The Final Two – Travis and Hays Counties – 28 October – 1 November

So here we are now, at the final installment of this grand adventure.  I had reserved two counties as “the icing on the cake”.

Number 253, the penultimate, is Travis County, where Austin, the state capital, is located.

Number 254, the final county, is my home county of Hays County.

Despite over 14,500 miles covered, nine months of travel, and 252 counties successfully visited, wouldn’t you just know that the cosmos would administer a kick in the butt at the very end!

But we aren’t there yet…  Let’s turn our attention to…

County 253 – Travis County – Austin  – Sunday, 28 October 2018

Wimberley – Austin

Now while the world at large seems to have been largely underwhelmed by all the effort I have put into doing, and then documenting, this crazy enterprise, my young friend Jefe Greenheart, wizard and co-proprietor of Circus Picnic…

https://www.circuspicnic.com/

…has been very interested.  He and his wife, my honorary daughter Kelly Greenheart nee Schiller, have visited and adventured with my family and me all over the world, and they offered to come out and record some audio, video, and still images of both parts of the grand finale.  They came out to Wimberley and took pictures and then followed me in to Austin, where we were going to take pictures in front of both the Travis County courthouse, and the State Capitol.  And, then shoot some drone flight footage of me driving the Enfield across the Congress Avenue Bridge.

We did all of that, and here is the penultimate courthouse photo:

253 – Travis County – Austin

In due course there will be additional material put on this page after Jefe and Kelly have done the edits, but for the moment let this serve as proof that I did get to the courthouse…and to the Capitol…

State Capitol Building, Austin

You’ll notice that there is only a helmet, not a motorcycle!  Despite Jefe’s and my best efforts, the guard on duty at the Capitol would not allow us to include the motorcycle in the photo.  We could not attempt from the other side because there was a Book Fair going on, but I’m not going to give up so easily.  Expect an update with the Royal Enfield and me in front of the Capitol.

From here we went to do the drone shoots over the Congress Ave bridge – if we got anything good, it’ll appear here in due course…

Postcript for Travis County

The light was not optimal for the Travis County courthouse shot, and the police did not allow us to get a Capitol shot with the bike.  The occasion of a glorious, sunlit, warm winter day gave me the chance to go back to Austin, different bike, and re-shoot the courthouse and the Capitol.

That turned out to be a good intuition.  These pix are more flattering to the courthouse and the Capitol.  With regard to the Capitol photo, I managed to get it set up and shot JUST BEFORE the police arrived to instruct the removal of the bike from that spot.  I graciously did it, exulting inside that I had gotten the photo that was denied the first time around:

Travis County courthouse, Austin
Texas State Capitol, Austin
The beautiful Texas Capitol, minus the bike and me…

County 254 – Hays County – San Marcos – Tuesday, 30 October 2018, and Thursday, 1 November 2018

Wimberley – San Marcos

Somehow or another I have managed to be a property owner in Hays County for almost 6 years without knowing, or having any curiosity about, why this county is named Hays.  Well, this 254 county adventure turned out to be edifying in more ways than one.

It turns out that Hays County is named for Captain John Coffee Hays – “Jack” – originally from Tennessee.  Jack Hays came to Texas in 1836, just in time for the fight for Texas’ independence from Mexico.  He was appointed by Sam Houston to the Texas Rangers, and though he only wound up spending 13 years in Texas before heading to California, where he died at the ripe old age of 66, he had a HUGE (not yuge) impact on Texas history, for several reasons:

First, he fought – very sucessfully – in practically every major battle in the conflicts between Mexico and Texas during the period (1836-1846) when Texas was a Republic.

Second, he recognized the value in battle of a new invention by Samuel Colt – the revolving cylinder handgun.  Colt had been unable to interest the US military in his invention, but Hays and his compadre, Samuel Walker, got their hands on some samples and eventually worked with Sam Colt to produce the legendary “Walker” Colt, the original six-shooter of the American West.

Image result for walker colt
Walker Colt

Third, he combined the advantage of the repeating sidearm with a relentless resolve to out-Comanche the Comanche, meaning to basically adopt hit-and-run guerilla tactics, while offsetting the rapid-fire advantage the Comanche had previously had by being able to shoot more arrows than an Anglo could fire with the cumbersome one-shot muzzle-loader that preceded the Colt revolver.

Jack Hays basically reversed the losing tradition of both the US Army and the Texas Rangers of that time by fighting the Comanche with an improved (with Colts) variation of Comanche tactics.  For a few years (while Hays was active), the tables, which had greatly favored the Comanche, were turned.  The Comanche came to fear Hays like they had feared no other Anglo, Ranger or otherwise.

Fortunately for the Comanche, when Hays went to California the Anglo fighting forces lapsed back into their more comfortable but less effective “sally forth and give the appearance of due diligence” tactics.  The Comanche regained their pre-eminence on the Texas Plains and kept the Anglo invasion at bay for another 20 years.

Notwithstanding now being part of the now uninterrupted “corridor” along I35 between Austin and San Antonio, San Marcos still has the advantage of being on the crystal-clear San Marcos River, so you can at least still tube there…

But the preceding rambling is just to underscore the fact that Hays County was not a great choice for the end of the grand adventure because I happen to live here, but also because it has major historical antecedents that put it on par with just about any other county in Texas.

Back to the story.  On the 30th of October, Jefe Greenheart and his father-in-law/my best friend Laren Schiller came out to Wimberley for the grand finale, which was to be ridden on my 1941 Triumph 350, which 2 weeks earlier had won second place in the Vintage Bike Show in Luckenbach, Texas.  Here in all her glory:

Now in truth I had never ridden the ’41 as far as San Marcos and back – it is after all a 77 year-old bike.  But it was running beautifully while we shot drone footage out here in my rural neighborhood, so I set off for San Marcos by taking the long way, which is up and over the Devil’s Backbone, one of the legendary twisty-curvy roads of the Texas Hill Country.  Jefe and Laren were following along, cameras in tow, as I began the ascent up to the Devil’s Backbone ridge.  The engine started sputtering, and I thought maybe it was starved for fuel.  After it died, we spent half an hour of “old school” motorcycling, by which I mean I would fiddle with the motor, then jump on the kick-starter, then fiddle some more…  Well, it never started and the three of us were able to manhandle the ’41 into the back of Jefe’s minivan (the horror!!) and with me squeezed in beside it to hold it upright, we ignominiously retraced our steps back back to my house.  After getting the bike out of the minivan (cringe), I thought to give it one more try, and of course it started up on the first crank…  That’s exactly how I remember most of my early years of motorcycling…  Here, for your amusement at my expense, are some scenes from the Backbone:

Old School Motorcycle Fun
The ignominious ride home in the back of the minivan…

Well, since the following day was Halloween, it looked like I’d have to head off to Thailand for my visa renewal on the 2nd ONE COUNTY SHORT of my grand design.

Well, I got a message from Jefe the next day telling me that he was doing a video shoot in San Marcos on the afternoon of 1 November, and we agreed to give it one last desperate chance.

Having learned my lesson (however temporarily), I loaded the ’41 Triumph on the bike trailer and (the shame!!) trailered it to San Marcos town, where I parked the truck and trailer and THEN rode the ’41 into the center of town, from where we were able to capture this final triumphant image!

254 – Hays County – San Marcos
Hays County Courthouse

And so ends, after almost nine months, 14,490 miles, and all 254 counties of Texas, this great adventure that was my 70-year birthday present to myself.

There will be one final post reflecting on the experience, and “the meaning of it all”.

Thanks for riding along, if you’ve made it this far…

Norman (Sandy) Sanders – 29 November 2018

 

 

Trip 10 – East of Austin – 27 October 2018

So because of the endless rains in September and October, and my imminent departure for Thailand in early November, the clock was ticking.  At this point I had 245 counties visited, with seven remaining for a day trip, and the final two – Travis (Capital of Texas) and Hays (my home county) saved for last.  Luckily for me, Saturday the 27th dawned beautifully and I was able to trundle out the last of the bikes that had not yet had a chance to participate in the adventure: the 2011 Royal Enfield.  Between 1978 and 1983 I had ridden an almost identical bike that I had bought new in Bombay all over India, so I had really been looking forward to this particular segment – deja vu all over again, as Yogi once said.

2011 Royal Enfield C5 Chrome, in Giddings

I was also looking forward to this trip because it took me back in time to my boyhood.  I was the first child in my family, and I was regularly packed off on weekends with my grandfather to visit his ranch in Washington County, between Burton and Carmine.  We drove all over that part of Texas doing ranch-type errands, and when I got my driver’s license at 14 he allowed me to go out on my own in a radius that spanned from Brenham in the east to Giddings in the west.

So this trip had the best of two worlds – a hearkening back in time to when my Royal Enfield was my one-and-only bike love (and also my first brand-new bike), and also in time to my boyhood.  I’m very comfortable in this part of Texas, and this was the itinerary for this 7-county trip:

Trip 10 – East of Austin

First stop was Lockhart, seat of Caldwell County, named for Texas Ranger Matthew Caldwell who fought in the Texas Revolution and also fought in the Battle of Plum Creek, which took place in 1840 just a few miles from Lockhart.  That was an epic battle between around a thousand Comanche led by Chief Buffalo Hump who was determined to exact revenge for the slaughter of Comanche chiefs and family members under white flag at the Council House Fight in San Antonio.  Buffalo Hump had rounded up a huge entourage which then traveled, in very un-Comanche-like style, cross country, through Victoria and on to Linnville, a little Gulf Coast town which they pillaged and plundered, and drove the occupants literally into the sea, which was kind of the point of the whole exercise.  After hitting Linnville, the Comanche, with piles of plunder and livestock, headed back to the Llano Estacado.  They were intercepted at Plum Creek by Texas Rangers and a band of Anglo militia.  While the Anglos claimed victory, the Comanche did get away with most of the plunder, and the number of casualties is still in dispute.

Looking at modern-day Lockhart you’d never imagine such a drama having occurred just on the outskirts of town.  In 1999 the Texas legislature proclaimed Lockhart as the Barbecue Capital of Texas, though I expect that that claim is in dispute, not least by the nearby town of Luling, host of the famous City Market BBQ.

Ready for Halloween in Lockhart
Caldwell County Courthouse
246 – Caldwell County – Lockhart
Downtown Lockhart, opposite the courthouse

The crisp morning ride continued from Lockhart to Bastrop, seat of Bastrop County and the place where I bought the BMW motorcycle that was the workhorse for most of this 254 county adventure.  Bastrop was the name of a Dutch settler who helped Stephen F.  Austin get the land grants in Texas that led, ultimately to the end of Mexican and Native American hegemony.

Bastrop, located on the Colorado River, has had beaucoup movies filmed there, including part of Linklater’s award-winning Boyhood, also mentioned in a different segment of this trip.

Bastrop is where the Piney Woods begins, which helped it feature in the 2011 wildfires that raged through this area.  As it happened, I was driving with my parents on I10 just south of the fires on the day that it happened, and we saw the horizon covered in smoke and flames.  Unforgettable.

247 – Bastrop County – Bastrop
Election Fever in Bastrop

One facet of this trip I forgot to mention – the Enfield basically will not run faster than about 70 mph, and is most comfortable at 60-65.  So I had to allocate more time than usual to get from one place to another, explaining the paucity of photos for some of these beautiful little burgs.

From Bastrop, east to Lee County, of which Giddings is the seat.  Predictably, the county is named for Robert E. Lee, who needs no introduction, while Giddings comes from one of a number of settlers from Pennsylvania.

City Meat Market, Giddings
Lee County Courthouse, Giddings
248 – Lee County – Giddings

From Giddings, a beautiful sunny ride northeast through the rolling hills of Lee and Burleson Counties, the seat of the latter being Caldwell.  Yes, it is named for the same Matthew Caldwell we met earlier on this trip in Caldwell County.  Burleson is a famous Texas name, cropping up all over the place, and refers to Edward Burleson, a general and Vice-President of the Republic of Texas.  He served under Sam Houston, though the two supposedly hated each other.  When Santa Anna surrendered at the Battle of San Jacinto, his sword was presented to Edward Burleson.  Burleson fought in just about every war and skirmish that took place between 1812 and the 1840’s.

Caldwell is the home of the Czech Heritage museum, this area having been a magnet for Czech immigrants (including my ancestors).  Caldwell is one of the towns around here that is famous for the Czech pastry kolaches.

249 – Burleson County – Caldwell
Beto in Caldwell!
Burleson County Courthouse

From Caldwell, continuing northeast to Bryan, seat of Brazos County and Siamese twin of College Station, the two jointly hosting Texas A&M University, from which my brothers and one son are graduates.  Bryan was a very pleasant surprise to me – I had never been there before, but will return to meander around the charming little town – notwithstanding the city being a pioneer in the establishment of a “Gang Safety Zone” in the downtown area.  I understand that to mean that they are trying to ensure safety FROM gangs, though who knows, perhaps it is a free-fire zone FOR gangs…

While the town is very attractive, the courthouse is pretty utilitarian…

250 – Brazos County – Bryan

From Bryan, I headed back westward toward the town of Cameron (of which I had never heard), seat of Milam County.  This stretch and the following one to Georgetown were among the most pleasant of the entire 254 county adventure.  It was all quiet back roads and glowing, rolling agricultural lands.

The county is named for Ben Milam, originally from Kentucky, but who became a Mexican, a Texian, but never a Texan because he was killed by a sniper at the siege of Bexar in San Antonio in 1835.   He spent time, in his own words, “as a tenant of every prison between here (Goliad) and Mexico”.

Cameron itself is an expansive, shady town with a beautiful square and gazebo.

251 – Milam County – Cameron
Milam County Courthouse and Gazebo
Detail of Milam County Courthouse
Ben Milam
Cameron mural.  Yoemen?
Milam County Museum and 1895 Jail
Old cabin in Cameron
Another Cameron mural – the pattern on that cow looks like Texas!

Reluctantly, noting the setting sun, I mounted back up and headed west, through more of the glorious afternoon-sunlit pasture and farmlands, toward Georgetown, seat of Williamson County, where my wife’s home is located.

Bullet on the homestretch

Williamson county – named for another Texas Revolutionary participant – is known to have been occupied by humans for over 11,000 years.  Part of Austin is in this county, and to the east it is the rich black loamy ag land that I had just driven through.  Dell Computer is now also headquartered in Williamson County, which contributes to the air of prosperity there.

The outlaw Sam Bass was killed in a shootout in nearby Round Rock in 1878.   The Texas Chain Saw Massacre was filmed in Georgetown.

Georgetown, I guess because of Dell Computer, looks like a Californian paradise, replete with sidewalk bars and restaurants, with the gorgeous courthouse in the middle of it all.  This was due to a restoration (very successfully done) that began in the 1970’s, and Georgetown was recently named as one of the best places in the US to buy a historic house.

252 – Williamson County – Georgetown
Williamson County Courthouse (with unfortunate CSA statue in front…)

And from Georgetown, last stop on this last trip, I headed back to Wimberley, having added 7 more counties, and covered 348 miles on the little Enfield.

And then there were two…

2 More to Go – Travis and Hays

 

 

Trip 7b – 5 Counties W and SW of Fort Worth – 25 October 2018

My original plan for this adventure – adjusted for the unplanned hiatus over the summer – was to finish up, gloriously, in Hays County on my day of days, Halloween.  However, for a two-month spell, it just R A I N E D.  I could never get out for more than a one-day run, and I was scheduled to go to Thailand on 3 November to renew my visa.  I was running out of time.

On Thursday morning, 25 October, there was heavy weather predicted to come in from the west – but it looked like, if I put the hammer down, I could complete the unfinished business I had from the original Trip 7, which was to include much of North Texas.  On the previous Sunday I had managed to get up to Dallas, Fort Worth, and Rockwall and visit those urban environments on the weekend.  I still had five left from that trip.  I decided to roll the dice and headed out on the Indian on Thursday morning to see what happened.

Here was the route:

Five Counties West and South of Fort Worth

Having already done the run from Wimberley up to the Dallas-Fort Worth area several times on earlier trips, this one was basically non-stop, except for gas, from Wimberley to Stephenville, seat of Erath County.

It was cloudy and misty when I left Wimberley in the morning, but by the time I had gotten north of Marble Falls,  Mother Nature had created a perfect seam, with cloud and drizzle to the south of me, and beautiful blue sky to the north.  Here are the two views, shot from the same place:

Looking south down 281 toward Wimberley…
South…
Looking north on 281 toward Burnet…
Northbound!
And westbound, if I had any ideas of going off road (I didn’t)…

So I continued happily, on the new Indian, north toward Stephenville, about a 180 mile trip.

Erath County was part of Comancheria (Comanche territory, theme of the next adventure), and was regularly raided until the Comanche were all moved (the few that were still living) to Oklahoma.  The county was named for an Austrian immigrant who surveyed this area.  He became a Texas Ranger and also fought at the Battle of San Jacinto, where the Texians defeated Santa Anna.

Somewhat surprisingly, after the Comanche were removed Stephenville became a coal-mining center for several decades.

241 – Erath County – Stephenville
Erath County Courthouse
Stephenville

Downtown Stephenville – Former First National Bank

Ben Hogan (the golfer) was born in Stephenville, and the singer Jewel lived here with her then-husband.  Jacobs Crawley, not a household name, but the world rodeo champion is from here.

From Stephenville, one eye on the weather, I scooted due north to Palo Pinto, seat of the county of the same name.  Palo Pinto is almost an accidental county seat – it only has a population of around 400 people and the town of Mineral Wells is MUCH larger.

This is Indian country, and there were numerous atrocities committed by both sides in this area (kind of like Charlottesville, eh?).  Attempts had been made to settle tribes that were being pushed westward in this area, but the Anglos were determined that the tribes would either be eliminated, or moved.  Both happened, giving way to a new round of conflict between ranchers, including Charles Goodnight and Oliver Loving, of Goodnight-Loving Trail fame, and farmers.  Fence-cutting wars lasted from 1883 to 1888, with the ranchers eventually suffering a fate similar to the Native Americans, though at least they weren’t killed.

242 – Palo Pinto County – Palo Pinto

The highlight of the visit to Palo Pinto (other than discovering that the town was too small to have a gas station, prompting another heart-in-mouth running-on-empty trip westward to Breckenridge) was that the monarch buttterflies were in full migration to Mexico, and they were all clustered around the courthouse:

Monarchs in Palo Pinto
Justice of the Peace, Palo Pinto (looking suspiciously like a former gas station…)

From the tiny town of Palo Pinto I headed due west toward Breckenridge, seat of Stephens County.  (Why wouldn’t the seat of Stephens County be Stephenville?  Don’t axe me…)  In any case, Stephens county is named after another Confederate personality, this one having been a Vice President of the Confederacy.  Yawn.

Westward, between Palo Pinto and Breckenridge

The county seat of Breckenridge is yet another of those towns that were once established because they were on the railroad line, but once that imploded they were just…out there.

Mural in Breckenridge
A nice guy moved his truck so I could get this wonderful mural and its setting…
Oil Museum in Breckenridge
243 – Stephens County – Breckenridge

From Breckenridge, sun still shining, I headed due south toward Eastland, seat of Eastland County.  Eastland was named for an officer executed by Santa Anna as part of the Black Bean drawing described in the Trip 1 (South Texas) blog.

244 – Eastland County – Eastland

There’s an amazing tale about Eastland.  When the old courthouse was built in 1897, a horned toad named “Old Rip” somehow got sealed up in the cornerstone of the courthouse.  When the courthouse was rebuilt in 1928, the original cornerstone was opened and Old Rip was STILL ALIVE.  Old Rip died in 1929 and is supposed to be encased in a glass “crypt” in the present courthouse.  I guess in his honor there’s a Horned Frog Firearms store opposite the courthouse.  Texas!

Horned Frog Firearms, Eastland, Texas
A gorgeous building in downtown Eastland, opposite the courthouse
Eastland County Courthouse
Downtown Eastland

Continuing south from Eastland, with heavy weather building to the west, toward Comanche, seat of Comanche County.

245 – Comanche County – Comanche

The original wooden courthouse, called the “Cora Courthouse” is still standing on the courthouse grounds, one of the few remaining from the 19th century.

Old Cora Courthouse
Detail from the old courthouse
Old and new courthouses in Comanche
Calaboose and rock with irons – drunks were chained up here in front of the old courthouse to sleep it off
So it is told…
What remains of the once-great Comanche

From Comanche, I headed on back to Wimberley, once again arriving just at dark.  This day trip of 520 miles added five counties to the tally, now up to 245, 9 short of the total.  It was a day well spent, bringing the final success within reach.

Nine to Go!

 

 

Trip 7a – Dallas, Rockwall, Fort Worth – 14 October 2018

The original plan for Trip 7 – Dallas/Fort Worth and Northeast Texas – was for it to be one of the most ambitious of the 254 county trips, in terms of distance and counties covered.   Because of time constraints, and weather, I had to shorten it by taking out 8 counties.

Three of those counties – Dallas, Rockwall, and Tarrant – are huge metropolitan areas, which I always try to do on weekends – driving a big motorcycle into a strange urban setting is not amusing, nor is trying to find a photo vantage point that is not cluttered with citizens and/or restricted by police.

I had been trying, weekend after weekend, to do a two-day leisurely run up to the DFW area, but every single weekend there was rain.  I was going to try again on the weekend of 13-14 October, but rain was predicted.  I scrapped Saturday, but woke up the morning of Sunday the 14th and it was dry – and predicted to be dry all day – so I decided to roll the dice and see if I could get up there on the new Indian before the rain set in.

So this trip was just the opposite of all the others, in which the county courthouse is just a means to an end, the end being to see Texas.  For this trip-let, I went out on a mission:  to photograph those three courthouses!  Here was the plan:

Wimberley, Dallas, Rockwall, Fort Worth, Wimberley

It happened.  It took me 11 hours of driving the Indian, and covered 566 miles, but it got done.  Evidence follows…

There’s only one way to make time and distance in Texas, and that’s on the Interstate.  I left Wimberley in fog and mist, and headed straight for I35, which I then followed north until I had to make a decision about where to go first.  Naturally, I made the wrong choice, forgetting that the Dallas Cowboys were playing at Arlington (between Dallas and Forth Worth) in the early afternoon.

I went to Dallas, great American city and seat of Dallas County, first:

238 – Dallas County – Dallas

There was a demonstration going on, but the demonstrators very politely cleared a spot for me to get my photo!  I had never been to Dallas before – I’m from Houston, so Dallas is enemy territory – but I was impressed at how nice an urban environment it is.  Near the courthouse was, apparently, the OLD Dallas county courthouse, now a museum:

Dallas Skyscape
Dallas Morning News – read the inscription!

Here’s a list of some of the more surprising people to have come from Dallas:

Troy Aikman, Erykah Badu, Clyde Barrow, Melinda Gates, Ray Wylie Hubbard, Norah Jones (her mother lives here in Wimberley), Jayne Mansfield, Steve Miller (Steve Miller Band), Dennis Rodman, Boz Scaggs, Stephen Stills, Sly Stone, Stevie Ray Vaughan (and brother Jimmy), Owen Wilson…and it goes on and on.

Speaking of going on and on, I got back on the Indian and headed east on I30, crossing the enormous Lake Ray Hubbard, en route to Rockwall, seat of the county of the same name.   Rockwall seems like a suburb of Dallas, and is the smallest county in Texas.  The courthouse is going to need some landscaping for some years to come – it looks a little forlorn out there all by itself…

239 – Rockwall County – Rockwall

Now I had to pay the piper – I had to get back on I30 and drive all the way back across Dallas, through Arlington, to get to Fort Worth, seat of Tarrant County.  I had to do that about an hour before kick-off for the Dallas Cowboys home game against the Minnesota Vikings – and sat in bumper-to-bumper traffic for…a long time.  It was worth the wait, though – Fort Worth is a fine little city, and its courthouse area is as impressive as any in the state of Texas:

240 – Tarrant County – Fort Worth

After a quick drive through Fort Worth, I headed out on I30 to the west, with the idea that I could perhaps go to four counties west and south of Fort Worth.  However, the weather, which had been threatening all day, got VERY dark in the west, and the weather app showed very heavy weather moving in the same direction I was heading.  So, for once, I did the right thing and turned back south toward Wimberley.  It was still a dramatic drive, but I never got wet!

So the mission was accomplished.  I got the three remaining urban counties, and got home alive and dry, but tired.

Five more counties to go to complete the original Trip 7…

Now a total of 13,500 miles, 240 counties done and 14 to go.  No counting chickens, though…  But here’s the map after a L O N G trip for 3 counties!

 

Trip 9 – Ring Around San Antonio – 10 October 2018

It seems to rain all the time now in Central Texas, so I’ve taken to dashing out of Wimberley whenever I think I might be able to “harvest” a few counties.

This was the plan for the day:

Wimberley to Wimberley, San Antone and South

The Moto Guzzi Centauro has been patiently awaiting its turn on the 254 county circuit, and finally a dry day was prognosticated.  I waffled in the morning, but decided to give it a try and see how far I’d get before the weather turned against me.

The first stop was a couple of hours away – Hondo, seat of Medina County – via some of the best roads the Hill Country has to offer.

Guzzi on the road between Kendalia and Sisterdale
Sisterdale Dance Hall

Sisterdale is one of the older Hill Country settlements, and was once famous because its educated citizens used to debate in Latin.

Humble abode in Sisterdale

Between Sisterdale and Comfort, a fine stretch of road, I came across this fine establishment, the Lone Star Cartoon Saloon.  They weren’t serving any beverages – in fact there was no one in sight – but it looked like more than one person had stopped and “set a spell” with a cold Lone Star.

Note that “selfie stick” in front…and the Christmas Tree decorations are bullet-riddled beer cans.  Yee haw!!
Cartoon Saloon parking lot
The outdoor lounge…
The main bar…
I can relate to this! No “wish you were here” for this place…
The back side of the selfie stick… 😀
Good view of the Christmas decorations…

With all the recent rains, the aquatic wildlife seem to be on the move.  I came howling out of Comfort and saw this very large softshell making his way slowly toward what would have been certain death in the road.  I turned around, came back and gave him a good look.  All OK..

Softshell living dangerously

So I picked him up and took him across the road.  He wiggled vigorously the entire way, and at one point decided to try to bite me.  He almost succeeded, so I had to put him down and pick him up with more distance between my hands and his mouth.  I did get across to a fast-running stream and deposited him in the water – he seemed happy, and so was I.

Softshell

Moving along, headed toward Hondo…

Centauro in the Hill Country

Passed through Bandera, where the Medina River was full to overflowing…

Medina River at Bandera
Between Bandera and Hondo

Finally got to Hondo after many many stops…

Medina County Courthouse
232 – Medina County – Hondo

I did not see it, but Hondo is famous, for decades, for the following sign:

Er, by the time I was aware of it, the Hell-driving had already been done…

From Hondo, due south to Pearsall, seat of Frio County.  George Strait was born in the town of Poteet, but raised in Pearsall.   Other than the Frio River and a zillion white-tail deer, it’s a fairly tranquil place…

233 – Frio County – Pearsall

From Pearsall, mostly south to the wide spot in the road known as Tilden, seat of McMullen County.  I stopped in front of a store of some sort and asked a lady where the courthouse was.  She laughed, looked over my shoulder, and said “‘at’s it right thair”.  No doubt, as I crossed the street with an Italian roar, she was thinking “how did somebody that damned dumb get such a fancy motorcycle…”  I’m not sure if I know the answer to that, but I did get to the courthouse…

Tilden was settled in 1858, and was apparently first known as “Dog Town” because everybody there used dogs to herd their cattle.  It was reputed to be a lawless and bandit-filled place.  The existence of this hand-done sign, welcoming the traveler to McMullen County, suggests that things may not have changed all that much:

Welcome to the Free State
234 – McMullen County – Tilden

From Tilden, north now to Jourdanton, seat of Atascosa County.  What the following picture does NOT show on the road between Tilden and Jourdanton is the State Trooper who was behind me, writing something that I was fairly certain I would not appreciate getting.  To my amazement, I was given my third (on this adventure) warning ticket for…surprise…speeding.  And I assure you, this time it was an accident.  I assured the Trooper, too, that I would forthwith change my errant ways, and we were both satisfied with that.  I better hurry up and finish this adventure while I still have a license…

Awaiting a ticket…
235 – Atascosa County – Jourdanton

Then northeast to Floresville, seat of Wilson County.

236 – Wilson County – Floresville
Carnival setting up next to the courthouse

Floresville is a modest little burg on the periphery of San Antonio, but is famous for being the birthplace and hometown of one of Texas’ most famous contemporary political figures, John Connally.

Then due north to the last courthouse stop of this circuit, Seguin, seat of Guadalupe County.  Seguin is one of the oldest cities in Texas, and was the cradle of the Texas Rangers and home to Jack C. Hays, after whom my county is named.  Hays just about single-handedly figured out how to fight the Comanche and win – and he did so until he moved on to California and all his lessons were forgotten and had to be relearned.

Nanci Griffith, beloved Texas singer, is from Seguin.

237 – Guadalupe County – Seguin
Punkin’s on the church grounds, getting ready for Halloween.. Seguin

From Seguin, it was another 40-odd miles up the road to Wimberley.

This trip added 6 counties and 358 miles to the adventure’s tally.  The Guzzi is a 21-year old bike, and some of the south Texas roads had been brutalized by the oilfield trucks – it was a demanding day, but the bike ran like a Swiss watch, or roared like a lion (until the State Trooper silenced it), all day.  It was a wonderful addition to the adventure.  And here’s the map after the Guzzi’s day:

It’s Filling In!

 

 

Singles

For various reasons, I’ve chosen to include a number of single-courthouse runs out from Wimberley and back on the same day.  This is their story…

Comal County – New Braunfels – 24 September 2018

Wimberley – New Braunfels

Even though this is my first son’s birthday, that was not the reason for this trip.  Sadly, this was the last ride I ever did on my beloved Triumph Thruxton 900 – it was traded later in the week as partial compensation for a 2018 Indian Springfield.  I felt like the Thruxton deserved to do at least one courthouse before it went to its next owner, and nearby New Braunfels was the place.  I was very lucky, it was a gorgeous day to go to New Braunfels, which is itself one of the most beautiful and interesting towns of central Texas.

It was originally established in 1845 by a German nobleman, who named it after his hometown in Germany.  Texas was still an independent Republic at that time, and New Braunfels became, effectively, the command center for a below-the-radar and probably unofficial attempt to set up a German feudal state in the middle of the Anglo land rush.  Thousands of German immigrants, including some of my ancestors, came in through the ill-fated Indianola (raided by the Comanche in 1840, destroyed by two hurricanes, and now a ghost town under water in Matagorda Bay, Gulf of Mexico).

New Braunfels became one of the main centers of German (and Czech) speaking immigrants in Central Texas, and it is to this day home to the annual Wurst Fest.  It is also situated right on the Comal and Guadalupe Rivers, with crystal clear waters, good food, and plenty of tubing down the rivers.

I had a great ride over on the twisty back roads, and got to the courthouse just in time to catch the afternoon light:

230 – Comal County – New Braunfels

Mural commemorating Ferdinand Lindheimer, father of Texas botany

On the way home, I took Rte 32, which passes over the Devil’s Backbone, a twisty piece of hill country biking nirvana that runs along the top of a ridge.  I stopped up there to shoot some final pix of this fine motorcycle, which was customized extensively over the 7 years I had it.  Thanks to Jeremy Slepekis, ex of Death Trap Motorcycles, for his (eventually) successful work on the motor!

The little sign in the background says “In Loving Memory”

Huskier than I was when I started this project…  😀

Bexar County – San Antonio – 30 September 2018

Wimberley – San Antonio

Having traded the Thruxton and its stable-mate the 2014 HD Deluxe for a new Indian, I needed to get some easy miles on the Indian before its first break-in checkup at 500 miles.  San Antonio was the choice, partly because I wanted to do San Antonio on a Sunday so as to avoid the urban weekday maelstrom.

Though I had to run a gauntlet of flying bugs that left the bike and me coated with insect remains, and a few sprinkles of rain, it turned out to have been a great idea – the courthouse was uncluttered and the light was gorgeous.

231 – Bexar County – San Antonio

San Fernando Cathedral, San Antonio

The remains of the “Texians” who famously defended the Alamo (also in San Antonio) against the Mexican army commanded by Santa Anna, are enterred here.

Though I’ve been in and around San Antonio for a good part of my life, I had never known that it was originally founded, in 1731, by “immigrants” from the Canary Islands, sent there by King Philip V.  I’m not sure if the “immigrants” had a choice, but they did get here, after a year-long trip, and began the amazing story of San Antonio.

On the way home, I noticed that the light on Fischer Store (which gives its name to the road I live on), perfectly mimicked the coloration of the new Indian.  So I got these beautiful photos of it…

An auspicious beginning to a new motorcycle love affair.

Here’s a map update with these two singles trips on it:

 

Trip 7 – Northeast Texas – Day 4 – 20 September 2018 – Gilmer to Wimberley

Mercifully, we awoke early on this, the last day of this trip, to discover that the sun was shining, the roads were mostly dry, and that we had squeaked by the inclement weather of the previous evening.  Here’s the day’s plan:

Gilmer to Wimberley

We had a quick breakfast in Gilmer and headed for the Upshur County courthouse:

225 – Marion County – Gilmer

Little Gilmer is a modest place, but it punches way above its weight in being the hometown of Blues legend Freddie King, crooner Johnny Mathis, and rocker Don Henley of the Eagles.  Sumpin’ in the water here…

Being now homeward bound, we stopped less frequently, but the countryside between Gilmer and Quitman is gorgeous – what I’d call “horse country” – rolling, green, well-manicured, and VERY expensive looking.  Quitman, seat of Wood County, is also the birthplace of Ms. Sissy Spacek.

227 – Wood County – Quitman

From Quitman down country roads through Mineola to Canton, seat of Van Zandt County.  (No, not Townes van Zandt, unfortunately…)  On the way to Canton, we passed the site of the First Monday Trade Days site.  It is a huge flea market-like affair, and we were grateful it wasn’t the first Monday.  Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow once lived briefly in a Canton hotel.

228 – Van Zandt County – Canton

Historic Canton Main Street

And then from Canton, east to Kaufman, seat of Kaufman County, and the last stop on this adventure.

Kaufman County – yeah, more Confederate glorification
229 – Kaufman County – Kaufman

Kaufman was the first place that Bonnie Parker was ever incarcerated, and was also the site of a German POW camp during WWII.  Astonishingly, Kaufman County is also home to the Southwest Vipassana Medication Center, descended from the “home base” of Vipassana meditation in Igatpuri, Maharashtra, India.  I used to live near there and friends on their way to Igatpuri would stay with us in Bombay.  I hope to do my first 10-day course at this place in early 2019.  Link is here:

Dhamma Siri

So from Kaufman, we headed southwest, Bobby Joe back to his home in Robinson, south of Waco, and me all the way to Wimberley.  The rain caught up with me twice, once torrential, and I had to pay for the good luck of the night before.  No free lunch.

But another great trip completed successfully…  I love doing this.

Trip 7 – Northeast Texas – Day 3 – 19 September 2018 – Palestine to Gilmer

Bobby Joe and I re-entered the realm of consciousness around 10 AM.  By that time I’ve usually had breakfast and done three courthouses!  Partnership is plenty of fun, but not all that efficient for task orientation.  😀

Here’s what we accomplished this day:

Palestine to Gilmer

We messed around in Palestine once we got re-oriented.  “Palestine”, incidentally, is pronounced Pal-us-steen, not Pal-us-stine, making one wonder again how people ever learn English.

First stop – the courthouse:

219 – Anderson County – Palestine

We then hunted around town for a traditional breakfast joint…

There really IS such a railroad that runs for tourism purposes between Palestine and Rusk.

We finally gave up on finding a “home-style” breakfast and went to the IHOP, distinguished for the world’s slowest breakfast service.

Bobby Joe and I finally began our riding day around noon (!), but before we could get out of Palestine, I spied this lawnmower graveyard.  My father was obsessed with lawnmowers his entire life – and these pix are in his honor:

While I was out photographing them, a man came racing up in an old American land yacht to inquire if I wanted to buy any of them.  Luckily I was on a bike and had to pass on the temptation…

More of Palestine on the way out of town…

Palestine Service Men’s Club, WWII
Sacred Heart Catholic Church, built in 1890 of hand-made brick
Redlands Hotel

We FINALLY got underway, headed due east to Rusk, seat of Cherokee County (the Cherokee all having been removed and relocated to reservations, mostly in Oklahoma, where one of them seems to have contributed to Elizabeth Warren’s gene pool).

220 – Cherokee County – Rusk

Mural in Rusk
Commemorating the Texas State Railroad on the other end from Palestine

Northeast from Rusk to Henderson, seat of…uh..Rusk County.  Don’t ask me…

Along the way, I finally got a chance to photograph one of those neatly trimmed passages of the power lines through the pine trees – ubiquitous in the Big Thicket/Piney Woods area (which we are now back in…).

221 – Rusk County – Henderson

Conscious of the late start, we blew on from Henderson due east to Carthage, seat of Panola County and namesake, presumably, of Carthage, Greece.  One of a number of so-named towns in this part of Texas.

222 – Panola County – Carthage

We did not get to see it, but Carthage is home to the Texas Country Music Hall of Fame, and both the great Tex Ritter and Jim Reeves were born and raised in the environs of Carthage, considered their home town.  It is also, implausibly, the home town of Mildred Fay Jefferson, the first African-American woman to graduate from Harvard Medical School.

Watching the sun headed down, we raced northwest to Longview, seat of Gregg County.

222 – Harrison County – Marshall
223 – Gregg County – Longview

Downtown Longview

 

We did not get to do much in Longview, as the day was almost over before it had really begun, so we headed due east to Marshall, on the border with Louisiana, and seat of Harrison County.  Marshall was once the gateway to Texas, and a major hub of the Texas-based Confederacy.  In fact when Sam Houston declined to swear allegiance to the Confederacy, and lost his job as Governor of Texas, he was replaced with Marshall’s own Edward Clark.  Marshall was also the capital of Missouri’s Confederate government-in-exile.

Marshall has a lot of nicknames, including “Cultural Capital of East Texas” (what if that’s true?), and “The Athens of Texas” (notwithstanding the REAL Athens, Texas being about a hundred miles to the west…

One thing for certain, though, and clearly the reason for being called the “Athens” of Texas, is the H U G E central plaza and equally gigantic courthouse:

Looking down the boulevard toward the courthouse complex…

In case we ever need to replace Washington, DC (Maybe we do…)
224 – Harrison County – Marshall
Statue of apprentice telegrapher, Marshall

Marshall also claims to be the “Birthplace of Boogie Woogie”, which I guess is a good thing that partially offsets its sad record as being one of the leading centers of black male lynching in Texas.  I would not be surprised to learn that some of the boogie-woogiers did double duty as lynchees…

Y.A. Tittle, legendary QB of the San Francisco 49’ers, and George Foreman (BBQ grill salesman…oh, yeah, and Heavyweight Boxing Champion of the World) are from Marshall.

YA Tittle Autographed New York Giants 8x10 Bloody Horizontal Photo PSM-Powers Sports Memorabilia

The sun had now set, and we set out from Marshall to the north, toward Jefferson, seat of Marion County.  This turned out to be the surprise of the entire trip.

The first surprise was that there were no motels on the north side of Marshall, so we just kept driving into the gloaming.

The second surprise came when we were about 3 miles from Jefferson – an INTENSE wave of humidity that was not rain turned all of our clothing, helmets, bike surfaces into a glistening, clammy mess.  I’ve spent much of my life in tropical conditions, but never before encountered a transition this stark.

The third surprise was Jefferson itself.  I had never even heard of it, but it is like a perfectly preserved little Texas-Louisiana river town from the 19th or early 20th century.  We went first to the courthouse, which was shuttered for impending repairs, but we did the photo deed anyway, with Bobby Joe’s Harley and my BMW glaring at each other:

225 – Marion County – Jefferson

I then wandered around town on foot – these are the best of the MANY photos I shot there in the fading light…

Jefferson
Jefferson
Jefferson
Jefferson
Jefferson – There apparently still is a riverboat
Jefferson, Texas, looking like Louisiana
Jefferson – Home of the Kornbread Sandwich
Jefferson
Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, Jefferson
Mural commemorating Vernon Dalhart, Hall of Fame inductee and singer of a boyhood favorite of mine, “Wreck of the Old ’97”.

Vernon Dalhart’s version (1924) of “Wreck” was supposedly the first million-selling country music release in American history, and the song has been recorded by everybody who’s anybody in country music, including Cash, Woodie Guthrie, Pete Seeger, and…the list goes on and on.

Jefferson
The Black Swan, Jefferson
The Old Post Office, Jefferson
Mural commemorating The Golden Era, Jefferson

The fourth surprise in Jefferson was that it was almost dark, and there was nowhere for us to stay.   We headed west out of town through intense blackness and towering pine forest.  We could see lightning on the western horizon – we were driving straight into it but there was no other place to go, other than sleep in the woods.  The lightning intensified as we drove, with huge bolts appearing right down the tunnel made by the pine trees, and each flash would illuminate all of the little reflective markers embedded on the centerline of the road.  It was hairy in the extreme.

Our luck held out – the actual rain started about 2 minutes before we got to Gilmer and, barely wet, we whipped under cover at a gas station and waited while the storm raged.  That only lasted about 10 minutes, during which we made a motel reservation that was barely a mile away.  When the rain stopped, we scurried to the motel, where the lady proprietor allowed us to keep the bikes on the covered porch.  We ate road food from the gas station opposite the motel, drank two (and two only) beers, and went to sleep early listening to Bobby Joe’s Bluetooth speaker and fine selection of weird music.

It was a magical end to a day that had begun with a rough hangover.  Lesson learned.  Welcome to Gilmer.  I will do the road from Gilmer to Jefferson again one day, in the light…

Trip 7 – Northeast Texas – 17-20 September 2018

The cool thing about going to East Texas from Wimberley is that you get to watch (and feel) the terrain and climate changes.  East Texas is, echoing the Texas tourism slogan:  “[East] Texas – It’s Like a Whole Other Country”.

Regrettably, part of that difference is the preponderance of statues and plaques extolling the glory of the Confederacy.  My position on that has been made clear elsewhere in these blog pages, so I promise not to revisit that issue, other than noting it, on this trip…

Another good thing about this trip was that my old friend Bobby Joe Sebastian, who earlier put in a cameo on the day trip to Lampasas, joined me for most of this ride.

Let’s get started…

Trip 7 – Northeast Texas – Day 1 – 17 September 2018 – Wimberley to Waco

Trip 7 – Northeast Texas – Day 2 – 18 September 2018 – Waco to Palestine

Trip 7 – Northeast Texas – Day 3 – 19 September 2018 – Palestine to Gilmer

Trip 7 – Northeast Texas – Day 4 – 20 September 2018 – Gilmer to Wimberley

The original plan for Trip 7 wound up having to be segmented, mostly due to weather and time.  The actual trip was still 1,325 miles long and added another 25 counties, with a new total of 229!  Here’s the map:

After most of NE Texas

 

Trip 7 – Northeast Texas – Day 2 – 18 September 2018 – Waco to Palestine

Abigail stuffed us with breakfast and Bobby Joe and I readied ourselves to set off together, our first bike trip as a duo!

Sandy and Bobby Joe Sebastian, Robinson TX

Here’s the plan for the day:

Waco to Palestine

Our first stop was to be Gatesville, seat of Coryell County, but we took the long way around, passing through Crawford, where George W. Bush had (and has) his Texas White House.  I had never figured out exactly where Crawford was, but now I know.

Celebrating the Bushes
Downtown Crawford

Apparently the Bush Ranch is unmarked, so instead of looking for it, we headed on to Gatesville, famous for hosting the majority of penal facilities for Texas women, including their Death Row.

211 – Coryell County – Gatesville

On the road from Gatesville to Meridian, seat of the gloriously beautiful Bosque County, we came upon a meeting of the local Democratic Committee, planning their next steps to support Beto…

We passed the women’s prison, and they were out working on the prison grounds, but I did not dare stopping for a photo shoot.  Texas State Correctional Service – an equal opportunity employer.

Route 182 that runs from outside Gatesville almost to Meridian is one of the most beautiful, and fun, motorcycle rides in Texas.  Highly recommended (but keep it a secret).

212 – Bosque County – Meridian
Lumpkin-Woodruff House, Meridian
Downtown Meridian

From Meridian, we headed east toward Hillsboro, seat of Hill County.  The movie Bottle Rocket, with Owen Wilson, was filmed here.  Even more interestingly, Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, both Texans from near Dallas, carried out a robbery in 1932 in Hillsboro in which a store owner was killed – though Clyde was only the driver, he wound up being accused of murder.

213 – Hill County – Hillsboro

Willie Nelson is from Abbott, which is in Hill County.

More Confederate glorification

From Hillsboro, northwest to Cleburne, seat of Johnson County, and located on the southern side of the Fort Worth-Dallas metro area.   Along the way, an amusing religious reminder.

214 – Johnson County – Cleburne

Lifelike and interesting murals in Cleburne…

From Cleburne, due East to Waxahachie, seat of Ellis County.  What an eye-opener this little place was!  Beginning with the courthouse:

215 – Ellis County – Waxahachie

On the Square, Waxahachie

Waxahachie is an unbelievably prosperous little town – called Ginger Bread City because of Victorian architecture and Gingerbread-style homes.  As we were driving in, home after immaculate home lined the street, making you feel like you were riding in on a red carpet.  A place to go back to, for sure.

I could not figure out how this prosperous little oasis came to be, but it turns out that Waxahachie has become a bedroom community for the big-money folks from Dallas and Fort Worth.  Hence the showcase homes…

The Texas Theater, downtown Waxahachie
Bobby Joe on the courthouse steps
Ellis County African-American Hall of Fame, Waxahachie

From Waxahachie, south-east to Corsicana, seat of Navarro County.   Named by Navarro (who gave the county its name) for the island of Corsica, where his father had been born.

Welcome to Corsicana
216 – Navarro County – Corsicana

Navarro County Courthouse detail

Corsicana was the birthplace of Lefty Frizzell, David “Fathead” Newman, the jazz saxophonist, and the quirky Billy Joe Shaver.

From Corsicana, due east to the seat of Henderson County, Athens.

217 – Henderson County – Athens

With lengthening shadows, we headed due east to Tyler, seat of Smith County, expecting that to be our final stop of the day.  We managed to get a photo of the courthouse by the dying sun…

218 – Smith County – Tyler

…and then we set off to the southwest toward Palestine, seat of Anderson County.  We expected to find a motel and liquor store to get some beer and a small bottle of sipping whisky, but we drove…and drove…we passed Palestine Lake…

…we found a liquor store but the lady behind the counter admitted that she would not personally stay in any of the local motels…so we drove on and on until we arrived in Palestine, well after dark.  But we immediately found a good motel, with a restaurant next door so that we could respect Abigail’s admonition not to drink and ride the bikes, and settled in for a great evening.

An evening during which Bobby Joe and I caught up on 40-odd years of tales, fueled by all the beer and all the whiskey.  We did not get to bed until 2:30 – at least that’s what Bobby Joe says…

 

Trip 7 – Northeast Texas – Day 1 – 17 September 2018 – Wimberley to Waco

The objective for day 1 of this trip was to wind up sometime in the late afternoon at the home of my old friends Bob and Abigail Sebastian in Waco, Texas.  So I left Wimberley and headed north on I35 – a break with my usual practice of staying on the back roads, but I had a lot of ground to cover.

Here’s the map of Day 1:

Wimberley to Waco

First stop was Belton, seat of Bell County.  Like virtually every single Anglo settlement in Texas, Belton grew up in areas that were originally inhabited by Native Americans – here they were Tonkawa, Lipan Apache, Wacos, Kiowa, and Comanche.  As was customary at that time, the Anglos said to the Indians:  “Thanks for your hospitality, now get out.”  It’s a sad refrain that provides the background music for that mid-19th century version of making America great.

But Belton itself is a pretty little town with a very nice limestone courthouse…

Bell County Courthouse
205 – Bell County – Belton

…and a nice little movie theater…the Beltonian.

Atypically for a Texas town of that time, Belton had a sizeable minority that opposed slavery and secession from the Union – there was strong support for Sam Houston, who gave up the governorship because of his opposition to secession.  After the war ended unhappily for the Confederacy, the losers got even by lynching some of the Union sympathizers.

After a little bit more of I35, I finally got back off the beaten path and went next to the little town of Marlin, seat of Falls County.  Marlin had once been known for its hot mineral water springs, which attracted tourists and, in due course, Conrad Hilton, who built his 8th Hilton Hotel in Marlin – it’s now defunct.  Several major league baseball teams held spring training there, I guess because of the mineral waters (what other explanation could there be?).

In order to liven this blog up, in Marlin I hit on the bright idea of “jumping” for the courthouse pix.  This is the first of those ill-advised experiments…

206 – Falls County – Marlin

Apparently the citizens of Marlin held their sheriff in high regard, as they had several decorated 55-gallon drums with his image on them:

In commemoration of the life-giving waters…

“Where Life-Giving Waters Flow”

and…

The best parking spots in town

From Marlin, I continued along back roads leading to, and going through, places I had never heard of before.  Such as Bremond:

Polish Pickle Run

Unfortunately I missed the Polish Pickle Run, but continued along my way to the town of Franklin, seat of Robertson County.  Along the way, the ever-trusty BMW crossed 30,000 miles, recorded for posterity below:

Franklin is a tiny speck of a town, but with a lovely little courthouse:

207 – Robertson County – Franklin

Boy, that jumping really adds to the narrative, doesn’t it?  (Don’t worry, I did eventually come to my senses, though not soon enough…)

Turning Northeast for a long drive through the country to Fairfield, seat of Freestone County.  Fairfield’s claim to fame is as the birthplace of the great jazz trumpeter Kenny Dorham, who played with Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk and everyone who had a name from that era.  Now it’s home to some funky rustic art:

208 – Freestone County – Fairfield

Hey, it seemed like a good idea at the time…

It’s definitely nicer without me…

Now headed back west, to Groesbeck, seat of Limestone County.  Groesbeck is the town closest to the hugely important historical site called Old Fort Parker, which was actually a family settlement on what was then the bleeding edge of Anglo encroachment into Comanche territory.  Cynthia Ann Parker was captured from this “fort”, and wound up being the wife of the Comanche chief, Peta Nocona, and mother of the last of the Comanche chieftains, Quanah Parker, who surrendered the remains of his band, undefeated, at Fort Sill, Oklahoma.  Cynthia Ann Parker was forcibly recaptured, against her will, by Texas Rangers.  She attempted to rejoin her Comanche family, and eventually starved herself to death because of her “captivity” in the white community that she rejected.

Groesbeck is also home to Bob Wills, the legend of Texas Swing music – interestingly, I did not see anything prominent that claimed Bob Wills, though I also did not see much of anything for Waylon Jennings in Littlefield in the Panhandle.

209 – Limestone County – Groesbeck

While taking pix in front of the courthouse, what was either a baby, or injured, turkey vulture practically landed on me.  I was thinking Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds”…  😀

Continuing west to the last stop of the day, Waco, seat of McClennan County.  Waco is named for the Hueco (same sound) band of Wichita Indians who were displaced by the Anglo arrival.  It’s kind of disconcerting to note the number of instances in modern-day Texas (and America) that evoke the people who were driven from their homes, or exterminated, and then commemorated in place names, coins, and sports teams.

The soft drink Dr. Pepper was invented in Waco, and of course David Koresh and the Branch Dravidians were incinerated there in 1993 by Attorney General Janet Reno.  Additional fame came from the 2015 shoot-out between local biker gangs and the police, with 9 bikers dead.  It’s not certain that the real story of what happened there has been told.

Hank Thompson, country musician, was from Waco, and Ted Nugent (!) lives here.  Leon Jaworski, the federal prosecutor who brought down the Nixon administration during Watergate, was born and raised here.

Here’s the courthouse, no jumping…

210 – McClennan County – Waco
Looking toward Baylor University

Chisholm Trail went through Waco…

Tallest building in Waco, the Alico (insurance) Building

After a brief foray through Waco – a place to revisit, I headed over to my friends’ home and spent a great evening with them before heading out on Day Two…

Issue 1 – Follow the Money (Citizens United and Campaign Finance)

What’s the Issue?

Democracy in the US is being affected by the relaxation of restrictions on the extent to which political actors with deep pockets – corporations, wealthy individuals, political action committees (PACs) – can use their financial resources to disproportionately influence both elections and policies.  Some politicians, including Ted Cruz, welcome the availability of this money, while others, such as Beto O’Rourke, believe that it enables the buying and selling of elected offices and public policies, with the advantage going to corporations, wealthy individuals, and PACs.

What’s the Background?

In politics, the more money you can raise, the higher the likelihood that your campaign, for office or policy, will prevail.

Both major political parties, mindful that today’s political tailwind can become tomorrow’s headwind, gradually enabled legislation that would maintain some sort of equilibrium in the extent to which money could influence elections.

The most recent such measure was the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA), put forward by John McCain (R) and Russell Feingold (D) and passed in 2002.  The BCRA addressed two issues: 1) the use of “soft money” that sidesteps federal spending limits, and 2) the use of “electioneering communications” that endorse specific candidates while seeming to be doing general issue advocacy.

On 21 January 2010, the Supreme Court decided, by a thin 5-4 margin, to reverse provisions of prior decisions (including BCRA).  This was the “Citizens United” decision

Citizens United ruled that First Amendment rights of free speech that had hitherto applied to individual citizens could not be denied to “associations of citizens“.  This effectively placed such “associations” – corporations, unions, PACs, wealthy individuals–with access to vast financial resources on the same playing field as ordinary citizens making contributions from their household incomes.

Why does it matter?

 Citizens United enables both conservative and liberal corporations, unions, and organizations of any kind, including their PACs, to use money to overpower the messages of other electoral participants with fewer resources.   This does not provide a fair marketplace for ideas in the American tradition.   It does, however, ensure that wealth and privilege continue to be given disproportionate advantage in civic dialogue.

Both Republican and Democratic elected officials benefit enormously from the cash that these “associations” and their PACs now wield.  The current leadership of neither party has shown any inclination to resist this money.

PACs by definition have a specific objective in mind – a politician who is taking money from a PAC becomes beholden to it and her/his independence is thereby compromised.

You may be concerned about the undue influence of George Soros.  Or, you may be concerned about the undue influence of the Koch brothers.  The concern is identical, and the solution is the same in both cases –PAC money undermines a fair and American democratic process and needs to be removed from the electoral equation for both sides.

The Candidates’ positions

 Ted Cruz supports the Citizens United decision, and is on record as having stated that “money absolutely can be speech” while putting forward a bill that allows large donors and special interests to directly contribute to candidates.

Beto O’Rourke stated the following on 24 October 2017: “I will make a commitment to you right now that I won’t be a part of supporting, helping, fundraising, or a tacit endorsement of super PACs or people who try to work in an unaccountable way outside of the political process.”

Texas Tribune reports that through 31 July 2018, Beto has raised $23.6 million, none of which comes from PACs.  In the same period, Ted Cruz has raised $15.6 million, of which $4.3 million, or 28%, is from PACs.

Federal Electoral Commission data show that so far in 2018, almost $900K has been contributed for Ted Cruz (or against Beto O’Rourke) by “independent spenders”, of which almost $600K has been contributed in the first week of September – after it was perceived that there was a real electoral threat to Cruz.  It can be reasonably anticipated that this dramatic upsurge in PAC funding will continue as anxiety about the election result mounts.

In Summary…

 Ted Cruz will not bite the financial hands that are feeding him.  Beto O’Rourke has categorically rejected PAC money for his own campaign and can be counted on to support the same approach if he is elected Senator.

If you share a concern that the democratic process is damaged by allowing political parties – ANY political party – to have unfettered access to big-donor funding, then on this issue Beto O-Rourke is clearly the better choice.

This is not a Republican vs. Democrat, or conservative vs. liberal issue – it affects everyone on any side of any issue.

Trip 8 – Big Thicket – Day 6 – 30 August 2018

So the final day of the East Texas circuit began in Madisonville – here’s the itinerary:

Madisonville to Wimberley
201 – Madison County – Madisonville

With all the rain from the previous days, the earth was steamy and beautiful on the back road ride to Huntsville, seat of Walker county.

And then, upon arrival in Huntsville, there arrayed in all its glory is the single thing that Huntsville is most famous for – the Penitentiary.  There’s even a Texas Prison Museum.

Well, adding to the list of obstacles in getting my courthouse pictures, in Huntsville I (surprisingly, actually) I encountered my first law enforcement obstacle.

I had been lucky in getting to the courthouse before business had cranked up for the day, and there was only one car in the way – I could get it out of the picture by positioning the bike part-way on the Handicapped zone, which I have done scores of times without anyone saying “boo”.

So I’m getting the camera and tripod ready, when an officious-looking young cop comes striding purposefully out of the courthouse.  I figured he was interested in what I was doing, which has previously been the case.  Here’s the exchange that took place:

Me:  Good morning, officer.

Him:  Do you have a Handicapped sticker on that motorcycle.

Me:  Laughing, no sir, I did not even realize that it was possible to get such a thing.  It’d be hard to manage a motorcycle if you were handicapped.

Him:  You have to move that bike.  If handicapped people need to use that space, you’ll be in the way.

Me:  Understood.  I’m not going to park.  I’m going to shoot a single picture that will take between 10 and 20 seconds, and if someone comes during that time, I’ll move instantly.

Him:  No, you will move it now.

Me:  In the amount of time we’ve been talking, I’d have already taken the photo and moved on.

Him:  You aren’t getting it.  There is a $500 fine for parking in the handicapped parking, and you are going to move the bike right now.

Me:   Wordlessly, taking the bike off it’s center stand and moving it no more than 12 inches so the front tire does not touch the handicapped parking line.

Him:  Wordlessly, having exercised his authority, he turns on his heel and walks back into the courthouse.

I’m incredulous, notwithstanding the fact that he was right – I should NOT have been obstructing the handicapped parking, though it would have been for 10 to 20 seconds.  All to move maybe a foot.  I guess I’m lucky I’m not out $500, or shot in the back, or writing this from the Pen…

202 – Walker County – Huntsville

Huntsville is quite a bustling town – I guess the Pen is good for business.

Celebrating Sam Houston…and the all-blacks…

Unbeknownst to me, Huntsville is closely associated with Sam Houston, who died here in 1863.  Sam Houston was an amazing figure.  He was a US Representative and governor in Tennessee, then he came to Texas and defeated Santa Anna at San Jacinto, establishing Texas as an independent Republic.  He was the first and third President of the Republic of Texas, and led Texas to join the United States in 1845, following which he served both as a US Senator and Governor of the Texas.

Of greatest interest to me is that he refused to join the Confederacy when Texas voted to secede in 1861, and accepted to be removed from the Governorship rather than become a Confederate.  He was offered troops by the Union, but rather than add to the bloodshed, he simply stepped down from his offices and retired in Huntsville.  There are plaques on the town square that identify sites from which he would sit and whittle wood.  It’s easy to be proud of someone like Sam Houston, after whom my home town is named.

Cafe Texan on the Huntsville square
A Huntsville variation on graffitti

Meandering to the west, back into the grassy rolling hills where I spent a large portion of my youth.  First stop, Anderson, seat of Grimes County.   Beautiful scenery along the way:

 

Arrival in Anderson:  what a stunner of a little courthouse!

203 – Grimes County – Anderson
Courthouse from Main Street
Methodist Church, Anderson

Heading west, still, passing through Navasota…

You may recall from the discussion on the previous day’s blog that the El Camino Real, or Old San Antonio Road, had been first trafficked in the late 17th century when the Mexican government was trying to hunt down the Frenchman Rene Robert Cavelier, born in Rouen, and believed to be operating a French fort in defiance of Mexican hegemony.

Well, right on the main drag of Navasota is a statue of none other than Rene Robert Cavelier, AKA La Salle. The inscription says that he “was treacherously slain by his own men near this spot in March, 1687”.  A fuller record of his exploits includes his having become a Jesuit at one time, though he left the order before being ordained because of “moral weaknesses”.  Recent Catholic history suggests that such weaknesses may not have required him to recuse himself in these days.

He made extensive explorations all over North America and Canada, and eventually claimed the entire Mississippi watershed for France, calling it La Louisiane after King Louis XIV.  He had many mishaps along the Texas Gulf Coast while trying to locate the mouth of the Mississippi, the final one of which was the mutiny of his remaining men.  He was tricked, ambushed, and killed by Pierre Duhaut, who was subsequently killed to avenge the murder of La Salle.

Rene Robert Cavelier

While there is some dispute about whether it was near Navasota that La Salle came to his end, it’s as good a place as any to begin an exploration of this fascinating slice of Texas history.

Another fascinating slice lay just ahead, in Washington County, of which Brenham is the seat.  It so happens that the two places that dominated my youth were Harris County, where was born, lived, and went to school, and Washington County, where my grandfather had a ranch between Burton and Carmine, and where I lived out every fantasy known to Texas boys of that time.  So when I’m back in Washington County, there’s some kind of “energy field” where, for me, the universe is “in tune”.  The landscapes, the smells, the thoughts – all of them make it very easy, and natural, to be in that place.  I think everyone who had a happy childhood must have a “place of origin” like that.

What I had forgotten, however, is that Washington County is more than just a place of personal origin.  It was the birthplace of Texas as a Republic.  At Washington-on-the-Brazos, in March of 1836, the Texas Declaration of Independence was signed at a Convention held there.  A Constitution was also drafted.  Astonishingly, less than two months later Sam Houston defeated Santa Anna and the Mexican army at the San Jacinto battleground outside Houston, and Texas was a country!

I did not stop at Washington-on-the-Brazos on this trip, but I’ll revisit it once the 254 county adventure is over.

Classic Washington County scene

This is the Washington County courthouse in Brenham:

204 – Washington County – Brenham
Ross-Carroll house in Brenham

And I got to see my old friend Ben Rice, whom I had not seen in 50 years, while in Brenham:

I did stop off in Burton on the way back to Wimberley, seeing the Brazos Belle where my grandparents celebrated their 50th anniversary, decades ago.

Burton, TX

I did stop off and visit my grandfather’s former ranch – those pix will be put up separately.

This was a grand trip, encompassing a huge variety of landscapes, histories, friends, family, and memories.  204 counties now visited, exactly 50 to go.

The end of Trip 8.

Trip 8 – Big Thicket – Days 3 & 4 – 27-28 August 2018

Here’s the itinerary for these two days of travel:

Houston to Beaumont (the long way)

One of the reasons for doing this trip, rather than the one up north, was that it gave me a chance to meet my old friend from 40 years ago at The Woodlands, where he was doing a training course of some sort.  We spent Monday together, catching up on stories, and reveling in the way old friendships can be rekindled in an instant, regardless of how much time has passed.

My old friend, Aloysius (Luis) Pereira, from Belgaum, India:

Aloysius Pereira

In the afternoon, I bade farewell to Aloysius and headed up to Conroe to meet my dear Aunt Ione, cousin Karen, and Karen’s husband Randy.  Here’s Conroe:

182 – Montgomery County – Conroe
A bronze in front of Montgomery County courthouse. Looks like a good idea, it’s sultry there…

Montgomery County has been officially recognized by the Texas state legislature as being the birthplace of the inimitable “Lone Star” flag which has flown over the state since 1839 – it was then an independent country.

Scenes in Conroe

Little paintings on a streetside bench: 

Had a great dinner in Conroe with my hysterically funny family members, and then overnighted at Cousin Karen’s place up on Lake Conroe, or, Lake Cornrow as I call it.

Next morning, I set out early for the next stop, Coldspring, seat of San Jacinto County.  My Aunt Ione lived there for more than 15 years, so we have some family history there, too.  On the way there, I ran through the little settlement of Punkin, which is what my Aunt Ione called me when I was little.  (She also called me other things, and still does, but Punkin was when I was in the good graces…)

 

183 – San Jacinto County – Coldspring

Note that there is a cross above the door to the courthouse in Coldspring, and there are identical ones on all four sides.  I’ve been unable to determine definitively whether this is legal, but I don’t find it consistent with one of the characteristics that does make America great, which is separation of church and state.  I don’t see a need for ANY religious iconography on state property that is ostensibly in the service of people of all, or no, religion.

Coldspring Downtown

From Coldspring to Livingston, seat of Polk County, through the Sam Houston National Forest.

Lake Livingston
184 – Polk County – Livingston

You could interpret this plate in more than one way (I spent decades with the United Nations Development Programme, UNDP), though the fact that the plate is on a Raptor truck suggests that this agenda is not the same as that of my old alma mater.

Breakfast in Livingston

From Livingston to Woodville, seat of Tyler County.  Gorgeous landscapes along the way, and clouds indicating (accurately, it turned out) what was in store for me the rest of the day.

Woodville
Woodville Art District

In Woodville I discovered to my horror that I had mindlessly gone off and left my tripod in Livingston.  It was too far to go back with no assurance that it would even be there, so I came up with Plan B, which was balancing my camera on top of a parking meter post that had been beheaded, and then running through the traffic to the other side of the street, hoping that the camera did not fall off, or that a car would drive into the picture.  It took three tries, but I did finally get my Woodville courthouse picture:

185 – Tyler County – Woodville

So I set out from Woodville as a man on a mission – GET TRIPOD.   Leaving Woodville on the way to Kountze (pronounced “coonts”), as the humidity is turning to drizzle – EUREKA!  Wal-Mart!  I found there a plastic tripod that was too big for my travel case, but thanks to my years as a Boy Scoutmaster, I had bungee cords with me that enabled a very effective strap-down arrangement.  With newfound confidence, though still kicking my own backside for having lost my pro-grade tripod, I set off into the rain.

Rainy road to Kountze

Kountze turned out to be the first in a string of problematic courthouses to photograph.  Luckily I had a new tripod to work with.  The highway runs right in front of the razor-wire protected courthouse, and in order to photograph the bike, me and the courthouse, I had to get the bike up on the pavement right at the entrance.  I’m usually reluctant to try that, for fear that it will attract unfavorable attention from law enforcement (see Huntsville, two days later, for proof that this is not an irrational concern).  In this case a law enforcement person happened to come out of the courthouse, and I was able to explain what I intended to do, and got a “no objection”.  Even if he had objected, I would have waited until he left and then done it anyway – I could not leave the fair ville of Kountze without the photo!  Well, here it is – t’ain’t much, but there’s no doubt about where I am…

186 – Hardin County – Kountze

From Kountze, now off in a westerly direction to Liberty, seat of the county of the same name.  Along the way I spied a trio of miniature horses grazing:

Miniature horses

187 – Liberty County – Liberty

Unlike on the previous trip, where I failed to don my rain gear until I was already soaked, this time I put on the rain gear BEFORE I was soaked.  And then I spent most of the next two days putting it on, and taking it off, and putting it on, and taking it off…  Why?  Think 95 degrees and 100% humidity.  If the rain doesn’t get you, the sweat will.

On the next leg, to Anahuac, seat of Chambers County, the rain DID get me, both en route, and then in Anahuac.

Road to Anahuac, from under I10 – site of another clothing change…
Flooded canal in Anahuac

Anahuac is apparently a Nahuatl (Aztec) word meaning “close to water”.  That fits, as it is right on the Gulf of Mexico.  It was never part of the Aztec Empire, it was given the name by Mexico when it controlled the area (prior to Texas independence).  Anahuac was the scene of “disturbances” in 1832 and in 1835 that helped precipitate the war for Texas independence.  More importantly, Anahuac is the “Alligator Capital of Texas”, and holds an annual Gator Fest.  Mark your calendar accordingly.

Thomas Jefferson Chambers home, built 1845

Anahuac seems to be home to vocal supporters of Trump-Pence and their agenda, in particular the wall:

Anahuac mural
188 – Chambers County – Anahuac

From Anahuac, I drove a local road parallel to I10 almost all the way to Beaumont, the 4th largest port in the US, and home, or near home, to lots of people, including George Jones (from Vidor), Janis Joplin (Port Arthur), J.P. Richardson (AKA The Big Bopper), sportsman Babe Didrikson Zaharias, and Johnny and Edgar Winter, blues musicians.  Jason’s Deli is HQ’d here.

Beaumont is also home to an important branch of my family, where my 2nd cousins still live.  When I was a very small boy we used to come visit them from Houston, and marvel at the gracious lifestyle they enjoyed.  I had arranged to meet my two cousins upon arrival at the Jefferson County courthouse, which I did and could happily include them in my Beaumont courthouse picture (my cousins are the ladies, Kathy (L) and Ninette (R):

189 – Jefferson County – Beaumont

Ninette’s son Charles took Kathy and me up to the 9th floor of his building overlooking Beaumont.  These are the views:

This gorgeous home was where my relatives, the Walkers, lived.  In the day it was white, and in my recollections it was as if it were Manderley, the fictional home of Rebecca de Winter of the du Maurier book and Hitchcock movie.  It is now owned by an oil baron, and though it has changed color, it is still glorious.

My cousin Kathy invited me to overnight with her and husband Pat, and we talked until late about our recollections and our respective genealogical findings.  It was a great ending to a great day…  Thanks, Kathy and Pat.

Trip 8 – Big Thicket – Day 5 – 29 August 2018

Off bright and early the next morning, bound due East for Orange, seat of Orange County.  OK, early, if not bright…

Here’s the day’s itinerary:

Beaumont to Madisonville
190 – Orange County – Orange

Near the courthouse is the beautiful home and garden of the Lutcher Stark family.  The house, built in 1894, is a Queen Anne style, over 14,000 sq. ft.  According to the information on the grounds, the family adored the garden and spent more on lawn and garden supplies than they did on domestic help and utilities.  When the Lutcher Starks died in 1936, the house was closed down for good, but then restored and used as a museum.  I found out upon my return home that my old friend George Parks is a relative of the Starks (and is still awaiting, in vain, he believes, his share of the inheritance!)

A grand old oak tree in Orange
Stark family home, Orange TX

The rain started in Orange, and escalated in intensity during the long ride north on 87 toward Jasper, where my Uncle Dalton had been a young man before leaving home and eventually joining the Army.  This is deep woods territory, and the elegance of the Stark mansion soon gave way to the brooding sensibility of this land.  As epitomized by this flag-draped roadside home and produce stall.  They also proudly offer “Confedrate (sic) items” – I think the spelling follows the pronunciation in this neck of the woods.

“Confedrate” items for sale

Not much further up the road I encountered this enticing offer to head down a Dead End road to the Texas Hogwallow.  With visions of “Deliverance” dancing in my head, I chose to point the BMW north and skedaddle…

Skedaddle right into the rain, that is.

With the refrain of Dylan’s “Shelter from the Storm” in my head, I courted divine wrath by pulling the BMW up on the dry porch of a local religious establishment and donned the rain gear for the first, but not last, time today.

A brief respite from the rain gave me a chance to run out and capture one of the defining images of this trip – 18-wheeler laden with logs blasting down the highway in a nasty cloud of crosswind and spray.  A motorcyclist’s nightmare…

However, shortly thereafter came the motorcyclist’s dream, a big, swooping downhill curve through the forest toward Jasper.

191 – Jasper County – Jasper
Another cross in the window…

From Jasper, due east to the little town of Newton, seat of Newton County.

Road to Newton
192 – Newton County – Newton

 

Lodging in Newton

From Newton, north to Hemphill, seat of Sabine County, named for the Sabine River that provides the border with Louisiana.  The road leads right through the magnificent Sabine National Forest.

And finally!  A Zen moment in the forest.  For a brief instant, I know where I am!  As is said by many an inveterate traveler:  “No matter where you go, there you are”…meaning that there’s no escape from yourself.   Or the corollary, “If you don’t know where you are going, any road will take you there…”

A fragment of the massive Toledo Bend lake:

And then on to Hemphill…

193 – Sabine County – Hemphill

Hemphill

 

From Hemphill, northwest on a magical road to a magical town that I had never even heard of, San Augustine, seat of San Augustine county.

So it turns out that this route retraces the old El Camino Real, running from Louisiana through San Antonio all the way to Laredo.  It was first established under Mexican rule in the 1680’s, when the governor of Coahuila was trying to find and destroy a fort that had been established by Rene-Robert Cavalier, Sieur de la Salle – about whom we’ll hear more when we get to Navasota.  However bloody the original road, the present one is a delight.

Along the Camino Real – all it needs is a palaver hut…

 

Ford’s Corner on the El Camino Real

From the down-home to the distinctly elegant in San Augustine…

The road into San Augustine town…
A beautiful home going into San Augustine…
194 – San Augustine County – San Augustine

You could say that the courthouse is plain, but it is very tasteful, the green window frames harmonizing nicely with the well-manicured green grass around the courthouse.

Elsewhere around town is this beautiful little Episcopal church, right next to the equally charming Crockett Hall, which may in fact be part of the church grounds, I could not ascertain this.

From San Augustine due north to Center, seat of Shelby county.

Who wouldda thunk that a little town like this could sustain a Korean Shop?

The courthouse in this modest little town turns out to be a jewel!

Flags at half-mast in honor of John McCain
195 – Shelby County – Center
A sign in the sky of things to come…

The Rio in Center, Texas

From Center, I begin to leave the deep forest for the wooded terrain of Nacogdoches, seat of Nacogdoches County, both named for the Nacogdoche tribe of Caddo Indians who inhabited this area for up to ten thousand years before the arrival of the Europeans. The road remains stunning:

Nacogdoches is a charming little university town (Stephen F. Austin U), and seems to be enjoying the benefits thereof.

Now you may think that my photographing of the courthouses is as simple as pulling up in front of the courthouse, setting up the tripod, and firing away.  Sometimes it IS that simple, but there is usually a challenge of some sort, whether lighting, law enforcement, positioning of extraneous vehicles, foot traffic, etc.  Nacogdoches posed the greatest challenge yet, and I fully expected my solution to result in a fine or handcuffs.

The Nacogdoches courthouse is right on a very busy corner.  It is behind walls, and looks more like a hacienda than a courthouse.  I could find no way of getting anything that even superficially looked courthouse-like from the outside.  The only solution I saw was to bring the motorcycle INSIDE the courtyard and photograph from there.  I tried to find an authority figure from whom I could get an OK for that idea, but not finding one, I readied all the camera equipment inside the courtyard, and then, breathing deeply, pushed the bike into the courtyard and into a suitable position.  I made the shot, thrust the tripod aside, and manhandled the heavily laden bike back out onto the sidewalk – still a violation of some sort, but a lesser one, I hoped.  (If I had been caught out there, I was going to say that the engine had stopped running and I had to get it out of the way of traffic…)  Anyway, what the following photo lacks in visual intensity does at least reflect a “get ‘er done” resilience.   A deviant mind is a terrible thing to waste…  I offer you Nacogdoches…

196 – Nacogdoches County – Nacogdoches

Mural opposite the Nacogdoches courthouse

Believe me, it was with a huge sigh of relief that I fled due south toward Lufkin, seat of Angelina County.  The county is named for a Native American woman who helped Spanish missionaries – they called her “Angelina”, though it’s highly unlikely that that was what her tribespeople called her.  Anyway, it’s a nice thought, and better than yet another Confederate slaver.  And in fact Angelina County was the ONLY county in East Texas to reject the secession vote in 1861.  Here’s how Angelina county was described by John N. Lomax (my mother was born a Lomax):

“Culturally, the county was less moonlight-and-magnolias Dixie than a little pocket of Appalachia, where pioneers, often from similarly hardscrabble areas of GeorgiaAlabama and Mississippi, wanted nothing more than to carve homesteads out of the Piney Woods and river thickets, farm a little, maybe raise a scraggly herd of tough cattle to drive to market in New Orleans.”  And, he added, “[t]hey also wanted to brew up a little whiskey and subsist on the bass, catfish and perch they hauled from the Neches and Angelina rivers and whatever they could trap and shoot on dry land.”  Doesn’t seem like it has changed much…

Katherine Ann Porter and her sister were married together (to two guys, not each other – those were different times…) in Lufkin, and both Brookshire Brothers (of grocery store and pharmacy fame) and Atkinson Candies, inventor of the mighty Chick-O-Stick novelty candy, are HQ’d in Lufkin.

They also have The Pines, where you can still see the original Magnificent Seven.  I’d surely go if I were there..

Lufkin mural

Because of the constant rain, I shot my first photo of the courthouse while I was still wearing my rain gear.  Luckily I noticed that it made me bear a resemblance to the Michelin Man, so there is a corrective photo that shows the real me.  It’s not much of an improvement, I concede…

197 – Angelina County – Lufkin

From Lufkin, to paraphrase “A Day in the Life”, “somebody spoke and I fell into a dream”.  That dream was the nearly surreal drive between Lufkin and Groveton, seat of Trinity County.  The road runs right through the middle of the Davy Crockett National Forest, which is itself a high order spectacle.  Then, as you near Groveton (I had also never even heard of the place), I spied a sign or two leading to a place called “Nigton”.  As a place name, it seemed to bear an uncanny resemblance to another place name that I knew in my youth, but is now something that cannot be uttered by people of my hue.  I could not tell how far off the trail it would take me (the afternoon was getting on), so I plowed on to Groveton, but wondering about Nigton.

Subsequent research, however, showed that Nigton is a “ghost town”, notwithstanding still having a population, founded in 1873 by ex-slaves, and named by one of the ex-slaves.  It’s an interesting story, you can look it up at this site:  “Uncovered Texas | Ghost Towns”.  (Sorry, I did not succeed in embedding the link…)

Actually Groveton is pretty close to being a ghost town itself, though it has a fine, large courthouse:

198 – Trinity County – Groveton
Love that pair of rocking chairs…

Here’s downtown Groveton.  I never saw moving car nor living human the whole time I was there.

From Groveton, I headed northwest to a place that, finally, I had heard of before:  Crockett, seat of Houston County.  As a small boy I had been infatuated with Davy Crockett (“King of the Wild Frontier”), and had owned and frequently worn a real coonskin cap, just like Davy’s (or Fess Parker’s, of San Angelo, who played Davy on TV).  Crockett, Texas is so named after the same Crockett, who died in the siege of the Alamo.   The famous Kenny Rogers is from Crockett.

Houston County is itself named after Sam Houston, and was the very first county established by the Republic of Texas.  More on Sam Houston when we get to Huntsville…

199 – Houston County – Crockett

Strode-Pritchett cabin (relocated to Crockett in 1976 for the bicentennial)

View leaving Crockett

I had originally thought to spend the night in Crockett, but, not spying much in the way of food or lodging, decided to make my way west to Centerville, seat of Leon County (and conveniently located on I45).

The roads had finally dried out, and I removed my rain gear for the last time today, and had a serene run in to Centerville.

200 – Leon County – Centerville

Centerville’s not much more than a wide place in the road, but by chance I discovered while looking at my itinerary that this was the 200th courthouse I have visited on this adventure.  Fifty-four to go!

I was so happy to be driving in the dry that I decided to continue on to Madisonville, from where we resume the travelogue tomorrow morning.

Sunset in Madisonville

 

Trip 8 – Big Thicket – 25-30 August 2018

I had referenced Conrad’s “Heart of Darkness” in my story about the Gulf Coast, Trip 5.  It was even more on my mind at the beginning of this trip into the Big Thicket and Piney Woods of Texas.  In that part of Texas there are a LOT of Confederate flags, monster trucks, and burly folk with pale skin and long stringy hair (just like mine was, once upon a time!).

Notwithstanding the stereotypes, which did indeed have some basis in reality, it was another wonderful trip, with every single person I met greeting me with hospitality and good will, though I might have helped my case by keeping my mouth shut about MAGA hats and the rebel flags.

Let’s get underway…

Trip 8 – Big Thicket – Day 1 – 25 August 2018

 

Trip 8 – Big Thicket – Day 2 – 26 August 2018

Trip 8 – Big Thicket – Days 3 & 4 – 27-28 August 2018

Trip 8 – Big Thicket – Day 5 – 29 August 2018

Trip 8 – Big Thicket – Day 6 – 30 August 2018

1,254 more miles and another 26 counties.  Map after the Big Thicket looks like this:

After the Big Thicket

Trip 8 – Big Thicket – Day 2 – 26 August 2018

I had been in Houston in April, when I shot the Harris County courthouse with the Vespa as the steed of choice.  I had been regretting that the way I had done it resulted in what I call “ant pictures”, in which the subject is so small you can’t even make out what it is.  I had some ideas on how to do it better, and I also wanted to shoot some pix of downtown Houston that I did not have time for before, so I set out bright and early on Sunday morning to revisit my hometown.

This time I successfully managed to find Memorial Drive into Houston – it looks EXACTLY the same as it did 50 years ago – in fact the road surface even looks to be original.  It is uncanny…

Memorial Drive at 610

Upon arriving downtown…

Dancers on Building – Houston
San Jacinto headed toward the courthouse

Alternatives to ant pix…justice now done for the Vespa, this being the only courthouse shoot it gets to attend…

Harris County – Houston

View from the front of the Harris County courthouse
Taco stand opposite the courthouse!  Must be some prime real estate for a taco stand…

These two inscriptions were in the sidewalk across the street from the courthouse:

Goo-goo eyes ordinance, 1905 – Not guilty, your honor…

1910 courthouse occupying the entire block
Coming into town across the bayou

After reshooting the courthouse area, I set off to prowl around town.  Here’s what I found:

Headed out of town on Fannin
Mural
Majestic Metro stop
What can you say about that?
Now THAT’s a skylight!

Houston Bahai Center
No loitering!

I had some time to kill before a lunch date with old friend John (Jay) Nelson, so I decided to pay a visit to my alma mater, the University of Houston, which gave me my BA, but did little to inspire alumnus enthusiasm.  It was MUCH nicer than I had recollected…

Roy Cullen building
The U of H cougar mascot.
I sure hope Ezekiel Cullen was right about this…

Well, heading back into town, I stumbled into a veritable cornucopia of murals and street art, beginning with the law offices of Tim Hootman.

Around Pease Street, murals, murals, murals!

So I had lunch with John Nelson in town, negotiated the hellish ride (on the Vespa) out Westheimer to Spring Branch, then met my old friend James Horwitz (candidate for Judge in the upcoming election – VOTE HORWITZ!, you’ll be proud you did).  Tomorrow back on the open road…

Trip 8 – Big Thicket – Day 1 – 25 August 2018

This was a longer-than-usual trip because I spent a couple of days in the Houston area catching up with some old friends and family.  So this first day was, by my standards, a leisurely affair.

Itinerary for Day 1 here:

Wimberley to Houston

I set out on Saturday morning from Wimberley, headed for La Grange, seat of Fayette County.  This is fine, rolling country, conducive to relaxed, comfortable cruising south of triple-digit territory.

The good life, Texas style

The bike for this trip was, again, the BMW – it is so comfortable, and convenient, I have a hard time saying “no” to it…

In addition to this being cattle country, it is also host to cotton farming, now ripe and ready for harvest.

The Fayette county courthouse was another of those unexpected surprises.  I used to come to La Grange quite a bit as a boy, but I had no recollection of ever being at the town square.  Better late than never…

179 – Fayette County – La Grange

Detail of the courthouse
Hermes in La Grange

Elegant home in La Grange
On the front porch

From La Grange, I went next to Fayetteville

Fine home in Fayetteville
Gulf station in Fayetteville
Joe’s Place, Fayetteville
The famous Orsak’s Cafe, Fayetteville

Next stop, Bellville, seat of Austin county.

Between Fayetteville and Bellville, cattle egrets awaiting dinner

I was gratified to note that Bellville’s Trump Cafe seems to be defunct, consistent with the maxim “Everything Trump Touches Dies”, ETTD.

ETTD
180 – Austin County – Bellville

And in case you were wondering why it’s called Bellville…

Bell of Bellville, Trump Cafe in the background
Bellville on the square

And then on to Hempstead, through which I learned highway driving in the early sixties on old 290, which still looks the same, though the dirt-floor BBQ joint and watermelon stands are long gone…

Hempstead

Waller county is (in)famous for being the site, three years back, of the arrest and then death in custody of the African-American woman Ms. Sandra Bland.  If you have not seen the video of the arrest, you should Google it.  She wound up dead in a cell after being arrested for a trivial traffic stop.  I guess she got “uppity”…  This kind of thing should not be happening.

181 – Waller County – Hempstead

Hempstead was the last courthouse stop of the day – then on to Houston, where I met up with my childhood friend, Dale Woodard.  Dale and I disagree on practically everything, but we are able to agree that we are still friends, 60 years later.  That’s worth something!

Dale Woodard and Sandy in Houston

Tomorrow, playtime in Houston.

Trip 6 – Red River – Day 4 – 16 August 2018

Knowing that I had a 400-mile day ahead of me, I actually set the alarm for this fourth and final day of this trip.  Here’s the itinerary:

Sulphur Springs to Wimberley

First stop, Emory, seat of Rains county.  Both reflecting glory on Mr. Emory Rains, an early “Texas patriot”.  More creative name-giving at work.

170 – Emory – Rains County

I met the county judge coming out of the courthouse, and he, having coming to Emory later in life, was enthusiastic about it as a place to live.  It kind of seemed that way – how could it be otherwise with this establishment of fine dining right on the courthouse square…

Too bad for me, the Bigmouth wasn’t yet open, so I had to push on westward toward Greenville, seat of Hunt county.  This is still quintessential horse country, as illustrated by these happy fellows…

Greenville is actually a little town, complete with overpass over the railroad lines.  The courthouse is a pretty thing, located smack in the center of town.  It is the 7th one since the county was established (the first being a log cabin), and was opened in 1929 (just in time for the Depression).

171 – Greenville – Hunt County

An attractive wine bar across from the courthouse, though no place I could spot that sold guns and ammo.  I would think a town of this size could provide sufficient custom for a gun and tactical enterprise of some sort.  (Note: potential business opportunity…)

You betcha!

Wasting no time, now headed (with trepidation) into the urbanized fringes of Dallas and Fort Worth.  First stop, McKinney, seat of Collin county.  This place was the biggest positive shock of this trip.  The center of town is beautiful, tasteful, and prosperous looking, with gorgeous homes, shaded boulevards, and fine buildings.   Also sidewalk cafes, at one of which I broke my fast.

This building is now the Performing Arts Center, though I think it may have at one time been the courthouse.

Now the courthouse is out in the edge of town in what looks like a small city (or mausoleum).

172 – McKinney – Collin County

Continuing the Westward Ho! trip, next stop Denton, seat of…Denton county.  Now this was another surprise.  Denton is a college town, hosting the University of North Texas and Texas Woman’s University.  The University of North Texas is noted for its music school, and from that school came the band Midlake, who produced the intriguing song called “Roscoe”.  More on that later.

Denton felt to me the same way that Austin did in the 70’s.  In the same way as being in Yangon (Burma) in the 2000’s felt just like being in Orissa (India) in the early 70’s.  If I were looking for a new place to settle into for the end-of-life glide path (or crash-and-burn), I’d give this little place consideration.

The courthouse is a stunner, and you can’t help but wonder whether the extensive and beautiful stone-work inspired the afore-mentioned Midlake to begin their song with

“Stonecutters made them from stones
Chosen specially for you and I”

173 – Denton – Denton County

OK, it’s not grammatically correct, but it’s a fairly evocative way of beginning a song, and it delights the mind by taking quite a few additional twists and turns before it reaches the end.  We’ll return to this song one more time before the end of this leg…

I had no time to tarry in Denton, mindful of the fact that I still had hundreds of miles yet to go in order to get back to Wimberley before dark.  I did find time, however, to come to another screeching halt at the Scalco Bucking Bulls operation.  From here came the thematic image for this trip (perhaps for my whole life):

I put that second picture on FaceBook, and was amazed at how many people found appeal in the idea of me getting kicked in the head by a bucking bull.  There was widespread disappointment when the realization set in that it was a sculpture, not a real bull….

Here, however, is what it looks like in real life, taken a few weeks ago at the Marble Falls rodeo:

There were also real bulls being raised for the rodeo, and they reminded me of my childhood when I lived in terror of the 1-ton Santa Gertrudis bulls my grandfather had on his ranch.

These are all young bulls, not yet in their prime for rodeo work, but impressive enough to remind you of what they are capable.

Well, not a mile down the road I came across a herd of the fabled Texas longhorns (cattle, not university students).

And on to the little town to which the old geezer had alerted me two days earlier, Decatur, seat of Wise County.  And he was well-advised to do so:

174 – Decatur – Wise County

This courthouse for the obscure (to me) little town of Decatur eclipses those of many more sizeable metropoli.  As I was photographing it, a guy drives by in a low-rider car and yells “Photograph it good, I’ve had a lot of problems come out of that place!”  I laughed, and yelled back “I might too, before the day’s over…”.

Luckily that did not happen (since I had gotten the 128 mph stuff out of my system several days earlier), so I pointed the Beemer south and headed home.  My original plan was that Decatur was the last photo stop on this trip, but since I had some time to spare, and could/would pass through some additional county seats, I added on Weatherford, Granbury, Glen Rose, and Hamilton.

Weatherford first.  I’m driving into town and at the end of this long boulevard-like road I see something looming on the horizon looking like Jagganath temple in Puri, or a Shiva temple in south India.  That turns out to be the Weatherford courthouse.  It was under renovation and there was no way to get all that close to it (it is ringed by a traffic circle), so I parked the bike under the construction scaffolding, placed the camera on a traffic median, and dodged traffic to get back to the bike before a) a car came, or b) the shutter went off.  This is the result:

175 – Weatherford – Parker County

Weatherford deserved more attention than I had time to give it, but I was now in homing pigeon mode, and continued southward to Granbury, seat of Hood county.  Another very pleasant little town – I like the open-ness and dry air of these towns to the west of DFW.  It looks like the architect of the Granbury courthouse may have been the same as the one in Weatherford, or at least copied that style.

176 – Granbury – Hood County

Perhaps one could be forgiven for wondering about that thing on top of the courthouse that looks like it came from a retired battleship.  It looks like an afterthought, and something that could (or should) fall off in a strong wind.

Opry House, Granbury
Downtown Granbury

Between Granbury and Glen Rose, seat of Somervell county, is a historical marker for a Squaw Creek Indian fight.  Form your own conclusions from the story.  Also note that the sign has been singled out for more vehicular marksmanship attention.  😀

Glen Rose looks like it could have been located in the Shire, only lacking hobbits.  The courthouse is like a stone dollhouse, perfect in proportion.

177 – Glen Rose – Somervell County

In addition, it calls itself the Dinosaur Capital of Texas, I guess vying with Seymour for that honor.  What seems to give Glen Rose the edge, though, is that it hosts the Creation Evidence Museum, which, in the town’s own words, allows you to “explore the scientific evidence that the earth and universe were created by special design.”  I did not get to go there, otherwise perhaps I’d have found the evidence for the co-existence of humans and dinosaurs that I could not find in Seymour.  In addition, this museum has a 25′ long replica, 1/20th scale, of Noah’s Ark.  I had not realized that his blueprints were still around, but I hope to check that out on the next run up north.

Glen Rose is also situated on the banks of the Brazos River before it turns into the big, red, muddy thing we see down on the Gulf Coast.  There were lots of little old-fashioned looking cabins and campgrounds along the river road leading to town.  A fascinating little place, and already on the Revisit List.

Glen Rose downtown

More incredible vistas on the road through cattle country toward the last stop, Hamilton, seat of…how could it be otherwise…Hamilton county.

These cows, to their credit, do have sense enough to get out of the sun, though that tree “don’t give a lot of shade”.  It’s not as if, though, they have too many alternatives.

Baptist Church on the prairie

And finally, a great way to end a great trip:  this beautiful little Hamilton courthouse.  How could it get any prettier?

178 – Hamilton – Hamilton County

So, sun baking down, I saddled back up for the long haul down 281 for the turn-off that leads me to Wimberley.  A final anecdote…

You may remember that I mentioned the Midlake song “Roscoe” earlier.  It contains the following lines:

Whenever I was a child I wondered what if my name had changed into something more productive like Roscoe
Been born in 1891
Waiting with my Aunt Rosaline

Driving thousands of miles gives you a lot of time for thought.  As I see these places I wonder, like “Roscoe”, what my life would have been like if I had been born in one of these places, each one offering a unique and random variation for an opportunity to live this one lifetime.  What would I have believed?  What kind of man would I have turned out to be?

And, for a nomad like myself:  What would it be like to go live there now?  Who would I have for friends?  What would be my passions?

It is wonder, not wistfulness – I cannot imagine living a life that I’d prefer to the one that I’ve been lucky to have, but there are infinite other ways it could have been.  It’s fun to think about them while riding a beautiful motorcycle down that seam of the always present from the always past to the always future.

Next trip:  Dallas, Fort Worth, and more of the Piney Woods of East Texas.

Thanks for riding along…

End of the Red River Trip

 

 

 

Trip 6 – Red River – Day 3 – 15 August 2018

My wet socks from Day 1 of this trip had, despite my best efforts, not yet dried out.  In fact they had taken on a bit of an…uh…aroma.  I resolved that they and I would part company, but being the kind of person who doesn’t want the motel staff to wonder what kind of person would be wearing, and disposing of, in the motel garbage can, something that smelled like it was dead…well, I opted for Plan B.

Itinerary for Day 3:

Gainesville to Sulphur Springs

I had already decided that you can’t do a trip called “Red River Trip” without actually seeing the Red River (I’m fussy about that kind of detail), so the first stop of the day was going to be to the Red River, which would also become the final resting place of those once beloved, but now reviled, Buffalo Brand socks.

I lit out from the Lindsay Inn, into the blinding sun, and then dashed north for 5 miles to the Red River.  I knew I could not stop on the Interstate bridge, so I took the last exit before Oklahoma.  Eureka!  The feeder road did a U-turn under I-35 right AT the river, allowing me to a) photograph the river, and b) dispose of the dreaded and now toxic socks in the bushes, where no nosy motel staff will find them.  Or, if they do, they won’t associate them with me. After the next flood, though, I’d steer clear of the Red River for a while, those socks could turn up anywhere.

Speaking of the Red River…le voila!

And now, welcoming the new arrivals from the North Country Fair, a reminder to “Drive Friendly – the Texas Way”.  Any motorist who saw the Sheriff’s military-grade Humvee awaiting in Montague would probably respond positively to that exhortation.

The stretch from Gainesville to Sherman and beyond was as close to perfect horse country as you will get outside of Kentucky.  It is also perfect for large trucks, so every time I’d see an image to die for, there would be a truck and trailer beside me, behind me, in front of me…so that part of the trip is sadly not documented.  But, other than the traffic, it is a great road to ride.

There are a fair number of Shermans in my family – grandfather and uncle and cousin, at least – but I had never thought of it as an especially good name for a TOWN.  (This, mind you, being the opinion of someone named “Norman”, no great shakes itself…)  Lo and behold, the little town/city of Sherman is a little gem, with a charming courthouse and little sidewalk cafes (where I ate breakfast).

158 – Sherman – Grayson County

And, for some happy but unknown reason, there were more pretty women sashaying around Sherman than I can recall having seen in any Texas town.  (Make a note of that if you are shopping for a new place to live.)

From Sherman, along the southern bank of the Red River to Bonham, seat of Fannin country.  It is named for James Bonham, who died in the battle of the Alamo in San Antonio.  The courthouse is in a state of near ruins, though it is seemingly being renovated.

159 – Bonham – Fannin County

While it doesn’t have a courthouse in the traditional sense, it does have the most odious of the monuments to the Confederacy I have yet seen.  I feature it, and details of it, below:

I have previously expressed consternation at the extensive celebration of the Confederacy and its heroes on the grounds of state facilities.  I have noted that the Confederate flag still flies over at least one courthouse (Goldthwaite).  Twenty-six of the 254 counties of Texas are named for people associated with the Confederacy.  I have an ancestor who fought in the Confederate Army and drew a pension from the post-war government for it.

This monument merits not consternation, but contempt.  It is of recent provenance, and it was erected by people who knew what they were celebrating as a “just cause”, “unrivalled for…bravery, gallantry, daring and dash”, whose soldiers were fighting for “principle”.

Actually the latter part is correct.  The principle they were fighting for is the principle of human slavery based on race.  I’m tired of and bored with the stupid arguments that it was about states rights, or other mumbo jumbo.  I quote below from the document called the “Declaration of Causes” passed by the Texas state convention on 2 February 1861:

“We hold as undeniable truths that the governments of the various States, and of the confederacy itself, were established exclusively by the white race, for themselves and their posterity; that the African race had no agency in their establishment; that they were rightfully held and regarded as an inferior and dependent race, and in that condition only could their existence in this country be rendered beneficial or tolerable.

…that the servitude of the African race, as existing in these States, is mutually beneficial to both bond and free, and is abundantly authorized and justified by the experience of mankind, and the revealed will of the Almighty Creator, as recognized by all Christian nations…”

Mississippi declared, in its equivalent document, the following:

“Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery– the greatest material interest of the world. Its labor supplies the product which constitutes by far the largest and most important portions of commerce of the earth. These products are peculiar to the climate verging on the tropical regions, and by an imperious law of nature, none but the black race can bear exposure to the tropical sun.”

If that doesn’t make your blood run cold, I don’t know what would.  Those aren’t opinion pieces, they are from the documents penned by the architects and managers of the Confederacy.

These documents state in the clearest possible terms the motivations behind the establishment of the Confederacy.  Similar contemporary documents were promulgated by Georgia,  South Carolina, and Virginia.

So yes, though I do have some personal roots on the Confederate side of that conflict, I’m not going to pretend that it was noble, gallant, dashing, daring, just, or right.  I understand how it came about, but it was wrong, and it was on the wrong side of a human history with hope.

So don’t wave that Confederate flag in my direction and expect a polite response.  It is time – actually I thought it had arrived 50 years ago – for white people, white Southerners in particular, to move beyond the stale, and intellectually and morally dishonest, arguments supportive of the Confederate secession.  Move on.  Please.  It’s overdue.

And now back to our regularly scheduled programming.  Moving on…

…to the funny little town of Cooper, seat of tiny Delta county.  This little display on the roadside!

And the almost “Deep South” feel to the Delta county courthouse…

160 – Cooper – Delta County

And then, finally, to PARIS!!  Paris, Texas, that is…seat of Lamar County and site of the famous 1984 Wim Wenders movie of the same name, sound track by the inimitable Ry Cooder.  (Spoiler alert – the movie has virtually nothing to do with Paris, Texas, other than as an idée fixe.)

Irene’s Cafe on the way in to Paris.
Cotton mural
Phat Phil’s BBQ in Paris.
Main drag in Paris.
Vestiges of a very old mural…
Downtown Paris

A very substantial courthouse.

161 – Paris – Lamar County

Bust of Jefferson Davis, first and only president of the Confederate States of America.

The First United Methodist Church.  I initially thought it must be a branch of the US Mint, or an LDS fortification, but lo and behold it’s the Methodist church.  They don’t seem to be having hard times…

Then, further eastward to Clarksville (Take the Last Train to… – OK, so that was Clarksville, TN), seat of Red River county.  More of those cross-like things on top of the courthouse…

162 – Clarksville – Red River County

On the road from Clarksville to New Boston, seat of Bowie county, I spied the first stand of pine trees, reminding me that I was now leaving behind West Texas and entering East Texas, this being the northern reach of the Piney Woods that extend all down the eastern side of Texas to the Gulf of Mexico.

The humidity began to change along with the vegetation.  I grew up on the hot, steamy, piney Gulf Coast, and this climatic transition reminded me that I’m not a forest person, or a fan of the muggy climate.  I like to see a horizon, and I like to have the sweat evaporate under wind and dry heat.   However, I’d better buck up, the next few trips are going to be exclusively in the heat and humidity.

In a refreshing respite from the glory of the Confederacy, Bowie county is named for Jim Bowie – he of the knife and the Alamo.  The county seat is New Boston, which I’d never even heard of – but it has a new and obviously expensive court house, with aforesaid Jim Bowie presiding over it.

Can’t believe I left that helmet out there to clutter up the photo…

163 – New Boston – Bowie County

Having reached the eastern-most part of Texas, nudging up against Arkansas and Louisiana, I head south for Linden, seat of Cass county.  Here you can clearly see the difference in landscape.

Maud, TX, en route to Linden…

Other than rain, it’s been a while since I’ve seen WATER!!  I like this picture because the road sign is peppered with shotgun shot and a few large-bore bullet holes.  Clearly one of the favored local sports is riding around with guns shooting road signs.  I get it.  In my neighborhood in Wimberley they play mail box baseball, which involves riding around with baseball bats bashing mailboxes off their post.  Mine has on at least one occasion provided somebody with at least a double, maybe a triple.

So T-Bone Walker is from the hamlet of Linden!  If you don’t know T-Bone’s music, it’s worth looking it up.  He was cited by none other than B. B. King as being the man who made B. B. want to play the blues.  You probably have heard of his most famous song, “They Call it Stormy Monday (But Tuesday’s Just as Bad)”, AKA Stormy Monday.

164 – Linden – Cass County

More brilliant murals!  Where do these towns find these artists?

4, 5 and 6 dollars each
Morris cinema in Linden

And on to the curious little town of Daingerfield, seat of Morris county.

165 – Daingerfield – Morris County

And then to Pittsburg (yes, spelled without an “h”), seat of Camp county.

166 – Pittsburg – Camp County
I Wonder…

And then to Mount Pleasant, seat of Titus county – jumping for joy!

167 – Mount Pleasant – Titus County

Glorious vistas on the road from Mount Pleasant to Mount Vernon, seat of Franklin county and namesake of my neighboring town when I lived in New Rochelle, NY.

Mount Vernon is a very special little town.  It is immaculately and creatively maintained, and despite its tiny size it had what seemed to be flourishing life around its beautiful central square with gazebo.

168 – Mount Vernon – Franklin County

And finally, for the last stop of the day:  Sulphur Springs, seat of Hopkins county.  Never having been to this place before, I imagined it as a grungy little dump located around some huckstered curative “spring”, but nothing could be further from the truth.  It is an elegant little town with the greenery of east Texas, but the better (for me) climate of the west.  And the courthouse is like something out of Alice in Wonderland.

Sulphur Springs courthouse reflected in a window
169 – Sulphur Springs – Hopkins County

The downtown has little sidewalk cafes, where I took my very fine evening meal in the warm glow of the setting sun.  Two big draft beer reward!  Magical end to a magical day.

 

End of Day 3 of Red River Trip