RediscoveringSETX

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RediscoveringSETX Southeast Texas has a rich history and many are unaware of the just what the past holds. I hope you join with me for a look into our past.

In this blog I wish to bring to light the people, places, and events that graced this land both good and bad. I’m sure it will be both educating and interesting.

Joining the Jefferson County Historical Commission (JCHC) in 2012 opened up many interesting opportunities for me to del...
14/12/2025

Joining the Jefferson County Historical Commission (JCHC) in 2012 opened up many interesting opportunities for me to delve into different histories and meet others from adjoining counties with their own stories to share. It was the perfect chance to broaden my knowledge of the region and extend my interests beyond county lines.

Growing up, I was always interested in history (though I’m sure my high school history teacher, Mr. G., would disagree—his class was right after lunch, and my teenage self was committed to daily naps). Don’t get me wrong; Mr. G. was an excellent teacher—passionate, dedicated, and determined to bring history to life. My brain just doesn’t perform well in a classroom setting, or in a Zoom meeting at noon. (Yes, I’m calling you out, Texas Historical Commission! Happy hour is at six; evening meetings would be lovely.) It probably goes back to those early years when I was dropped off at school hours before the day started because I had a single parent who had to work. (Single fathers work, too!)

Looking back, my earliest historical interests were World War II—no surprise, given the flood of movies from that era—weather, and the paranormal. When you grow up in a house with three older sisters, ghost stories are inevitable. And hilarity ensues when Tiger, our cat, leaps onto the air conditioner to stare inside because he wants someone to let him in, scaring the bejeebus out of everyone. Fun times.

I never had a true historical mentor growing up—unless you count the television. Watching World War II movies beside my bedridden grandfather, who stayed in a hospital bed at home, is one of my clearest memories. Another is from when I was ten and my father told me the story of how my other grandfather was bitten by a tarantula in his garden in the 1930s in Beauxart Gardens. Even at ten, I knew enough about spider habitats to realize that tale was… geographically challenged.

In my teens, music became another form of historical inspiration. (And yes, all you leftover satanic-panic jacklegs from the ’80s may exit now—or I’ll send the evil eye back at you threefold! I might even throw in Carmen’s “The Champion” while I’m at it.) Carmen—note for the uninitiated—was a Christian musician with some genuinely good songs. Unfortunately, my friend’s aunt, who presented herself as a pious ^%$@, called us out for listening to a song about a boxing match between the devil and Jesus. She didn’t realize Jesus let the devil knock him down. The devil wanted him to get up because of what would happen next. The song ends with Jesus victorious, of course. At the time, I thought it was hilarious—she couldn’t tell her own religious lore from a set of lyrics; she just wanted to display her “look at me!” devotion. Technically, judging is a sin, so she’d be right there in hell with us. Probably neighbors. And unfortunately for her, I mow the lawn at 5:30 a.m. It’s hell—there’s no sleeping in.

(I’ll leave a link to the song. Carmen was talented, even if he was sometimes more full of himself than the Spirit. RIP, Carmen.)
https://youtu.be/WfHfTKdYwvY?si=bpWQRgDX8MSDppqd

Eventually, my interest in history shifted toward England and Wales after reading Elizabeth Goudge’s The White Witch (1958). That book heavily influenced my first attempts at writing. I published a historical fiction novel in 2013, and I have many people to thank—but more on that in the coming weeks.

In the early 2000s, I had a client named Charles Irwin, whom I will readily acknowledge as a legitimate Texas historian. Born and bred in San Antonio, he moved to Southeast Texas in 1957—just in time for Hurricane Audrey. He was a chemical engineer (and I emphasize engineer), and while he was incredible when it came to history, the engineer in him sometimes made communication… interesting. One recurring debate involved Hurricane Humberto’s path. He always insisted that Humberto strengthened over land. Trying to explain that it was actually off the coast near Corpus Christi and that an incoming cold front whipped it up along the coastline—well, explaining that to an engineer is a special challenge. I even had radar images! When it made landfall at High Island, someone I knew was working on a beach house at Crystal Beach, and the storm scared the hell out of him at two in the morning. (Eighty-mile-per-hour winds will do that.)

You know what’s scarier? Being woken at three a.m. by Larry Beaulieu’s backside on the TV screen as he tries to fix a camera while KFDM’s radar is down. I was watching my phone radar—which showed Humberto’s eye over Port Neches—while the TV was saying the eye was in Vidor. Meanwhile, my cat was wandering the neighborhood, confused about the whole situation. That morning was chaotic, but hilarious in retrospect. I even have a link for that, too.

https://www.rediscoveringsetx.com/2022/09/18/thoughts-and-ramblings-hurricanes-ike-humberto-and-fern-researching-history/

One road trip Mr. Irwin and I took was to Anahuac, where we visited the Chambers House and the museum. I had done some work in Anahuac before, but I’d never known about the Chambers House until I took a wrong turn and suddenly—there it was. The window alone was stunning. My mind went immediately to Aleister Crowley’s winter home rather than Texas (me being a heretic in the eyes of my friend’s aunt, you know).

https://flic.kr/s/aHsjDsr14K

We had a great visit to the museum, and seeing the house interior was an added bonus.

Engineer quirks and all, I genuinely miss my friend. I loved our talks about Texas history, even if I could never quite get him to acknowledge Southeast Texas history with the enthusiasm it deserves—he was a true San Antonio loyalist. If you’re interested in Texas history, I believe his books may still be available at the Museum of the Gulf Coast.

Next week, since I’m the Cemetery Chair of the Jefferson County Historical Commission, I plan to focus exclusively on my 13 years in cemeteries and give a recap of what’s going on with the Cemetery Inventory Project.

Sayonara for now.
\m/-_-\m/ Rock in peace—everyone except my friend’s aunt.

https://www.rediscoveringsetx.com/2025/12/14/a-look-back-ii/

Beaumont Enterprise December 7, 1941Hawaii and Manila attacked from sky by Japanese Bombers.
08/12/2025

Beaumont Enterprise December 7, 1941
Hawaii and Manila attacked from sky by Japanese Bombers.

07/12/2025

Doris Miller, the first African American hero of World War II, was born in Willow Grove. In addition to playing football, he supplemented the family income by working as a cook in a small restaurant in Waco during the Great Depression.

As his family's fortunes worsened, he considered joining the Civilian Conservation Corps or the army but encountered obstacles to each of these plans.

Less than a month before his 20th birthday, Miller enlisted in the United States Navy at its Dallas recruiting station. Following bootcamp training in Norfolk, Virginia, he was assigned to the USS West Virginia as a messman.

On this day in 1941, Mess Attendant Second Class Doris Miller was collecting soiled laundry just before 8 a.m. When the first bombs blasted his ship at anchor in Pearl Harbor, Miller went to the main deck, where he assisted in moving the mortally wounded captain.

He then raced to an unattended deck gun and fired at the attacking planes until forced to abandon ship. It was Miller's first experience firing such a weapon because black sailors serving in the segregated steward's branch of the Navy were not given the gunnery training received by white sailors.

Miller himself told Navy officials he thought he hit one of the planes. Navy officials conferred the Navy Cross upon Miller on May 27, 1942, in a ceremony at Pearl Harbor.

Following a Christmas leave in 1942, when he saw his home and family in Waco for the last time, Miller reported to duty aboard the aircraft carrier Liscome Bay (or Liscomb Bay) as a mess attendant.

During the battle of the Gilbert Islands, on November 24, 1943, his ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Pacific Ocean, and Miller perished. In addition to conferring upon him the Navy Cross, the Navy honored Doris Miller by naming a dining hall, a barracks, and a destroyer es**rt for him. The USS Miller is the third naval ship to be named after an African American Navy man.

📸: Doris Miller Memorial in Waco

Tonight's double feature! Tora! Tora! Tora! and Wake Island
07/12/2025

Tonight's double feature! Tora! Tora! Tora! and Wake Island

Most of my bookshelves sub as memorials.Remembering
07/12/2025

Most of my bookshelves sub as memorials.
Remembering

I’ve been away for a while, and the break has been a needed rest. I make no money from this blog, but I still think it’s...
07/12/2025

I’ve been away for a while, and the break has been a needed rest. I make no money from this blog, but I still think it’s important to present an accurate history of our region, to share news about what the Texas Historical Commission is doing, and to occasionally indulge in things that have nothing to do with SETX—like Sensha-dō (戦車道) and Yukari Akiyama (秋山 優花里).

When I started Rediscoveringsetx.com in 2012, my goal was to support every museum in Southeast Texas. But over the last 13 years, some museums have closed, and others—usually the ones with money—hired social media experts and are now fully capable of promoting themselves. They don’t need me to shill their history anymore, and honestly, that’s a good thing. Still, you can find photos of the ones that closed on my Flickr page:
25032584@N05/albums/" rel="ugc" target="_blank">https://www.flickr.com/photos/25032584@N05/albums/
After that era, my focus shifted to researching specific topics from regional history. Some of these stories will show up later. I will say this: historical research is not a 1970s crime-solving TV show where everything wraps up in an hour. Proper research takes time. You can make up answers—as some historians do—but most people prefer the truth. And the truth doesn’t show up on a weekly schedule.
In more recent years, this blog has mostly been my thoughts and ramblings about our history and whatever else I care about. Again, I’m not making money, but at least the history is good. Maybe not as good as the “experts” on Facebook who insist there were slave quarters inside the Phelan Mansion constructed in 1928—but hey, that’s Beaumont and Facebook. Knock yourself out. Yes, you can even find it on Ancestry. As the Russians say: доверяй, но проверяй — doveryay, no proveryay — Trust but verify.
So, what have I been doing during my time away? Besides vegging out on Japanese baseball—my personal delicacy ever since I learned about the Curse of the Colonel—I’ve been doing what I hope my kids will do when I die: going through all my research files and digitizing everything.
Every file cabinet is being checked. Every paper copy is being digitized and sent to the Jefferson County Historical Commission (JCHC). The physical papers will then be passed along to whoever wants them—or thrown away. I have no hope that anyone else would come along and preserve this stuff. I’m doing them a favor. You’re welcome!
The first drawer alone took 38 hours to complete. I’ve now finished the first file cabinet and am moving on to my Florence Stratton files. Most of that research is already digitized and shared with people who can take it further than I can. My regional history books will be an own ongoing project as well. It’s amazing how valuable some of these books have become—and even more amazing how often people throw them away.
For example, I found my copy of Sapphire City of the Neches by W.T. Block on the floor of a house in Port Neches that had been auctioned. It was lying next to Down Trails of Victory: The Story of Port Neches-Groves High School Football and a Fats Domino record. The house had already been cleaned out, but somehow these survived. The last time I checked (a few years ago), an autographed copy of W.T. Block’s book was going for around $400. The other book? I didn’t check—everyone who cares about PNG football already owns it. Kudos to W.T. Block’s son, who saw the collector prices and wisely reissued the books on Amazon at reasonable prices.
Working through these files has brought me back to moments of discovery, and to histories people shared with me over the years—or that I uncovered myself. I’ve been rediscovering favorites from the blog, RediscoveringSETX.com, and it’s been fun.
The Rowley Family
One reason the first drawer took so long is the Rowley family. I spent countless hours on their history after a chance moment at Greenlawn Cemetery, where I saw Virginia (“Gene”) Rowley’s headstone with its poem and photograph. It was a somber moment—and I learned someone had created a 12-minute film taking “creative liberties” with the family’s story. That didn’t sit well with me. I care about facts, not someone’s L.A. dream script. Gene deserved to have her story told correctly.
A family member later reached out to me about my post on Gene, her father’s su***de in 1934, and her accidental death in 1942 in San Antonio. Gene died in an auto accident while working at Kelly Field as a radio operator. They confirmed much of my research and shared new details about her siblings, Vera and Jerry. That cracked open an entirely new story.
Vera (known as “Dido”), Jerry, and Jerry’s wife Evelyn formed The Rowley Trio, performing with the likes of Johnnie Horton and even George Jones. Despite their family’s tragedies, both Dido and Jerry built successful careers. Dido went even further by joining Don Mahoney’s children’s TV show in Houston—Don Mahoney and Jeanna Clare with their Kiddie Troupers. It was like a local Roy Rogers and Dale Evans show.
I never would have uncovered all of this without help from a family member. Thank you, Ben Rowley.
Evelyn Keyes
One of my favorite exhibits at the Museum of the Gulf Coast is the display on Evelyn Keyes. She left Port Arthur at age three but never forgot her connections here. Her display is beautiful—and if you look closely, you’ll notice the Genie lamp from A Thousand and One Nights (1945) is hollowed out. When she died in 2008, she requested that some of her ashes be placed inside it.
Years ago, when Sarah Bellian was Coordinator, I visited the museum looking for information on Bessie Reid, a birder and author of The Legend of Kisselpoo. While Sarah printed the info, I asked how Evelyn liked being moved from the first floor to the second. Right then, the printer froze. I said, “Well, I guess she doesn’t!”
Blanche Morgan
People have shared many histories with me over the years, but Blanche Morgan’s story needed to be front and center. Imagine this: your mother is sickly in Iowa, the doctor says she needs a warmer climate, and your dad sees a sign in Kansas City that the Kansas City Southern Railroad (KCS) will take you to paradise. What could go wrong?
(Answer: quite a lot.)
I’ll post the link below, but I’ve never been a fan of Arthur Stilwell. The only reason Port Arthur exists is because of John Warne Gates. Stilwell, in my view, was all hat and no cattle. He also lost investors a fortune trying to build a railroad to the Pacific through Mexico.
For the record, I did accidentally acquire an autographed copy of Stilwell’s Confidence or National Su***de? This is why you don’t leave things in your online cart if you don’t want to buy them. But I digress.

Til next week, I'll leave you with the Hanshin Tigers Curse (呪い / のろい) — The Curse of the Colonel

The Hanshin Tigers Curse was a long-running superstition blamed for the team’s decades of struggles after their 1985 Japan Series championship. The curse centered around an unusual event involving a statue of Colonel Sanders, the mascot of Kentucky Fried Chicken.

How the Curse Started (1985)

After the Tigers won the Japan Series in 1985—led by star slugger Randy Bass—ecstatic fans in Osaka celebrated along the Dōtonbori Canal. Tigers fans are famously intense, and the city basically exploded with joy.
During the celebration, fans began pulling people into the street who resembled players to jump into the canal in their honor. But no one resembled Randy Bass, the team’s bearded American MVP.
So what did they do?
They grabbed a full-sized Colonel Sanders statue from a nearby KFC, declared it their Randy Bass “look-alike,” and threw it into the canal.
That’s the moment the curse supposedly began.
After 1985, the Tigers went through:
18 consecutive losing seasons (1986–2003)
Multiple last-place finishes
A long list of near wins that collapsed at the final moment
A reputation for heartbreak comparable to the Chicago Cubs pre-2016
Fans believed the team would never win another championship until the Colonel was recovered.
People searched the Dōtonbori Canal for years, with no luck. The statue was considered lost forever. But in 2009, construction workers dredging the canal recovered the upper body of the statue, later the right hand, and eventually most of the remaining parts. It was reassembled and returned—with ceremony—to a local KFC.
Even after recovery, the Tigers did not immediately win a championship.
However, things did improve. They made the Japan Series again in 2014, and claimed their first Central League pennant in 18 years in 2023, and finally winning the Japan Series, ending the curse in most fans’ minds
For Tigers fans, the 2023 win was a massive cultural moment—some said it felt like “Osaka was released from a 38-year spell.”

Yukari Akiyama (秋山 優花里) — The Heart of Sensha-dō
Yukari Akiyama (秋山 優花里) is one of the central characters from the Japanese anime franchise Girls und Panzer, a series built around the fictional martial art of Sensha-dō (戦車道)—the “way of the tank.” In this world, operating and battling with World War II–era tanks is considered a traditional feminine art, similar to calligraphy or tea ceremony.
Yukari is arguably the series’ most beloved character, especially among real-world military history and armor enthusiasts, because she represents a respectful, enthusiastic, and knowledgeable fan of historical tanks.

Blanche Morgan : https://www.rediscoveringsetx.com/2014/04/16/blanches-journey-an-early-look-at-life-in-port-arthur/

Evelyn Keyes:
https://www.rediscoveringsetx.com/2014/04/06/tales-from-hallowed-ground-evelyn-keyes/

Gene Rowley:
https://www.rediscoveringsetx.com/2015/12/29/tales-from-hallowed-ground-virginia-lee-rowley/

The History of the Curse of the Colonel:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qvoBGSVUdsI

https://www.rediscoveringsetx.com/2025/12/07/rediscoveringsetx-a-look-back-part-1/

American Guide Series 1939-40 Port Arthur telephone books 1946-47
02/12/2025

American Guide Series 1939-40 Port Arthur telephone books 1946-47

Found a few of these wonderful cards by Larry Baggett this morning.   is taking
02/12/2025

Found a few of these wonderful cards by Larry Baggett this morning. is taking

Today marks the 82nd anniversary of the Battle of Tarawa, and we remember Port Arthur boy Hugo DeBretagne, who lost his ...
20/11/2025

Today marks the 82nd anniversary of the Battle of Tarawa, and we remember Port Arthur boy Hugo DeBretagne, who lost his life on D-day 3 of Operation Galvanic. Since he was buried at sea, he most likely was severely wounded on D-Day 1 and transfered to a ship. One thousand marines perished in the first two days of fighting. This wasn’t the first battle Hugo had been in. I assume he was in the Guadalcanal Campaign with the Second Marines. I do know that his brother was. Thankfully, James DeBretagne made it out of WWII alive, and he received the Purple Heart for Iwo Jima. Hugo DeBretagne was buried at sea. A memorial stone is located in Greenlawn Cemetery.

We also remember Beaumont resident Murray Anderson, who did survive and lived to write a book about his experiences during the conflict. Murray Anderson was born in Whitney, Texas, and grew up on his family’s farm in Deport, near Paris (also Texas). On the Tyler Knows Everything podcast, Murray said that he “was doing a man’s work at the farm at age six.” Whether cutting or picking cotton, milking the cows each morning, or picking corn, it was a rough life during the Depression. In the spring of 1942, when he was 17, his father died, and the farm became financially unviable. So, he moved with his mother and his sisters to Dallas. He had six sisters (four got married and lived in Dallas).
Murray’s dream was to fly planes for the US Navy, but he didn’t pass the examination. So, he joined the Marine Corps, hoping to fly with them. The day he was to depart for boot camp, he got a telegram from Washington stating that there had been a mistake in the grading of the exam and that he had passed. He was to report to Hensley Field Naval Air Station in Dallas for flight training. He contacted the Marine Corps about the mistake and was told, “Sorry, but you are in the Marine Corps.” I guess this is why their slogan is The Few, the Proud.
Murray Anderson moved to Beaumont in 1958 and wrote a book about his time in the Marine Corps. The Unrelenting Test of War is an excellent account of what he and his fellow marines faced.
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Morning rainbow
24/06/2025

Morning rainbow

15/06/2025

Susie Spindletop's Weekly Letter: June 16,1929
MARY AUTRY HIGGINS came along with the epitaph she found somewhere:
Here lyeth the body of WILLIAM STRATTON
buried May 18, 1734
Age 97
Who had by his first wife 28 children
By his second, 17
Own father to 45,
Grandfather to 86,
Great-grandfather to 97,
great great- grandfather to 23...in all 251
***
Happy Fathers Day

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