It is
with regret we report the Harvest Tea, scheduled for Saturday, October 27,
2012, at the historic Abbott-Blakely-Chavis House in College Station, has been
cancelled due to poor ticket sales.
The
Brazos Heritage Society will consider holding a tea in the spring of 2013.
Persons
who purchased tickets have been notified of the cancellation, and refunds will
be made this week.
Heritage Brazos is the electronic newsletter of the Brazos Heritage Society. This publication, best viewed using Mozilla Firefox, will carry news items from the organization's newsletters, special notices, and other items of interest to its members.
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Resolution Honoring Brooks Cofer
On
September 3, 2012, Brooks Cofer, a longtime supporter of the Brazos Heritage
Society, passed away following a brief illness.
In recognition of Brooks’ many contributions to the community, on
September 24, 2012, the Society passed the following resolution.
BRAZOS
HERITAGE SOCIETY
RESOLUTION
WHEREAS, D.
Brooks Cofer, Jr., was born on May 13, 1922, in College Station, Texas.
WHEREAS, Brooks graduated from the Agricultural
and Mechanical College of Texas, where he was a member of the Corps of Cadets
and Editor-in-Chief of the Battalion.
WHEREAS, Brooks earned a law degree from
Washington and Lee University School of Law.
WHEREAS, Brooks served his country honorably in
the United States Army, both on active duty during World War II and its
aftermath, and in the U. S. Army Reserve, from which he retired as a Lt.
Colonel.
WHEREAS, Brooks practiced law in Brazos County
from 1953 to 2012; during that period he served as Assistant County Attorney
(1955-1960), County Attorney (1960-1969), and District Attorney (1969-1972). Commencing in 1972 Brooks went into private
practice, working tirelessly for the citizens of Brazos County and assisting
those in need.
WHEREAS, Brooks devoted countless hours
supporting various charities and community organizations.
WHEREAS, Brooks was a longtime supporter and
member of the Brazos Heritage Society.
AND WHEREAS, Brooks passed on to his final reward
on September 3, 2012, at the age of 90.
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, the Brazos Heritage
Society shall expend $225.00 to purchase a tree for Heritage Park in memory of
D. Brooks Cofer, Jr.
APPROVED by the Executive Committee
of the Brazos Heritage Society on this 24th day of September, 2012.
Nat
Hilliard
Nat
Hilliard, President
Friday, October 12, 2012
Harvest Tea Scheduled for October
On the afternoon of Saturday,
October 27, 2012, the Brazos Heritage Society will host Victorian teas at the
beautiful Abbott-Blakely-Chavis House, located at 701 Hereford Street in
College Station’s historic College Park neighborhood. There will be two seatings at the Harvest Tea,
the first at 1:00 PM and the second at 4:00 PM. Everyone is encouraged to wear their best hat;
awards will be presented.
The Abbott-Blakely-Chavis Home was built in 1934 in College Station’s historic College Park neighborhood. The original one-bedroom, one bath structure typified the modest style of construction promoted by New Deal legislation designed to increase the number of homeowners.
The first owners, John Paul and Virginia Abbott, had long ties to Texas A&M University. Virginia was the daughter of one of the earlier faculty members in the School of Agriculture. She married John Paul, who moved to College Station from Ohio in 1925 to teach English. He later became Chair of the Department of English, then Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences where he spent much of his career. After serving for a period as Provost, he retired after 50 years at Texas A&M University.
The home was purchased from the Abbotts by Dr. Craig Blakely and Karan Chavis in 1996. Dr. Craig Blakely is the Dean of the School of Rural Public Health which gives the house the unique distinction of having had deans as its owners. Karan Chavis is the Assistant Dean for Planning and Evaluation in the College of Medicine.
In the fourteen years they have owned the home, the Blakely-Chavis’s have significantly enhanced the property, adding comfort and functionality while preserving the historic charm and bountiful personality of the original residence.
The price of admission to the Harvest Tea is $40.00 per person, which includes a tour of the home. For reservations, please call Beverly Myers at (979) 229-9414. Tickets must be purchased in advance. Seating is limited so make reservations early.
Proceeds from this event will go to fulfilling the mission of the Brazos Heritage Society.
The Abbott-Blakely-Chavis Home was built in 1934 in College Station’s historic College Park neighborhood. The original one-bedroom, one bath structure typified the modest style of construction promoted by New Deal legislation designed to increase the number of homeowners.
The first owners, John Paul and Virginia Abbott, had long ties to Texas A&M University. Virginia was the daughter of one of the earlier faculty members in the School of Agriculture. She married John Paul, who moved to College Station from Ohio in 1925 to teach English. He later became Chair of the Department of English, then Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences where he spent much of his career. After serving for a period as Provost, he retired after 50 years at Texas A&M University.
The home was purchased from the Abbotts by Dr. Craig Blakely and Karan Chavis in 1996. Dr. Craig Blakely is the Dean of the School of Rural Public Health which gives the house the unique distinction of having had deans as its owners. Karan Chavis is the Assistant Dean for Planning and Evaluation in the College of Medicine.
In the fourteen years they have owned the home, the Blakely-Chavis’s have significantly enhanced the property, adding comfort and functionality while preserving the historic charm and bountiful personality of the original residence.
The price of admission to the Harvest Tea is $40.00 per person, which includes a tour of the home. For reservations, please call Beverly Myers at (979) 229-9414. Tickets must be purchased in advance. Seating is limited so make reservations early.
Proceeds from this event will go to fulfilling the mission of the Brazos Heritage Society.
Thursday, October 11, 2012
Exploring History Lunch Lecture Series Reminder
The
College Station Historic Preservation Committee and the Senior Advisory
Committee have developed an outstanding Exploring History Lunch Lectures Series
for 2012. Please join them on October 17, 2012, at the Aldersgate Church
as they present:
Hidden
Treasures of the Cushing Library
Featuring
Dr.
Mary Manning
The
luncheon is $5.00 per person and begins at 11:30 AM in the Aldersgate Church at
2201 Earl Rudder Freeway in College Station.
Parking
is available in the main lot to the south of the building. Enter through the main double doors, take a
left, and you will be directed to the meeting room. In case you are not familiar with this
facility, it is located just north of Academy, Gander Mountain, and Dickey’s,
on the frontage road between Southwest Parkway and Harvey Road.
Reservations
are required and must be made with Marci Rodgers, Senior Services Coordinator,
College Station Parks & Recreation Department, at mrodgers@cstx.gov or
by calling the Southwood Community Center at 979-764-6351.
Monday, October 8, 2012
Texas Insights
The
Texas State Historical Association, in cooperation with its partners, offers Texas Insights, an electronic newsletter
designed to share opportunities for Texas teachers and students while promoting
effective instructional practices.
The
October 2012 (Vol. III, Issue 2) edition of this electronic publication may be
read by going to: http://www.teachingtexas.org/enewsletter/october2012.
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Fall 2012 Issue of Riding Line now Available
Bill O’Neal of Panola College Appointed Texas State Historian;
Highlights of three books – Old Red: Pioneering Medical Education in Texas, by Heather Green Wooten; The Great Hanging at Gainesville, 1862: The Accounts of Thomas Barrett and George Washington Diamond, with an introduction and commentary by Richard B. McCaslin and L. D. Clark; and A Wild and Vivid Land: An Illustrated History of the South Texas Border, by Jerry Thompson;
Items available at www.Shop.TSHAonline.org;
Information about next year’s annual meeting of the Texas State Historical Association; and
Various educational endeavors.This issue of Riding Line may be accessed by going to the following link: http://www.tshaonline.org/sites/default/files/doc/ridingline/riding_line_-_fall_2012.pdf.
Sunday, September 30, 2012
Dedication Ceremony Held for Boonville Jail Marker
Members
of the Brazos Heritage Society and several community leaders were in attendance
at the Boonville Building at 2490 Boonville Road in Bryan on Friday, September
28, 2012, for the unveiling and dedication of the community historical marker
for the Boonville Jail. The Boonville
Building, owned by the Duncum family, is located on the site of the old jail.
Following
the introductions, Dan Beto, the Society’s Vice President, gave the
invocation. He was followed by Sheila
Fields, Research Chair for the Society, who provided background information on
the Boonville Jail and how the community marker became a reality. Henry Mayo, Chair of the Brazos County
Historical Commission, spoke next about some of the leaders of old Boonville
and offered words of thanks to the Society for taking the lead on this project.
Other
members of the Brazos Heritage Society present at this event included Treasurer
Beverly Myers and Judge Tom McDonald, Of Counsel.
Society
President Nat Hilliard welcomed everyone to the ceremony, and specifically
recognized County Judge Duane Peters and Bryan Mayor Jason Bienski.
Brazos Heritage Society Community Marker |
Justin
Duncum, speaking on behalf of his family, noted their interest in the Boonville
community and expressed their thanks to members of the Society who reached out
to them with the proposal to have a community marker on their property.
Following
the remarks, members of the Duncum family unveiled the marker.
Sheila Fields with members of the Duncum Family |
The Bryan-College Station Eagle was
represented by reporter Cassie Smith and award winning photographer Stuart
Villanueva; their coverage of this event, appearing in the September 30, 2012,
edition of the newspaper, may be found at this link: http://www.theeagle.com/news/local/article_3b6abcb8-22ec-5528-ab06-4e22ade22744.html.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Where in Brazos County? September Contest
The
Brazos Heritage Society has been conducting a monthly contest since March of
this year in which readers of Heritage
Brazos are asked to identify a structure or a location in Brazos
County.
Past and current members of
the Society’s Executive Committee are ineligible to participate.
In this
latest contest, readers are being asked to identify the item in the
accompanying photograph and its location.
Submissions may be sent to Dan Beto at dan.beto@gmail.com. The submission received by October 15, 2012,
with the greatest specificity will be declared the winner.
Friday, September 28, 2012
Fall Membership Meeting Held
On
September 27, 2012, members of the Brazos Heritage Society gathered at the Matthew Winsper Knobel Memorial Gazebo
in Heritage Park for the fall membership meeting and social.
Darrell Lovelette, Director of Bryan’s Parks
and Recreation Department, and Blaine Brezina, who is working on the Heritage
Park Master Plan as part of fulfilling the requirements to become an Eagle
Scout, discussed plans for the planting of trees in the foreseeable
future. Mr. Lovelette also responded to
questions about park maintenance issues.
It was noted the Society has received more than $1,100.00 in
contributions for the purchase of trees and Keep Brazos Beautiful has committed
to providing a number of trees as well.
President Hilliard provided a status report
on the Harvest Tea, scheduled for October 27, 2012, in the
Abbott-Blakely-Chavis House in College Station’s historic College Park
neighborhood. She also asked for
volunteers to assist with this event.
Prior
to and following the formal meeting members gathered
in the gazebo to enjoy a selection of delicious refreshments, to become better
acquainted with one another, and to learn more about the work of the Society.
After convening the meeting, President Nat
Hilliard called on Judge Tom McDonald, who provided a report on the Boonville
Historical Marker and an update on the Queen Theatre restoration.
Tom McDonald |
Darrell Lovelette and Blaine Brezina |
Beverly Myers, the Society’s Treasurer, reported
the Society was still awaiting word on a grant request to fund the restoration
of the Astin vintage clothes. She also
advised that some of the clothing would be featured in an exhibit at the Brazos
Valley Museum of Natural History.
On a final note, President Hilliard advised
the Society would participate in the Bryan Christmas Parade on December 14,
2012, and that the Society’s Christmas Stroll in Heritage Park and the East
Side Historic District will be held on December 15, 2012.
Sunday, September 16, 2012
Boonville Days Living History Fair 2012
Join
the Brazos Valley Museum of Natural History for the 7th Annual Boonville Days
Living History Fair on Saturday, October 6, 2012, at the Brazos Center, 3232
Briarcrest Drive in Bryan, Texas. This
event will take place from 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM.
This
year marks the 4th Annual Buffalo Stampede Half Marathon for 5K Race at 7:30
AM. In addition, there will be a Chuck
Wagon Cookoff.
Celebrate
the history of the Brazos Valley at Brazos County’s only living history fair.
For
more information about this event and much more, visit the following link: http://www.brazosvalleymuseum.org/.
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Where in Brazos County? August Contest Winner
On
August 26, 2012, the Brazos Heritage Society posted its sixth monthly photo
contest on Heritage Brazos, where readers of this electronic newsletter
were asked to identify a building and its location in Brazos County.
The announcement
for this particular contest may be viewed at the following link: http://heritagebrazos.blogspot.com/2012/08/where-in-brazos-county-august-contest.html.
The
person who was the first to correctly identify the location of this building,
which has been a store and a beer joint known for serving good hamburgers, was
Henry Mayo, a local surveyor, historian, and Chair of the Brazos County
Historical Commission. This building is
located at the intersection of Farm Roads 50 and 1687, in an area commonly
known as Mudville or Steele’s Store.
According
to the Handbook of Texas Online,
Mudville, also known as Steele’s Store, is located at the intersection of farm roads 50 and 1687, on the Southern Pacific Railroad eleven miles west of Bryan in far western Brazos County. The area was settled in the 1860s and became known as Mudville for the mud common to this floodplain of the Brazos and Little Brazos rivers. In 1878 a post office, called Steele’s Store, was opened in the store owned by Henry B. Steele, and the names Steele’s Store and Mudville seem to have been used interchangeably by local residents, with Mudville sometimes referring to the wider rural area served by the community. According to some sources the population was three-fourths black at this time. Many Italians were farming in the area. In 1884 Steele’s Store had an estimated population of 150 and two churches, three cotton gins, a steam gristmill, and two general stores. The community became a station on the Hearne and Brazos Valley Railway in 1891, and by 1896 claimed a population of 350. In 1904 a school for whites at Steele’s Store had sixty-eight pupils and one teacher. In 1930 the community comprised an estimated 300 inhabitants and fourteen businesses. In 1940 it had a church, a school, four businesses, and a number of scattered dwellings. The post office closed in 1950, and the school had consolidated with Bryan by the 1960s. In 1988 the community had a number of scattered dwellings and was designated Mudville on maps. In 1992, the Texas Historical Commission placed a historical marker at the site. [Mark Odintz, “MUDVILLE, TX,” Handbook of Texas Online, accessed September 15, 2012. Published by the Texas State Historical Association].
Congratulations, Henry. Arrangements will be made for you to receive
you prize.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Where in Brazos County? August Contest
Commencing
in March, the Brazos Heritage Society began conducting a monthly contest in
which readers of Heritage Brazos are
asked to identify a structure or a location in Brazos County.
In this sixth contest, readers are being asked to identify the building in the above photograph and its location. Submissions may be sent to Dan Beto at dan.beto@gmail.com. The submission received by September 15, 2012, with the greatest specificity will be declared the winner.
In this sixth contest, readers are being asked to identify the building in the above photograph and its location. Submissions may be sent to Dan Beto at dan.beto@gmail.com. The submission received by September 15, 2012, with the greatest specificity will be declared the winner.
The winner
of this contest will be provided a book – Historic
Brazos County.
16th Annual Alton C. Allen Historical Conference
Doug Kubicek, Chair of the Lavaca County Historical Commission
provides information about a conference that members of the Brazos Heritage
Society may have an interest.
On October 20, 2012, the Lavaca County Historical Commission and the Dickson-Allen Foundation will sponsor the 16th Annual Alton C. Allen Historical Conference at the
American Legion Hall in Hallettsville, Texas. This year the theme is The Texas
Rangers: The Frontier Battalion, 1874-1901. Three renowned
authors and experts on the Texas Rangers will be presenting papers and
answering questions from the audience – Harold Weiss, Chuck Parsons, and Paul
Spellman. The
Texas Ranger Museum from Waco is hosting a session in the afternoon dealing
with various topics from their archives.
Additional information about this training opportunity is available at this link: http://www.lavacacountyhistory.org/historical_commission.htm. Also available at this site is a registration form.
We thank
Henry Mayo, Chair of the Brazos County Historical Commission, for bringing this program to our attention.
Thursday, August 23, 2012
President’s Message, August 2012
It was great to see so many of the Society members
and a number of people new to this Independence Day celebration with us in
Heritage Park this year. There was so
much more to see and do. This did not
happen on its own, special thanks again goes to our hard-working Executive
Committee. Without them, we would not
have had all the exhibitors we did, all the silent auction items, the fabulous
cars and trucks, the flyers for advertising, or the patriotic programs handed
out at the Celebration. And, we
certainly don’t want to forget the time and effort spent on cooking, preparing,
and selling the hot dogs and popcorn, as well as slicing all those watermelons
for our enjoyment, and dispensing cold water and lemonade.
Many thanks also to all the Committee members
and volunteers who helped with our booths and lead the Children’s Parade. Way to go guys!
There
are several exciting things I want to report in this message:
- We plan to hold the unveiling and presentation of the Society’s Community Historic Boonville Jail Marker very soon.
- Cross your fingers, we submitted our grant proposal to the Astin Foundation for funds to help get the rest of the Vintage Astin Clothes restored for display. We should hear about this in early October.
- The Society now has a Facebook page; if you are a Facebook user, please search of “Brazos Heritage Society,” go to the Society’s page, and click “Like.”
- The plans for our Harvest Tea are coming together. I will talk more about this later in the newsletter.
- We are working on plans for a full membership meeting to be held sometime in September. More information about this event will be forthcoming.
- I would like to see the Heritage Society sponsor a float in Bryan’s Christmas Parade; we will definitely need volunteers to help with this.
- Last, but by no means least, we will be working on plans for a Christmas Stroll in Heritage Park and the East Side Historic District for December 15, 2012.
Let’s
talk a little bit about our Harvest Tea. We are so pleased to announce that this event
will be held in College Station’s Historic District this year, in the Abbott-Blakely-Chavis Home.
The Harvest Tea will be held on October
27, 2012, only, with two seatings, one at 1:00 p.m. and the other at 4:00 p.m. Each seating will accommodate 48 people, so
get your orders in early for tickets! The
owner of the home has graciously volunteered to arrange a tour of this historic
home after each seating. This tour will
be included in the price of the Tea Tickets, which will be $40.00 this year.
We made
our first appearance at the Historic Downtown Bryan First Friday event on
August 3rd. We handed out over 50 of the
Guide to Historic Brazos County
booklets, along with a short description of the Brazos Heritage Society and its
activities, and Brazos Heritage Society membership forms. We also got the chance to talk with some nice
folks who were strolling by. We would
like to continue to have a presence at the First Fridays, but we will need
volunteers to help us man the table for a couple hours each month.
We will
also have a booth at the Boonville Days Living History Fair at the Brazos
Valley Museum of Natural History on Saturday, October 6th. Our Treasurer, Beverly Myers, will be
demonstrating her quilt piecing skills and I will be demonstrating how butter
was made in old fashioned churns. We
also plan to sell some of our Boonville books.
If anyone is interested in helping with this booth please email me at nathilliard@verizon.net or
call me at 979-229-2468.
Nat Hilliard, President
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