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Category Archives: North Texas History
Bilious Fever Attacks North Texas
The summer of 1853 in North Texas was warm but not sultry. Strong breezes blew across the prairies almost constantly. For the most part, health was quite good. However, those who walked or rode horseback in the sun suffered from … Continue reading
Posted in Historical tidbits, North Texas History
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Justify!
I believe a horse is one of the most beautiful animals in the world. There is nothing more graceful than watching horses run and cavort in a pasture. Colts and foals are so frisky, even on their wobbly legs when … Continue reading
Posted in Greenville, Historical tidbits, North Texas History
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Corporal I.G. Coley
For the last six years I have enjoyed personal research on World War I. It’s the reason I started my blog and now continue it as well as my newspaper column. I am not a military historian nor am I … Continue reading
War Service at Home
The American Red Cross in World War I was usually seen as a group of ladies who met weekly to fold bandages made of old bed sheets for the injured soldiers along the Western Front. However, in the fall of … Continue reading
Posted in Greenville, Historical tidbits, North Texas History, Texas
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Land Speculators after the Civil War
One of the Texas land laws is very confusing. Supposedly women could not control property they owned or inherited. Women were seen as delicate creatures who needed a man to take care of all financial matters while the wife took … Continue reading
Posted in Historical tidbits, North Texas History, Texas
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Striking Cotton
On Saturday morning, April 28, the Audie Murphy/American Cotton Museum in association with the History Department at Collin County Community College will present the 22nd Annual Cotton and Rural History Conference at the museum located at 600 Interstate 30. Three … Continue reading
Posted in Greenville, Historical tidbits, North Texas History, Texas
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Whiskey in the Big Red
The Red River between Texas and Oklahoma is definitely red. So red it is impossible to see the riverbed when standing knee-deep in water. Now suppose I told you there are 300 barrels of good whiskey somewhere in the bottom … Continue reading
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Pot Holes
I recently saw a listing of Spring Sightings that remind us springtime has arrived. There in the middle of the list was the phrase “Pot holes”. Really? It’s possible. Every spring it seems our favorite streets often look like battle … Continue reading
Posted in Historical tidbits, North Texas History
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An Eerie Tale
It wasn’t the content of the story that was so eerie, but the coincidence that when I read it, the time lapse was almost forty-one years to the day after my mother’s death. But let me start at the beginning. … Continue reading
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Colonel Ned Green and the Texas Midland Railroad
Imagine knowing your mother was worth at least ninety million dollars ($90,000,000), yet you and your sister lived with her in the squalor of New York and New Jersey tenements. You grew up shy with no self-confidence. Once a boy … Continue reading
Posted in Historical tidbits, North Texas History
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