Bring back some good or bad memories


Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts

February 10, 2022

DOCUMERICA: Snapshots of America in Crisis in the 1970s

By the late 1960s, the American landscape was ravaged by decades of unchecked land development, blighted by urban decay in the big cities, and plagued by seemingly unstoppable air, noise, and water pollution. 

In November 1971, the newly created Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced a monumental photodocumentary project to “photographically document subjects of environmental concern” in the United States. The collection, now at the National Archives, resulted in a collection of more than 20,000 photographs by its conclusion in 1978.

With support from the first EPA administrator, William Ruckelshaus, project director Gifford D. Hampshire contracted well-known photographers to work for the EPA on the project. Estimates of the number involved range between 70 and 120, and they were organized geographically, with each photographer working in a particular area in which they were already active.

Subjects photographed include urban cityscapes, small towns, rural areas, beaches and mountains. They show people going about their everyday lives as well as working in farms; waterfronts; mining and logging, industry and heavy industry. Images document junk yards, highways, Amtrak trains, air and water pollution; and environmental protection and pollution control measures. 

The earliest assignments were closely aligned to the EPA's proposed areas of concern: air and water pollution, management of solid waste, radiation and pesticides, and noise abatement.  However, photographers had considerable creative freedom about what they shot.  Among the areas depicted are national parks and forests, including environmentally sensitive areas that were under development or considered for government protection.

Water cooling towers of the John Amos Power Plant loom over a home located across the Kanawha River, near Poca, West Virginia, August 1973. (Harry Schaefer)

One of four bicyclists holds her ears against the roar of the jet taking off from National Airport in Washington, District of Columbia, May 1973. (John Neubauer)

Clark Avenue and Clark Avenue bridge, looking east from West 13th Street, obscured by industrial smoke, in Cleveland, Ohio, July 1973. (Frank J. Aleksandrowicz)

Balloon logging in the Culp Creek drainage area of Oregon, near Eugene.

A mountain of damaged oil drums lies in a heap in an Exxon refinery near Baton Rouge, Louisiana, December 1972. (John Messina)




February 5, 2022

Evocative Photos of Life in Texas in the 1970s

By the late 1960s, the American landscape was ravaged by decades of unchecked land development, blighted by urban decay in the big cities, and plagued by seemingly unstoppable air, noise, and water pollution. 

In November 1971, the newly created Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced a monumental photodocumentary project to “photographically document subjects of environmental concern” in the United States. The collection, now at the National Archives, resulted in a collection of more than 20,000 photographs by its conclusion in 1978.

With support from the first EPA administrator, William Ruckelshaus, project director Gifford D. Hampshire contracted well-known photographers to work for the EPA on the project. Estimates of the number involved range between 70 and 120, and they were organized geographically, with each photographer working in a particular area in which they were already active. For example, Leakey, Houston and San Antonio in Texas were covered by Marc St. Gil.

Take a look at life in Texas in the late 1970s through 19 pictures below:

Dallas, 1972

Galveston’s West Beach on the Gulf Of Mexico draws huge crowds, 1972

Galveston Bay, 1972

Dune buggy on Stewart Beach on the eastern tip of Galveston Island, 1972

Galveston Bay, 1972




November 4, 2021

October 17, 2021

Applicant for Carhop Job Being Interviewed, Houston, 1940

Applicant for carhop job, Ruth Oliphant, 18, is being inspected by Mrs. Sivils, who coaches girls in diction, deportment and the importance of laughing at customers’ jokes.


A carhop is a waiter or waitress who brings fast food to people in their cars at drive-in restaurants. Carhops usually work on foot but sometimes use roller skates, as depicted in movies such as American Graffiti and television shows such as Happy Days.

Carhops were especially big in the 1950s and 1960s when car culture was really emerging. They can still be found at a few remaining original drive-in stands and nostalgic fast food establishments, mostly in smaller and rural towns with local ownership.

Roller skating carhop in the 1940s.

Sonic Drive-In still employs carhops at most of their over 3,600 restaurants. In recent years, there has been a carhop resurgence, with some franchises cashing in on the nostalgia and memories of baby boomers. The aluminum window trays used by carhops are still manufactured and sold today.




September 18, 2021

Portraits of Highland Park High School Teenage Girls, 1947

Highland Park High School is a public, co-educational high school located immediately north of downtown Dallas in University Park, Dallas County, Texas. It is a part of the Highland Park Independent School District, which serves residents who are predominantly college-educated professionals and business leaders in the Dallas community. It serves: all of the city of University Park, most of the town of Highland Park, and portions of Dallas.


The first building was the yellow brick schoolhouse of the Armstrong School which opened on October 12, 1915. The Armstrong School only served children through ninth grade. In 1922, the high school moved to its own separate building on Normandy Avenue following HPISD’s purchase of 11 lots in 1920. The tenth grade was added in the fall of 1922, and the eleventh grade a year later.

In 1924, 34 students became the first graduating class of the Highland Park Independent School District when they participated in the first-ever high school graduation ceremony of HPISD on June 2, 1924 (at that time, only eleven years of school were required prior to college admittance; it was not until 1937 that the twelfth grade was added).

These black and white photos were taken by LIFE photographer Cornell Capa in 1947. They show beautiful teenage girls’ styles of Highland Park High School from between the mid to the late of 1940s.










September 2, 2021

Unidentified Man and His 1952 Custom Pontiac in Houston, Texas, 1973

Postcard published by International Trade, 1973. Back of postcard reads: “’52 Pontiac custom features hand-painted seat covers, lots of chrome, years of work.”


The artist wishes to remain anonymous. Photographed by Chip Lord in Houston, Texas, 1973.




August 21, 2021

The Story of Janis Joplin at Her 10 Year High School Reunion in Port Arthur, Texas in August 1970

In August 1970, just weeks before her untimely and tragic death, Janis Joplin’s last journey back to her native Port Arthur, Texas included a highly publicized appearance at her 10 year high school reunion that saw the 27-year-old singer in the very unique position of having defied the odds, leaving small town life as an unwanted outcast and returning as a wealthy counterculture icon. She told a local reporter that she was attending “just to jam it up their asses” and to “see all those kids who are still working in gas stations and driving dry-cleaning trucks while I’m making fifty thousand dollars a night”.

Some of those same kids once called Janis a pig and a weirdo and threw pennies at her, teasing her about everything from her weight to her acne to her outspokenness about civil rights. Many of them never left Port Arthur, so 10 years hadn’t brought many changes. But here was Janis, a rock star, a counterculture icon and a wealthy woman, returning with sweet revenge on her mind. And a secret hope that she might finally be accepted. She arrived in hippie style – a loose white blouse, purple and pink feathers in her hair, oversized tinted glasses, and a bounty of bracelets jangling on each wrist. But as often happens when we go home, we revert to our insecure, teenage selves. At the reunion, Janis quickly felt the chill of her classmates, who stood apart, snickering and making catty remarks about her.

The Goodhue Hotel, in downtown Port Arthur just off Proctor St., is venerable. On a certain Saturday afternoon in August, hot in the unique way it gets hot in towns on the upper Texas Gulf coast, a couple of oscillating fans in the Goodhue lobby were playing ping pong with what passes for atmosphere in Port Arthur: Equal parts of humidity and whatever the refineries were exhaling that day.

The Schedule of Events board in front of the elevator listed a dinner-dance in the Scenic Room for 7:30. It was the 10th reunion of the class 1960, Thomas Jefferson High School, and it was to be preceded at 6:30 by a cocktail reception in the Petroleum Room on the second floor.

One of the girls from the class of 1960 was the one who compiled all the addresses and sent out all the letters and had her name on things as one of the persons who was ramrodding the reunion. She had said on the phone to newspaper people who had called about Janis and the reunion: “This is NOT a reception for Janis Joplin.”

No indeed, the lady said, this was not a reception for Janis Joplin, there were 566 other member of TJ ’60 and this reunion was for everybody to have fun at, not just for Janis Joplin. But face to face, there in the petroleum room three or so days later, things had gotten a little less tense.

“I asked Janis to come over to my house Thursday night to get this problem straightened out. I had all these reporters calling me, and I just didn’t know what to do. When I got married, I put my picture in the paper and that’s all I’ve ever had to do with them. At first Janis was very on her guard. But then she loosened up and we didn't have any problems at all.”

So, as compromise between the public’s curiosity and this-is-not-a-reception-for-Janis-Joplin, there was a press conference in the Petroleum Room just before the cocktail party began. They had put a table with a white cloth up on a little raised platform at one end of the Petroleum Room. When Janis walked in, she said, “O wow, man, the Last Supper” and made a sharp right and headed for the bar.

She wanted vodka but there wasn’t any. It was a Texas bar: Scotch, bourbon, gin. “Man, I can’t drink any of that,” said Janis. “I can’t drink scotch and bourbon. It’s bad for the voice” and she did one of those incredible little Janis riffs that sounds like glass tearing. Upon assurances that a bottle of vodka could be had later, she accepted gin and orange juice in a plastic cup as compromise.

Somebody asked Janis what she’s been up the last 10 years and she said something naughty. People giggled. “That’s off the record,” said Janis. “It’s the truth. Listen, I just came for the party, man.”

Reporters asked many questions about her childhood. Excerpts of the story, as it ran on the Sunday Zest magazine on Aug. 23, 1970:

How was Port Arthur changed in the last 10 years?

“I’ve been here two days, man, and it’s really loosened up a lot, man, since I left. It’s looking good. People are getting together, getting down. I see a lotta freaks, that means a lotta rocking, a lotta drugs. It’s looser. Of course that’s relatively speaking, man. I live in San Francisco, and you can’t get any looser than that.”

Did you entertain when you were in high school?

“Only when I walked down the hall, man I was a recluse in high school. I was a painter. Painting keeps it in, man, but since I’ve started singing, I’ve changed. Singing lets it out.”

Were you an eccentric in high school?

“I thought of myself as an eccentric.”

And Port Arthur wasn’t ready for an eccentric?

“Uh…no comment.”

Did you go to football games?

“Uh … no … yes, I guess so. To tell ya the truth, man, I don’t even remember the high school.”

Well, did you go to senior prom?

“Nobody asked me.”

“Aw come on!” Said TJ ’60.

Did you feel different from your classmates?

“I felt apart from them.”

Still feel the same way?

“Uh … no comment. Look, man, I been away for 10 years and most of these people have stayed here, and what that boils down to is different strokes for different folks, right? I been doing one thing, they’ve been doing another. There is still some common ground here somewhere. We can talk about…birds…”

Then the lady with the corsage said it was 6:30 and time to let the rest of TJ ’60 in.

“Sure,” said Janis, “Let ’em in, give ’em a drink. Listen, man,” she asked no one in particular, “was I too randy? Did I offend anybody?” She really seemed to mean it. Her retinue, the three dudes and a girl, smirked.

No, no, no, said TJ ’60

“Monteel? Did I do anything wrong?”

“No sweetie,” said Monteel, who was part of TJ ’60. “You were fine.”

So Janis Joplin, who didn’t have on one of those little stick-on labels that say “HELLO MY NAME IS,” went down to meet the rest of the TJ ’60.

It would be something, poignant, to say that the poor famous little rich girl was ignored by her classmates. She wasn’t ignored. People came up and were pleasant to her and she was pleasant back. She may be gone from Port Arthur. But she’s still a part of the Global Village. Young Middle America wanted to know how tall Tom Jones was (“about to here,” she said putting her hand at the level of his forehead), what Ed Sullivan was like (“like a rock with make-up”) and how tall Dick Cavett is (“he’s tee-ninesy but he’s nice”).

She was stared at. She signed autographs. She posed for Instamatics. But Janis had a hug only from John Coyle and his wife.

The Goodhue’s air conditioning was unable to keep up with the heat of nostalgia and it was beginning to get sweaty. The wallflowers (still, after 10 years), sat against the wall with their Instamatics and watched Janis talking to one clot of people, then another.

Why did she come?

If she wanted revenge, she was taking it out on no one that you could see. She was conspicuous, certainly, but she wasn’t flaunting anything. But people knew she was there.

“Which one is she?” asked a woman in a pants suit.

“She’s got purple and pink feather in her hair,” said the woman she asked.

The pants suit walk over, with this big Miss Personality, Miss Ten-Most-Beautiful-TJ ’60 charm masks on her face and say, “Janis: Sue Ellen.” (not Sue Ellen, really, but she looked as though she should be named Sue Ellen)

Janis looked at her “HELLO, MY NAME IS” sticker.

Pause.

“Yeh, Sue Ellen.”

Pause.

“I … uh, see you on TV a lot.”

Janis Joplin smiled. “Yeah I do what I can …”

No, it might not be revenge but whatever it was, it was sweet.










July 9, 2021

Studio Portrait Photos of San Marcos People in Front of the Mirrors From the 1930s

Advances in camera lenses and the development of faster film speeds and better lighting meant studio photography became easier to achieve in the 1930s.


Glass plates were replaced by celluloid film in this period and the quality became better and better and the ISO increased progressively over the next 20 years.

These amazing photos from San Marcos Daily Record captured studio portraits of San Marcos people posing in front of the mirrors from the 1930s.

An unidentified woman holding an unidentified infant girl in front of a mirror

An unidentified woman holding an unidentified infant girl in front of a mirror

An unidentified girl sitting on pillow looking into mirror

An unidentified girl sitting on pillow looking into mirror

An unidentified girl sitting on pillow looking into mirror





July 3, 2021

34 Photographs Capture the Fort Worth Stockyards Festivals During the 1990s

The Fort Worth Stockyards is a historic district that is located in Fort Worth, Texas, north of the central business district. A 98-acre (40 ha) portion encompassing much of the district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places as Fort Worth Stockyards Historic District in 1976. It holds a former livestock market which operated under various owners from 1866.

From concerts to rodeos to other crowd-pleasing shows, and many other entertainment such as guitar strumming, bull riding, trick roping..., these photographs were taken by Steven Martin that show festivals and other events at the Fort Worth Stockyards in the 1990s.

Band performing, Chisholm Trail Roundup, Ft. Worth Stockyards, June 1993

Cowboy sits on steer during Chisholm Trail Roundup, Ft. Worth Stockyards, June 1993

A costumed couple during the 1993 Chisholm Trail Roundup at the Ft. Worth Stockyards, June 1993

A pretty lady working the drink booths at the 1993 Chisholm Trail Roundup, Ft. Worth Stockyards, June 1993

Crowd on Exchange Avenue, Chisholm Trail Roundup, Ft. Worth Stockyards, June 1993





May 12, 2021

Inside of the Theodore Newton Law Residence in 1965 Through Fascinating Color Photos

Robert Yarnall Richie (1908–1984) was an American photographer who worked as a freelance commercial and industrial photographer, in Texas and worldwide. Richie’s work is significant for its artistic qualities as well as documentary information.

Inside of the Theodore Newton Law residence in Houston, Texas, October-November 1965 taken by Robert Yarnall Richie

Richie had work published in the magazines Fortune, Time, Life, Scientific American, and National Geographic, and in other publications. He also contributed photos to annual reports for Fortune 500 companies such as General Motors, U.S. Steel, Gulf Oil, and Phelps Dodge.

Richie was an avid pilot, and his life work includes thousands of aerial photographs taken worldwide, as well as many photos of aircraft and other aviation-related subjects. Many of his photos are collected in the Robert Yarnall Richie Photograph Collection, held by the DeGolyer Library at Southern Methodist University.

The SMU archive contains corporate and industrial photographs made by Richie from 1932–1975, some of them are fascinating color photos that he captured the residence of Theodore Newton Law, a leader in the Texas Republican Party, in Houston, Texas, October-November 1965.

Aerial View, Theodore Newton Law Residence

Aerial View, Theodore Newton Law Residence

Desk, Theodore Newton Law Residence

Dining Room, Theodore Newton Law Residence

Exterior Rear, Theodore Newton Law Residence





April 25, 2021

Some Snaps of Renee Zellweger Rocked a Mullet in Her High School Days in the 1980s

Renee Kathleen Zellweger (born April 25, 1969) is an American actress. She graduated from Katy High School, in Katy, TX, in 1987, where she was active in cheerleading, among other activities.

With a gloriously awkward mullet hairstyle, it’s hard to imagine that this blonde Texan teenager would grow up to become a Hollywood actress. These snaps show Renee Zellweger as a fresh-faced teen with the big, bouncy hair popular in the 1980s.










February 2, 2021

Rare Portraits of a Very Young and Beautiful Farrah Fawcett in High School in the 1960s

Farrah Fawcett, born Ferrah Leni Fawcett (February 2, 1947 – June 25, 2009) was an actress and artist. She was a 1965 graduate of W. B. Ray High School, in Corpus Christi, Texas, where she was voted “Most Beautiful” for every year she attended.


Fawcett moved to Hollywood in 1968 and got her start acting in commercials. She soon began making guest appearances on television shows, including The Flying Nun, I Dream of Jeannie, The Partridge Family, and The Six Million Dollar Man.

In 1976, a poster company approached Fawcett’s agent, and the resulting image of the beauty in a red swimsuit ended up becoming the best-selling poster in history. That same year, she was cast in two high-profile projects: the film Logan’s Run and the made-for-TV movie Charlie’s Angels. The latter was picked up as a series, and Fawcett reprised her role as Jill Munroe for its first season, which boosted her popularity even more.

She went on to act in a diverse group of projects, including The Cannonball Run (1981), the Off-Broadway play Extremities (1983), the TV film The Burning Bed (1984), the miniseries Small Sacrifices (1989), The Apostle (1997), and Dr. T & the Women (2000).

The four-time Emmy nominee and six-time Golden Globe nominee also returned to television appearances, guest-starring on shows including Ally McBeal, Spin City, and The Guardian. Her final on-screen appearance was in the 2009 documentary Farrah’s Story, which chronicled her battle with cancer, and for which she was posthumously given an Emmy nomination for her role as producer.












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