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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.
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HenryFan
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Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by HenryFan » Sun Dec 17, 2023 12:21 pm

Shakey Jake -

Has anyone ever eaten that much food? If so, how often does it happen?

Seems impossible to me.

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cooperhawk
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Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by cooperhawk » Sun Dec 17, 2023 12:27 pm

They have an elevated area with tables and they televise it all around the place.
When we've been there there are usually one or two folks trying. If you can't eat it all
then you pay full price and take left overs home.
I'll never try it myself. Can't eat that much.
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Shakey Jake
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Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Mon Dec 18, 2023 9:56 am

HenryFan wrote:
Sun Dec 17, 2023 12:21 pm
Shakey Jake -

Has anyone ever eaten that much food? If so, how often does it happen?

Seems impossible to me.
According to Wiki about 10,000 people have completed the challenge successfully out of 90,000 that have attempted it.
Jake

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Shakey Jake
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Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Mon Dec 18, 2023 9:57 am

Per Traces of Texas Facebook group:
"The Dodge City Peace Commission" in 1883. One of the most famous photos in Old West history. Several men here had Texas roots or spent considerable time here.
Luke Short, whose life story should be a Hollywood movie, was born in Arkansas but moved to Montague County, Texas shortly after birth and grew there. In 1862, Luke witnessed his father being ambushed and attacked by a group of Comanches in their yard. His father was surrounded by the group and attacked with arrows and lances. Inside the house, Luke helped the elder Short by dragging a large rifle to his brother, who then ran and handed it to his father, who successfully fought off the attackers. Later, on the night of February 8, 1887, an argument broke out between Luke Short and Jim Courtright in Fort Worth about the Courtright's persistence in demanding money from Luke's establishment for "protection". Short ended up killing Courtright in one of the Old West's most famous duels.
Bat Masterson was engaged in buffalo hunting on June 27, 1874, when he became an involuntary participant in one of the Wild West's most celebrated Indian fights: a five-day siege by several hundred Comanche, Kiowa and Cheyenne warriors led by Quanah Parker at a collection of ramshackle buildings in the Texas panhandle known as Adobe Walls. Masterson was one of 28 hunters who defended the outpost during the attack. The Comanche suffered the most losses during the battle, though the actual number killed is not known, with reports ranging from a low of 30 to a high of 70. The defenders of Adobe Walls lost only four men, one of whom shot himself by accident. After being fought to a standstill, Quanah Parker and his followers rode off. Later, Masterson was involved in a gunfight in Mobeetie, Texas, and sustained a bullet wound in the pelvis, from which he recovered. But that is why he started carrying his signature cane.
Wyatt Earp met Doc Holliday for the first time at the Cattle Exchange Saloon in Fort Griffin in 1878 --- a meeting Earp credited with saving his life. He subsequently had some serious adventures in Texas.
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RetiredSeabee
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Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by RetiredSeabee » Mon Dec 18, 2023 6:31 pm

Shakey Jake wrote:
Mon Dec 18, 2023 9:56 am
HenryFan wrote:
Sun Dec 17, 2023 12:21 pm
Shakey Jake -

Has anyone ever eaten that much food? If so, how often does it happen?

Seems impossible to me.
According to Wiki about 10,000 people have completed the challenge successfully out of 90,000 that have attempted it.
Jake
I’m willing to bet that at least half of the 10,000 were nicknamed Bubba or Tiny. :D
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Shakey Jake
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Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Mon Dec 18, 2023 7:38 pm

RetiredSeabee wrote:
Mon Dec 18, 2023 6:31 pm
Shakey Jake wrote:
Mon Dec 18, 2023 9:56 am
HenryFan wrote:
Sun Dec 17, 2023 12:21 pm
Shakey Jake -

Has anyone ever eaten that much food? If so, how often does it happen?

Seems impossible to me.
According to Wiki about 10,000 people have completed the challenge successfully out of 90,000 that have attempted it.
Jake
I’m willing to bet that at least half of the 10,000 were nicknamed Bubba or Tiny. :D
Mel's Country Kitchen in Tomball has their own version of this but it's not free if you finish it. They will add your name to the "honor list" if you complete it withing an hour:
The Mega Mel Burger $29.99 One and a half pounds of ground beef, a FULL pound of bacon, 1/4 pound of cheese & all the trimmings. Finish & add your name to our wall!
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Shakey Jake
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Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Tue Dec 19, 2023 10:23 am

Downtown Mineola, Texas in December during the early 60's. The picture is a bit grainy, but I thought it had some merits to post here. I remember my hometown used the same style of Christmas decoration. I guess it was the generic decoration for small towns. Mineola is in East Texas, about 26 miles northeast of Tyler. According to some, Maj. Ira H. Evans, an International-Great Northern Railroad official who laid out the townsite, named the town for his daughter, Ola, and a friend, Minnie Patten. Others say the name originated when Major Rusk, a surveyor for the I-GN, combined his daughter's name with that of Minna Wesley Patten. The town came into existence when the railroads-built lines through this part of the state. In 1873 the Texas and Pacific and the I-GN raced to see which could get to Mineola first. The I-GN reached the finish fifteen minutes earlier. The town's first government was organized in 1873 and incorporated in 1877.
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Shakey Jake
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Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Wed Dec 20, 2023 8:36 pm

Per Traces of Texas:
The Driskill Hotel in Austin is 137 years old today. It was on Dec. 20, 1886 that the grand old lady first opened its doors to the public. Here's a photo of the hotel circa 1920. The hotel was named for its builder, Jesse Lincoln Driskill, who was born in Tennessee in 1824 and moved with his wife to Texas in the early 1850s. He had several business ventures that were successful and then unsuccessful and rebuilt his fortune several times, ultimately becoming a trail cowboy and finally a rancher. Sadly, just two years after he opened his hotel, the Driskill family lost their fortune in 1888, when a late spring freeze on the northern plains killed 3,000 cattle. Payments on the hotel could not be met, and Driskill was forced to sell to S. E. McIlhenny. Jesse Driskill died, some said a broken man, on May 3, 1890, of a stroke
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Shakey Jake
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Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Thu Dec 21, 2023 3:44 pm

Miss Kathy Ellis, an entrant into the 1948 Birthday Party fashion show in Weslaco, Texas. Believe it or not, her entire outfit is made of produce. The Weslaco Chamber of Commerce held these annual parties to highlight the fruit and vegetables grown in the Rio Grande Valley and area citizens created and modeled clothing made from local fruit, vegetables, and flowers. In Kathy's case, her blouse and petticoat were made of white grapefruit membrane. Her laced bodice and overskirt were made of bougainvillea.
Courtesy the bodacious The Portal to Texas History .
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Shakey Jake
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Re: Traces of Tx (today)

Post by Shakey Jake » Fri Dec 22, 2023 1:43 pm

You don't have to live up North to have a Santa Claus Museum. Check out this one in Columbus, TX. It's located at 604 Washington Street.
https://santamuseum.org/
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