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Category Archives: Texas
Medicine Then and Now
In last week’s Herald Banner, it was announced that the Hunt Regional Hospital will soon add on to the county’s lone hospital. The late Otha C. Spencer collected news from around Commerce and published it under the title Cow Hill … Continue reading
Posted in Historical tidbits, North Texas History, Texas
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Isolation on the Blackland Prairie
Such sad news that the Delphian Club announced, after more than 100 years they have decided to disband “due to COVID-19 and the age of members.” It was a wise decision, albeit sad for Commerce. Four years before in February … Continue reading
Walking Tour Revisited
Three weeks ago, I took us on a walk of downtown Greenville with some of the western part of the city included. No one reminded me that I had some wrong information, but I went back over the route last week. … Continue reading
Posted in Greenville, Historical tidbits, Texas
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Georgia Walden’s Northeast Corner
Throughout the first part of the twentieth century, educated women wrote brief articles about local people, events, and issues. These were women who loved to read, wrote prolifically, and were well acquainted with neighbors. I should know; my grandmother was … Continue reading
Posted in Historical tidbits, North Texas History, Texas
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New Year’s A-coming!
When you read this, we’ll be nearly be in a new year; a year that lots of people are looking forward to. Will we be back to “normal?” Will schools return to “in class learning” this month? What about restaurants, … Continue reading
Posted in Historical tidbits, North Texas History, Texas
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Pearl Harbor, Day of Infamy
On the morning December 7, 1941, Americans heard on the radio, at church or from someone they knew, the news of the debilitating attack on Pearl Harbor Naval Base on the island of Oahu in Hawaii Territory. U. S. ships … Continue reading
Thanksgiving in Texas
Did you know that Texas is the only state that often celebrated Thanksgiving twice in the same year and on separate days? You know how ornery Texans can be, and for many years if Thanksgiving fell on the fourth and … Continue reading
Posted in Greenville, Historical tidbits, North Texas History, Texas
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Horsehead Crossing
My favorite attorney in early Greenville, Alfred Thomas Howell, wrote to his brother in March 1854. Alfred had recently met a couple of speculators taking herds of cattle from different points in the East Texas to California and were trying … Continue reading
Posted in Greenville, Historical tidbits, Texas
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Limestone on the Blackland Prairie
From the time the first settlers arrived on the Blackland Prairie, they were full of pride to have found such a treasure. In the South, black clay is considered the best soil to plant cotton in. Throughout much of Hunt … Continue reading
Posted in Historical tidbits, North Texas History, Texas
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Finally, the Right to Vote
Way back in 1848, a large group of women gathered in Seneca Falls, New York, to discuss three important issues facing Americans. Abolition, Temperance, and Women’s Suffrage were the topics; but the major issue was Women’s Suffrage. It would determine … Continue reading
Posted in Historical tidbits, Texas
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