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Sunday, November 17, 2013

William 'Butch' Boyd 1940-1983


A classmate, Robert Brandon (DHS '68), told me recently he worked with Butch Boyd (SLHS '59) at HL&P.  In fact, they were colleagues when Butch died in 1983.  He liked Butch and found his grave at Morton Cemetery in Richmond.  Robert suggested I do a small memorial to Butch, which I've done here.

Senior profile in '59 Gator yearbook.

Photo in Gator yearbook.
Football photo in '59 Gator yearbook.
(Obituary courtesy of Robert Brandon.)
(Photo courtesy of Robert Brandon.)
 

Butch was undoubtedly one of Sugar Land High School's premier athletes.
     

More People of Old Sugar Land


Last week's 1955-56 1st graders with identifying names.

Members of DHS Class of '66 as kindergarteners in 1954.  (Note: one member of the Class of '67 crashed the party and decided to take his guns to town.)

DHS Class of '67.

Four member of Mrs. Boyer's 1954/55 kindergarten class at Tommy and Lynell Laird's wedding in 2002.

Undated photo of Mr. and Mrs. Darvin Altenhoff.  (Mr. Altenhoff was Principal of SL Elementary in my day.  I'd never seen him in casual clothes until I saw this picture.)

Unidentified visitor to the Imperial refinery in the 1960s.  (He made certain everything looked ship-shape.)

Sugar Land Elementary 2nd grade class in 1956/57.  (No guns this time.)

William Gordon joins Imperial in late 1960s.
  

More Images Of Old Sugar Land



Construction Begins on Imperial's Raw Sugar Warehouse in the late 1950s.
 
Construction on Imperial's Automated (palletized) Warehouse in the 1970s.

Imperial's first computer (an IBM 360) in the late 1960s.

Imperial's first computer (an IBM 360) in the late 1960s.
New home in Mayfield Park in the 1950s.

Old homes in Mayfield Park in the 1950s.

Sewer system installation in Mayfield Park the 1950s.
Old homes in Mayfield Park in the 1950s.

Old homes in Mayfield Park in the 1950s.
Mrs. Moye, SLISD Dietician, in the Lakeview cafeteria with unidentified man in the 1950s.

Mrs. Moye, SLISD Dietician, in the Lakeview cafeteria with William 'Sweat Pea' Gandy in the 1950s.
Airplanes at Hull Field in the 1960s. (Note the T-6 trainer on the right.)

Airplanes at Hull Field in the 1960s. (Note the T-6 trainers on the far left and far right.)
1950s Cotton field in the Sugar Mill area of town. (Hillary Circle in mid foreground; Eldridge Road out of view on the right.)

Cotton gin on Ulrich St. (Area now incorporated into Nalco complex.)

Cotton gin on Ulrich St. (Area now incorporated into Nalco complex.)
Grand Central (?) during 1935 flood.
 
Syb Fowler, Sugar Land historian, Ted Harman, former mayor, and Denny Kempner with street sign designating Kempner St. (formerly Sugar Land St.) in early 1970s.  (Name change in honor of Denny's grandfather, I. H. Kempner, Sr.)
Syb Fowler, Sugar Land historian, Ted Harman, former mayor, and Denny Kempner with street sign designating Kempner St. (formerly Sugar Land St.) in early 1970s.  (Name change in honor of Denny's grandfather, I. H. Kempner, Sr.)
 

Sugar Land Demolishes Danbury 53-12 in 1953


No surprise that the Sugar Land Gators smashed Danbury in their match at Kempner Field in 1953.  The score was a lopsided 53-12 margin, but the newspaper story was about Kenneth Hall approaching another record.
 
  
He broke Dick Todd's single-game record with 49 points in an earlier game that season against Lutheran High School.  The previous week, he broke Todd's three-year scoring record.  Now he was rapidly approaching Todd's 4-year scoring record.

Those of you who attended the Chautauqua Talk a few weeks ago heard Ken say he held 17 high school records at one time.  I think they all relate to rushing yardage, total yardage and points scored.  I'm sorry to say I don't know which ones still stand.  I believe his record for average points per game over a career still stands, but I can't guarantee that I'm right.
  

Saturday, November 16, 2013

JFK's Trip To Texas


As everyone knows, we're coming up to a big anniversary of the events in Dallas on November 22, 1963.  I found a few articles from The Dallas Morning News pertaining to the run up to JFK's visit.  If your interest in history extends to source documentary evidence, here are some article you can scan.  Note the 'unfortunate' political cartoon in the last  clipping.

It may be helpful to remember why JFK came to Texas in the fall of '63.  He had barely won the 1960 election.  He needed to win Texas badly and he was way behind in the polls.  More importantly, the Texas Democratic Party was falling apart.  

A conservative faction led by John Connally (Governor) and a liberal faction led by Ralph Yarborough (Senator) were in open warfare.   During his short stay in Houston, JFK and LBJ (a Connally suporter) had a loud shouting match in the Rice Hotel before the President gave his speech to LULAC.  

The overriding purpose of Kennedy's trip was to patch up problems in a state he desperately needed to win in 1964.  The only direct influence this intra-party conflict had on the assassination were the seating arrangements in the presidential limousine.
 
(Dallas Morning News)

(Dallas Morning News)

(Dallas Morning News)

(Dallas Morning News)

(Dallas Morning News)

(Dallas Morning News)

(Dallas Morning News)
   

A&M Beats Rice 13-6 in 1963 Game, But Fight To A Draw At Half-Time


As I went through the Dallas Morning News archive recently, I ran across the attached file.   I attended this game and remember it well.  (I've attached an aerial of Rice Stadium to help set the scene of the crime.)
  
(Dallas Morning News article)
(Photo from Houston Area Digital Archives at the Houston Public Library)
   
Bruce and I went with our parents who met a salesman and his wife and sat with them in the upper deck of the east stands.  Bruce and I bought end zone tickets.  Probably a $1 a piece.  We sat in the south end zone a few rows down from the top.  It was a muggy day, not particularly cold for November, but not particularly warm either.  I always liked going to the Rice-A&M game because they always played in mid-November when the sun's vertical angle in the sky gave daylight a definite autumnal glow.

A&M was pretty dismal during the early 1960s, so Rice was the favorite.   The article says 48,000 attended, and the score was 6 - 3 at the half with Rice leading, but note the paragraphs I've highlighted in red.  I remember the incident well although a little differently than how the article recounts it.

After the bands had performed at half time, Rice students (all male) poured out of the stands to make a path from the tunnel to the benches on the sideline.  I went to a lot of Rice games in those days, but I don't remember that the Rice student body did this as a rule.  As Rice students were forming parallel lines, the Corps poured out onto the field from their seats in the northeast corner of the stadium and ran down the field toward the tunnel.  They began forming a path to the Aggie benches on the east side of the stadium.

The newspaper account says the melee started when an Aggie began tearing the 'B' off a sign saying 'Beat A&M.'  That's probably true, but I didn't see it. As I casually scanned the field, I happened to see a Rice student start running from somewhere near the mouth of the tunnel and race behind the Cadets as they began forming a line.  Without breaking stride, the weanie grabbed an Aggie's cap and continued running back toward the Rice students lined up around mid field.

Of course, a mob of Aggies tore out after him and fisticuffs began. They spread all across the field.  I was 13-years old and thought it was the most amazing sports spectacle I'd ever seen.  The whole south half of the field was one big fist fight, and more students from both sides began pouring out of the stands to join in.

I vaguely recall some fat old Houston cops trying to stop it as the article says, but I definitely recall the A&M band playing the Star Spangled Banner to bring the mayhem to a grinding halt.

After the game, Bruce and I walked the concourse to meet our parents in the east stands, so we had to pass the Rice student section as it emptied.  I saw lots of broken glasses, split lips, black eyes, etc.  The weanies were pretty impressive, however.  They held their own even if the Owl football team lost the game. 
  

Roy Cordes, Sr. and 'Flying The Hump'


I got a note last week from Ronald Miller (SLHS '51) reminding me that Roy Cordes, Sr. 'flew the Hump' in WWII.  Here's the note Ron sent me:

You may want to check this out with Betty, but as I recall, Colonel Cordes "Flew the Hump."  CBI stands for China, Burma and India Theater".  By "flying the hump" it simply meant that there were a contingent of Army Air Corps crews flying C47s to deliver supplies to the forces fighting the Japanese in those countries.  This was a very hazardous mission because the service ceiling altitude of the C47 was below the very tall Himalayan Mountains.  These guys flew to support the logistics network in all kinds of weather and by some reports about 1000 crew members and 600 aircraft were lost during this very important campaign.

While the Berlin Airlift was also very important, the importance of what Roy did during WWII is lost in the CBI initials.  I had a cousin by marriage that was a foot soldier in China behind enemy lines.  He is no longer around to talk with, but he told me that they heavily relied of the supplies delivered by the guys that Flew the Hump.
Ron
I have forgotten how I heard it (I think my father told me), but I know Roy did fly the in CBI theater.  Here is some information if you're not familiar with this story.  Amazing stuff.

A modern news article summarizing the CBI story.

A 3-minute YouTube video of newsreel footage about Flying the Hump.

A lengthy Wikipedia article on the subject.
 

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Veteran's Day


I've posted several items about Sugar Land area veterans.  Here are a few:




A DHS '68 classmate, Frank Lampson was in Washington, D.C. last week and took these photos of the Vietnam Memorial.  Frank and I both knew Arthur Medina (DHS '69) as a student manager of the Dulles football team.  Although we didn't know him real well, we both liked him, and Frank wanted to find his name on the memorial.  I'm certain all the players on the team liked Arthur; he was quiet but very personable.



 

Dulles Had A Bye Week 50 Years Ago


As I mentioned last week Dulles took a break at this point in the '63 season.  Their final game versus Sweeny is next week.  It was the Vikings' home coming game as this article indicates.  Note the comments about previous matches with the Sweeny Bulldogs, who were at the top of the district in November 1963.


I had forgotten that Leonard Archer wore a Viking costume to the games until I found this article.  The big, fiber-glass mascot (Erik) was scheduled to make his first appearance at the Sweeny game next week, so Leonard provided authentic color.  Actually, he was ahead of his time, but I wonder if he could get into a stadium nowadays with a sword like that.


A final note: I got the following message from Travis Gandy about the Boling loss.  He's right that Halloween fell on the Thursday night before the Boling game.  At first I wondered why the coaching staff was at Kempner Field on Halloween night, but then it dawned on me the freshman and junior varsity teams played that night in Sugar Land, which explains their presence.
 
I do remember something about the night before the game. If i'm not mistaken the Thursday before the game was Halloween. The coaches were mad at us for being out on the streets the night before a game. I remember the coaches standing at the top of Kempner Stadium watching us have water balloon fights on 6th street. Boy did we hear about that when we got to school on Friday.

The Rockwall Yellow Jackets were in a completely different situation.  They were steam rolling through their schedule.  Here's an account of their 44-0 shellacking of Whitesboro.  


As I said, we're coming up on November 22nd.  Here's an unexpected tidbit I found relating the Oswald family and Rockwall.  (Everything I've read said Oswald's mother was a 'pill.')