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Tivy High School class of 1944, part 1

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A reader suggested I post the photographs of the Tivy senior class of 1944 -- and I thought it was a good idea.  I was surprised how many faces I recognized, including the parents of quite a few of my own Tivy classmates.  I hope you enjoy seeing these photos.  Please feel free to share them by email or with your Facebook friends.  I post these images here so people can share them.
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Because these images are so big, I need to break this post into two parts.  Part 2 will publish in a few days.

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Tivy High School Class of 1944, part 2

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A reader suggested I publish the photos of the Tivy senior class of 1944, and I thought it was a good idea.  I was surprised how many folks I recognized.  Many of the seniors were parents of my classmates of mine at Tivy.  Here is the second and final batch of photos from 1944.
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The 1947-48 Kerrville Cardinals baseball team

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I received this image of the 1947-48 Kerrville Cardinals baseball team from a fellow history sleuth, Robert Puig:
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1947-48 Kerrville Cardinals, courtesy of Robert Puig
Here are some notes provided by Mr. Puig:

I recently acquired a copy of an old 1947 Kerrville Daily Times new paper clipping (date of issue unknown at this time) of a Kerrville Mexican-American baseball team called "The Cardinals". The actual  photo belongs to my cousin Zulema Ayala Sandoval of Kerrville who shared it with the Kerrville Daily Times .

The players in this photo were people whom I personally knew. Many of these guys were born and grew up in Kerrville. Some have passed away others have moved to other states such as Jaime Cortez who lives in Fresno,California and my cousin Joe Cortez Jr who lives in Chicago. I have corrected some of the player's last names. The photo was taken at the Harper Road Field probably back in 1947.

LtoR Standing: Federico Moreno ( coach), Rudy Silvas,Alejandro Gonzalez,Simon Ramos, Pedro " Chulo" Vargas, Jaime Cortez , Ramiro Madrid. Sitting LtoR: Felipe Castillo, Joe " Cone" Cortez, Fernando Lopez, Eliseo " Cheo" Bill, Isidro Davila, Ramon Lemos Jr.,Joe Ramos and David " El Blue" Medrano.

The nicknames are my insertion. These are the nicknames by which these guys were known in our community.

Thanks, Mr. Puig, for sharing this image with all of us.

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Do you remember these?

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Parking meter, last used in Kerrville, Texas -- 1980s.
These parking meters used to grace the entire downtown area -- even when on-street parking was available in front of our printing shop in the 600 block of Water Street.  My, how times have changed. My thanks to Orlene K, who gifted this old meter to my Kerrville and Kerr County collection.

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Tivy Senior Class of 1945, part 1

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I recently posted the Tivy Class of 1944 -- and here's the Seniors from 1945, part 1.  The rest of the class will post later.  Please feel free to share this with your friends.

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Tivy Senior Class of 1945, part 2

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I recently posted the photos of the Tivy Senior Class of 1944.  Here are the Seniors of 1945.  I recognize quite a few of these folks.  Please feel free to share these with your friends.

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An especially interesting artifact

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A fellow brought this by the print shop, and I found it interesting.  This little carving was found between Kerrville and Fredericksburg in a plowed field.  According to its owner, it's been shown to archaeologists in San Antonio to determine if it was carved with metal tools, and they report that it was not.  It was found near some dart points (arrowheads) which date to about 1000 to 1500 years ago.  It's carved in limestone, and is about six and a half inches tall.  If from that period, it's the only one ever found in the Texas Hill Country.
Since posting here, several "archeologists" have contacted me and passed judgment on the piece without actually examining it.  Is it authentic?  I don't know.  But, without examining the piece, I'm sure they're not positive, either.
I don't own the piece, and cannot vouch for its authenticity.  It is interesting -- even if it is controversial. I do find it amusing how quickly "experts" pass judgment without actually physically examining the piece, don't you?

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Do you remember the Rialto Theater?

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There were once a movie theater in the 600 block of Water Street, and it stood in what is now our parking lot next to the print shop, between our print shop and Grape Juice.  The old movie theater was torn down by the Charles Schreiner Bank in the 1980s, I believe, and they built the parking lot my family now owns.
Click on any image to enlarge
Rialto Theater, 600 Block of Water, Kerrville, around 1946
Rialto Movie Theater poster, 1941, from the
collection of Fred and Annie Streit
The Rialto Theater, 600 Block of Kerrville, next to what is now our print shop.
The sign on the outer wall of our print shop building is still there,
but on an interior wall.

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The story of the Cascade Pool in Downtown Kerrville

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Cascade Pool, downtown Kerrville, probably mid-1950s, I'm guessing
Click on image to enlarge
I bet a lot of readers don't know that there once was a pool right in the center of town, the Cascade Pool.  The pool was run by the city of Kerrville.  This pool was behind Schreiner Bank, nestled on the high bluff of the river between the back of the Arcadia Theater and the Earl Garrett side of the Blue Bonnet Hotel.   Of these landmarks, only the Arcadia Theater remains.  For you newcomers, the Blue Bonnet Hotel was an eight story hotel that towered at the intersection of Water and Earl Garrett streets, across from where Francisco's restaurant is today.  Earl Garrett in those days went all the way to the river bluff, about where the stairway down to the dam is today.  Schreiner Bank, the bank that preceded NationsBank, was located facing Water Street, at the corner of Water and Earl Garrett streets, across Water from Schreiner's department store.   Schreiner Bank was in a small building that didn't extend all the way from the street back to the river bluff.  Next door to Schreiner Bank was a long row of buildings, all now demolished, that housed a variety of businesses, including the offices Mrs. Salter and her Kerrville Mountain Sun.  This row of businesses and the bank was between the Arcadia Theater and the corner, with the bank on the corner, on the river side of Water Street.
When I was a boy, the Cascade Pool was already gone -- a victim, it is rumored, of fears of racial integration, a still painful blight on our community's past.  In its place was a rather sunken parking lot for the bank's employees and the tenants of the string of offices.  I vaguely remember Schreiner Bank having its drive-through windows back there, also.
The pool itself was a beautiful thing, with a fountain in its center, a fountain like you'd find in the courtyard of some Moroccan dwelling.
Everitt M. Mahon, formerly of Kerrville, but now living in San Antonio, shared these memories of the Cascade Pool with us:
"Me and sister (Ann Mahon) had summer passes to the Cascade, along with Billy Eldridge.
"Mr. Hirth was the 'man-in-charge' of the pool.  As soon as it was full in the Spring, I was there, although the water was cold.  Mike Michon and I would help Mr. Hirth skim, clean, etc.  I used to go when it opened, go home for lunch, and come back when it was dark; all summer.
"Next to the pool was the Chamber of Commerce building (3 floors).  The bottom floor was mechanical equipment for the pool, the top other two floors were their offices.  Mike and I would climb up a drain pipe in the alley behind Schreiner's Bank to the top of the Chamber building (3 floors) and jump into the pool across their sidewalk, and once I nearly didn't make it -- I slipped on the tile cornice atop the building.  My feet were wet.  Now at 66, I wonder why I am still here . . . ."
A newspaper from 1936, loaned to me by George Morris, has as a front page story the opening of the pool, informing readers that "A charge of 25 cents for individual adult tickets, 15 cents for children and $7.50 for season tickets will be in effect." The story noted that "accredited lifeguards will be on duty while the pool is open to the public."
"Built of concrete at a cost of about $25,000 several years ago," the story continues, "Cascade Pool is centrally located across the street from the Blue Bonnet Hotel.  The water purification system send 250 gallons of purified water a minute into the pool Daily laboratory tests keep the water up to the best standards of drinking water."
Or, as an advertisement featuring a tastefully drawn bathing beauty in the same paper promises, "It comes in Pure -- it goes out Pure!"
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Early Schools in Kerrville

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Tivy School, probably taken in the late 1890s.
Though education was important to the earliest settlers of our community, early schools met infrequently and often had gaps in sessions, largely because of the problems of finding qualified teachers, and partly because of funding problems. The first school was held in the log courthouse, with William E. Pafford as its first teacher, as early as 1857.
In the years up to the Civil War, several names are recorded as teachers in Kerrville's early schools. Bob Bennett, in his "Kerr County" history writes "It is evident that but little schooling was available in Kerrsville for the first several years after the organization of the county. The classroom equipment consisted of a rough table, slab seats, and a plentiful supply of switches."
The school moved from the courthouse to "a frame building on the site now occupied by the [old] Sid Peterson Memorial Hospital," at the corner of what is now Sidney Baker and Water streets. Later the school moved to the John Ochse Store, near the corner of Washington and Main streets.
After the Civil War there was a civic movement in Kerrville to have the school housed in a permanent facility, and classes were held in the bottom floor of a two story rock building at the corner of Main and Sidney Baker streets. But even this solution was temporary.
In 1883 a frame school building was erected on Jefferson Street, and was named the "Guadalupe Institute." Boys enrolled in the school were given training "rudimentary military tactics," and drilled by their instructor Professor J. C. Lord. "The company used wooden lances in place of guns." I imagine they were quite a sight.
Still, even with boys parading with wooden lances, many in Kerrville wanted a more permanent school system. Captain Joseph A. Tivy, Kerrville's first mayor, is really the father of our school system here, because he gave the land for the schools and also tracts that could be sold to help fund construction of a school building.
"Two deeds from Joseph A. Tivy to the City of Kerrville were executed on August 16, 1890, conveying certain properties 'chiefly in consideration of the deep interest I feel in the cause of public education and with a view of promoting and advancing the growth and development thereof in the City of Kerrville."
In those days the schools were run by the city government, a point that was hotly debated after Captain Tivy's gift. The City of Kerrville was organized in 1889, but in early 1890 a petition was given to the council "requesting that an election be held to determine 1) whether or not the town of Kerrville should have exclusive control of the free public schools within its limits; and 2) to determine whether the free public schools should be under the control of the board of aldermen or a board of [school] trustees."
In January 1890 the vote was held and the City retained control of the schools, but also calling for the appointment of a board of trustees. But, this being Kerrville, people were unhappy with this result and a new election was held in April 1890, and the city council was given "complete control of the school property, the hiring of teachers and all other matters pertaining to Kerrville Public Schools."
A new school building was designed by B. F. Trester, but the plans exceeded the community's budget of $8000. New plans were drawn by C. C. Williams, and the firm of Davy & Schott and Williams were awarded the contract. The completed building was accepted by the city council in February 1891.
This school building is now home of the Kerrville Independent School District's administrative offices. It was almost torn down in the 1980s, but a group of concerned citizens, including my friend Clarabelle Snodgrass, saved it from the bulldozers.
The first diplomas from Tivy High School were awarded in 1895 to a class of three students; none were awarded the next year, or the next. Three more students graduated in 1898.
It wasn't until 1923 that the Kerrville Independent School District was established by election.

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The mystery photo of Governor John Connally

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Julius Neunhoffer brought this image of Governor Connally by the other day, and it was a little bit of a mystery.  With Governor Connally is Neunhoffer's father, Kerr County Judge Julius Neunhoffer, and behind the two are Mr. and Mrs. Howard Butt, Sr.
Click on image to enlarge
Texas Governor John B. Connally and Kerr County Judge Julius Neunhoffer, April, 1967
Here's the mystery: it appears, since Mr. and Mrs. Butt are in the image, that this is an event at the library; however, Governor Connally was not at the dedication of the library.  That event featured then First Lady Ladybird Johnson.
In the background, you can see what looks to be the Tivy High School band.  To the right, a column of the library building.
So what could the event be?
It turns out there was a separate ceremony, a cornerstone celebration, during the construction of the library.  A front-page story in the Kerrville Mountain Sun, on April 26, 1967, talks about the event, but also gives a tantalizing clue about something else:
Did you know there's a time-capsule, of sorts, in the cornerstone of the library? 
Neither did I.  But there is.  In 2017, three years from now, that time capsule with be fifty years old....
Thanks, Julius, for sharing this image with all of us.
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Kerr County courthouse annex under construction

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Julius Neunhoffer, whose father was county judge here for so long, shared this photo with me, showing the annex of the current Kerr County courthouse under construction.  I'd never seen photos of the project.  Thanks, Julius, for sharing this image with all of us.

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Annex, Kerr County Courthouse, construction late 1970s.
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The Top 10 most read stories on this website

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Sometime on Friday, October 10, 2014, one of the pages of this blog will be opened, and that action will mark the 300,000th page view of this material.  (A page view is defined on Wikipedia like this:a request to load a single HTML file (web page) of an Internet site.) So far that has happened 300,000 times on this little history blog.
Since I've started posting here several years ago, I've been really surprised how many people visit the site.  It's essentially the story of one little county in Texas -- and yet people have loaded up stories here 300,000 times.

Here are the top 10 most-read stories on this blog (so far).  

You can click on the blue link to visit each story.
  1. Captured by Apaches -- the story of my lunch with the daughter of a man who was captured by Apaches between Fredericksburg and Mason.
  2. Solving the Mystery of the Legless Man -- several readers of this blog solved the meaning of a rather odd photograph in my collection.
  3. Why David Wampler lost -- some of my trenchant analysis of local politics.
  4. A first peek at "Peterson Plaza" -- sometimes I get to see plans early, even before they're in the newspaper.
  5. My last Kerrville Daily Times column -- I wrote 999 columns for the Kerrville Daily Times.  And then I didn't.
  6. Fairy Tale Architecture for Mrs. Florence Butt -- photos of the home of Mrs. Florence Butt, who founded what is now H-E-B.  The home looked different when it was first built than it does today.
  7. Tivy High School Pep Rallies in Downtown Kerrville -- some nice nostalgic photographs of Tivy students in the old Kerrville downtown.
  8. Arcadia Theater: Endangered Species -- the sorry story of the City of Kerrville's poor stewardship of a remarkable downtown theater.
  9. What was in their pockets? -- a column about looking deeper at an old Kerrville photograph.
  10. First peek at plans for the old Sid Peterson Property -- people really wanted to know what the City of Kerrville planned for the heart of Kerrville Old Town.
Thanks for your support of this online history series, and for your kindness.  I hope you've enjoyed it so far!
The author, back during his career
as a cowboy.
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Two who gave their lives

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The Tivy High School Class of 1964 will be holding its 50th year reunion this year, during the homecoming festivities October 24th.  Dianne Meeker DeBarros, a member of that class, sent along photographs of the Vietnam War Memorial in Washington, and the names of two of her classmates killed in that conflict.  They were so young when they died, and it's difficult to avoid wondering what their lives might have been had they not been in Southeast Asia those many years ago.  The two of her classmates memorialized on the Memorial are Robert Glen Chenault and Anthony Kunz.  While there were other Kerrville men who died in that war, these were in the Tivy graduating class of 1964.
Thanks, Dianne, for sending these photos for all of us to share -- and for remembering these brave young men.
Click on any image to enlarge
Anthony E. Kunz, member of the THS Class of '64

Robert Glen Chenault, member of the THS Class of '64



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50 years of ink and paper

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Pat and Joe Herring, Sr., in the early 1960s.
On November 10, 1964, my parents, Joe and Pat Herring, opened a printing company in Kerrville, Texas.  The little print shop they started on that day is still going strong, and I'm proud of all they accomplished.  Today is the 50th anniversary of the founding of the company.
They had a toddler son (me), and a daughter on the way (my sister, Judy), and they decided to start their own business.  The reason: they wanted to raise their family in Kerrville.
Their first office was in the old Tivy Hotel on Tivy Street in Kerrville; in 1965 they purchased the Hunter Printing Company, which was located at 615 Water Street.  Later, they bought the building housing the print shop, then the building next to that building, and finally, the parking lot next to that building.
Herring Printing Company as it appeared in the mid 1970s
Over the past five decades the company has employed hundreds of people, served thousands of customers, and contributed in many ways to the community.
On behalf of my family, thanks -- we really appreciate your support, your business, but most of all, your friendship.

One foot of Kerrville's railroad

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A good friend at the City of Kerrville brought by one foot of the railroad rail from part of the San Antonio and Aransas Pass Railroad line which served Kerrville until the early 1970s.  I am old enough to remember the trains which traveled to Kerrville about once a week.  This part of the track was used for many years, and I'm glad to add it to my collection of Kerrville and Kerr County items.
Click on image to enlarge
Part of the rail line which once served Kerrville and Kerr County.
"That's real Kerrville dirt on there," he told me. Don't think I'll wash it off.  Many loads of livestock, wool, and mohair traveled over this piece of iron.

Rare photo of Francisco Lemos

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For any collector, there are always some missing items you'd like to have.  I have a lot of "holes" in my collection, but one of those holes was filled this week, thanks to Charlene Stacy and her sharp eyes.
I had a rather poor scan of a war-time portrait of Francisco Lemos; my scan was pretty awful, and very low-resolution.  Given the importance of Lemos to our history, I really wanted a new, better scan.
Charlene Stacy happened to see a copy of a photo of Lemos at the recent sale at Schreiner University, and picked it up before it was, well, lost forever.  She has graciously allowed me to scan that original copy.  Below is my scan, complete with the removal of the tear in the photo -- which was represented in the copy of the original.  While this is a third generation of the original, it's a lot better than what I had before.  Thanks, Mrs. Stacy!
Click on image to enlarge
Francisco Lemos, World War I hero

The new marker for his grave
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Water Skiing behind Downtown Kerrville -- mid 1950s

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Believe it or not, folks (including my parents) used to water ski in the little lake formed by the dam at Louise Hays park.  These photos were taken from the Sidney Baker Street bridge, behind Pampell's -- the top one, looking down river; the other, up river.  Jorns, the photographer, took many images during the 1950s and 1960s.  Thanks to Harriet Warren for sharing these with all of us.


Water skiing in the small lake formed by the dam at Louise Hays Park
in downtown Kerrville, mid-1950s
Another view, water skiing in the small lake formed by the dam at Louise Hays Park
in downtown Kerrville, mid-1950s

The stories we tell

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The last time I was in an airliner, I happened to get a window seat, and I found myself looking down at the towns and cities we passed.  Some were just a few buildings at a crossroads; others were crowded metropolises.  Each has a story, and as I looked at them from above the clouds, I wondered what some of those stories might be.
I'll never know those stories, of course.  But I do know at least some of the story of our community, and I hope to share what I learn of that story here.
Tranquility Island and River Trail, 2015
While much of our community's story is similar to the stories other communities tell, there is much that makes our story unique.  Mostly, it's the unique people who live here -- and those who lived here in earlier times.  The setting of our story, in many cases, also makes it unique.  We are blessed with a beautiful place to call home -- a blessing other communities cannot claim.
Here's the thing about stories: we use them to make sense of the world around us, just like our ancestors did.  It's my opinion a good story makes a good community; if we know the story, it helps build community.
Part of that story has to be what happened here before any of us arrived on the scene, the history of a place.  I enjoy history, but not because of the various dates and facts most people associate with that word.  I enjoy history because it's a story in which we generally know the ending.  These people did this at this place -- and this happened -- and this is how their efforts changed things.
I've noticed, in researching the history of this place, several others before me have attempted to tell the story of our community, some better than others.  One or two of these storytellers focused only on the positive parts of our community's story -- in the old days they'd be called boosters.
I hope you'll agree with me that telling the whole story -- even the warty sections -- makes for a better story.  I hope to tell the stories I find as accurately as I can, whether the stories are positive or negative.
For as long as the newspaper will allow me, I would like to present at least a part of our community's story in this space.  Taken together, like tiles in a mosaic, they might give hints about the larger story of this place.  Some of the stories will show our similarity to other communities; others will demonstrate what makes our area special.
Our part of Texas seems to have a story in each canyon, a tale in each bend of our Guadalupe River, and an chapter on each hilltop. Legends abound here. I hope you'll join me here as I explore those hidden stories, even the ones hidden in plain sight.
The journey ought to be fun.
Until next week, all the best.

Joe Herring Jr. is a Kerrville native who once flew an airplane -- although very briefly, and only after it was safely in the air.

This column originally appeared in the Kerrville Daily TimesJanuary 10, 2015.

Kerrville Folk Festival display at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport

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Carter Blackburn, who grew up here in Kerrville and graduated from Tivy High School, recently took these photos of a display in Austin at the Austin-Bergstrom International Airport.  Carter is the son of Bill and Deana Blackburn, and is a respected sportscaster, currently working with the CBS Sports Network. 
Display, Austin-Bergstrom International Airport, January 2015

Detail, display, Austin-Bergstrom International Airport, January 2015

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