The site should be fixed. We show secure now, we should have a favicon and the picture aspect should be better.

Traces of Tx (today)

Sit back and talk with friends. Same rules as before. Rule #1-Relax with friends on the front or back porch.
Rule #2-No Politics, religion or anything above a G level.
Post Reply
User avatar
Shakey Jake
Drover
Posts: 4351
Joined: Wed Aug 16, 2017 11:10 am
Location: Sugar Land, TX
Contact:
United States of America

Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Wed May 31, 2023 10:28 am

How about this fantastic picture of Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys!
Attachments
Bob Wills.jpg
Bob Wills.jpg (342.04 KiB) Viewed 568 times

User avatar
Shakey Jake
Drover
Posts: 4351
Joined: Wed Aug 16, 2017 11:10 am
Location: Sugar Land, TX
Contact:
United States of America

Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Thu Jun 01, 2023 9:29 am

Sorry to bore you with another Fort Worth picture. I'd move back there in a heartbeat if it weren't for all the sister-in-law's medical needs. There's no place better to be than Houston if you have health issues. I go back later this month for my six months CAT scan. I hate those things but it's necesssary. Enough of my grousing. Here's a early picture of Fort Worth on Market Day (usually the third Saturday of the month). It was taken in late 1860 or possibly in the 1870's. My what a great picture for the time.
Attachments
Early Fort Worth.jpg
Early Fort Worth.jpg (575.9 KiB) Viewed 561 times

User avatar
Shakey Jake
Drover
Posts: 4351
Joined: Wed Aug 16, 2017 11:10 am
Location: Sugar Land, TX
Contact:
United States of America

Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Fri Jun 02, 2023 11:07 am

Here's a picture of the great Bob Hope at the Colonial. I remember while at TCU the Colonial was a big event in Fort Worth every spring. The campus would be filled with guests during the days of the tourney. The next big event would probably be the Cliburn Piano Competition that was held on campus each year. This year the Cliburn Junior Competition will be held in Dallas starting next Thursday.
Description: While on tour in Fort Worth, Texas on June 17, 1946, Bob Hope stopped by the Colonial Country Club for a round of golf. Mr. Hope was in town to perform his variety show at Farrington Field the next day. Mr. Hope is teeing off on the first hole. He is wearing a hat, a striped short sleeve shirt and trousers as he swings his driver. A crowd of people are watching the famous actor. The club house is in the distance.
Date Created: 1946-06-17
Attachments
Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries. Bob Hope. (1946). Retrieved from https://library.uta.edu/digitalgallery/img/20029684
Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries. Bob Hope. (1946). Retrieved from https://library.uta.edu/digitalgallery/img/20029684
Bob Hope.jpg (687.87 KiB) Viewed 553 times

User avatar
Shakey Jake
Drover
Posts: 4351
Joined: Wed Aug 16, 2017 11:10 am
Location: Sugar Land, TX
Contact:
United States of America

Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Fri Jun 02, 2023 11:09 am

On this day in 1849, Maj. Robert S. Neighbors arrived in San Antonio after leading an expedition to survey an upper, or northern, route to El Paso. His expedition was one of several sent out to open a practical wagon road to the west. The expedition formed at Torrey's Trading Post near Waco, left the trading post on March 23, 1849, crossed the Colorado River on April 2, and crossed the Pecos at Horsehead Crossing on April 17. They reached the Rio Grande on April 25 and El Paso on May 2. Considering the last hundred miles too difficult for wagons, Neighbors took a northern return route previously used by the Mexican army between El Paso and the Pecos River. He reported that the route could be used by wagons and proceeded on to Fredericksburg and finally San Antonio. Today's railroads and highways generally follow his survey.

User avatar
Shakey Jake
Drover
Posts: 4351
Joined: Wed Aug 16, 2017 11:10 am
Location: Sugar Land, TX
Contact:
United States of America

Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Sat Jun 03, 2023 10:52 am

Per T of T Facebook Group:
Apolinaria Gutierrez Garrett, wife of sheriff Pat Garrett, poses with the gun her husband used to kill the outlaw Billy the Kid in 1881. This was taken in El Paso in (roughly) 1920.
Attachments
Garret Pistol.jpg
Garret Pistol.jpg (70.26 KiB) Viewed 546 times

User avatar
Shakey Jake
Drover
Posts: 4351
Joined: Wed Aug 16, 2017 11:10 am
Location: Sugar Land, TX
Contact:
United States of America

Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Sat Jun 03, 2023 10:57 am

Per TSHA:
On this day in 1836, a mounted ranger company in the service of the Texas revolutionary army captured a Mexican ship. The rangers, under the command of Maj. Isaac Watts Burton, had been dispatched by Gen. Thomas J. Rusk to watch a stretch of the Gulf Coast south of San Antonio Bay. When they heard of a suspicious vessel in Copano Bay, the rangers hid on the shore and sent up distress signals. The ship responded first by hoisting American and Texan signals, which were ignored. Only when the ship raised Mexican signals did the rangers respond. Thus tricked into thinking the supposedly distressed soldiers were Mexican, the captain came ashore and was captured. With him as hostage, sixteen rangers rowed out, boarded the Watchman, and seized its cargo of provisions for the Mexican army. Burton and his men employed this decoying tactic twice more on June 17, when they captured the Mexican ships Comanche and Fanny Butler. For these unlikely captures at sea, the mounted rangers were dubbed "Horse Marines."

User avatar
Shakey Jake
Drover
Posts: 4351
Joined: Wed Aug 16, 2017 11:10 am
Location: Sugar Land, TX
Contact:
United States of America

Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Sun Jun 04, 2023 7:58 am

Clora Larea Bryant (May 30, 1927 – August 25, 2019) remains a sadly under-recognized musical pioneer. The lone female trumpeter to collaborate with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, she played a critical role in carving a place for women instrumentalists in the male-dominated world of jazz, over the course of her decades-long career proving herself not merely a novelty but a truly gifted player regardless of gender.
Born May 30, 1927, in Denison, TX, Bryant grew up singing in her Baptist church choir. In high school, she picked up the trumpet her older brother Fred left behind upon entering the military, joining the school marching band. She proved so proficient that she won music scholarships to Bennett College and Oberlin, instead opting to attend the Houston-area Prairie View College, joining its all-female swing band, the Prairie View Coeds. The group toured across Texas, in the summer of 1944 mounting a series of national dates that culminated at New York City's legendary Apollo Theater. Although one of the band's lead soloists, Bryant nevertheless transferred to UCLA in late 1945 after her father landed a job in Los Angeles; there she first encountered the fledgling bebop sound, and began jamming with a series of small groups in the Central Avenue area.
In the summer of 1946 Bryant joined the all-female Sweethearts of Rhythm, earning her union card and quitting school soon after. Around this time she befriended Gillespie, who not only offered her opportunities to perform with his band but also served as Bryant's mentor for the remainder of his life. When the Queens of Swing lost their drummer, Bryant rented a drum kit and won the job, touring with the group until 1951, at which time she returned to L.A. and to the trumpet, backing Billie Holiday and Josephine Baker during their respective performances at the Club Alabam. She relocated to New York City in 1953, gigging at the Metropole and appearing on several television variety shows.
She even toured Canada, but ultimately returned to southern California in 1955, two years later cutting her sole headlining LP, Gal With a Horn, issued on the tiny Mode label. Bryant spent the remainder of the decade on the road, with long engagements at clubs in Canada, Chicago, and Denver. She also played Las Vegas opposite Louis Armstrong and Harry James. While performing with James, Bryant caught the attention of singer Billy Williams, joining his touring revue and backing him during a showcase on The Ed Sullivan Show. In 1960, she also appeared in the Sammy Davis, Jr. motion picture Pepe.
After quitting Williams' band in 1962, Bryant again returned to Los Angeles, teaming with vocalist brother Mel to put together a song-and-dance act. The duo toured the globe for well over a decade, even hosting their own television show during a lengthy engagement in Melbourne, Australia. In the late '70s, Bryant replaced the late Blue Mitchell in Bill Berry's big band, but after several years out of sight she made international headlines in 1989 after accepting Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's invitation to play five dates in the U.S.S.R., becoming the first female jazz musician to tour the Communist nation.
A 1996 heart attack and subsequent quadruple bypass surgery rendered Bryant unable to continue her career as a trumpeter, but she continued to sing, at the same time beginning a new career on the lecture circuit, discussing the history of jazz on college campuses across the U.S. Honored by Washington, D.C.'s Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts with its 2002 Mary Lou Williams Women in Jazz Festival Award, Bryant was again celebrated with the 2004 release of Trumpetistically, a documentary profile that took filmmaker Zeinabu Irene Davis some 17 years to complete.
Bryant died at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles on August 25, 2019, after suffering a heart attack at home. At the time of her death, she had nine grandchildren and five great-grandchildren.
Source: Jason Ankeny/Wikpedia
(Image: May be an image of 1 person, clarinet, saxophone and trumpet)
Attachments
Bryant.jpg
Bryant.jpg (51.58 KiB) Viewed 538 times

User avatar
Mr. Neutron
Cowhand
Posts: 362
Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2022 7:34 pm
Location: Near Boring, Oregon
United States of America

Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Mr. Neutron » Sun Jun 04, 2023 4:25 pm

Shakey Jake,

First of all, Thank You SO MUCH for all these really interesting posts in this thread. I was born a bit north in Oklahoma, but spent a lot of time in Texas racing Motocross in the early '70s, visiting relatives in Sherman, and such. Always liked Texas a lot.

In your post a bit above here, from May 31st, you gave picture of Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys. Do you happen to have a list of names of the musicians and folks in that picture? Reason I'm asking is because when I lived in Tulsa, the first man I ever took guitar lessons from was Eldon Shamblin, the rhythm guitar player for Bob Wills. Some of his other "duties" with the band was to wake up Bob himself and make sure he made it to the shows. I guess that wasn't always an easy thing to do sometimes..... :shock:
Jimmie

An Okie living in Oregon

H009G
H004
H009BG
"Never miss a good chance to shut up." Will Rogers
"It's better to eat yer fruit before ya shoot it." youtuber WHO_TEE_WHO

User avatar
Shakey Jake
Drover
Posts: 4351
Joined: Wed Aug 16, 2017 11:10 am
Location: Sugar Land, TX
Contact:
United States of America

Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Sun Jun 04, 2023 6:37 pm

Mr. Neutron wrote:
Sun Jun 04, 2023 4:25 pm
Shakey Jake,

First of all, Thank You SO MUCH for all these really interesting posts in this thread. I was born a bit north in Oklahoma, but spent a lot of time in Texas racing Motocross in the early '70s, visiting relatives in Sherman, and such. Always liked Texas a lot.

In your post a bit above here, from May 31st, you gave picture of Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys. Do you happen to have a list of names of the musicians and folks in that picture? Reason I'm asking is because when I lived in Tulsa, the first man I ever took guitar lessons from was Eldon Shamblin, the rhythm guitar player for Bob Wills. Some of his other "duties" with the band was to wake up Bob himself and make sure he made it to the shows. I guess that wasn't always an easy thing to do sometimes..... :shock:
No, there isn't. I went back to the original site and there isn't a list. I did find a list of players on another site:
Al Stricklin
Bob Wills
Cameron Hill
Curly Lewis
Danny Alguire
Eldon Shamblin
Herman Arnspiger
Jesse Ashlock
Jimmy Belken
Joe Ferguson
Laura Lee
Lee Ross
Leon McAuliffe
Louis Tierney
Millard Kelso
Noel Boggs
Sleepy Johnson
Smokey Dacus
Tiny Moore
Tommy Duncan (1934 – 1948)
Tubby Lewis
Zeb McNally

User avatar
Mr. Neutron
Cowhand
Posts: 362
Joined: Mon Sep 26, 2022 7:34 pm
Location: Near Boring, Oregon
United States of America

Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Mr. Neutron » Sun Jun 04, 2023 7:29 pm

Thanks, Jake!!!
Jimmie

An Okie living in Oregon

H009G
H004
H009BG
"Never miss a good chance to shut up." Will Rogers
"It's better to eat yer fruit before ya shoot it." youtuber WHO_TEE_WHO

Post Reply