Thursday, April 30, 2015

Weeks Mansion

      Photograph of the house as it looked between 1953 and 1968 while it served as offices for the American Trust Life Insurance Company. Archived at the Museum of North Texas History and Archives.

The marker on the front entryway reads:

A lawyer who made a fortune
during the oil boom in this area,
Fred Weeks (1888-1977) erected this
elegant home in 1924-26. Designed
by Kansas City architect J. F. Louck,
the mansion stood in the middle
of a 13-acre landscaped tract.
Local brickmason Walter McAbee
laid the specially made Kansas
bricks. The Weeks family often
hosted musical recitals here.
Two later owners, George F. LeBus
(1876-1956) and Charles H. Featherston
(1886-1969), were also oilmen.
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark

     In addition, a supplemental plate was installed beneath the Official Historical Building Medallion and interpretive plate for the Weeks Mansion, THC Order #5390, Wichita County that reads, simply, "Entered in the National Register of Historic Places."


    Eventually, Fred Weeks (13 September 1888 - 3 November 1977) and his family moved to Tyler, Texas, and sold the home to George F. LeBus (14 December 1876 - 29 December 1956). Charles Featherston (5 April 1886 - 27 February 1969) bought the house in 1946 who in 1949 sold it separately from its surrounding 12 acres to Earl A. Burch, who began the building's commercial use by establishing the Town Club, a restaurant. Then in 1953, Truman K. Pennell, a young businessman, used the house as the headquarters for the American Trust Life Insurance Company. John M. Hirschi purchased the building in 1968.

    Thanks to the work by John M. Hirschi in restoring the house to near-original condition, Mrs. E. E. Clack, then chair of the Wichita County Historical Commission pushed for a supplemental plate to be installed underneath the marker that said:

                                             John M. Hirschi restored the
                                                Weeks Mansion giving it
                                             a new role in the community.

     The proposed text was changed to:

                                       Restored by John M. Hirschi in 1977.

     The incise on the base with 1/4-inch lettering was approved by Truett Latimer. Alas, the mention of the restorer apparently met with disapproval from others.
 
     At the time of the proposal for a marker, E. E. Clack -- Katherine Y. Clack, the chair of the Wichita County Historical Commission, proposed to have the inscription "John M. Hirschi restored the Weeks Mansion in 1977, giving it a new role in the community," included on the plaque, or otherwise included on the wall of the building in homage of Mr. Hirschi. She writes, "[ . . . ] the work of Mr. Hirschi is so outstanding and sacrificial on his part, as well as significant to the community that he deserves special recognition." The reply from the Director of Research of the Texas Historical Commission explained that "[ . . . ] restorers are absolutely not mentioned on historical markers unless they have owned the property at least twenty-five years."  

     In an interview, Hirschi noted that "The real struggle for anyone thinking of restoring an old building like this is trying to find a viable usage -- one that will create enough revenue to keep the owner from having to tear it down. Ideas, concepts and management are important in determining what type business will succeed, but what will make or break it is community support." From the article, "Former Weeks Mansion listed on national historic register," published on March 3rd, 1981 by the Wichita Falls Times. While under his ownership, the house was renovated and then hopped with restaurants and an antique mall.

    * * *

    I typed below the article published on January 7th, 1938, by the Wichita Falls Record News that tells the story of the second owners:

    "LeBus Family, 'Plain Folks,' Make Green Acres Home
 
          The captions for these photos archived at the Museum of North Texas History and Archives say: "At top, beginning at left are Fred Weeks, original owner and builder of "Green Acres"; Mrs. George F. LeBus and Mr. LeBus, new owners of the palatial residence and grounds. Mr. And Mrs. LeBus will move here from Longview. 
    Below is a view of the mansion looking through the northeast gate, from Harrison Street."

      Wichita's Gain Counted Loss for Longview

     "Wichita Falls' gain is Longview's loss as a balance is restored to the scales that weigh community achievement.
     Another former resident of Wichita county is returning to the point of beginning again, pinning his faith on the future of the KMA oil field.
     George F. LeBus, who left Electra a few years ago to enter competition in the East Texas oil field at Longview, made his return to this area auspiciously significant when he purchased the baronial home of Fred Weeks, former Wichita Falls attorney, for the reputed sum of $70,000.

    13-acre Estate
    'Green Acres,' the name by which the estate is known to Wichitans, covers an expanse of 13 acres on Harrison avenue in southwest Wichita Falls. the construction of the home is of brick reinforced concrete, towering three stories and supplied with 19 rooms and six bathrooms.
    Designed by J. F. Louck of Kansas City, construction of the mansion required more than two years, completed in 1927, and was supervised by the original owner, Mr. Weeks. The architecture is English colonial. An ornamental iron fence surrounds the grounds on which are, in addition to the luxurious home, tennis courts, tea house, greenhouse, rose arbor, rose garden, lily ponds, fountain and a four-car garage over which are comfortable quarters for two servants and laundry room.

     Mr. and Mrs. LeBus left Wichita Falls early Thursday morning, bound for the happy fishing territory of Don Martin Lake in Old Mexico below Laredo.

    LeBus 'Young Man'
    One of the youngest semi-elderly men of the state, LeBus has kept his physical being in condition with constant outdoor work and play, depending upon fishing, hunting, golf and other sports for his sunshine and fresh air. All the nine LeBus children, all married and the entire congregation of 19 grandchildren, along with Mrs. LeBus, are consecrated to the proposition of spending as much time as possible in the open and all are healthy in body, wealthy accomplishments and wise to what life bestows.
    LeBus prides himself and wife upon the fact that they are 'common people,' looking ahead with youth, always associating with young people and, consequently, they have remained young in body, spirit and mind. "As a man thinketh," Mr. LeBus quoted, explaining his tendency to remain young, "so is he."
    LeBus is thrilled with the prospects of the Wichita Falls area. He says there is a lot of business here and will soon be opening his office in Wichita Falls, having under his control 1,200 acres in the heart of KMA field to insure drilling of at least 120 wells. He believes this territory is in for a long reign of prosperity.

    'A Lot of Living'
    Mrs. LeBus said Thursday that it "'takes a lot of living in a house to make it a home' and the LeBus family has always been of that contention and intends to do a lot of living.'"
   But the LeBuses didn't buy Green Acres with the expectation of diverting it to modern 'society' channels. They like to be able to walk down the street and be known by those they meet, and the older they get the less transplanting from one community to another is their collective aim. Their gate will be unlocked to any and all of their friends; the front door will forever remain ajar, they said.
    Green Acres will be reconditioned and renovated immediately. There'll be a 'house warming' early  in the spring.
    'Wichita Falls has gained a real asset,' Weeks declared Thursday, 'in the LeBus family. Three is not better family alive. They are good, Christian people, being members of the Christian church and they'll be active in things beneficial.

     Drilled Extension
    'LeBus really drilled the actual extension of the KMA field,' Weeks said. 'He superintended the putting down of the well that is responsible for the present activity in the field when he drilled the Lewis well, sometimes known as the South LeBus, southwest of KMA proper. He has 1,200 acres in the heart of the field. Soon a LeBus machine shop will be erected because LeBus builds one wherever  he is engaged. He has shops at Talco, Greggton, and Turnerville now.'
    A peculiar quirk has bobbed up to interest the LeBus' lately. LeBus was born and raised in Flora, Ill., near the site of the recent oil field in that state. He came to Texas to find his fortune in 'black gold' only to learn that it was waiting for him in his own backyard. Mrs. LeBus is a native Texan.
    Weeks left here in 1931, moving to Tyler. He has enjoyed a complete comeback. Never, he says, has there been a greater bunch of lawyers than those here and his residence elsewhere has given him the opportunity  to make comparisons---Wichita Falls' attorneys lead that field. His plans will shape up within the next three or four months and it won't be at all surprising to meet Fred Weeks returning to Wichita Falls to make his home.
     The LeBus children include Frank of Longview, father of Frank, Jr., who was a whirlwind backfield star on the star championship Loboes this past year; Mrs. Homer Griswold [NOTE: Someone underlined the name Griswold and then scribbled on the page the word, Grizzle.] of Longview; Mrs. Bennett Nance, Kerryvile; Jack, Longview; Mrs. Paul Brilby, Talco [NOTE: Another scribble shows Brilby is underlined and next to it is written in longhand the word Bilbry.]; Roy, owner of the Electra Chevrolet company; Mrs. Laura Dietrich, George F. Jr., and Mrs. W. J. Sheldon, the latter three live at home.
    The former Weeks home was planned with great care. The reception room, the enormous studio living room and the library, all on the first floor, are paneled in walnut. The sun room has a tile floor with the ceiling in fresco. The great kitchen is black and white tile, as is the large breakfast room.
    A beautiful winding stairway leads to the mezzanine living room and on the third floor are the bedrooms, each artistically canvassed. The master bedroom is on the second floor. Each bedroom in the house has its individual bath."
 
* * *

     The nomination form, dated September 15, 1980, for the National Register of Historic Places was prepared thoroughly by J. W. Strong, Researcher/Consultant, Austin, Texas, using F. D. Monahan, Jr.'s description of the house as his major reference. Bring yourself a cup of tea because it is lengthy and quite an experience to read Monahan's narrative:

    "The Weeks' House, 2112 Kell Boulevard, is a generously proportioned and stately mansion built during the 1920s for a wealthy Wichita Falls lawyer. Unmistakably revivalistic in concept, the Weeks' mansion derives its symmetry and ornamental vocabulary largely from the Renaissance, to a lesser extent from Tudor England. It is a two-wing, central portico building, 2 1/2 stories in elevation with symmetrical massing on two fronts. Vitrified brick sheathes load-bearing masonry walls twenty inches thick. A multi-hipped, slate roof, now turned green with age, contrasts with the red brick and white trim of the exterior. Three brick chimneys with decorated crowns pierce the roofline. The house is basically U-shaped in plan, but all facades exhibit irregularities on this plan. Fenestration varies in both size and ornamentation from facade to facade.
   
     On the front or east face, terraced stone steps ascend gently to the dominant feature, a handsome three-bay stone portico with four pairs of columns carrying simple entablature. It combines round Doric columns flanked by square pilasters and has recently been veiled by tinted glass. The portico arches are flat; slightly projecting beyond the flanking arches, the central arch is crowned with a segmental pediment and crest. A single front door is tucked beneath the portico and framed by a round arch with fanlight and sidelights. Two Palladian arched windows flank the front door and appear to be the same size as the door. At the second level, the single-story portico supports a balcony with a combination stone and iron railing. Three previously shuttered doors visually reinforce the three-bay portico below. These doors are surmounted at the roof by three hipped dormers.
   
     Symmetrical paris of shuttered, casement windows flank the portico at both levels. The 8/16 windows of the ground floor are further ornamented with stones sills and keystones whereas the 4/16 windows of the second story are adorned with only the sill. This large shuttered, casement window also appears on the south and north facades.
   
     The strong horizontality of the Weeks' House is emphasized repeatedly on the east facade by a variety of elements: a string course of flat stones dividing upper story from lower; wide, louvered green shutters surrounding the windows, plain quoins on the lower floor; bracketed cornice with paneled frieze under the soffitts; and iron railings on two pairs of semi-circular balconies projecting from the second story wing windows.

     Curiously, the north facade, rather than the main (east) face, is the most highly decorative facade of the building. Here, the architect drew heavily on classical motifs to increase the dramatic effect of the dominate feature, a one-story carriage entrance. It, too, has a hipped slate roof, but unlike that of the house, the carriage roof is low-pitched. The carriage entrance is adorned with pilasters and two arched openings which in massing, proportion and detail are reminiscent of Roman triumphal arches. Two pairs of columns carrying a simple entablature support each stone arch. The outermost columns are square with square capitals while the inner pair is round with Ionic capitals. Sheltered beneath the porte cochere is an eight-paneled, single door with semi-elliptical fanlight and sidelights. Above the carriage entrances rises a projecting gable which is pierced by a circular window at roof level and three small, single unit windows at the second story. Four massive piers support the entrance, and overhanging foliate ironwork ornaments its vehicle entrance and exit.

     Dominating the other elements of the south facade is a two-story bay window with inset cut stone decoration at roof level. The windows of the bay are ornamented by stone framework and are shaded by modern awnings. The bay window is juxtaposed alongside a one-story Tudor bow window with crenellated parapets and a three-window, double hung 8/12 unit, also framed in stone.

     The west facade, like the east facade, is reached by steps leading to a terrace. The centered, double back door is set into a two-story bay window glazed with stained glass. The other two doors of the west facade are crowned by broken triangular pediments supported by brackets. Stone sills emphasize the single unit, double hung, 8/8 ground floor windows and the 16/16 second story windows.

    The interior of the house was planned with formal living, entertaining and dining areas on the ground floor, sleeping and sitting quarters of the second and utility and recreational space in the basement. After the house was completed, additional entertaining space, including a living room and ballroom, was carved out of the basement. The kitchen, breakfast, two stairwells, conservatory, dining room and solarium occupy the south wing, ground floor. The formal entrance hall, music room and formal stairwell occupy the 'curve' of the U-plan while the south wing holds a library, two bathrooms, study and stairwell. Upstairs, in addition to bathrooms, sitting and sleeping quarters, a mezzanine overlooks the formal entrance hall and music room. There are 15,000 square feet in the house.



    Contrasting with a relatively restrained exterior, the interior exhibits a varied and sumptuous use of finishing materials and detail. The floors on the ground and second floors are hardwood except in the kitchen, bathrooms and solarium, which are tile. Dark-stained, two and three-tiered, Italian walnut paneling is copiously used for the walls of several ground floor rooms, including library, entrance hall and dining room. Dramatic stained glass windows two stories in elevation complement the walnut wainscoting and plaster walls in the music room. The walls in the stairwell are also wainscoted and plastered. Plaster sheathes the study, mezzanine and solarium walls. Ceilings of the ground floor are either plaster, cast plaster or paneled walnut.



     Two of the three ground floor fireplaces are in original condition. A third fireplace, located in the dining room, has been reconstructed after damage sustained from a 1978 fire. Faced with glazed tile, the library fireplace is green marble, as is its hearth. Paneled walnut pilasters flank the fireplace. The spectacular music room fireplace, mantel and overmantel of highly ornate cast plaster, is faced with glazed ceramic tile and has a Tudor-arched opening which is framed with pairs of tapered pilasters and ornamented with a cartouche. A heavily moulded mantle supports a figured and foliated over mantle with six fluted pilasters, in turn carrying an elaborate entablature.



     Containing the formal stairwell and mezzanine is a continuous wood andiron stair rail, which is ornamented with painted floral decorations in classical style. Brass hardware on windows and some doors is original. Wood trim and fluted colonnettes define an elegant triple-arched display case at the landing of the formal stairwell.



     The solarium originally had a tiled water fountain and hand painted designs on its walls. The latter have been obscured by later generation-paintings.

    Except for several reconstructed shutters, the exterior of the Weeks' House is basically unaltered. the interior has undergone some modification during its lifetime, much of which was returned to original status during the 1973 Hirschi restoration. The ground floor bathrooms have been modernized, and the kitchen has been enlarged by an extension into the pantry. All light fixtures, with one exception, are the 1920-style replacements of 1950 fluorescent fixtures. Some doors in the entertainment area were removed during the 1950s but have been replaced with French doors matching the originals.

     Upstairs, the master bath has been converted to a bar, but its original sky light is intact. Some walls and closets have been roomed, and the ceilings in several bedrooms and sitting rooms were lowered during the 1950s to accommodate air conditioning. In most of those cases, the original ceilings above are intact.

     The property was originally part of a 12-acre tract but has been reduced to less than one acre in area. There are a few parking places on the east, north and south sides of the property.



     With its revivalistic tendencies, grandiose scale and remarkable interior, the Weeks' House -- like The Breakers in Newport, Rhode Island -- is a notable example of Second Renaissance Revival architecture in America. The Weeks' House also drew on Tudor England for some of its ornamental detail. Few buildings in Texas exhibit interiors designed as elegantly as this mansion. Excellently preserved and solidly constructed of the finest materials available at the time, the house reflects a socially fluid and economically bumptious environment as well as a Texas lawyer's aggressive rise to affluence and influence in Wichita Falls. The families who resided there all made fortunes through the  oil industry; thus, the structure records the opulent lifestyle of the small but enormously influential class of American society. Today the Weeks' House is hemmed in by modern apartments and a freeway. Even so, it stands as an extravagant reminder of a boomtown period in Wichita Falls' history.

     Like others before him, notably Cornelius Vanderbilt who built The Breakers, J. Fred Weeks of Wichita Falls and architect J. F. Louck of Kansas City chose to revive the Renaissance image and vocabulary for the Weeks' family residence. Renaissance principles of symmetry and harmony naturally impart respectability and prestige on a social level. This style was ideally suited to the social aspirations of wealthy men like Weeks and Vanderbilt before him. Though The Breakers is certainly a more elaborate and precise statement of the Second Renaissance Revival than is the Weeks' House, the two mansions share some features, including classical symmetry, detailing and articulation of their main facades.

     Fred Weeks made at least two fortunes, largely from the North Texas oil boom. With part of the first, he built his home in Wichita Falls. Trained to practice law, he became a famous trial and criminal lawyer specializing in oil and gas interests. Weeks was also active in real estate development, as well as civic and philanthropic affairs, in Wichita Falls. One of the early and active supporters of the Spudder's professional baseball team, he and his brother Henry donated substantial park land to the city. Weeks Park is named for them.

     The Weeks were active in social and cultural affairs. Mrs. Katie Lou Avis Weeks, in particular, was vitally interested in music. She used her home, clearly designed for entertainment purposes, for many musically and socially prestigious concerts. Her keen interest in landscape gardening was demonstrated by her designs for the acreage that originally surrounded the mansion and by the early landscaping of Weeks' Park. After living in the mansion for only five years, Weeks lost his fortune in 1931. He and his family moved to Tyler where he built up a second fortune, again by practicing law in an oil- and gas-rich economy.

     In 1938, the house sold to George F. LeBus and family. LeBus was a mechanical genius who made his fortune by developing innovation oil drilling equipment. From machinery invention, LeBus developed profitable interests in oil exploration and drilling in Texas and the Southwest. Charles H. Featherston purchased the house in 1946. Featherston was first a rancher, then an oil entrepreneur, drilling the second production well in the Burkburnett field. Other business interests included real estate development and insurance, both highly lucrative endeavors for Featherston. Like Weeks, he was a civic leader in Wichita Falls, and in Oklahoma as well.

     Since 1949, the Weeks House has been used for commercial ventures. That year it was sold separately from its 11.2 surrounding acres. Apartments were built on the acreage and the house was converted to use as a private dining club. The mansion later housed an insurance company, followed by an education service center and a small theater group in the basement. Its current owner, who with a team of professionals restored the house to near-original condition in 1973, today leases the upper floors as a mini-mall of exclusive boutiques and the basement as a restaurant."

    * * *

   An article published by the Wichita Falls Times on February 2, 1975, reports the opening of the Gatsby Club, a restaurant with a 1920s theme.

    "The Gatsby . . .nostalgia personified

     The Gatsby is probably the city's best known example of restoration or more specifically, preservation.

     Its walls today are reverberating with the laughter and music of a new generation -- but coincidental with the Charleston rhythm and gaiety of the '30s when the famed Weeks Mansion was in its heyday.

    The Gatsby, located at 2000 Harrison, was opened two years ago as a private club and restaurant by John Hirschi, a Wichita Falls realtor, as the latest renovation to the mansion since it was built in 1925 by Fred Weeks, wealthy attorney and oil man.

    Just recently it was acquired by the Trade Winds Motor Hotel and is under management of Burl Kirkland. The Gatsby will remain as a club, but with something to be added for the public.

     The imposing mansion is said to have cost a half million dollars to build and its 20-inch thick masonry walls, 11 fireplaces, most of them Italian marble, 9 bathrooms, winding staircase, huge ballroom and individual balconies will attest to that.

    The house has Italian walnut woodwork, exquisite chandeliers, leaded glass windows and many other features that give it a character definitely reflecting a bygone era.

    Ben Hoaldridge, assistant manager of The Gatsby, talked about the newest plans for this elegant showplace.

    The Gatsby is going public with its restaurant, The Ritz. The main floor restaurant will be open to the public for dining. a charcoal broiler and prime rib carving area is under construction now. These new facilities will be located in what was the original front entrance to the ballroom. (Guests now enter through the door from the portico.)

    The second floor, game rooms and bars will be for private members only.

    The mansion has been well preserved all these 50 years. Construction is said to have taken more than two years when it was built on the original 13 acre lot. It has been kept intact since 1931 when Weeks left Wichita Falls to make his home in Tyler.

    Among businesses which have occupied the building have been an insurance company, the Town Club in the 1950s, Region IX Education Center, and more recently, the Backdoor Players.

    The Gatsby took its name from F. Scott Fritzgerald's novel, "The Great Gatsby," a story of wealth and power with a 1920s setting, and it doesn't take much imagination to envision this mansion as a replica of Jay Gatsby's original showplace. The decor is in a 1920s theme.

    Many of the original light fixtures have remained, including the intricate brass one, discovered in the basement and rehung over the main dance floor. Other fixtures and furnishings are originals from this era -- which was the intent of interior designer, Barbara Thompson when she decorated The Gatsby.

    'We acquired most of the furnishing in the Wichita Falls and North Texas area. In the 'Lucky Lindy' game room, for example, all the Lindburgh poster and memorabilia were bought from a collector.
    The old signs throughout the Gatsby are original ones and the many photographs of automobiles and scenes are from Wichita Falls,' she said.

     A ceiling fan, barber pole and hanging planter buckets are features of the Yellow Roadster Bar, while church pews, old books and other accessories are reminders of the past. Round oak tables, odd early-day chairs are used throughout also.

    The menu goes right along with the decor also, while other rooms in the mansion are The Veranda, a dining area with a garden atmosphere, the Bathtub Bar, the Library for private dinner parties and the Flapper Disco where contemporary music is played.

    The disc jockey stand was designed from head and foot boards of a Victorian bed.

    Hoaldridge says all of the fireplaces are working in the mansion with three of them used in the winter -- and along with candlelight certainly add atmosphere to the club.

    Entering The Gatsby is like a nostalgic step into the past as well as an example of what can be accomplished in preserving our heritage."

* * *
     The Weeks' House is the first home in Wichita Falls to receive both a listing on the National Register and a Texas Historical Marker. The brief ceremony was held on June 2, 1979, with John M. Hirschi doing the unveiling of the marker. Later in the day, string ensemble entertained the guests of the open house.

    Thus ends the file about the marker for the Weeks' House.


Sunday, April 12, 2015

Initial Focus on Electra

    While at the Archives I follow alphabetically my study of the markers, and would rather continue such an organized approach, I pounced today upon the opportunity to journey to Electra, breaking my methodical study. Such exuberance put me before each of the markers mentioned below without having studied any information about them. I hardly knew where to find them, who made them possible, and barely their relevance. So this post merely relates the cursory glimpse that each marker gives us, while we wait until I return to the Archives to open each file, sure to find a deeper meaning to each of them.
   
    I uploaded some of these photographs to the Wichita County Historical Commission's web site, sans GPS coordinates, which are forthcoming after verification. In addition, disappointed in my photography, I do plan to return for better pictures.

    A blogger who dabbles in photography would enjoy today's outing. Stormy skies brooded over Wichita County, providing an interesting background, while across the rolling plains, flowers bloomed in yellows, purples, and blues. My only disappointment was my choice of settings on my camera: Auto. My thoughts are to return to Electra's historical markers and do a better job at photographing them, but how to stage again the stormy skies in the background and the lovely bluebonnets in the foreground? Lesson learned.

    John drove while I strained to spot the markers, which, ultimately, appeared easily. Not until the very last one did I relax a bit and decide that for our next marker search outing, I will not strain so hard. Markers in and south of Electra are marked by large brown signs posted by the side of the road.

   One marker we did not find was the Kadane Discovery Well, but then, we left that one marker for later, since I could not remember which oil marker one of the companies damaged, and that now sits safely in the sheriff's office, waiting for us to replace the post upon which it stands.

    Walking around Electra is a surprise in that it sparks my imagination. What was that town like during the 1920s when the buildings were recent, the economy good, and vaudeville playing at the Grand Theatre? How grand it must have been!

The Grand Theatre in Electra.

The marker reads:

Electra's population surge in the 1910s led
local business leaders to hire Meadow &
Wolfe of Fort Worth to design a theatre to
accommodate the town's growing
entertainment needs. It opened here in 1920
and featured vaudeville, operas, boxing and
other events. It included an orchestra pit
which later housed an organ and piano for
silent movies. It has been both a movie house
and performing arts venue. The Grand's 
eclectic design features mission and 
classical elements done with emphasis on
fancy and fantasy. Panels with swags and
piers frame a vault motif.
Recorded Texas Historical Landmark - 2006

                                               Located at 114 North Waggoner in Electra.

    Around the corner, a young woman parks her car on the curb in front of an old building. Well, "old building" in Electra sounds redundant. All the buildings are old and historic. This particular building at which she parked her car was the Electra State Bank, a building with a historical marker. She carries in her hand an envelope, walks toward the building, and slips it into the night deposit slot.
   
Night deposit box for the Electra State Bank.

Electra State Bank. On the outside column to the right of the door, we can see the marker.


The marker reads: 

Building erected 1908, the
first brick structure in
Electra. Occupied 1908-1911
by Waggoner Bank 1911-1931
by First State Bank, since 
1931 by Electra State Bank.
   Remodeled in 1952, using
original foundations and
walls.
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark - 1966

Located on the corner of North Main and West Cleveland, 101 West Cleveland, in Electra.

     Life continues to thrive in the small town of Electra. People still need to go to their jobs, do their banking, grocery shopping, and other relevant activities. In the meantime, they celebrate the structures that reflect the lives of the people of the past.

     Driving south on Highway 25, we come upon Farm Road 2326 and turn to the west, and about a mile down a road flanked by lush green fields and growth, we find the Beaver Creek Cemetery.

Gate to the cemetery.


The front of the marker says:

To the memory of the Circuit Riders and 
early settles, who established the homes - the 
camp meeting ground - the church - the school
and the cemetery of the Beaver Creek community -
this monument is affectionately and gratefully dedicated.
     Their courage was reflected in the glow of
their campfires. Their faith and industry tamed
an untamed land. Their love and devotion to 
Almighty God pointed us Heavenward on that 
upward path that leads to the Great Divide.


The back of the memorial marker says: 

TO THE PIONEER CIRCUIT RIDERS

THE REVERENDS

      J. W. Campbell      S. O Gafford       I. N. Crutchfield
D. J. Powell          A. B. Trimble      C. C. Davis
       J. T. Hosmer          L. G. Rogers       F. L. McGeehee 
 A. P. Smith            T. J. Minnis          E. H. Coburn
 Casey                   C. C. Williams    T. E. Cannon
                                                         G. R. Slagle  

   Some people find taking pictures of flowers, in this instance bluebonnets, a bit hackneyed. Not me. I love it. And the more hackneyed the better. It is a joy to see the countryside blanketed by flowers.

Located on Farm Road 2326, about a mile west of State Highway 25.

    Continuing our drive to the south on Highway 25, we search for the Old Buffalo Road marker. It is a sad marker for me, for it shows the struggles of the people back then, natives and pioneers. And for the bison, too.


(About 100 Yards to the West)
    Named for its traffic in buffalo hides and bones,
this North Texas road gave subsistence to pioneers
while aiding in mass "harvest" of the American Bison.
As long as buffalo survived (providing food, shelter
and clothing) the Indians were lords of the plains.
Recognizing this, the authorities encouraged hunting.
Harvested hides were taken to market over this road.
     The buffalo and Indians gone, permanent settlers
arrived. In adverse years (while a man tried to get
a start at farming, ranching or storekeeping), bones
were salvaged and sold for grocery or seed money.
     The old road was route of hundreds of wagons
taking buffalo hides to market before 1878 and
hundreds of wagon taking bones to Wichita Falls
and Henrietta before 1890. The road came east from
the plains, near south line of Foard and Wilbarger
counties to guide the mound; then three miles east (near
this marker) and south to Wichita River bridge, then
to the county line three miles west of Holliday.
Next it passed the north edge of Holliday, and south
of Lake Wichita, then crossed at the old Van Dorn
crossing five miles south of Jolly. Pioneers also
called it "Great North" Road or "Good Creek" Road. it
proved invaluable to economy and mapping of the area. 
                                                                                        (1970)

Looking to the south from the location of the marker.

Behind the marker, sitting in the field, a parked work-over rig ready for work in the oil field. 

Find the Old Buffalo Road marker on Highway 25, approximately twelve miles south of Electra.

    At Kadane Corner, passing by Kathy's cafe where they serve nice sandwiches and coffee, we gave only a lazy search for the oil field marker. I could not remember which oil marker was sitting safely in the sheriff's office after a company damaged the post upon which it stood. Hence, we decided we would search for that information (and the marker) later. Then, not seeing it, we drove to Valley View. There, in front of a church, we spot the Van Dorn Trail historical marker. 


                            (One Mile North)
     First important wagon road in Wichita County.
Blazed by brevet major (later General) Earl Van Dorn
in September 1858 with 200 men of the crack 2nd 
U. S. Cavalry. Just ahead of him went young L. S. "Sul"
ross (Governor of Texas 1887-91, and President of 
Texas A&M College 1891-98) with 100 Indian Scouts
from the Brazos Reservation. Loyal Tonkawa Chief
Placido guided Ross and his party.
     After opening the trail, Van Dorn camped on Otter
Creek, in present Oklahoma, for over a year. He routed
the Comanches in a battle near Rush Springs (70 mi. E.),
although he and Ross were wounded in the fighting.
     In 1859 Van Dorn won another decisive victory
over the Comanches in Ford County, Kansas. Famous
persons in this battle were Kirby Smith (later a  
noted Confederate General) and Fitzhugh Lee (later
Governor of Virginia). They had recently ridden up
the west branch of the trail. the 15 Army wagons
which brought supplies to the men leveled a trail
much used by pioneer settlers who came afterward.
     The trail ran from Fort Belknap, near Newcastle,
Texas, to Camp Radziminski on Otter Creek, north of
Frederick, Oklahoma. At Van Dorn Crossing the road
branched off to Montague County for supplies.
                                                                                 (1969)

    Just up the road, we come upon the Valley View High School, a grand building but in decay.



   Area families established the Denny and Jones Dale schools in 1897. In 1918, the schools combined, and J. A. Kemp and R. S. Allen sold land to the trustees of Wichita County School No. 6 at this site to build the Valley View School. The next year, oil discovered in the Kemp-Munger-Allen (KMA) filed brought many new residents. in 1924, the completion of lakes Kemp and Diversion, and the creation of a farm irrigation district, influenced even more growth. Two years later, with 325 students in grades one through eleven, the school opened a larger building, and voters created the Valley View Independent School District in 1928. Local African American students attended school at the  Wichita County Rural Colored School, which operated on the Munger Farm from 1925 to 1942.
     In the 1930s, the Valley View School student population increased, peaking in the 1937-38 school year with nearly 600 students. The district added new buildings as needed, including a second brick structure completed as a federal project in 1942. In the 1950s, however, with the mechanization of farming and decline in the oil industry, the area's population began decreasing. The Eagle Bend School merged into the Valley View district in 1956, and although it completed new facilities in 1968, the district consolidated with Iowa Park in 1970. The Iowa Park  Consolidated Independent School District utilized former Valley View facilities for several years, but most have since been dismantled. The significance of the Valley View school continues, though, in the lives of those who were students here over the years.
                                                                                                                    (2004)

The front of Valley View High School.


    The text on the marker and the beautiful architecture of the building reflect the devotion of the community in teaching culture and education to their youth. I can hear the pride and melancholy in my friend Gary Jones' inflection when he tells me that he attended the Valley View School. 
     
 Located on Arkansas Lane, just north of Farm Road 1206 and the Van Dorn Trail marker.

Thursday, April 9, 2015

Booker T. Washington

   
     Image engraved on a memorial that sits next to the marker commemorating Booker T. Washington school.

     After a lengthy hiatus during which I finished another project, I returned to the Archives. The clock ticks as I open carefully the Historical Commission's file on the marker for Booker T. Washingon's school.
   
     Brenda Jarrett began work toward installing the marker in 2003. Jarrett was born in Alabama, then moved to Wichita Falls for the Air Force. She attended the school from 1962 to 1968.  In 1994, Jarrett founded the Youth Opportunities Center, was recognized by the Texas House of Representatives, and in 1995 was awarded the Golden Eagle Award by US Attorney Paul Coggins; then, in 2014, was named Wichitan of the Year.

Photograph by Torin Halsey of Brenda Jarrett during the celebration for Wichitan of the Year, published by the Times Record News, June 20th, 2006.


      Jarrett in 2005 related the story about the marker:

                               Booker T. Washington High School Historical Marker

     The Wichita County Historical Commission, Wichita County Archives, and the Booker T. Washington Alumni Association and Community Archives, Inc. seek to have the property bound on the north and south by Flood and Woods Streets, and on the east and west by Rosewood and Redwood Streets designated and marked as an Official Texas Historical Site.

     The aforementioned parcel of real estate, located on the east side of Wichita Falls, is the location where the Negro children were educated in the segregated Wichita Falls Public School System from 1921 until the school district's compliance with federal legislation that required the integration of all of America's public school systems.

     For many years, the location of both the Booker T. Washington High School and the Booker T. Washington Elementary School on Flood Street were the heart of the east side community. The many businesses and organizations were as "spokes" on wheels to which the Washington Schools were the central hub. Through the years the Booker T. Washington schools and many students have received recognition in academics, athletics, choir, band, and other areas.
                                                                ***
     The history of how the Booker T. Washington Schools evolved is rich and proud. The earliest reference to educating Negroes in the Wichita County Record book refers to "the election in 1886 of Cora Robinson, a Colored, to teach in the colored school." A fire destroyed all Wichita Falls school board records in 1894.

     In 1895, a one-room school opened its doors at the intersection of what is now Miller Street and the MK&T railroad tracts. Mrs. A. L. Hedrick was the teacher from 1895-1896, and Mrs. M. E. Hunter was the teacher from 1896-1897. The school building was destroyed twice by fire. Subsequently, a one-room school building in the 300 block of Park Street, followed by a one-room school building in the 400 block of Sullivan Street, served as the Negro Schools.  1

     Walter T. Downing was the principal of the Negro School from 1897-1907. He was paid a small salary and had poor equipment, however he did good work.  1

     C. C. Trimble, a vital, well-educated and modest principal, administered the Negro School from 1907-1917. The school board bought a lot, and a two-room schoolhouse was built under his tenure. In 1910, when another local school was abandoned, half of that building was moved to the Negro School. In 1911, the Negro School was moved to the Lakewood addition. 1

1. Wichita Falls Independent School District, Negro Schools.

     In 1921, Jim Marlow, a former mayor of Wichita Falls, stated that Negroes were "a minority group, but not a minority people." He went on to state that "they (Negroes) needed a place where they had self-respect, to develop their own institutions and their own homes." Mr. Marlow sold eight acres on the east side of Wichita Falls, where some Negroes had settled, to the Wichita Falls School Board for a new school building. the four blocks bound by Flood, Woods, Rosewood and Redwood Streets is where the school for Negroes students would be built. Mr. Marlow bought back the remaining acreage which soon thereafter became a business district. 1 2 4 5

     H. D. Robinson's tenure as principal was 1917-1922. A three story brick building with eleven classrooms was built facing Flood Street, on the property bought from Mr. Marlow, and Booker T. Washington School formally opened on October 3, 1921. 1

     When the new school began in September 1922, there were 220 pupils, eight teachers and the principal, A. E. Holland, who served as principal from 1922-1946. Under "Prof Holland's administration, Booker T. Washington became accredited high school, and later after improvement training for the staff, it became the third Negro high school in Texas to attain the coveted goal of "A School" status. During his tenure more classrooms, a cafeteria, a physical education building and a home economics building were built. Under his leadership, the Negro Community sponsored and built the first and only high school lighted football stadium for Negroes in Texas.  6

     C. Emerson Jackson served as principal from 1946-1963. To meet the needs of an increasing school enrollment, a new Booker T. Washington Elementary School building was built on the Flood Street campus in 1951. Additionally, the main school building, office, library, the homemaking building and the cafeteria were all enlarged and renovated. A new spacious gymnasium was constructed in 1952 on the campus. 3

1. Wichita Falls Independent School District, op cit
2. C. Emerson and Gwendolyn Jackson, The History of the Negro, Wichita Falls, TX 1880-1982, page 210
3. Booker T. Washington 1969 Annual, The Leopard, page (number missing)
4. Wichita County Deeds Records, Vol. 130 Page 311
5. Wichita Daily Times, January 1952
6. Stayton, A Teaching Team

Booker T. Washington's mascot and title of the annual, The Leopard, image engraved on the memorial situated next to the marker.

     The Booker T. Washington High School building, on the Flood Street campus, is where many educators taught thousands of students "of color" in Wichita Falls from 1921 until the high school relocated in 1963. Many graduates went on to become blue collar workers, military personnel, educators, entrepreneurs, doctors, lawyers, politicians (some nationally known), and made many positive contributions to society.

     It is our solemn and heartfelt declaration that an official Texas Historical Marker, memorializing our beloved school, Booker T. Washington, has been earned and shall be designated in recognition of the school's historical significance to the City of Wichita Falls and the State of Texas. 

     An appropriate placement for the marker would be in front of what is now the Booker T. Washington Alumni and Community Archives building, which was the school's cafeteria. This location, facing Flood Street, is where the main Booker T. Washington School building so proudly stood. The school board voted to raze that building in February, 1971.

Bibliography
1. Paper from the Wichita Falls Independent School District entitled, Negro Schools from the Wichita Falls Independent School District Public Information Office. 
2. The History of the Negro, Wichita Falls, Texas 1880-1982; by C. Emerson and Gwendolyn Jackson.
3. A Booker T. Washington High School Annual, The Leopard.
4. Wichita County deed records, Vol 130, Page 311
5. Wichita Daily Times, January 31, 1952.
6. Paper, "A Teaching Team" by Edith Stayton from the Wichita County Archives

Booker T. Washington, the school as it stood until 1973.

     Of interest, showing the trend toward more sensitive semantics, is the correspondence (Email from Wednesday, November 2, 2005, 11:22 AM) between Lita and Linda Henderson of the Texas Historical Commission in reference to the use of the term "Negro." The state commission's style is "to use African American in most cases, sometimes using 'black' where appropriate. The markers are written for the modern reader, so we use modern language." The state commission chose to employ African American on the grounds that it is the most common term.

     Also of interest is the apparent transition from correspondence by post to the new electronic correspondence. In an email on Thursday, September 08, 2005, 4:23 PM, Henderson apologizes to Lita for her tardy reply and explains that they are trying to "figure out how to use email to streamline" their communications and "not lose things" in their inboxes. The email to which Linda is replying asks that the inscription on the marker include mention of "a very important person" that had been omitted:

"Mr. C. E. Jackson became principal from 1946-1963. Many accolades were afforded him during this tenure. The school district added an adjacent elementary building in 1951 and a gymnasium in 1952, all under the name 'Washington.'" 

     The email also asks that "African American" be replaced by "Negro" in the text of the marker. Hence the response by Henderson.

     On Thursday, November 25, 2004 10:39 AM, Lita received an email from Dan Utley, Chief Historian at the Texas Historical Commission, that they had approved the marker. Dashing off his email "on the way to turkey and trimmings with friends and family," Mr. Utley writes that a formal notice will "go out soon, along with a payment form."  

     The marker text was thirty-fifth to be written by Henderson, as she stated in an email sent on Tuesday, November 09, 2004 10:35 AM, on top of the five months before she could resume work on it after the discovery of Lita's email.

The invitation to the unveiling.

Program for the ceremony.

Request for funds to pay for the marker and the unveiling.

   The marker reads:

                                                  Site of
                            Booker T. Washington High School

  Records indicate that by 1886, when Cora Robinson was chosen as a
teacher, Wichita County operated at least one school for African
American students in the Wichita Falls area, Other early teachers
included A. L. Hedrick and M. E. Hunter, and students attended classes
at different times in facilities on Mill, Park and Sullivan Streets.
  Walter Downing and C. C. Trimble served as principals for many
years, but it was during the principalship of H. D. Robinson that a
three-story brick school building was constructed at this site. in
1921, former Wichita Falls mayor Jim Marlow sold eight acres in this
section of town to create a new African American business and
social center. The community chose this site for the Booker T.
Washington school, named for the noted educator and author. The
school became neighborhood focal point, and businesses developed
around it that further placed it at the center of Wichita Falls'
African American community. In 1922, A. E. Holland became the school's
principal. Her served until 1946, and under his leadership the school
became a class A accredited campus, and additional facilities,
including a cafeteria and lighted football field, were constructed.
The acclaimed C. E. Jackson served as principal from 1946 to 1963,
during which time the district added a gym and an adjacent
elementary school, also named for Washington.
    The high school moved to a site on Harding Street in 1963, and the
district integrated in 1969, razing the former Washington High
School building in 1973. Since that time, the community has continued
using other buildings on the campus, including the cafeteria, which
now serves as a center for the school's proud alumni. (2005)


Marker and memorial.

      Memorial next to the marker. In front, an engraving of the building; on either side, an engraving of the leopard.


"'Until This is a High School, I Won't Be Your Principal'"
Prior to 1922 the black community of Wichita Falls did not have a high
school. When A. E. Holland was asked to become the principal, he made
the above statement. In 1922 Booker T. Washington became a high
school when it enrolled 11th graders as members of the class of 1924.
The black community of Wichita Falls traces its educational heritage
back to 1886. Cora Robinson taught the Colored School for $30.00 a 
month for the 1886-1887 school year. Fire destroyed all school records
from 1889-1894. Alice B. Heddric taught in a one-room school located
on Mill Street at the M.K.T. tracks for $40.00 a month from 1895 to 1898.
The records from 1898 to 1903 do not show any "colored school" teachers.
Queeny Hunter taught next during the 1903-1904 school year.
No teacher is recorded for the 1904-1905 term."

     The marker is located on the 700 block of Flood Street, GPS coordinates: 33-degrees, 54' 55.0"  -98-degrees, 28' 39.8".