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Category Archives: Greenville
Pesky Animals
In the 1920s progressive Texans supported by the Federal Agricultural Department and Texas State Health Department began a campaign to eradicate rats from the state. In December 1927, Hunt County joined other Texans in a four-week campaign to kill rats. … Continue reading
Santa’s Visit 100 Years Ago
“Christmas season is approaching and already the Yuletide spirit is in the air,” so wrote the Greenville Evening Banner of Friday, December 3, 1920. Local merchants placed their first offerings on display. Early indications are that an excellent offering of … Continue reading
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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Greenville Ghost Stories
Watch out, the goblins are coming. This time of year don’t we all love a good ghost story? Back in the far history of Greenville, when most of the activity occurred in what is now Downtown Greenville, a group of … Continue reading
Posted in Greenville, Historical tidbits
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Two Presbyterian Churches Merge into One
Shortly after Greenville became a community in 1846, new residents began to build churches. The first was a Baptist Church followed by a Methodist Church. The third church built in town was organized as a Cumberland Presbyterian Church, circa 1863. … Continue reading
Why did Dr. Schoonover Come to Greenville?
One would be surprised to meet Dr. Schoonover on the streets of Greenville, much less to turn to him for medical problems. He was a Yankee, raised in Tippecanoe County, Indiana, and Captain of the Eleventh Indians Cavalry. And in … Continue reading
Race Records
Any idea what “race records” are? Could they be the data the UIL keeps in Austin each spring when high school track and field events occur? Not really. Maybe they keep the results of the Kentucky Derby? Guess again. They … Continue reading
Posted in Greenville, Historical tidbits
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Touring Bucolic Hunt County
Last weekend we slipped out of our In-Shelter place and went for a drive. South Sulphur Cemetery was our goal, but we investigated other spots in northeast Hunt County along the way. It was a pleasant Sunday morning, with lots … Continue reading