Thursday, October 19, 2017

El Jardin: Agony on the gridiron




The year was 1929, only three years after the new El Jardin school building (located five miles east of Brownsville) was erected, that its football 11, the Comets, were fighting for their lives on the gridiron.
The rural school football title was on the line with Stuart Place and El Jardin having two games remaining against each other for the crown.
El Jardin had a formable starting lineup that included: H. Vicars, left end; Frazier, left tackle; Carl Vicars, left guard; Underwood, center; Kemper, right guard; Gendenning, right tackle; Adams, right end; Coy Vicars, quarterback; Lawrence, left halfback; Mathias, right halfback; and Triplett, fullback.
In their first encounter Stuart Place gained an advantage on the Cameron County Rural title by defeating the Comets in Brownsville, 13-12. The Herald described it as a nip-and-tuck affair, with neither team holding a decided advantage.
El Jardin’s inability to score points after touchdowns and a called-back score for being offside was the downfall for the Comets.
The second game was played at Stuart Place. where El Jardin was embarrassed. Coach Ryle’ team ended the season with undefeated record and the Rural Championship Title.
But wait a minute — according to Bruce Underwood, those three points the Comets scored “were the greatest three points in Rio Grande Valley Football. “The following is a reprint of Underwood’s story of that November afternoon game of 1929:
Eleven spirited but rather scrawny El Jardin High School football players were taking the most awful drubbing of their lives on that mild afternoon at Stuart Place High School in November of 1929.
The host team, it was proved later, had brought in five huge, over-aged, ineligible players to help insure a victory in this second of the three-game series against El Jardin. Such a victory would enable Stuart Place to win the Cameron County Class “B” Championship.
Stuart Place’s power was evident in the first play from scrimmage. El Jardin guard-center Bruce Underwood was knocked out for the only time in his 16 years of sports competition.
Coach Diltz’s El Jardin Comets tried everything they knew to hold the score down, since it seemed impossible for them to score. The Comets pulled a foxy play when Stuart was four touchdowns ahead.
Tackle Homer Vicars received the ball after a kickoff, but instead of returning it he amazed the home team by holding the ball a second, while the Stuart players thundered toward him. Just in time he punted the ball 35 yards back into Stuart territory. Even this unexpected reverse didn’t keep the home team from piling up a higher and higher score.
By the time the fourth quarter rolled around, the dog-tired Comets didn’t even bother to keep the score. The home team juggernaut kept on smothering the Brownsville boys. The little handful of spectators lost interest.
After El Jardin received the ball on the next kickoff, quarterback Coy Vicars tried three plays that got nowhere. He routinely called for a punt. (In those days the quarterback ran the game; his team executed the plays he called.) Just before the center snapped the ball, however, Coy shouted, “Signals check.” Quickly, he called the number for scrappy Bill Lawrence to do what he used to a lot on the practice field.
Bill was to try a drop-kick goal, no matter if the ball was almost 40 yards from the Stuart goal line.
As the viciously charging Stuart line poured toward him, unflappable Bill got off the most stunning drop-kick of his life. The 52-yarder was beautiful. The ball headed straight toward the uprights and spun end over end, high above the crossbar. An amazed referee thrust both of his arms toward the sky.
The Comets had always liked Bill; now they revered him. The final score of 84-3 was incredibly better than 84-0 would have been.
And yes, on this day, the Comets had a tough time holding that line and were repeatedly knocked down, but they repeatedly got up, to eventually score a moral victory by recording a blemish on their opponent’s side of the board.
In October of this year, a high school team made national news when it lost 91-0. After the game a parent accused the winning squad of “bullying.”
I guess the Comets could have done the same, but you heard no cries of “foul play” coming from them; instead, they took it on the chin and went on to recover much faster than the stock market crash of ’29.
When it comes to victories or defeats, we must remember the words of Michel de Montaigne: “There are some defeats more triumphant than victories.”
The following year, the El Jardin Comets would no longer sear their opponents; instead would claw ’em down. The student body voted to change their mascot name from Comets to Cougars. The boys wanted something on their lettermen’s blanket that suggested real flesh and blood fights.
Allow me to close with the El Jardin High School Alma Mater, as written in 1939. It is for those who proudly walked the halls of that once rural school that was then so removed from city life, that some rode their horses to school.
In this tip of Texas where bal-my breezes blow,
Palm trees and poinsettias and golden grapefruit grow,
The dearest spot of all, the school we love so well,
El Jardin High School, your glories swell.
(Chorus) We’ll fight, fight, dear Green and White
We give our best to you;
So true to thee we’ll ever be,
We’ll fight for you
Our banner is the peer, its colors may they shine,
Green for youthful vigor and white for honor or fine,
Now come, let us recall, those memories so dear,

Give us now, your classmates, and a lusty cheer!

Monday, October 16, 2017

2017 Brownsville Latin Jazz Festival Street Jams and Dance Party Photo album

Photos by Javier R. Garcia

 Saturday - Street Jams on E Adams St.
 The stage was set on E Adams St between 13th and 12th with Fausto Cuevas III Latin Jazz Band headlining the annual festival this year


 Toni Hudson art was on display
Juan Montoya and Mary Helen Flores rockin' t-shirts with Toni Hudson's design which includes an acknowledgment to downtown heritage director Peter Goodman who for many years coordinated the activity between the City of Brownsville and the BSPA. 
 Show dancers 

 Street dancing on E Adams St

 Brownsville Society for the Performing Arts director George Ramirez (at center) with friends of the  Brownsville Heritage Museum-  Sitting L to R:  Ed and Ceci Moody, George,  Alexander Stillman and BHM director Tara Putegnat.  Standing L to R:  Juan, Dave and Aubrey.  

Sunday - Dance Party of E Levee St
 E Levee St was closed from 10th St to 12th for festival guests 

Chalk art street museum on the Capitol Theater done by local artists from UT-RGV, TSC and Buena Vida Neighborhood






 Ernesto, Veronica and Jacqueline


BSPA and Latin Jazz Festival organizer George Ramirez


READ MORE about Latin Jazz Festival at the Brownsville Society for the Performing Arts webpage by clicking THIS LINK!  

Sunday, October 15, 2017

1930 aerial by CR Sinclair over Gateway Bridge ~ Brownsville, Texas

1930 aerial photo (in-part) by a North Star pilot C.R. Sinclair acquired by Jose Cazares of Brownsville, Texas showing El Jardin Hotel, Missouri Pacific Railroad Depot, Capitol Theater  and other familiar downtown structures on E Levee St. and E Elizabeth St.

For a larger image click link below
****LINK****
1930 aerial photo by C.R. Sinclair over Brownsville, Texas

2017 TSC's First Annual Living History Day at UTRGV- Brownsville




 Dirk Yarker as a Roman soldier 63 B.C era
 Rob Ramaker as Knights Templar soldier 1187 A.D.
 A teen with 35 lb. shield
1530 Spanish Conquistador Eloy Garcia 

 Wade as a 1780 Revolutionary soldier
 1836 Tejano Revolutionary soldier
 1846 Mexican-American War soldier opens a medical kit to identify surgical tools inside
 Saw for amputations of bone-shattered limbs
 Infantry Shako
 1860s Bruce Kidd dressed as Civil War 1st Lieutenant Trans Mississippi  Confederate soldier
 Bruce Kidd displays yellow feather in hat and insignia that identifies him as a Lieutenant in Confederate Army
 Ruben Cordova dressed as a Lipan Apache scout during Civil War along the Texas border 

 1914-18 Jing Lou as a World War I infantry soldier dressed for trench warfare with gas mask close at-hand
 Bayonet attachment demonstration for close quarter combat
Haversack and blanket carried on back
It was a wonderful event with free hot dogs and refreshments.  They were all wearing heavy costumes, many made of wool, on a very warm day and were able to tell stories and points differing points of view and answer many questions.

Here a **LINK** to the Brownsville Herald article about this event.  

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

1967 Vivid Memories of Hurricane Beulah 50 Years Later



Janie Garcia I was a freshman at TSC and living at home. My older brother and his family came to stay with us. We had gas stove so ate well. We used the galvanized tubs to shower in cause we had no water except the one we had gathered. No electricity so when night fell, we would used kerosene lamps to get around. Trees were all over the streets but we were safe even though our home was in a corner.
Jim Tipton For a ten year old it was fun.

Mary Melching It was a week after my tenth birthday-!
George Longoria Mosquitos galore

Olga Moreno I missed the big one..Beulah..was working in Indiana in a catsup factory..with family..
Remove
Bernardo S Garza That's right. And it wasn't just ketchup; it was tomato soup, tomato sauce and canned tomatoes. When school started I worked night shift and weekends. It was like another life. Couldn't stand ketchup for a long time. That was my second and last year as a migrant worker, but nine years later I returned to the midwest for a different reason (UM Law School).
Remove
Olga Moreno Yes..even now I don't care too much for catsup..hehe..that was my last time as a migrant worker too..what adventures we had..and yes you went out again for a better reason and made us all proud..love you Bernie..
Remove
Bernardo S Garza Love you too Yogi
Fran Hancock I was working as a receptionist at the Newman Center on the TSC campus(building now a police station) under the supervision of Father Ballard (RIP) after studying full time in the Fall 1966. I too lived at home since our house was on Jackson Street just walking distance. Afterwards enrolled in night classes before going on to Texas A&I where I graduated in 1971. During Beulah, we had 18 people at our house during the hurricane - including three visitors from Monterrey, Mexico who could not return home before the storm. It was so scary since we heard objects hit the house and one of our sisters reported that our neighbor's tree was pulled from its roots and had blown away. Our uncle was in Vietnam and managed to call the Sheriff's office(it was law enforcement but not sure what group) to come and check on us because they were hearing on the news that we were off the map. I remember seeing the National Guard in the aftermath! We were fortunate given that we lived in a wooden house - built by our Dad of course but still made of wood. Thank the Lord we made it without any damages. Let's pray for those impacted by all the past hurricanes such as Harvey, Irma and now Maria. Many blessings to all
1967 Hurricane Beulah "McGee catches an airplane hanger [reference is to Mauldin's Airport] exploding between Brownsville and San Benito. Wind estimate 125 MPH. Five minutes later we were in dead calm of eye."
Gabe Vega Hmmm... Exactly 9 months before I was born? Coincidence?


Olga Lydia Saenz I was five years old. My family sheltered at Mercy Hospital. I got blown by the wind holding on to the screen door.
Remove
Poy M. Reta I was living in Brownsville, when it hit. Had to evaluate to the church of Christ the King.
Remove
Mary Melching Daddy catching over 300 parrots and placing them in cages in our house.
Mother frying chicken by the buckets.
Hoarding water.
Dry ice.
Batteries.
Daddy plotting the movement of Beulah on the giant hurricane map...
My horse dying.
No school for 3 weeks...?
Seeing my father weep at the devastation.

1967 Press Photo A Fleet of Wrecked Shrimp Boats in Brownsville, Texas after Hurricane Beulah passed
Millie Sexton We stayed at the El Jardin Hotel

Remove
Soledad Garcia Woodburn My family had moved to Wisconsin in April of 67! We were suppose to be back by Aug and never came back. Our house was totally emptied by Beulah. It came in the front door and out the back kitchen door. Since we were not there, no one secured our place. We lost all we had. My Mom & Dad drove down to see what they needed to do. Our neighbors had a tin can to give to Mom. This is where my Mom kept our all school Records and award. My State Gold Spelling Bee, and some other small valuable items that were of sentimental value to us .So the entire Family was very grateful to Oralia, who had rescued that from the floating water in our back yard . I pray for all those who are now going through the devastation of the hurricanes and the earthquakes. God Bless Us All
Nan Jones Hughes I was 16 and living on Monroe street with my Mom. My Aunt Ruth was staying with us and she had been dismissed from Mercy Hospital (had been there for nosebleeds). I will never forget that time. My Mom was securing boards across a door that lead from our garage and out to our back yard. My Aunt was holding the board for her to hammer the nails into. When they finished My Aunt went to take her had from the board and she couldn't get loose because her hand was lodged between the board and the door. We all laughed so hard. Those were some kind of pain killers she was on. My Aunt Ruth was Dr. Harry Millers Receptionist for over 20 years. RIP to all 3
Robert Casares Seven years old and living in San Antonio. On trips to the valley for the next year or two, I remember fields full of water next to US-77 in Raymondville and Lyford.

Asked my cousin about my great grandmother's home in San Benito and there was no damage.
Gracie V. Miranda I was six years old! I remember going to my elementary school for shelter. It was a last minute decision my parents made.😃
Remove
Cynthia Lee Espinosa Strong I was also six years old...my family and I sought shelter at Sams football stadium.
1966 Press Photo Hurricane Inez-Residents of lowlands around Brownsville
Remove
Maria Garza I was twelve when Beulah hit Brownsville. My parents, myself and six siblings were moved to the civic Center by the National guard. My mother did not want to leave our house and prepared very well for the storm. But when she saw all the neighbors leaving, she changed her mind. Don't remember how long we were in the shelter, but it eventually got unlivable. The windows were breaking and the toilets were not working and messy. One thing I cannot forget was the stench. Everyone was sleeping on the floor. After the storm, we found out our house was completely destroyed. We lived with our aunt, who lived across the alley behind us, for about three months. Her house was untouched. Dad had our house rebuilt. Not sure what kind of help he got, if a low interest loan or grant, not sure. So he wouldn't have to borrow so much, he had only the shell built and later worked on the inside walls and other details himself. It was very scary and when hurricane Harvey was coming I could feel that it was going to be bad. It was a gut feeling. You see, I live in Houston now and have lived thru my share of storms. My family and I have been lucky though. I am thankful.
Kim Tipton I remember taping windows with masking tape, so hard to clean off. We had a gas stove and lots of ice in chests.
Remove
Lita Palmer Besteiro Didn't need special hurricane or flood insurance back then. Regular home insurance covered it. I remember parents taking tons of 'before"&"after " pics
Remove
One of these days I'll dig out the pics
1954 Press Photo Brownsville Police rescue family from flood waters, TX
Doc Roberts I helped deliver meds.
Cindy Abrego Morales I was eleven years old.. I remember going to my grandmother house in Mercedes Tx .. we were there till the storm was over ... I remember helping my mom pack a lot of food and big bottle of water ... It was a very bad storm .. the winds were real bad ...
Remove
Diana Morrison I had just married September 1, 1967....weeks before Beulah hit Brownsville head on! My mother-in-law's name was Beulah....was a little afraid of what I had gotten myself into! The hurricane did a lot of damage to Brownsville. My parents home (two doors down from Dr. Harry Miller) on Honeydale had 30 year old trees blown over. My Mom was devastated as she had planted every one of them. We had 4x8 sheets of plywood on every window, so our house was pretty spared from damage. Everyone in my family drive inland....we don't stay for hurricanes, too dangerous!
Remove
Brownsville Station This is great. Later on I would like to make a post of this on the BS blog for future readers to enjoy your comments which really tell so much more than photographs ever could. thank you all 
Manage
Leo Rodriguez I was 11 years old, my dad & my grandfather were carpenters, they assured family our house was structurally sound, so we stayed, and they were right.

After hurricane hit, dad drove us to Harlingen to see the impact. I still vividly recall the Arroyo 
Colorado, the water level almost reached the bridge street surface. About a week later we would hear airplanes spraying mosquitos, which were horrible, we couldn't step outside without being bitten continuously.
Remove
Donna Sue Cameron My sister and I were Seniors at the new Brownsville High School. I sat up all night with my dad on watch and filled out my application to college, Trinity University. The next day we volunteered with the girl Scouts at the High school shelter then volunteered on food trucks in Port Isabel which had been leveled. The old causeway was closed to South Padre Beach.
Remove
Hector Guajardo I was 4 when we road out CARLA the parents had sedated us kids and tucked us in bed incase we didn't survive it. They realized how bad that was, so when Beulah headed in my parents decided we would high tail it out to San Antonio only to find that there were no hotel vacancies in the city. It wasnt much better there when we realized we had road out a Texas Tornado and how fortunate we were to survive it. A lady who saw us staying in a park took us in to her home and lucky for us that she had a basement shelter in her three story home which got damaged by the tornado.


1967  Ft Brown Motor Hotel - (photo sent by Leo Rodriguez)
Maricela Rivera Galvan I am your tia marcy i was there too in ama,s house in mercedes, tx

Remove
Cindy Abrego Morales Everybody was there Tia .. even though it was a scary time .. we all have our good memories being together..,
Remove
Priscilla Abbott These are great stories. I had finished teaching at Cummings for 7 years and was planning to leave for Seattle to study Japanese Language at the U. of Washington for a few months before leaving for Japan. I was able to leave Brownsville on the last plane before Beulah hit. Then I could not contact my parents for many days. Their roof had had some damage so they went to an uncle's house. The previous hurricane to make such serious contact in Brownsville was over 30 years earlier. There are stories that my mother went through that one under a mattress at her parents' house in Port Isabel. Last month I left Victoria just ahead of Harvey. My apartment was undamaged, but many residences in this city have been ruined by that storm.
Susan Guerra I grew up with stories of this hurricane Beulah, my grandma took refuge at a school in Matamoros and that the walls would move and shake right in front of them, total devastation fr months after, i was only 1 and living in Lousiana with my family 
Remove
Laura Garcia-Avendaño I remember, I was 7 years old, we stayed at my grandparents over nite and went back to our house the following day to see only broken trees
1967 Fort Brown Motor Hotel
Stella Garcia We were at Nana and Tata house with the door open went downtown next
Morning and there were Nationsl guardsmen all over the place there was hardly any damage only a few broken store fronts
Remove
Stella Garcia The flooding occurred in Harlingen not Brownsville and people that left could not come back
Remove
Carol Lee Davidson I was working at Mercy Hospital in the ER. All hospital staff had to stay and work. If you had family they were welcome to come there also. The very elderly bedridden retired nuns lived in the basement part of the hospital. They were so good. Lots of mothers from Matamoros came in during the storm to have their babies. We were very busy that night. My parents stayed home and rode out the storm. We never surrender!,
Remove
Brownsville Station Those were tougher times
Manage
Dam Gunnoe My mother was pregnant with me,and we stayed in the basement of Mercy Hospital.
1967 aerial of Gateway International Bridge after Hurricane Beulah
Norma Garcia I was not born yet my father domingo Rivera Sr told me they had just baptized my older sister they had to tie ropes around their waists because of the flood water to get from one place to another if you were going out. he would say it was a really really bad storm my dad had lots of stories he would be conversing everyday he was born in 1908 so he had lived through alot
Remove
Liza Alegre I wasn't even in the pic, my older brother was 1 yo

Remove
Maria Alaniz I was 3 yrs old..when Bullah hit Mexico cuz that's where I was born n believe it or not I remember..my mom full of mud in her face water up to her chest..n she would go n get us food up in a hill from the helicopters from the US..to help us..I remember Bullah...then after that my mom brought all my brothers n sisters to the valley to Mission..n I've been here ever since...I will never forget Bullah .
Remove
Rosemary Sloss Parra We had just moved back to Brownsville. It was scary!
 1967 Hurricane Beulah 1444 Palomar home (Mels Antiques)
 1967 Hurricane Beulah 1444 Palomar home (Mels Antiques)
Remove
Robert Mora I was 7 living in a very old house. We came back and found it still standing, even surviving a tree falling on the roof

Sophia Gonzalez I was 8 yrs old and all my family waited through it in the Buena Vida projects where we lived at till 1969. Moved to Dallas the following year & still here.
1967 HAM radio operators help communicate with the outside world - (SPI LIFE Facebook page)
Remove
Joseph Biela Um. I was two years old so no memories other than those shared by family. I do remember the next one (Celia) _ But my grandpa telling me his refrigerator was found two blocks down.

Remove
Martha Capie I do remember! I was also very young living in San Diego and my mom was so worried for our family here
 1967 El Pirata and other shrimp boats got licked by Hurricane Beulah
1967 Press Photo A Fleet of Wrecked Shrimp Boats in Brownsville, Texas 
Remove
Juan Johnny Solis I was a graduate of Class of 1967 and June 1 was my graduation. I had been working as a VOE student the the PUB Power Plant on the West Side of Bville. I was 18 yrs old when Beulah hit us in Sept. Being single and no family I volunteered to help keep the plant running with Clarence Fragoso, Macedonio Lopez, Jimmy Frausto and Ruben Cano who brought their Families and bunked in the lower part of the building. We were able to keep the giant screens from clogging up with debris and trash so water could circulate and keep the steam turbines going even thou power was out in the City. Simply it was a nightmare...category 5 hurricanes are scary.

Jessica Stone My mother, 2 brothers, sister and I stayed at my grandmother's house on Levee Street. Daddy was a Border Patrolman and was on duty thru the storm. Very scary yet exciting for us. When we got back to our own casa on Greenway, our fence was blown down. 9 years old.

Holly Miller Our family boarded up the windows and went to Laredo for a couple of days. We lived on Los Ebanos St. at that time.
Remove
David Stanley I was 12. As we returned to the valley after the hurricane, I remember national guard helicopters swirling overhead, and entire houses floating down the floodway we were crossing. Our house in Brownsville had a lot of broken windows and the inside was covered with mold. SO many mosquitoes!
Remove
Pam Johnson Day My father was out of town so it was my mom and 4 kids and 1 being a toddler. We left Brownsville and traveled to Harlingen where my grandmother and uncle lived. My uncle worked for Southwestern Bell so we were able to stay at the telephone building (all brick)until the storm pasted. I do remember how it damaged the island and Port Isabell. I was just thinking about that time in my life because we just rode out Harvey.
Remove
June Dittman I had to go back to teach school at Russell Elementary wit NO power! We had "mold chandeliers" hanging from the ceiling and it was warm and humid! I went home to no power. During the super high wind blowing against the house, we watched the shingles from my grandmother's house "peel off" as if they were paper in the angry wind blowing very swift and horizontally! It was frightening at times as objects blew and struck our house and windows! I am thankful that we have not had a storm this year! 
Remove
Chuck Pace Beulah was the first hurricane I remember impacting Victoria. I was 8. Must have been mostly rain that far north of Brownsville. But we talked about it for years!

Page copies of Portrait of Beulah memorial publication shared by Gloria Bermea