Character of Midland
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"Every Midlander Should Own This Book" Review by Glen Aaron

11/3/2014

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REALLY NICE REVIEW. Thanks to Glen Aaron, who writes about books by West Texas authors, for this really nice review which was published in the Midland Reporter-Telegram last Sunday. I'm grateful for the kind words, Glen. ~ Jimmy Patterson

'EVERY MIDLANDER SHOULD OWN THIS BOOK'
By Glen Aaron
Jimmy Patterson has done it again, written another fine book. We often talk about "character" as an individual, family and community value, but how does one define character? We know the good when we see it. We know the trait of bad character when we see it.
In searching for that definition in the community of Midland and in preparation for producing A History of Character, the story of Midland, Texas, Patterson conducted almost one hundred interviews with more than seventy-five people. It was a monumental effort and took a number of years.
In this column we often talk about our West Texas heritage and how important it is to know it and to embrace it. That heritage is about character, what it takes to create, to produce, to survive and to join together in community for common cause.
A History of Character is divided into two parts. Part One is about the history of Midland being a place with this thing called character and its historical highlights from the 1840s until today. The Second Part is entitled "People of Integrity, Past and Present, a few of the Midlanders who have helped make us who we are." By subject matter, Part One covers it all from the first white settlers, to cowboy and ranch development, how Midland became an oil capital and wealthy, to where we are now and much, much more.
While Part One covers many stories of individuals and the events surrounding them, Part Two includes sixty-six short biographical sketches of Midlanders from widely varied professions, as well as community leaders we have all known, or at least knew by name, and the countless volunteers who have shown what good character means.
Midland is a community of religion and fundamental faith and always has been. Patterson references John Howard Griffin's book, Land of the High Sky, as that author described the crucial importance of the church to social life in Midland's early decades, as the church provided church suppers, ice cream socials, Sunday School picnics and bazaars. Patterson, in A History of Character describes community sings:
"Singing was one of the best-loved traditions in early Midland, often used as a diversion from the realities of the hard-luck existence of the day. Community sings were often held on Sunday afternoons in churches during the time of growing congregations."
There are so many well-told stories in Patterson's book such as the Clarence Scharbauer, Jr. penthouse atop the Scharbauer Hotel, the construction of the Hogan Building (Petroleum Building) and adjoining Yucca Theatre and how that building influenced oil-industry professionals to establish their base of operations in Midland instead of San Angelo, Colorado City or Odessa. While that building offered fine office space, the Scharbauer Hotel provided fine lodging and food.
When it comes to Midland's famous personalities and leaders, their stories not only reveal who they are and what they did or continue to do, but Patterson in his writing brings them to life with the human element. You come to see their heart and dedication to this community. From Dr. Viola Coleman to Charlie Spence, Ed Todd, the Scharbauers, the Cowdens, the Midkiffs, the Herds, oil pioneer Jim Henry to the father of fracking, George Mitchell, you come to know and admire character, and this list doesn't even come close.
There are other fascinating stories, as well, such as the infamous murder of Juliette Turner in her mansion, which is now the Museum of the Southwest. From visionary mayors to President George W. and Laura Bush to famous bankers, the First National Bank of Midland, the accomplished lawyers and merchants, this book covers the history and current-day Midland. Moreover, it defines character in the process.
Every Midlander should own this book. It is by far the best description and story of who we are and where we came from, to date. In a world of turmoil and change, we need this book. This is the base of our community, the heritage source of our strength, the clear description of how we survived in the past and how we will in the future, no matter what happens.
A History Of Character, the story of Midland, Texas, was co-published by the Abell-Hanger Foundation and The Permian Basin Petroleum Museum and dedicated to the memory of the Honorable John Hyde, a Midland history enthusiast, himself.
Currently, the author, Jimmy Patterson, is working on a book with writer Ellen Hopkins regarding the history of Henry Petroleum, and a series of children stories, as told by Jim Henry to his grandchildren. The prolific Patterson is also working on a story of the great Scharbauer horses, Alysheba and Tomy Lee.
A History Of Character can be purchased at The Petroleum Museum, Hastings, The Ivy Cottage and the George W. Bush Childhood Home.
It would make a great Christmas gift for every person in the oil industry, as well as for those who love Midland.
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Hear Jimmy's Interview with KCRS

9/12/2014

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Book Release September 13th and Pre-Sale Available Online Now!

8/27/2014

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 "A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas" is currently available for pre-sale online at www.petroleummuseum.org/shop and will be available at the Petroleum Museum Store, Hastings, and the George Bush Childhood Home upon its release on September 13, 2014.

Book signings will take place:
Saturday, September 13th
8:30 am – 11:00 am Midland Downtown Farmers Market
11:30 am – 1:30 pm George W. Bush Childhood Home
2:00 pm – 5:00 pm Permian Basin Petroleum Museum
Sunday, September 14th
Following the 8:30 am and 10:45 am Masses at St. Ann’s Church in the Commons
Friday, September 19th
3:00 pm – 6:00 pm Hastings
Saturday, September 20th
8:30 am – 12:30 pm Midland Downtown Farmers Market - Local Authors Day

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HISTORY OF CHARACTER UPDATE

8/20/2014

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I am pleased to be able to reveal the official cover art for "A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas." Thanks both to my designer, Stephanie Bart-Horvath, and editor, Janet Frick, both late of Harper Collins-New York. They have taken a fascinating story of our history and made it shine. More details soon to come.

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Integrity

8/17/2014

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Integrity: President Bush shares his memories of Midland

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I had always heard that President George W. Bush was an accommodating man. His friends in Midland have often shared stories about his good-naturedness, his friendliness and his willingness to help others. I never thought I’d have the opportunity to find out how true those statements were. Not until I opened my email on Feb. 28, 2012.

It took awhile to make contact with Bush. I had made a number of attempts through his press people in Dallas. Weeks went by, months even, and finally I received an email from someone who identified himself as Bush’s press relations person in Dallas. Attached in the email were the former president’s responses to the questions I had asked him about his time in Midland, both as a child and later when he returned as a oilman and community volunteer.

Needless to say, I was impressed the president would take the time to share stories about his Little League days, about riding his bike and getting into water gun fights and throwing dirt clods with close friend Charlie Younger.

The former president also wrote of his decision to visit Midland on his way to and from Washington at the opening and closing of his presidency, and admits he had nothing to do with Air Force One’s decision to “buzz” downtown Midland on that return trip. If you were there, you likely remember the huge plane over Centennial Plaza. It was an impressive sight.

Bush responded to more than three pages of questions I sent, and closed his correspondence with a, “Thank you for doing this, Jimmy. I hope it helps.” It was a nice touch to close out a letter that frankly he didn’t have to complete. But his friends in Midland would not have been surprised at the news that he had taken the time.

In addition to the stories shared by Bush, there are a number of stories shared about him, by Joe O’Neill, Charlie Younger and U.S. Rep. Mike Conaway. Each of them provides great insight into the kind of person Bush was when he lived in Midland — which is to say the kind of person he still is even though he may live elsewhere.

One of my favorite stories concerns the friendship shared by Younger and Bush.

The following is an excerpt from “A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas.”

“President Bush asked me, ‘Do you want to go to the movies?’ There was a movie being screened downstairs at the White House. It was a private showing of ‘We Were Soldiers.’ We go down and have a nice dinner before the movie. It was my wife and me, Dick Cheney, Colin Powell, Donald Rumsfeld, Condoleezza Rice, all these people who are involved in defense and national security. Hal Moore, who the movie was about, was there, along with Joe Galloway, the famous journalist who was in Vietnam, and then all the actors, Mel Gibson, Greg Kinnear. It was kind of surreal to watch the movie with the cabinet members, the actors, and the president and first lady.”

Like many others who knew the president, Younger insists he is the same person today as he was when he knew him in the 1970s.

“He enjoyed being president until I guess about the last two months,” Younger said. “He really did wake up every day, truly relishing being the president of the United States. His values, his work ethic, his beliefs, have all stayed the same. He hasn’t changed to this day. I don’t think he'll ever change. He just happened to be the president.”

Conaway shared a personal story about the effort President Bush put forth soon after the congressman had learned his first wife had cancer.

“When my first wife was diagnosed with leukemia, George would come over and get our boys and take them to Midland College basketball games,” Conaway remembered. “He didn’t have to do that. He couldn’t do anything about Julia’s treatment, but he could come by and be with the boys, and that’s what he did.”

Conaway jokes about his former business partner when the two ran Arbusto Energy, saying he would have rather been business partners when Bush was owner of the Texas Rangers.

“I’d have made a lot more money,” Conaway joked. “He invited the boys and me up after Julia died. He had us as his guests at the last game the Rangers played in their old stadium and the first one in the Ballpark in Arlington. We were standing there watching batting practice before one of the games, and he walked up behind us and said, ‘This is my own personal field of dreams.’”

Jimmy Patterson's book, “A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas” will be published in September.





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August 05th, 2014

8/5/2014

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Drive to survive, excel, a common thread through Midland's history

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People of character frequently share a number of traits. At or near the top of that list of like characteristics would be drive; a passion for excellence, as motivational speakers would term it. It goes practically without saying that the drive to become even better has been as much a staple in Midland history as burrito specials and downtown parking shortages.

Whether it be outliving drought, fighting injustice, surviving a bust, or improving the community simply because your situation in life allows it, the drive to improve one’s self and one’s community is frequently found in those who have guided Midland in its first 130 years. And it will likely be a characteristic common to these parts for as long as there are these parts.

One of my favorite stories has to do with the Midland Jaycees refusing to be told they could not sponsor a Soap Box Derby for the town’s youth back in the 1950s simply because there was no hill in Midland that would give competitors the speed needed. The organizers of the event didn’t whine. They didn’t settle for, “Oh well, it was a good idea.” Instead they had mounds of dirt brought in. The dirt was graded and packed until it reached the appropriate height and stability, and the race was on.

 Midland’s drive to survive is exemplified through the many periods of drought the town has endured. The dry years of 1949-56 are said to have been the most severe drought in history.

 Foy Proctor and Clarence Scharbauer, Jr., saw to it that their cattle survived that 1950s drought in a way not everyone can: instead of selling down their herd, they simply bought a ranch in the Panhandle -- Scharbauer once talked of the purchase as matter-of-factly as if it were as easy as buying a new house or truck. When the deal was done, the two men and, one can imagine, a great many cowhands, loaded the herd into cattle haulers and moved them to the Matador Ranch, west of Amarillo.

 RIVALRY

Another constant through the years has been the rivalry between Midland and Odessa, which has run deeper than football and longer than, “You raise your kids in Midland and hell in Odessa.”

 Pat McDaniel, director of the Haley Memorial Library and History Center, recalls one of the oldest tales told about the two cities’ competitive drive.

 “Midland National Bank was chartered out of Odessa National Bank, which failed,” McDaniel said. “The running joke was that everybody was happy because Midland traded Odessa a whorehouse for a bank by sending our (prostitutes) over there and getting a bank in return”

 A variant of the joke would be return years later when Sheriff Ed Darnell liked to tell others there was an unspoken agreement between the sheriff’s departments in the two cities: Darnell was supposed to have said he wouldn’t have any running of prostitutes in Midland unless they were high class. All the low class prostitutes had to stay in Odessa.

 Before his death earlier this year, Scharbauer Jr. insisted there never really was a rivalry between the two cities, but that it was a media creation brought on to sell books like, “Friday Night Lights.” Scharbauer, interestingly, was front and center for one of the biggest and most brutal scrapes between the two cities: the fight to land a university, a battle that produced two winners. Odessa landed its university, Midland received a first-rate junior college.

 For all the bad blood that has, or hasn’t, come throughout the years, there is one story that stands out and can make longtime residents wonder if Scharbauer may not have been right after all. Perhaps there never really has been a competition between the two cities. The excerpt below from “A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas,” paints a picture thin on any sort of feelings of animosity between the neighboring towns. The gesture of kindness and even friendship occurred just as Midland was at what is arguably its historical low point: the week First National Bank failed in October 1983.

 Excerpt from “A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas”

Several days before First National failed, three Midlanders organized a pledge drive to help rescue the institution. That same week, another group organized a community rally to give citizens the opportunity to come together to show their support.

“That bank should not be allowed to go under by members of the community,” said Margaret Captain, who helped organize the pledge drive with fellow Midlanders Ken Lough and Goodrich Hejl. Lough told the Midland Reporter-Telegram the three of them were just cheerleaders, helping to ensure an eleventh-hour turn-around. Hejl said he pledged his support of the bank in spite of occasionally getting mad at it.

Although Midlanders pledged millions of dollars, it was, of course, too little too late. Still, the effort of a pledge drive was another example of Midlanders coming together to try and help make a bleak situation better, a dark day brighter. Midland’s history is rife with these kinds of episodes.

The show of support for the bank at the Midland Center was termed “Midland’s finest hour.” The night was made even brighter when Odessa community leader Steve Late announced he had raised $500,000 to be deposited at FNB.

“How often have residents of a community joined hands and forces to show their support for and confidence in a bank in trouble, most of them not stockholders, many of them not customers, some of them even competitors? How often have citizens facing a similar situation come forward with deposits of any size, not to mention the magnitude of what has been pledged here in only two days? How often have residents of a competitive sister city with a history, admittedly with help from us, of having engaged in a longstanding feud, raised a large amount of money for deposit, not to their own banks, but to one of ours?”

In full support of the Odessans who, within two hours actually produced a half million dollars for deposit, the Midland Reporter-Telegram editorial board said it was one thing for a sister city to pledge support and pass resolutions in show of same, but it was quite another for them to put their money where their mouth was.
 


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Vision

8/5/2014

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Forward thinking as much a part of Midland as character and important early buildings

Vision.

So important is the word’s meaning that we still use it daily in our conversations around here. And we use it long after other words have come and gone in our fickle, often trending tendency to create fleeting terms that may make a point and sound good but quickly shrivel into cliché or memory.

Our early leaders had vision ample enough to lay the groundwork necessary to turn a spot of land into a thriving young city and finally a headquarters to one of the world’s most vital industries. We have never tired of the use of the word “vision” as even today our leaders refer to the decennial gathering of leaders and volunteers as the “Vision Committee.”

Pat McDaniel, director of the Haley Memorial Library and History Center, nailed it by saying the early vision of our pioneers is what provided the spark needed to get to where we are today. While luck played a role, it was the vision of people willing to spend time, talent and treasure to ensure those early days of survival.

Those early influential leaders numbered a modest handful, but the support staff surrounding them — the people who came here, stayed here and helped the leaders bring it all together — played a significant role just by being here and not giving up when times weren’t easy.

Any list of leaders who made it all possible would have to include Captain Randolph Marcy, who simply found the place while looking for something else (level ground for a railroad). There was Dr. John B. Thomas who built the first multi-level office building — The Thomas Building — which still stands occupied today.

The work and generosity of the Scharbauer family would have never occurred had John Scharbauer not left upstate New York in 1880 to come first to Eastland, then to Abilene, next to Mitchell County and finally to Midland in 1887. After years of farming sheep, he began working cattle, and in 1888 established the family’s first cattle ranch. John Scharbauer’s westward migration led to his brother Christian Scharbauer’s move to Midland in 1889. Then, Christian and Jennie Scharbauer’s greatest contribution to Midland and West Texas would come: they were the parents of Clarence Scharbauer Sr., who made the family name synonymous with vision.

Thomas S. Hogan and his son, Fred, are certainly near the top of the vision list along with Scharbauer, Thomas, Marcy and later people like Jno. P. Butler, CJ Kelly, George T. Abell and many others. The list could and maybe should go on and on, and Art Cole’s name would be on it, too.

Why Art Cole? “Didn’t he just give us a theater?” you might ask. To be more precise, Cole and his former wife, Ruth, both of whom died in January 2012, gave the town what would become the preeminent volunteer-supported, community-funded theater in the country, not to mention Summer Mummers, the annual hot-month answer to the question, “What is there to do in Midland?”

Cole was nothing short of one of the most brilliant visionaries our town has ever known. I particularly like the story of how he imagined Midland Community Theatre. After completing bombardier school in Midland, the Ohio native was sent to the South Pacific aboard a warship. For whatever reason — likely their intense focus in defeating the enemy during World War II — the Army Air Force brass had failed to stock Cole’s ship with reading material, and so Cole had no way to pass his idle hours. The only thing he had to read, in fact, were two theatre arts magazines he had brought along with him. In those magazines was a series of articles on how to start a community theater in a town that doesn’t have one. And so Cole read, returned to Midland and, with the tireless help of his wife, volunteers and funders, created what is now Midland Community Theatre.

Seeing positive and often radical change is not as easy as having an, “I Can See Clearly Now” attitude, although that can help. The kind of vision it takes to turn dreams into cities, buildings and theaters, takes passion, faith and more than a century of hard work.

While Midland may not have more doers and dreamers than sideline sitters and followers, it can sure seem as though sometimes it does, and we can be thankful for the visions and actions of those doers — movers and shakers as we would call them in today’s parlance — for all that Midland enjoys now.

Rancher, Banker, Hotelier, Philanthropist

Excerpted from “A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas,” by Jimmy Patterson.

“Clarence Scharbauer took a scientific interest in improving Texas,” John Howard Griffin wrote in Land of the High Sky. “The first to bring in registered Herefords, he established a ranch of more than 3,000 acres south of Midland.” By the time he died, Scharbauer owned ranchland in Gaines, Dawson, Martin, Midland and Ector counties in Texas, and Lea and Chaves counties in New Mexico. Until his final illness confined him to his bed, he would visit at least one of his ranches every day.

Bill Collyns, longtime editor of the Midland Reporter-Telegram, was one of Scharbauer’s contemporaries and friends. “Mr. Scharbauer loved this place,” he once said. “He really wanted to see Midland do well, and if people made money that was great. That’s why he started the bank and the radio station (KCRS). He wanted to see Midland thrive. He knew if Midland was going to do well, he was going to do well.”

Scharbauer was a significant provider for Midland. In addition to his cattle, he was involved in the hotel business even before financing the inn that would bear his name. He was a principal investor in the Llano Hotel downtown, and a leader in a number of civic organizations, including the Midland Chamber of Commerce. As a banker, and as a leader of First Baptist Church, Scharbauer assisted in the construction of virtually every bank and church in Midland. He was also instrumental in improving roadways into and out of Midland during the early years of the oil industry.

Clarence Scharbauer Jr. remembered the story of how his father put bank depositors at ease with a simple yet grand gesture during the Great Depression. It was during a time of widespread economic uncertainty, when the people of Midland had begun to squirm about their financial security. “One day during the Depression,” said Scharbauer Jr., “when people had started making runs on the bank and wanted to get their money, my daddy went in to work and put a lot of the bank’s cash on tables in the First National Bank lobby, which was in that old white building that still stands at the corner of Wall and Main. When he put the money out on the table, a lot of people came down to the bank. And he would tell them, “Now, any of you who feel like you want your money, here it is, we’ll give it to you.” Of course when they saw they could access it, they didn’t want it anymore. They were just afraid they couldn’t get to it.”

Retellings of the story through history have suggested that armed guards stood alongside large Plexiglas containers, which securely held the cash. The total amount Scharbauer put out for the people to view also differs. Most versions say the amount was $250,000. Even Scharbauer Jr. himself was uncertain as to the exact amount but he agreed it was likely $250,000.

“A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas” will be published in September by The Abell-Hanger Foundation and the Permian Basin Petroleum Museum. For information about a presentation on the book for your civic organization or church group, email
historyofcharacter@gmail.com.


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Compassion

8/5/2014

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Midland has long history of patriotism through kindness, service to others

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Since even before the June 1941 day when Sloan Field was leased to the U.S. government for the establishment of the Midland Army Air Field, Midland has always taken care of its veterans. From 1942-1945, the life of “Bombardier College,” and the telling time that followed when scores, perhaps hundreds, of veterans who returned to Midland stayed here and called West Texas home, it is one of the most unmistakable distinctions about Midland: men and women in uniform have always been held in the highest esteem.

Just a few years ago, it seemed improbable to be able to visit the Midland International Airport without having the opportunity to join with the Patriot Guard in giving a hero’s welcome to a service man or woman in uniform returning from a tour in the Middle East or other international location.

Almost three years ago, after Midland High School graduate and U.S. Marine 2nd Lt. Patrick Wayland died suddenly in a training accident in Florida, on Aug. 5, 2011, an estimated 75 Marines descended on Midland in support of their fallen brother. In return, and probably quite unexpectedly to those visitors, the same 75 Marines witnessed firsthand how much Midland loves the military.

Col. Joseph P. Richards, Wayland’s commanding officer, who attended Wayland’s funeral, said, “It was something you just don’t have words for, to feel the honor and patriotism of Midland. Your tremendous respect for Patrick and the Wayland family was a beautiful sight to see.”

Then, three years ago this November, the community came together as it often does, in support of veterans felled by a horrific train collision just as those soldiers and their families were being honored.

Terry Johnson, organizer of Show of Support’s Hunt for Heroes, pours his life into the annual event. A year after the tragedy, he still clearly remembered the instantaneous response of Midlanders.

“The businesses across the street from where this had all happened began taking people in instantly,” Johnson said. “When we found out everyone had been accounted for, we headed to the Hilton. Buses were sent to take us all to the hotel. Over the next four days the folks at the Hilton let us move into the ballroom. They brought water, blankets, they just let us get our heads together for four days. We had people manning phone banks, calling moms and dads, sisters, brothers. We had offers to send private jets all over the country to bring family in.”

One of the most remarkable aspects of the generosity that poured forth for the veterans and the families involved in the accident came with the news that in the span of a few days, donations totaling $500,000 poured in to Hunt for Heroes. Of that total, Johnson estimated 80 percent — $400,000 — was raised just by the people of Midland.

What is even more remarkable, are the words the veterans and their families leave with Johnson and others at the conclusion of a Hunt for Heroes event.

“People always ask me if the veterans are from Midland,” Johnson said. “But we pick them from all over the United States on purpose. We want the guy from Ohio to go back and say, ‘You’re not going to believe what they’re doing in Midland.’ They come to Midland and tell us, ‘Man, I want to move here. Y’all are the best people, the friendliest people I’ve ever met. Where I’m from, when I came home from the war, it’s like I never left. But I come here and y’all don’t know me, and yet you love me.”

An excerpt from “A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas”

In his 2001 book “The Stars Were Big and Bright: The United States Armed Forces and Texas During World War II (Vol. 2),” author George E. Alexander quoted Thomas Bellingham, a cadet at the Midland Army Airfield: “There was just absolutely nothing to look at out there. One old timer I knew called that whole Midland-Odessa part of Texas the ‘Flat Brown,’ and I think he was being overly generous.”

First impressions can be important and long lasting. Yet for the thousands of men who came to train at the bombardier school at the Midland Army Airfield in 1942 and throughout a good portion of World War II, first impressions were often followed by impressions that ran much deeper and longer. When those displaced cadets met the people of West Texas, many, perhaps hundreds, made the decision to stay here after they returned from the war.

In a Reporter-Telegram article headlined “Science of War taught,” written for the publication’s centennial edition, the bombardier school was called “Uncle Sam’s most potent weapon. Not only was the school one of just 14 across the country that taught bombardiering, it was also the largest. The government believed that at the type of bombardier schools found in Midland and elsewhere, the men learning and working with bombsights would actually shorten the length of the war.”

“The value their training had in the overall war effort defies calculation,” Judge Hyde told the Reporter-Telegram in 2011. “Within a few months of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and America’s entry into the war, the old Midland Sloan Field became Midland Army Airfield. In a span of just three years, the school graduated more bombardiers than any other training base in the United States, and in the first 17 months of its operation, more than 800,000 practice bombs were dropped.”

 “A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas” will be published in September by The Abell-Hanger Foundation and the Permian Basin Petroleum Museum. For information about a presentation on the book for your civic organization or church group, email historyofcharacter@gmail.com.



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Courage

7/23/2014

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Courage: Overcoming discrimination, racist attitudes required extra character for many

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The telling of a town’s history is not comprised simply of its progress, successes and optimism. It does not consist solely of talking points from its visitor’s center brochure. Authentically recalling any place’s past must include those moments — or even eras — when a citizenry was, by and large, far from proud of the treatment of all of its people. As ugly as memories can sometimes be, episodes of struggle and strife provided many the opportunity to grow and change because of what society put in our path, or what individuals often put in their own paths.
On any comprehensive town history list must be the experiences of those who suffered or were held back in any number of ways simply because of their skin color or race. Midland was never immune to discrimination. African Americans and Mexican Americans were often forced to hear words of hate common during the time, or they were hidden away in theater balconies unable to sit in floor seats with whites. Even flaming red crosses burned on lawns during MISD’s desegregation years.

Those kinds of instances — and likely more — occurred in Midland. Failing to acknowledge that part of our past is to pretend wrongly that it never happened.

Longtime Midlander Sid Trevino, the first Hispanic detective on the Midland police force, investigated a burglary at the Yucca Theatre in the 1950s. Two weeks later, Trevino’s sisters, who lived in South Texas, visited Midland and decided to see a movie at the same theater. The manager insisted the women sit upstairs where the other non-whites were sitting. When they refused, the women asked for their money back. They were denied.

Trevino arrived at the Yucca a few minutes later after receiving a call from one of his sisters. The manager remembered the detective’s assistance in investigating the burglary, but did not yet know who the women were.

“He asked me if the three women were related to me, and I said, ‘Yes, they’re my sisters.’ And he said, ‘Well, it’s okay, they can sit downstairs.’ I told him, ‘They don’t want to sit downstairs. They want their money back.’ He said, ‘No problem, we’ll get your money back. No problem.’”

Many blacks in Midland were sequestered in their own neighborhoods south of the railroad tracks near a place that, through the years, has come to be known as “The Flats.” Not many realize the name is considered derogatory and refers not to the entire southeast side of Midland, but to a small patch of cement upon which African Americans often gathered on Lee Street.

African Americans in Midland experienced the same kinds of discrimination and treatment found elsewhere in America — including two crosses that burned on lawns during the years Midland was desegregating its school system. Incredulously, Midland law enforcement passed the incident off as the work of “pranksters,” according to a Reporter-Telegram article at the time. The desegregating of Midland’s schools itself was long a sore point and took 12 years to fully implement, an unnecessarily lengthy transition, many felt.

Today, although we remain far from perfect, many African Americans will talk openly of Midland being a place of opportunity for people of all colors. Pastor George Bell of Greater Ideal Baptist Church, who grew up and spent most of his life here, calls Midland “one of the most God blessed cities I have ever seen.”

Director of the Texas Education Agency Michael Williams refers to his hometown in much the same way as Bell.

“I cannot imagine another city in this country that would have taken a kid who was black, who is out of law school by the age of 25, and by the time he is 27 would have served on the boards of directors for the United Way of Midland, the Midland Chamber (of Commerce), and the Midland County Housing Board. Where else could that happen?” he said.

And then there’s Austin attorney Novert Morales, a Midland native and brother of Mayor Jerry Morales. Several years ago, Novert purchased the Ritz Theater on Main Street — 40 years after his parents, Felipe and Celia Morales, were confined to the balcony because of their race.

“When Celia and I were dating a long while ago, I took her to the Ritz Theatre downtown,” said Felipe, who has always spoken highly of his adopted hometown. “They would always tell us to go upstairs to sit. We were originally from San Antonio so we’d never experienced anything like that. Many years later, our son Novert bought that theater. I just thought, it’s funny how you can buy a piece of property where you used to be told you could only sit upstairs. It made me feel very good when he bought that building.”

Exerpt from “A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas”

Longtime Midlander Joe Chavez described his experience in Midland public schools in 1938:

I remember being in the eighth grade. The school I went to was near downtown, and I loved school. I’ll never forget how two days before I finished the eighth grade, my teacher came to me and said, “That’s all. There’s no more school for you after next week. But since you like school so much, you can repeat the eighth grade if you would like.” Chavez was crushed. At that time Mexican Americans in Midland attended their own separate public school, which ended at eighth grade. It was not until 1946 that Mexican Americans were allowed to attend junior high and high school with white students and continue with their education through the 12th grade. The first Mexican Americans graduated from high school in Midland in 1952.

Another public school in Midland was just for African American students. Carver School, which opened in 1933, was later expanded and eventually included a junior high and high school. Its first 12th graders graduated in 1943. However, African American students were not integrated with white students in Midland until 1968.

Chavez fought through the limited educational opportunities afforded him and others of his descent during those times. He and his wife raised three children, all of whom not only graduated from high school, but now have master’s degrees. The Honorable Sylvia Chavez, a child-protection associate judge in Midland, is their daughter.

“A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas” will be published in September by The Abell-Hanger Foundation and the Permian Basin Petroleum Museum. For information about a presentation on the book for your civic organization or church group, email historyofcharacter@gmail.com.







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Midland 101: Pliska plane took flight 100 years ago this spring

1/19/2012

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_ One need only look at our aviation history to appreciate just how far we have come in a short period.

   One-hundred years ago this spring John Pliska, a Midland blacksmith, aided by local auto mechanic Gary Coggin, completed construction and test flew his own airplane after witnessing the stop over of the Wright Brothers’ Model B aircraft in Midland in 1911. Though he dropped $1,500 on engine costs, Pliska’s aircraft was greatly underpowered and could only withstand brief flights of 15 minutes at a time.

   According to “The Pioneer History of Midland County,” “The open-cockpit craft, made mostly from buggy and windmill parts, had a 33-foot wingspan, a 27.5-foot fuselage and was 7.5 feet high.” Pliska, according to the Texas State Handbook Online, would make his biplane less airworthy when he replaced a cheap canvas with a more expensive balloon silk on the wings. It was not until after Pliska’s repeated tinkering with the craft that it was finally able to fly 1-2 miles between rests.

   The Pliska Plane hangs today over the baggage claim area at Midland International Airport.

-- Jimmy Patterson

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    About the Blog

    Welcome, and thanks for your interest in what will be a rewarding trip through our shared past. This "History of Character" blog is only the beginning. A book by the same name -- "A History of Character: The Story of Midland, Texas" -- will be published September 2014. Through this blog you'll be able to track the progress of the project and learn along with the book's author, Jimmy Patterson. If you have stories to share that you think deserve mention in the history of our city, drop an email to historyofcharacter@gmail.com.

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