Owens, Jan. 16, 1986; also easily identifiable from old campus photos as
one of five houses facing the campus drill field
Style: middle sized Queen Anne with some Victorian features; roof peak cut off in house
move; being renovated by owner
Previous residents on campus:
House is widely known as the residence for some years of Richard J. Dunn, TAMU
bandmaster in the 1920s and 1930s
Highland, 315
Marie (Mrs. John) Ashton (resident) owner
Erected 1910 (campus no. 114)
Sold 1941
Identification: Mrs. Ashton, Jan. 16, 1986; confirmed by Peggy Campbell Owens, Jan.
16, 1986
Style: small Queen Anne, considerably modified since move
Previous residents on campus:
A. E. Wood, 1918; R. Flagg, 1926
Kerry, 502
Anne L. (Mrs. George E.) Potter
Erected 1923
Sold 1948
Identification: Mrs. Potter, Jan. 16, 1986 and Peggy Campbell Owens, same date
Style: cottage, somewhat modified since move
Previous residents on campus: ?
Laura Lane, 1700
Richard H. Ballinger (resident) owner
Erected 1905 (campus no. 410)
Sold 1965
Identification: Peggy Campbell Owens, Jan. 16, 1986; Caroline Mitchell, Jan. 16, 1986;
Mary Bolton Eckles, Feb. 2, 1986; this house is well known as a campus house
Style: Large Queen Anne with neo-classical features; well restored by owner
Previous residents on campus:
D. w. Spence, 1916, dean, School of Engineering
O. F. Chastain, 1917, professor of History
Francis C. Bolton, 1918, head, Electrical Engineering; dean of Engineering, Vice
President, TAMU; President, TAMU, 1948-50
Luther, 107
th
Bardin A. Nelson, Jr., 723 27 St., San Francisco, CA 94131, owner
Erected 1915 (campus no. 112)
Sold 1941
Identification: Peggy Campbell Owens, Jan. 16, 1986
Style: originally a bungalow; considerably modified since move
Previous residents on campus:
W. H. Thomas, 1915, professor of English
Jack Shelton, 1935
*Montclair, 201
Myrna J. Hughes, Trustee, 2400 Longmeier, No. 302, College Station, TX, owner
Erected probably between 1900 and 1910, judging from design and interior; campus
location quite uncertain
Sold probably in 1941-42, based on Brazos County tax records (see “Additions,” 1939-
43, College Park, block 1, lot 15 and part of 14)
Identification: Myrna J. Hughes, Jan. 31, 1986; design is also clearly indicative of
campus origin
Style: small sized Queen Anne
Previous residents on campus: ?
*Montclair, 400
Oscar C. Murphy (resident) owner
Erected probably in 1911, as closely similar in design to several houses known to be on
the campus and erected in 1911 (see house at 300 Fidelity)
Sold probably in 1941-42, based on Brazos County tax records (see “Additions,” 1939-
43, West Park, block 5, lots 9, 10 and part of 11)
Identification: Mrs. Luther Jones, wife of person buying house from campus, identified
house as a campus house, Jan. 21, 1986
Style: small sized Queen Anne, once with neo-classical porch pillars
Previous residents on campus: ?
*Montclair, 601
Eric J. Schulte (resident) owner
Erected probably in 1911, as closely similar in design to several houses known to be on
the campus and erected in 1911 (see house at 300 Fidelity) (campus location quite
uncertain)
Sold probably in 1948-49 (see Brazos County tax records, “Additions,” 1949-53, College
Park, block A, lots 8 and 9; confirmed by Bardin Nelson, Sr. as a house moved
about 1950
Identification: Bardin Nelson, Sr., April 28, 1983, said house was moved by him from
the campus
Style: small sized Queen Anne with neoclassical features
Previous residents on campus: ?
Montclair, 603
Howard C. Nelson, 12410 Cobblestone, Houston, TX 77024, owner
Erected 1916-? (records say 1920, but first assigned 1916) (campus no. 417)
Sold 1947
Identification: Mrs. J. P. Abbott, wife of Prof. Emeritus J. P. Abbott, 31 Jan. 1986; and
Bardin Nelson, Sr., April 28, 1983, who originally had the house moved in the late
1940s
Style: small Queen Anne, considerably modified into duplex
Previous residents on campus:
W. F. Proctor, 1916, state director of farm demonstration
J. C. Burns, 1917; G. S. Templeton, 1922, head, Animal Husbandry
A. B. Connor, 1925, director, Agricultural Extension Service
W. A. Holzmann, 1928, Fiscal Department
Montclair, 611
Paul P. and Dorothy D. Van Riper (resident) owners
Erected 1890
Sold 1942
Identification: Lucille Gould, who lived in house as a child, July 3, 1984; Bardin Nelson,
Sr., house resident fall of 1950, April 28, 1983; Frank G. Anderson, Jr., M. D., who
lived in nearby campus house, Nov. 22, 1985; also easily identifiable from old
campus photos as one of five houses facing the campus drill field
Style: medium sized Queen Anne with neo-classical features
Previous residents on campus:
Known widely as the Francis house; Mark F., dean, Veterinary Medicine
Montclair, 710
Donald O. Wiersig, 1107 Sul Ross, Bryan, TX, owner
Erected 1915 (campus no. 211)
Sold 1976
Identification: Bardin Nelson, Sr., bought this house and had it moved, April 28, 1983
Style: small sized Queen Anne, originally with some neo-classical features
Previous residents on campus:
E. C. Gee, 1915, head, Agricultural Engineering
N. M. McGinnis, 1917; J. W. Ridgeway, 1920
P. K. Whelpton, 1922, head, Farm Management
*Montclair, 908 and 912 (these are twin houses in similar situations)
Boyd G. Hall, P. O. Box 9103, College Station, TX, owner of both
Erected: 1911-?. After investigation, Arthur C. (Jack) Dean, reported on Dec. 5, 1984,
that these two houses had been moved around 1970 from the campus area of two-
story barracks type student housing near University Drive; by 1970 there were only
two houses in that area which fit the design and other characteristics of these two
houses. Both were dated 1911 on the TAMU records; their design is consistent with
such a date 9theswe would be campus nos. 339 and 343)
Sold: no. 339 sold in 1967 and no. 343 in 1972
Identification: Information obtained above by Dean from Mrs. Luther June, wife of
buyer and mover of these two houses, reported to me on Dec. 5, 1984
Style: small cottage
Previous residents on campus:
No. 339: Monsner, 1937
No. 343: Spiller, 1912; Sgt. J. C. Hyland, 1914, Asst. to Commandant B. D.
Anderson, 1916; L. D. Smith, 1939
Park Place, 710
John M. Belew (resident) owner
Erected 1918 (campus no. 250)
Sold 1942
Identification: After investigation Graham Horsley, TAMU professor of Environmental
Design, reported March 3, 1985, that the house had been moved off campus by Mrs.
Esther Taubenhaus, now dead, once head of the TAMU herbarium; this and campus
location confirmed by Peggy Campbell Owens, 16 Jan. 1986 and by Bardin Nelson,
Sr., Jan. 30, 1986.;
Style: bungalow; records, confirmed by Owens, indicate that house was seriously burnt
in 1924 and rebuilt in 1925
Previous residents on campus:
J. J. Taubenhaus, 1918, professor and researcher, agriculture (see just above for note
about wife)
Park Place, 1006
Dwight S. Miller (resident) owner
Erected 1916-? (records say 1917, but first assigned 1916) (campus no. 220)
Sold 1948
Identification: This house is well known as the former commandant of cadets house for
some years; confirmed after investigation by Graham Horsley, March 3, 1985;
confirmed by Pat Boughton, long time resident on campus and in College Station,
April 6, 1983; also easily identifiable from old campus photos as one of five houses
facing campus drill field
Style: American four-square, largely in original condition
Previous residents on campus:
F. H. Blodgett, 1916, plant pathology
F. B. Clark, 1916, specialist, seed selection, extension services
Maj. I. Ashburn, 1922, later TAMU public information officer and director, Former
Students Association
Also known as McQuillen House (from Horsley and others); E. E. McQuillen,
director, Development Fund
Park Place, 1102
Gerald L. Maffei (resident) owner
Erected 1891 (campus no. 224)
Sold 1942
Identification: is widely known as for some years the campus residence of F. E.
Giesecke, professor of architecture and university architect for many years both
before and after World War I; confirmed Owens, Jan. 16, 1986; Caroline Mitchell,
same date, etc.; also easily identifiable from old photos as one of five houses facing
campus drill field
Style: middle sized Queen Anne, originally with neo-classical pillars; under restoration
by present owner
Previous residents on campus:
F. E. Giesecke, 1933
Pershing, 101
Mrs. S. W. Bilsing (resident) owner
Erected 1899 (campus no. 420)
Sold 1941
Identification: According to Mrs. Bilsing, March 30, 1979, the house was moved from in
front of Duncan Hall on two railroad tracks to present location. The Bilsing’s had
lived in the house on campus, bought it, and then moved it. Mrs. Bilsing has lived
in the house since 1925.
Style: large Queen Anne with neo-classical features; well maintained in original form
Previous residents on campus:
C. E. Friley, 1918, dean, Liberal Arts
D. Scoates, 1920, head, Agricultural Engineering
S. W. Bilsing, 1925, head, Entomology
Suffolk, 315
Peggy Campbell Owens (resident) owner
Erected 1917 (campus no. 232)
Sold 1941
Identification: Mrs. Owens, Jan. 16, 1986, said that she was born in the house; her father
bought it and moved it; and that she has lived in the house from her birth to the
present—probably the only person to do so in a former campus house
Style: l bungalow, with some modifications after move
Previous residents on campus:
C. B. Campbell, 1917, head, Modern Languages
*Tauber, 415
Howard C. Nelson, 12410 Cobblestone, Houston, TX 77024, owner
Erected perhaps 1910-15-?; n o clear evidence as not sure where located on campus; this
dating is from design evidence
Sold probably 1953-54 (see Brazos County tax records, “Additions” 1954-57, Boyett
Subdivision, block 4, lots 9 and 10)
Identification: Purchased by Bardin nelson, Sr. and moved to Tauber, April 28, 1983;
remodeled by Wheeler Barger, professor of Economics and builder on the side;
Barger’s widow, Mabel, confirmed was a campus house but did not know location,
Jan. 27, 1986; Nelson said was not far from Guion Hall on campus, but could be any
one of several houses and not at all clear which
Style: cottage, considerably remodeled and modified since move
Previous residents on campus: ?
Texas Avenue, South, 3231
Mrs. W. M. Dowell, 2723 Fontana, Houston, TX 77043, owner
Erected 1909 (campus no. 405)
Sold 1952
Identification: Present owner, Mrs. Dowell, said on Feb. 3, 1986, that house was just east
of Guion Hall, facing west, and next to the Trigon building; only one house, no. 405
fits this description; it is also known by several as once a commandant of cadets’
house; Mr. Dowell was head tennis coach in the 1940s
Style: large Queen Anne with neo-classical features
Previous residents on campus:
O. F. Chastain, 1916, History; J. C. Nagle, 1917, dean, Engineering
Col. C. C. Todd, 1922; Col. F. H. turner, 1925
Col. C. JU. Nelson, 1927; Col. A. R. Emery, 1932
Timber, 205
Homer B. Adams (resident) owner
Erected 1917 (campus no. 146)
Sold 1941
Identification: identified by M. L. “Red” Cashion as his family’s residence on campus,
Feb. 3, 1986; described as next to surgeon’s house—only one house, no. 146, fits
that description
Style: American four-square, somewhat modified after move
Previous residents on campus: ? other than Cashions
Timber, 208
Raymond and Patricia R. Reed, P. O. Box 9863, College Station, TX, owner
Erected 1918 (campus no. 254)
Sold 1941
Identification: Mrs. Norman Anderson, widow of Presbyterian minister who bought the
house, identified it as 254, Jan. 23, 1986; confirmed by Peggy Campbell Owens,
Jan. 16, 1986, and by Caroline Mitchell, same date
Style: cottage
Previous residents on campus:
Capt. M. C. Funston, 1918
O. B. Wooten, 1918, head, TAMU military training schools in World War I
Bryan and Vicinity
FM Road No. 2223 (1.6 miles on this road after leaving Tabor Road; then turn left on Thurmon,
first driveway to right and considerable distance in; that is, in country about 2 miles north
of B.)
Dale B. Stringfellow (resident) owner
Erected 1899 (campus no. 412)
Sold probably in 1950s; date uncertain; house moved to this location from somewhere on
Jersey by Sam Pack in 1959; that is, moved at least twice according to present
owners with information from pack, Sept. 8, 1983
Identification: See information under “sold” just above; also identified by Dr. R. D.
Lewis, former head of the Agricultural Extension Service, as confirmed by Caroline
Mitchell, Jan. 16, 1986
Style: large Queen Anne with neo-classical features
Previous residents on campus:
R. D. Lewis, 1946, director AES
Pease, 508
James A. Daves (resident) owner
Erected 1911 (campus no. 413)
Sold 1948
Identification: well known as residence of Charles Puryear, dean of the College, TAMU,
and Acting President, 1914, as Puryear was one of few authorized by the university
board of directors to build his own house; he did so; it returned to university
ownership in 1940; confirmed by Caroline Mitchell on May 1, 1983 and others
Style: American four-square
Previous residents on campus: ? other than Puryear
Williamson, 107
Basil W. Long, Jr. (resident) owner
Erected 1911 9campus no. 248)
Sold 1942
Identification: by Morris Williamson, 4206 Chestnut St., Temple, TX 76502; he is son of
H. H. Williamson, former director of the Agricultural Extension Service, who lived
in this house on campus; described as on SW corner of block now occupied by the
Memorial Student Center; only one house, no. 248 was there; records show it once
occupied by Williamsons
Style: middle sized Queen Anne with neo-classical features; largely intact in original
form
Previous residents on campus:
H. H. Jobson, 1915; F. W. Bell, 1915 (Jobson given leave)
W. H. Broyler, 1917; R. L. Pou, 1920, dairy specialist on extension staff
H. H. Williamson, 1924 (see just above)
Appendix
Exhibit A – Letter from Dr. Frank Vandiver, President of TAMU.
Exhibit B – Map of College Station showing the campus quadrangle of interest here.
Exhibit C – 1938 map of TAMU central campus, showing most of the central quadrangle
together with locations of most of the numbered houses therein.
Exhibit D – 1914 map of the TAMU central campus, showing the numbered houses in existence
then.
Exhibit E – Current photographs illustrating the various styles of campus houses.
Exhibit F – Old photographs of the houses while on campus.
Exhibit G – The housing rules of 1913.
Exhibit H – Typical property records pertaining to campus houses, from the Fiscal Department,
TAMU.
Exhibit J – List of existing houses by campus number.
FOOTNOTES
1
The research reflected here could not have been possible without a great deal of
assistance. The members of the Brison Park Historical Committee, which I have chaired, were
especially helpful in establishing the initial listing of presumed former campus houses prepared
during 1983 and 1984. The members have been Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Breazeale, Sam M.
Cleland, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Dean, Dr. and Mrs. Harrison Hierth, W. Graham Horsley, Mr.
and Mrs. Timothy Keneipp, Bill D. Lancaster, Mrs. Peggy Campbell Owens, Dorothy Van Riper,
Mr. and Mrs. David Woodcock and Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Worley. For other support I am
especially indebted to Dr. Charles Schultz, TAMU Archivist and Paul Scott of his staff; Joe J.
Estill, Jr., and James Davidson of TAMU’s Physical Plant Department; Paul W. Stephens,
Manager of Physical Planning, TAMU; Ms. Ann Grady of TAMU’s Fiscal Department. Dr.
Rand Evans, president of Citizens for Historical Preservation, Brazos County, provided
encouragement and many copies of photographs. My political science colleague, Dr. Gary M.
Halter, also Mayor of College Station, has been most helpful beyond his formal sponsorship.
Other informants, interviewees, etc., to whom I am indebted are shown in the notes found with
the “List of Houses” which is part of this document.
2
The Brison Park Association’s sesquicentennial project to identify houses that have
been moved off the campus was officially approved by the Brazos County Sesquicentennial
Commission on Nov. 28, 1984, signed by Mary Evelyn White, Chairman.
3
The project was voted approval and encouragement by the Citizens for Historical
Preservation of Brazos County on Feb. 22, 1984.
4
See letter from Dr. Frank Vandiver, President of Texas A&M University, dated Jan. 31,
1986, and attached as Exhibit A in the appendix to follow.
5
The site presently favored is on Throckmorton Street on the main campus, near the only
remaining house erected prior to World War II.
6
See the College Station map attached as Exhibit B. Most of this area is shown on the
1938 TAMU map attached as Exhibit C.
7
For old photographs of the brick houses see photographs 2 and 3 in Exhibit F. For their
location on campus, see houses numbered 403, 407, 411, 415 and 419. For their destruction, see
the “Building Records,” TAMU Fiscal Department.
8
See the campus map of Jan. 4, 1914, attached as Exhibit D. The house numbers on this
map are those of 1919.
9
For the university enrollments, see Henry C. Dethloff, A Centennial History of Texas
A&M University, 1876-1976, 2 vols. (College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press,
1975), II, table p. 583.
10
For the directive establishing the original numbering system, see Minutes, Board of
Directors, TAMU, vol. 3, p. 59, Jan. 6, 1913 and p. 88, March 31, 1913. For the revised system,
with cross-references to the original system, see Minutes, Committee on Housing, p. 62, TAMU
Archives. For use of house numbers in a few examples of property records, see Exhibit H.
11
See the 1938 map, Exhibit C. There is some uncertainty about the total number of
houses on the campus in 1938, as the property records are in a very few cases incomplete or
manifestly incorrect or inconsistent; moreover, there are ten houses shown on the 1938 map for
which there appear to be no extant property inventory records.
12
See Exhibit E for current photographs illustrating the various styles of campus houses.
13
See Exhibit F for several old photographs of the houses while on campus.
14
See Minutes, 1913-1939, Committee on Housing, TAMU, University Archives.
15
For a copy of the housing rules of 1913, see Exhibit G. For their approval, see
Minutes, Board of Directors, vol. III, pp. 93-97, August 18, 1913.
16
Dethloff, op. cit., II, 449.
17
For sales data, see Property Records, Fiscal Department, TAMU.
18
Ibid.
19
For associates, see those listed in note 1 above, as well as those listed under the
“identification” headings in the following “list of houses.”
20
For a few typical property records for campus rent houses, see the examples in Exhibit
H.