Author Topic: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game  (Read 424955 times)

Offline belbbmfan

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #990 on: January 14, 2007, 05:35:21 pm »
Old Brooks Place, Wyoming
'We're supposed to guard the sheep, not eat 'em'

Offline MaineWriter

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #991 on: January 14, 2007, 06:22:00 pm »
East Sweden, TX

The town had its beginnings in 1885 when three Swedes from Williamson County each purchased a half-section of land in McCulloch County. In the fall of the following year Swen L. Hurd and family made the trip and they were joined two years later by four other families.

Evidently life was good and they wrote to friends back in the old country who arrived before 1890. The town had a population of 63 in 1889. Church services were held in private residences at first and in 1890 a minister from Mason held services here once or twice per month. In 1891 the populace switched from Lutheran to Presbyterian and they received a full-time pastor. In 1892 three acres of land were donated by the three original landowners for a church, school and cemetery.

The first church building was built in 1892. In 1903 the town was bypassed by the St. Louis-San Francisco Railroad and nine years later the town was bypassed by the Santa Fe Railroad.

Around 1905-1906 a Swedish Methodist from Travis County organized another Swedish community west of Brady and the towns became East Sweden and West Sweden. West Sweden declined into a ghost town while East Sweden hung on. In 1916 the town was hit by a tornado which destroyed the church although it was rebuilt within four years. It wasn't the town's last disaster. The school burned in 1933 but was rebuilt the following year.

Residents raised cattle and sheep and East Sweden had not one but two dairies. Cotton farming provided a cash crop as well as oak and wheat crops. A man named Swen Hurd built the town's first cotton gin which later relocated to Salt Gap.

A monument commemorating early Swedish settlers stands in front of the former school and in 1976 a time capsule was buried nearby.

Annual Event

Residents and former residents gather each August for a homecoming.

Leslie
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Offline jpwagoneer1964

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #992 on: January 14, 2007, 06:58:25 pm »
Naucalpan, Mx
Thank you Heath and Jake for showing us Ennis and Jack,  teaching us how much they loved one another.

Offline belbbmfan

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #993 on: January 16, 2007, 07:50:03 am »
Nancy, Texas
'We're supposed to guard the sheep, not eat 'em'

Offline MaineWriter

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #994 on: January 16, 2007, 08:20:21 am »
Yodzonot, Mexico

Latitude   19.9333   
Longitude   -88.0500   
Altitude (feet)   85   
Lat (DMS)   19° 55' 60N   
Long (DMS)   88° 2' 60W   
Altitude (meters)   25
Time zone (est)   UTC-6(-5DT)
Approximate population for 7 km radius from this point: 630

Leslie
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Offline jpwagoneer1964

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #995 on: January 16, 2007, 12:15:31 pm »
Tucker, Tx

TUCKER, TEXAS. Tucker is a rural community in southwestern Anderson County eight miles southwest of Palestine on the Missouri Pacific Railroad and the combined U.S. highways 84 and 79, two miles from the Trinity River. In 1866 African Americansqv who worked on the Long Lake cotton plantation organized the Green Bay African Methodist Episcopal Church in the area. The name Green Bay was later applied to a small school for black children and eventually to a black high school. As the white community known as Prairie Point developed, the black portion of the community was often still referred to as Green Bay. What was then the International and Great Northern railroad was built through the area in 1872, and a post office called Prairie Point opened at the site in 1873. In 1882 the name of the post office and the town was changed to Tucker, after W. H. Tucker and the Tucker family, who owned land and operated a general store in the area. By 1884 Tucker had an estimated forty inhabitants, a steam gristmill and cotton gin, a church, and a district school. The town shipped cotton, cottonseed, and fish. In 1896 the population was estimated at 150 inhabitants. The post office closed in 1905. In 1913 A. L. Bowers drilled several unsuccessful wells in the area, and in 1932-33 several profitable oil and gas wells were developed in Tucker and nearby Long Lake oilfield by the Tidewater and Texas Seaboard Oil Company. A small refinery was built adjacent to the railroad in Tucker. In the 1930s the community had an estimated sixty inhabitants. The two Tucker schools served some forty-two white pupils and eighty-six black pupils in 1932; the schools later became part of the Westwood Independent School District. In the late 1930s Tucker had two churches, three businesses, a factory, and numerous oil storage tanks. Tucker's population fell to forty in 1964 and fluctuated between sixty-five and eighty-five in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The population was consistently estimated at 304 inhabitants from 1978 through 1990. In 1982 the town had three churches, numerous scattered dwellings and oil tanks, and an oil refinery a short distance to the north. In 1984 the nearby oilfield was still in production, but by 1992 the oil refinery had closed down.

Tucker was also the name of a automobile, made famous in Frances Ford Coppolas movie "Tucker" staring Jeff Bridges. Unfortunately fill with many historical inaccuracies it did bring forth a moment in automotive history. Of the 50 cars produced 47 are accounted for.

The Car You Have Been Waiting For


The Tucker '48 automobile, brainchild of Preston Thomas Tucker and designed by renowned stylist Alex Tremulis, represents one of the last attempts by an independent car maker to break into the high-volume car business. Ultimately, the big three would continue to dominate for the next forty years. Preston Tucker was one of the most recognized figures of the late 1940s, as controversial and enigmatic as his namesake automobile. His car was hailed as "the first completely new car in fifty years. " Indeed, the advertising promised that it was "the car you have been waiting for." Yet many less complimentary critics saw the car as a fraud and a pipe dream. The Tucker's many innovations were and continue to be surrounded by controversy. Failing before it had a chance to succeed, it died amid bad press and financial scandal after only fifty-one units were assembled.

Much of the appeal of the Tucker automobile was the man behind it. Six feet tall and always well-dressed, Preston Tucker had an almost manic enthusiasm for the automobile. Born September 21, 1903 in Capac, Michigan, Preston Thomas Tucker spent his childhood around mechanics' garages and used car lots. He worked as an office boy at Cadillac, a policeman in Lincoln Park, and even worked for a time at Ford Motor Company. After attending Cass Technical School in Detroit, Tucker turned to salesmanship, first for Studebaker, then Stutz, Chrysler, and finally as regional manager for Pierce-Arrow.
As a salesman, Tucker crossed paths at the Indianapolis speedway with the great engine designer Harry A. Miller, and in 1935 they formed Miller-Tucker, Inc. Their first contract was to build race cars for Henry Ford. The company delivered ten Miller-Ford Indy race cars, but they proved inadequate for Ford and he pulled out of the project.

During World War II, automobile companies' operations were dedicated to the war effort. Denied new car models for four years, by the war's end Americans were anxious for a new automobile, any new automobile. The time was right for Tucker to begin his dream. In 1946, he formed Tucker Corporation for the manufacture of automobiles.
   Tucker with Henry Ford
At the Indianapolis 500 speedway 1932, L to R: Henry Ford, Harvey Firestone, Preston Tucker, Henry Ford II, Benson Ford, and Edsel Ford. Photo: P.188.8255

zoom in on either image

He set his sites on the old Dodge plant in Cicero (south Chicago). Spanning over 475 acres, the plant built B29 engines during World War II, and its main building, covering 93 acres, was at the time the world's largest under one roof. The War Assets Administration (WAA) leased Tucker the plant provided he could have $15 million dollars capital by March 1 of the following year. In July, Tucker moved in and used any available space to build his prototype while the WAA inventoried the plant and its equipment.

The fledgling company needed immediate money, and Tucker soon discovered that support from businessmen who could underwrite such a venture, meant sacrificing some, if not all, control of his company. To Tucker, this was not an option, so he conceived of a clever alternative. He began selling dealer franchises and soon raised $6 million dollars to be held in escrow until his car was delivered. The franchises attracted the attention of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), and in September of 1946 it began an investigation, the first of a series that would last for the next three years.
The agreements were rewritten to SEC satisfaction and the franchise sales proceeded. In October, Tucker began another proposal, a $20 million dollar stock issue contingent upon a completed prototype and clearance by the SEC. That same month, Tucker met his first serious obstacle. Wilson Wyatt, head of the National Housing Agency, ordered the WAA to cancel Tucker's lease and turn the plant over to the Lustron Corporation to build pre-fab houses.

Tucker may have been an unfortunate pawn in a bureaucratic war between the housing agency and the WAA, but the battle continued until January of 1947. Franchise sales fell, stock issues were delayed, and Tucker's reputation was severely damaged. In the end, he kept his plant, but the episode made him some real enemies in Washington, including Michigan Senator Homer Ferguson. But Tucker did find some allies. The WAA extended Tucker's $15 million cash deadline to July 1 and Senator George Malone of Nevada began his own investigation of the SEC.
   A Tucker business card
Front of card

Back of card

zoom in on either image
Meanwhile, Tucker still had a prototype to build. During Christmas 1946, he commissioned Alex Tremulis to design his car and ordered the prototype ready in 100 days. The time-frame was unheard of, but necessary. Unable to obtain clay for a mock-up, engineers, many from the race car industry, began beating out sheet iron, a ridiculous way to build a car but a phenomenal achievement. The first car, completely hand-made, was affectionately dubbed the "Tin Goose."

The Tucker '48 premiered June 19, 1947 in the Tucker plant before the press, dealers, distributors and brokers. Tucker later discarded many of the Tin Goose features, such as 24-volt electrical system starters to turn over the massive 589-cubic-inch engine. For the premier, workers substituted two 12-volt truck batteries weighing over 150 pounds that caused the Tucker's suspension arms to snap. Speeches dragged on as workers behind the curtain tried feverishly to get the Tin Goose up and running. Finally, before the crowd of 5000, the curtains parted and the Tucker automobile rolled down the ramp from the stage and to its viewing area where it remained for the rest of the evening. Stock finally cleared for sale on July 15.
By the spring of 1948, Tucker had a pilot production line set up but his stock issue had been $5 million short and he again needed immediate money. He began a pre-purchase plan for Tucker automobile accessories such as radios and seat covers. Although he raised $2 million, advanced payment on accessories to a car not yet in production was the final straw for the SEC. On May 28, 1948, the SEC and the Justice Department launched a full-scale investigation. Investigators swarmed the plant and Tucker was forced to stop production and lay-off 1600 workers. Receivership and bankruptcy suits piled up, creditors bolted and stock plunged.    Image of Stock Certificate
A Tucker Stock Certificate for 100 shares - May 3, 1948. This is a black and white copy of the certificate. The original is currently on display in the museum.

zoom in on either image
The SEC's case had to show that the Tucker car could not be built, or if built, would not perform as advertised. But Tucker was building cars. Seven Tuckers performed beautifully at speed trials in Indianapolis that November, consistently making 90 mph lap speed. However after Thanksgiving, a skeletal crew of workers assembled the remaining 50 cars the company would ever produce. In January 1949, the plant closed and the company was put under trusteeship.

"Gigantic Tucker Fraud Charged in SEC Report" ran the Detroit News headline in March. The article related an SEC report recommending conspiracy and fraud charges to Tucker. Incensed, Tucker demanded to know how the newspaper had seen the report even before him. SEC Commissioner John McDonald later admitted he delivered the report to the paper in direct violation of the law. Feeling tried and convicted by the press, Tucker wrote an open letter to many newspapers around the country.

On June 10, Tucker and seven of his associates faced a Grand Jury indictment on 31 counts - 25 for mail fraud, 5 for SEC regulation violation, and one on conspiracy to defraud. The trial opened on October 5, 1949 and from the beginning the prosecution based its entire case on the "Tin Goose" prototype. It refused to recognize the 50 production cars and called witness after witness who, under cross-examination, ended up hurting the government's case. In the end, Tucker's defense team merely stated that the government had failed to prove any offense so there was nothing to defend.

On January 22, the jury found the defendants innocent of any attempt to defraud, but the verdict was a small triumph. The company was already lost. The remaining assets, including the Tucker automobiles, were sold for 18 cents on the dollar. And incredibly, Preston Tucker began again. In 1951, he went to Brazil to seek backing for another new car. With the new project almost underway, he was diagnosed with lung cancer. He died December 26, 1956.


 
« Last Edit: January 16, 2007, 01:14:51 pm by jpwagoneer1964 »
Thank you Heath and Jake for showing us Ennis and Jack,  teaching us how much they loved one another.

Offline Meryl

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #996 on: January 16, 2007, 11:01:09 pm »
Red Willow, AB

(Albert) Garnet Truax was one of a group of 31 Burnsites (followers of Nelson Burns) and their families who set out from Toronto in 1909 to settle at the foot of the Rockies in Beaverlodge, Alberta.

The group decided to cooperate on most aspects of the endeavour, sharing expenses, labour, and equipment. They wanted to farm cooperatively as well, and purchased several "South African Scrips", which were land grants given to veterens of the Boer War and then sold off at discounted prices by the ones with no interest in farming. The group sold all their unnecessary belongings, packed up the rest, and set off on a four or five day train trip to Edmonton, Alberta.

Once in Edmonton, the Burnsites had to decide where they were going to settle. No suitable large blocks of land were available nearby, but some friends had seen the land around the Beaver River Valley, and were so enthusiastic that the Burnsites were convinced.

The group left Edmonton late in the afternoon on April 20th, 1909, in a rather impressive procession of 14 wagons and 18 teams of oxen. The oxen apparently inspired the locals to refer to them as "The Bull Outfit", and the name stuck. They travelled four or five miles that first day and made their camp. The awoke the next morning to find their wagon wheels frozen to the ground.

Once they got used to the wagons and oxen, the settlers averaged about 13 to 15 miles a day. The going was hard, and there were a few mishaps, but this part of the trail was relatively well-used. They made Athabaska Landing by April 27th, where they left a large percentage of their freight to be shipped up the river and across Lesser Slave Lake, to lighten the load and make faster headway.

After having to wait at Shaw's Point (Grouard) for the rest of the freight from Athabaska to arrive, the settlers set off for the Peace River Crossing, which they reached on June 28th. From there, it was south again to Dunvegan, Spirit River, Grand Prairie, and finally the beautiful sight of the Beaver Lodge River Valley at the foot of the Rocky Mountains, where they arrived on July 14th, 1909 - three months after leaving Edmonton.



Garnet and Maud's Cabin
Red Willow, Alberta, c. 1919

Garnet filed his claim on land which is now part of the town of Beaverlodge. In addition to farming, he also clerked and ran freight for the owner of the general store. In 1914 he married Maud Sherk, who had also come to Beaverlodge with her parents as part of "The Bull Outfit". They moved to nearby Red Willow, where Garnet's parents and brother spent a very cramped winter with them in 1919. After his father's death in 1922, Garnet moved his family to Vancouver, where he went to work as a longshoreman. His children stayed in British Columbia, except for his son Albert (Al), who moved back to Beaverlodge to raise his family.

« Last Edit: January 16, 2007, 11:15:43 pm by Meryl »
Ich bin ein Brokie...

Offline belbbmfan

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #997 on: January 17, 2007, 08:00:41 am »
Wolf, Wyoming

Home of the Eaton Ranch, where you can go horseback riding in the Big Horn Mountains



« Last Edit: January 17, 2007, 08:11:32 am by belbbmfan »
'We're supposed to guard the sheep, not eat 'em'

Offline memento

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #998 on: January 17, 2007, 10:50:19 am »
Fink, Texas

 Fink formed shortly before the Civil War when the family of Fred Fink and others moved into the area from their former home in Mississippi.

The community was underdeveloped until after the war when all of NE Texas was infused with new settlers looking to start fresh with cheap Texas land.

Fink had a post office from 1897 to 1903 but the population never came close to a hundred. It declined to less than 20 during The Great Depression and averaged little more than that for the remainder of the 20th century. It is now what is known as "a dispersed rural community."

The fourth Friday in June has been declared Fink Day in Texas, by the Texas Legislature (people who are familiar with the name). This coincides with "National Fink Week" which is a celebration held by families sharing that same surname. Fink barely appears on county maps, but due perhaps to its semi-humorous name, it appears clearly on the Official State Highway map - just below the Red River in Grayson County.

The Legend of the origin of
the noun "Fink" and the verb "to Fink"
by Raul Hashimoto

19th Century Mississippi Keelboat operator Mike Fink - once featured in the Walt Disney Davy Crockett series of the 1950s - was a real person with a reputation for heavy drinking and carousing. One of the stories about Fink places him in a shooting match with his best friend. The two were also rivals for the attention of one particular woman and this supposedly non-lethal "duel" had the men shooting targets off of each other's head - winner would get the girl. When it was Mike's turn he perforated his friend's forehead. Onlookers never knew if it was "shooting under the influence" or an intentional and very abrupt end to the rivalry. Some say that Fink himself, never knew.

A "Fink" came to mean someone who was capable of betraying his best friend, although the years have softened it a bit to that of a informer or snitch. As a verb - to "Fink" on someone was a petty betrayal for little reward. It became a popular "friendly insult" in the 1960s. The term of rat - for informer was added in some circles - making the term rat-fink which is somewhat redundant.

Offline jpwagoneer1964

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #999 on: January 17, 2007, 11:45:37 am »
Knippa, Tx

KNIPPA, TEXAS. Knippa, originally known as Chatfield, is on the Southern Pacific Railroad, U.S. Highway 90, and the Frio River, between Sabinal and Uvalde in southeastern Uvalde County. It was named for founder George Knippa, who moved his family to the site in the 1880s. Knippa had been a frequent visitor to the semiarid Frio River area of Uvalde County in the 1870s and early 1880s, a period of abundant rainfall in the area, and witnessed an open country of luxuriant grazing land traversed by spring-fed rivers. He moved his family from Fayette County to the railroad siding of Chatfield soon after the Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway had extended its railroad line west from San Antonio to Uvalde.

The period of abundant rainfall in the Frio River region ended with the drought of the early 1890s, dashing the hopes of many of the farming families who had followed Knippa to the area. Around 1900 the rains returned, and a new wave of settlers, mostly Germans, moved to Knippa. A post office was opened in 1898. On February 16, 1898, the Uvalde County Commissioners Court established School District No. 12 at Knippa and authorized a school building. In 1900 fourteen students attended the one-teacher school. A two-room school was built in 1907.

A mine for traprock, an igneous rock used in road construction, was opened west of Knippa around 1905 and attracted Mexican laborers to the area. The traprock quarried at Knippa was used to ballast the Southern Pacific Railroad. Because the quarry was originally opened up as a gold mine, it was said that all of the railroad ballast contained a small amount of gold.

Most of the original settlers in the community were Lutherans. A Lutheran church was built on land donated by George Knippa in 1910. Church services, directed by Rev. Gottlieb Langer, were conducted in German. At the beginning of World War I,qv however, the Uvalde Council of Defense prohibited the use of German. The community responded by taking the council to court, and the prohibition was eventually rescinded by the United States Supreme Court.

By 1914 Knippa had a population of fifty, telephone connections, two cotton gins, two general stores, and two lumber companies. The St. Joseph's Church, a Catholic mission, was constructed in 1913 through the efforts of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Knippa. In 1915 a Baptist church was built in the community, with Reverend Rubottom as minister. A two-room school building was built in 1907. The school was moved to a brick structure in 1924 and was accredited in 1926. A small one-room school, constructed in 1927, served as a catechetical center and was the site of many Mexican-American social events.

In 1929 Knippa had a estimated population of 400 and twelve businesses; by 1933 the population had dropped to an estimated 150. By the end of World War IIqv and for the four succeeding decades the population was 325. In 1944 the Methodist, Baptist, and Church of Christ congregations were holding regular services at Knippa; the Church of Christ constructed a new building in 1948. Rev. Raymond Wolf, pastor of the Knippa Lutheran Church between 1957 and 1967, was selected Rural Minister of the Year for Texas in 1964. In 1990 St. Joseph's Catholic Church, Emmanuel Lutheran Church, and the Church of Christ were active in Knippa. The population was 360, and the town had nine businesses. In 2000 the town had 739 inhabitants and nineteen businesses.
Thank you Heath and Jake for showing us Ennis and Jack,  teaching us how much they loved one another.