Those familiar with Houston history may be able to tell you that the oldest house in the city still standing on its original property is the 1847 Kellum-Noble House in Sam Houston Park. Although owned by the City, The Heritage Society (THS), a non-profit organization, has maintained the home for the past sixty-five years. Recently, […]
Tag Archives | preservation
14.2 Civil Rights Table of Contents
Download the full pdf. Vol. 14, No. 2 (Spring 2017) Letter from the Editor by Debbie Z. Harwell 2 Camp Logan 1917: Beyond the Veil of Memory By Matthew Crow 8 Remembering “The Mouse that Roared”: Eleanor Tinsley and Houston By Marina DonLevy Shimer 13 Guadalupe Quintanilla: Defying the Odds By Adriana Castro 18 The […]
Letter from the Editor
Pieces of History By Debbie Z. Harwell My parents were born in the early 1910s and had definite ideas about racial boundaries. Growing up in Houston I learned from an early age, “You don’t socialize with them.” Although I do not specifically remember being told to whom “them” referred, the meaning was clear. As I […]
Building on Intellectual Foundations: Creating the African American Library at the Gregory School
On September 2, 2002 a group of city officials and Houston’s then-mayor, Lee P. Brown, solidified the fate of an abandoned brick building at 1300 Victor Street in Freedmen’s Town Historic District. Through a significant restoration effort, Fourth Ward’s late-1920s-era African-American elementary school, vacant since 1984, was to become a dual-purpose cultural center and research […]
Minette Boesel: Houston’s Preservation & Adaptive Reuse Advocate
By Silvia Celeste Martinez What is the current building trend in Houston? Adaptive reuse of buildings has become increasingly popular in an effort to preserve existing structures and simultaneously adapt their function to their communities’ needs. Since preservation activist Minnette Boesel wrote “Historic Preservation in Houston… a History?” which appeared in The Houston Review of […]
A Round Trip back to Houston
Who would have ever thought that a valise thrown onto burning trash heap outside a house being torn down in Houston would be rescued by an unsuspecting passerby and turn out to hold a historic collection of nineteenth century photographs? Well, it happened, and this is the story!
Letter from the Editor – Historic Preservation
Click here to view the pdf.
Letter from the Editor – Ideson and Preservation
To read the full text of the Letter from the Editor for the Spring 2009 issue of Houston History on “Ideson and Preservation,” download the pdf version.
The Preservation and Expansion of the Julia Ideson Building
To read the full text of this article by Barry Moore that appeared in the Spring 2009 issue of Houston History, download the pdf version.
Volume 4, Number 2
San Jacinto Vol. 4, No. 2 (Spring 2007) Download PDF Letter fromthe Editor 2 Henderson Yoakum’s Narrative of the Battle of San Jacinto With an Introduction and Annotation by Jeff Dunn 12 Beyond The Battleground: The Competing Legacies of San Jacinto by James E. Crisp 20 Honoring Texas Heroes: The San Jacinto Monument […]