“Georgetown- The Pictures and the Stories”
“He Taught Me How To Skate”
(A retelling of a memory described by a woman named Frances in 1987)
After coming home from Baylor, I began teaching in my hometown of Bertram Texas in 1927. Now, teachers were expected to be home by 10 o’clock every night and were not supposed to date during the week. At Bertram, we’d never heard of a roller skating rink, until one came to town. It seemed like the whole town turned out. We all went, but on skates, I seemed to end up sitting on the floor as much as I was on my feet. All at once, here came this good looking young man.
“Would you like me to help you?” He said.
To which I replied, “I sure would!”
On skates, he was one of those that could weave in and out and waltz and all that, and I thought, “Oh, my goodness how wonderful.” So, he just held onto me and away we went! The time went by, and as it got close to 10 o’clock I said, “I’m sorry, but I’ve got to go home.”
“Oh, let me take you!” He said.
“I don’t even know you.”
He took my hand and said, “Follow me.” We went up to the skate counter where a friend that had come with him from Georgetown was standing.
“Tom, will you introduce us please?”
His friend looked at me and said, “Who are you?”
“I’m Frances Ledbetter.”
“Frances, this is Claudie Mayo. Claudie, this is Frances.”
Claudie looked back over at me and said, “May I take you home now?”
“Yes!”
We went together for a year and a half before we got married in January of 1929. We kept on skating over the years, and even though he was much better than me, we enjoyed it.
(Claudie and Frances Mayo lived in Georgetown until they were separated by death. Frances died in 1994, and Claudie in 1998.)
Paraphrased from an interview in volume IV of “Georgetown’s Yesteryears- The way it was” -1987. The image is a platinum toned Kallitype print on rag paper from a wet collodion glass negative.
“Vibrations”
He was a member of an early Native American tribe in Texas, here long before this land was even known by that name. We don’t know if he was a great hunter, warrior, trusted friend, respected leader or father during his lifetime upon this earth, but we do know that upon his death his body was carried alongside a river to its final resting place, located on the high ground of a narrow strip of land separating two rivers just above where they converged into one.
The tribe moved on, as did time. One hundred years quietly went by, which continued on to five hundred years, and then on to at least a thousand more. Until the year when the vibrations began. They were small at first and just settled his bones a bit. But soon, the vibrations started occurring more often, and in greater intensity, coming and going at random intervals.
It may take many more years before the vibrations finally cease, but until then he’ll continue resting just beneath the asphalt road between the north and south tributaries of what we now call the “San Gabriel River” in Georgetown, and chances are he’s not alone.
We vibrate the ground a little each day as we pass over them in our vehicles, whether we’re heading home, to the square, or just pulling through Hat Creek Burger Co. to grab a bite to eat. We just never knew they were there, until the early 1950’s when “Wiggy” Shell started digging what would become Georgetown’s first public swimming pool known as the “Shell Pool,” which was located where the Hat Creek Burger Co. parking lot is today. Another was found where Austin Ave. crosses. So, while it’s certainly possible that those found were the only burials along that strip of land, my little short story is written with the belief that there are more than just two of those who came before us resting along there.
Resource’s were; “Georgetown’s Yesteryears” a book project of the former Georgetown Heritage Society, and “Land of Good Water” by Clara Scarborough.
“Swimming the Blue Hole”—-
Georgetown was settled in the 1840’s and lies just south of where two “San Gabriel” rivers converge into one at what’s now called “San Gabriel Park.” Within the park are the “Tonkawa Springs” which flow out from several areas along the north bank. Because of these springs, the grounds were a seasonal home for Native Americans for thousands of years and the name they gave it translates into, “Land of good water.”
Just a short walk from the square, the “Blue hole” was located between two steep bluffs. I say “was” because, although it still goes by that name today it no longer resembles the original swimming hole.
Long before a small dam was built that changed it, the “Blue hole” was a crystal-clear emerald pool fifteen to twenty feet deep with columns of cattails and secluded behind stands of large trees on both banks. (Fun fact; many years ago an alligator in the “eight footer” range was taken out of the blue hole). The south bank was later cut away to make room for a single lane road which is now a walking path.
In summertime of the 1920’s, “Blue hole” was the most popular place to go swim. But jumping in was more difficult for the female students enrolled at Southwestern University. The campus rules at that time stated that, “Girls are not allowed to go swimming with boys.” But with some collegiate ingenuity, the young folks made it happen anyway.
Sundays after Church was when the students could leave the dorms and get off-campus together. The girls were still dressed in all their Sunday finest as they passed by the front desk and out the doors to join the boys who were waiting with their cars lined up around the circle drive. But prior to making their exit, the girls had bundled up their “bathing suits” and tossed them out a back window, which was promptly retrieved by one of the boys. After parking near the blue hole, “curtains” were placed around a car where the girls could change into their bathing suits.
When it was time to leave, the girls would change back into their Church clothes and give their wet bathing suits to one of the boys to take home and dry out. The following day, he would put the dry bathing suits into a pretty box with elaborate bows and ribbons wrapped all around it and deliver it to the front desk of the girls dorm with a written card that said, “A gift of candy and sweets for the girls.” One young man was so bold as to hand the box directly to the Dean of Women, who kindly told him that she’d be happy to deliver the box to the girls.
But, as with all great shenanigans…they were found out. A notice went up on the dorm bulletin boards stating that “Girls may no longer ride with boys in automobiles.”
Well, that collegiate ingenuity kicked in again and before the next Sunday rolled around, they had solved their problem. The boys had reached out to the local farmers and borrowed or rented every horse drawn buggy and wagon that they could get their hands on, and at 1 PM on Sunday they were once again lined up in the circle drive waiting for the girls to exit the building.
The notice on the bulletin boards was quickly amended to read, “Girls may no longer ride with boys in automobiles, buggy’s, wagons, WHEELS of any kind!”
Well darn!
(Paraphrased accounts from “Georgetown’s Yesteryears”- The People Remember” 1985)
Local boys in the blue hole- 2019
“Little Flo’s Finger”
(As only Florence herself could have described it.)
“In 1910, I was a 5-year-old little girl growing up with six siblings on a cattle ranch a few miles north of Georgetown on Berry Creek. One day, I was playing in the yard with my older brothers Richard and Bob, who were around eight and nine then. Richard had a small hatchet that belonged to Bob, and he was chopping small sticks for me to put into a little cast iron play stove.
Pointing at a stick, I said, “Don’t chop that one.” Bob said, “Chop it Richard” …and as I reached for it, Richard minded Bob instead of me and I hollered out as he cut half my finger off. It didn’t cut it all the way off, but only about halfway through. Our oldest brother Bryce was working nearby and came running when he heard me screaming. Seeing what had happened, he jumped onto a horse and rode for the nearest doctor who lived over in Corn Hill. I remember Momma yelling, “Bob, I told you to put that hatchet up!” He said, “Yeah, but you didn’t tell me not to get it back out.”
When Bryce got to Dr. Foster’s, he wasn’t home, and it was well after dark later that day before he finally made it out to our place.
My 14-year-old brother Clifford was given the task of holding a kerosene lamp so Dr. Foster could see, and as he unwrapped the bandage from my hand the sight of all that blood was just too much for poor Clifford and down he went. I was left sitting there while all attention was turned to reviving Clifford. Everyone was screaming.
Dr. Foster did his best to sew it up but it was soon obvious that blood poisoning had set in and he had to go ahead and cut my finger off.
Richard and Bob took it to bury and had a little funeral and sang songs. It was the least they could do…give it a proper funeral!”
A retelling of a recollection described by Florence Yearwood Wray and Virginia Reagan Yearwood from Vol. IV of “Georgetown’s Yesteryears-The Way It Was” (1985)
“Hello Central”
That’s what you’d say to make a phone call in Georgetown Texas a few years back.
“Central” was a small building near the square (just south of the Wildfire Restaurant), and the switchboard operators were young women known as “Hello girls.” If you were lucky enough to have a phone on the wall at home, it was most likely a party line and connected to the phones of quite a few others.
The phone didn’t have a number, it had a “ring,” and everyone just knew their own, which was a combination of “longs and shorts.” So, if you needed to call Fred and Edna’s house, you would know their ring was “two shorts and a long,” etc. When a call was made, all of the phone’s would ring, and it didn’t matter whose ring it was, anyone could pick up and listen in if they wanted to. The downside (other than the obvious personal invasion part), was that the more folks that picked up, the weaker the call would become. A soldier during WWI had just gotten off of a ship in California and called his mother late one night to let her know that he was alright, but others who heard her ring wanted to know what was going on as well. The line became so weak that she had to stop their conversation and say, “Now…this is my son Robert calling me. Y’all hang up and call me tomorrow and I’ll tell you what he said!” A few of them hung up, and others just hung on.
If you didn’t know someone’s ring, you’d just pick up the receiver and say, “Hello Central” and a “Hello girl” would answer and connect you. “Hello girls” had all the news in town, so if you were curious whether a baby had been born yet or not, you’d just pick up and ask one of them. And it wasn’t uncommon to get a long distance call into Central with a request that went something like; ”My husband’s working there for a man that has a red picket fence and a black dog and I need to get in touch with him.” The “Hello girl” might say, “Yes, I know who that it is, hold the line and I’ll connect you.”
They were also the local “emergency alert system.” Central’s ring was “five longs” and when that went off, everyone would pick up to get the news. It could have been anything from a mad dog on the loose to a bad storm heading towards Georgetown.
As Clara Guthrie Williams put it, “The service was just one piece of line strung up to a small cedar pole with an insulator on it that was tied to a fence post. Storms or wind would weaken the signal, so someone had to work the line all the time to keep the brush off of it.”
A 6” x 6” wet plate ambrotype. Resource was “Georgetown’s Yesteryears” a book project of the former Georgetown Heritage Society.
“Milk money”
The dairies near Georgetown in the early 20th century were just small family farms, and everyone in that family would start their day by milking cows. Actually, if you grew up on any farm with cows, a standard chore for the kids was to milk them before going to school, and then again after school. But if you lived in town, life was easier. If you were out of milk or butter, you would let the dairy know how much you needed a day or two in advance, and after all the “udder tuggin” was completed of a morning, they’d fill up milk jars, cover them with a cardboard cap and deliver it to your porch, possibly by the same person who had just “tugged” it. In exchange, you’d drop some money into an empty milk jar and put it out on the porch, or into a bucket hanging out on the fence. Leaving the milk on the porch was the best spot, since you were most likely off picking, plucking, or skining something for your family to eat that night for supper. If there wasn’t a dairy farm nearby, milk might be obtained from a neighbor’s cows, although it might be in exchange for whatever you’d just finished picking plucking or skinning.
The challenges are different now. One must drive all the way to the grocery store.
Image is a photo of a whole plate platinum print from a wet collodion negative. Resource was “Georgetown’s Yesteryears” a book project of the former Georgetown Heritage Society.
“Noah and Nanna”
Known today as the “Come and Take It” flag, in 1835 it was just “The old cannon flag,” which flew over the little junk cannon at the battle of Gonzales and the first shot fired of the Texas revolution.
The flag itself was lost to history, but someone who saw it and later described it was Noah Smithwick, a familiar name to anyone interested in Texas history. His book, “The Evolution of a State” is considered to be, as J. Frank Dobie described it, “The best of all books dealing with life in early Texas.” And as an enthusiast of Texas history, it’s been #1 in my Texana library for a very long time. I “splurged” many years ago to acquire an early edition of the book.
Following the revolution, Noah’s family lived near Georgetown, and then some years later he helped build a gristmill with his nephew east of Marble Falls where the community of “Smithwick” is still on the map.
By 1861 the Civil War was firing up and Noah, being a supporter of the union, decided it would be better for his health to leave Texas for California. His nephew stayed and ended up being killed and thrown into a waterhole.
By 1897, only two of his five children remained alive. Noah was now 89 and completely blind. His daughter Nancy (who went by “Nanna”) was a writer, who realized the importance of preserving her dad’s knowledge of early Texas, and also that his time was running out. She left Georgetown for California and spent the next two years documenting Noah’s memories as he sat in his chair and recounted them to her.
Regarding the flag, Noah had arrived at Gonzales the day after the battle and helped fix the cart carrying the flag and the cannon before they all moved on towards San Antonio. What we know as the flag today, being a single star over a cannon, was made as a third-person sketch from a description being given by a blind man. We won’t ever know just how accurate it really was, but today, Nancy’s original pencil sketch of the flag is in the Gonzales Memorial Museum next to the original cannon.
Noah died at the age of 91 in October of 1899. “Evolution of a State” was published in 1900 and remained popular throughout the 20th century and beyond.
And for a Texas history lovin’ guy like myself, here’s where things get really weird.
At some point, Nanna went back out to California to visit friends and became ill. She sent a wire back to Georgetown to her friend Fred Millholin, who worked for the newspaper, asking him if he would buy her house for $500, which he did. Nancy later died in 1937 and was buried in Santa Ana.
Fred and Almeda Millholin spent the rest of their lives in the house, and they had a daughter named Rosemary who also lived there. As fate would have it, over twenty-five years ago Rosemary was moving into assisted living when I bought “Millholin house” from her. And it was years later before I learned that Nanna Smithwick-Donaldson had been the previous owner.
Talk about a book feeling right at home. “Evolution of a State” was already here at home…long before I was ever even here…and at home, with my own copy!
“A Georgetown Saturday Night”
If it was spring or summer in the early years of the 20th century in Georgetown Texas, the square was the place to be on a Saturday night, and the stores always stayed open until after 10 PM. This was the day that the farming families came into town to do their shopping, and it was also a time for fun and socializing for the younger folks. The ice cream parlor was a popular stop, and the sidewalks were always crowded. The single girls would group up and walk around the square in one direction, while the boys would walk around it in the other so that they could collide and mingle.
For others, it was about getting to see a movie. The first motion picture theater was started by Dave Goodlett and was called the “Airdome,” which was an open-air theater between two buildings on the north side of the square with 8 ft. sheet metal walls and plank seats. Admission was 5 cents, but for 10 cents one could sit on the premium planks which were screened in and off to one side. That audience didn’t have to deal with the pesky bugs quite as much, but everyone had to deal with the heat. The features were shaky 4-reel silent movies with pauses in the action while the reels were changed over. There wasn’t much music with them either, unless there was an exceptionally emotional scene such as a hero dying or the like, and then a person up in the front would play some sad music on a piano.
Dave Goodlett later opened the “Monarch Theater” inside the building on the SE corner of 8th and Austin St. He would send his son Sebe across the square with a small megaphone to announce the title and time of a movie that would be starting soon. Dave would do the same, but from the top of these stairs located on the side of the “Monarch.” He’d also advertise the lemonade available inside, hollering out that it was, “…as long as a railroad track, cold as a rich man’s heart, pure as a farmer’s blood, and as sweet as a girl; five cents a glass!”
Saturday nights on the square stayed busy like this up until “Gunsmoke” arrived on television. After that, folks would just come into town, quickly do their shopping, and then head right back on home to watch Matt Dillon!
A 6” x 8” wet plate ambrotype. Resource’s were; “Georgetown’s Yesteryears” a book project of the former Georgetown Heritage Society, and “Land of Good Water” by Clara Scarborough.
“The Red Poppies of Georgetown”
Each spring, the “Old Town” district of Georgetown is covered in wild red poppies. They’re everywhere. But what made them "pop" up here? Well, that was due to Henry.
Henry Purl Compton grew up on 7th Street and was known simply as “Henry” up until 1912 when he earned a nickname… “Okra.”
Henry's family were local cotton farmers, but during one very bad year, his father put aside planting cotton to take a job that had him traveling. It was then that 17-year-old Henry decided that he wanted to help out. He’d read that okra had potential of bringing in a good profit, so he planted the farm in it. But what the county ended up profiting greatly from in 1912 was relentless rain. The ground was so saturated that Henry couldn’t harvest the okra before it all went to seed, which then blew all over the county and started what the locals called an “okra plague,” and Henry was bestowed his new nickname of “Okra.”
Two years later, our country was pulled into World War I, and “Okra” enlisted.
“I didn’t join World War I to fight.” Henry said later, “I joined to get out of the okra business!”
While crossing the Flanders region of Belgium as part of the “Western Front,” Henry couldn't help but notice the beautiful red poppies growing there. He gathered some of the poppies and sent the seeds back to his mother in Georgetown, who promptly planted them in her front garden. Like Belgium, the limestone rich soil of central Texas was a perfect match for them, and they grew like crazy. Grew like okra! The seeds spread up and down 7th street, into Southwestern University, and eventually all over “Old Town. So once again, Henry had a hand in getting seeds blowing all over Williamson County. Maybe his nickname should have then been changed to “Poppy!”
Georgetown’s poppies are now nationally known, and its “Red Poppy Festival” is held each year in April.
Fun fact: The old Compton house is located at 507 E. 7th St. But before the Compton’s owned the house, it was the home of a Georgetown wet plate photographer, George Addison. The house is now known as the “Addison-Compton house,” and is next door to Georgetown’s current wet plate photographer. . . me!
Steps to nowhere now - Georgetown Texas - 2022