Tag Archives: Coupland Texas History

Coupland – 50 Years Ago by Max Marasco

Coupland,_circa_1965

BACKGROUND ON PHOTO:

In the early afternoon of 7 March 1965, I rented a Cessna 150 from the Longhorn Flying Club at the Austin Mueller Airport to fly around the local Coupland area and asked Kenny Gerschbeck, a good friend from high school days, if he wanted to ride along, which he did.

As I recall, when this photo was taken, we were flying in a westerly direction (note the Cessna 150’s high wing strut in the photo’s upper left hand corner) at around 1500 ft MSL when Kenny took the photo out of the right side window of the airplane. North is to the upper right corner of the photo. I do not recall what type of camera Kenny used but it was probably a Kodak Instamatic. The photo in this story is a scanned copy of that photo.

To help make sense of the photo and not clutter it up with notations, I have included (below) a hand drawn map of Coupland on that day. In 1965, the current “911” addresses had not yet been assigned; although no one used street names back then, those used below are from the original town plat and are the same as used today by 911.

COUPLAND, CIRCA 1965:

In that light, I’d like to call your attention to some of what you are looking at in the photo. Perhaps the first thing you may notice is that the west end of Hoxie St terminates at Austin St — no Stock Up, no Hoxie St access to TX 95, no Post Office building, etc. Also, Broad St “stops” at Elliot St — at that time, kids living less than (as I remember) 2 miles from the school were not entitled to bus service, so had to walk or be otherwise taken to school. You will notice a N-S path from the corner of Elliot and Broad to the school grounds that was maintained by the school board for the “town kids” use. Before TX 95 bypassed Coupland, Commerce and Herrin Streets were part of TX 95 and the footpath was used to keep the kids away from/off TX 95 and was kept in use after the bypass was completed. You will also notice that the current houses in that “Muery Addition” are non-existent. The house just north of the school was the school principal’s residence – at one time, the house was provided “in-kind” as part of the principal’s salary. I don’t recall when the school board sold the property.

Continue reading

1910 Coupland, Texas postal card from Rev Krebs of the Lutheran Church

cropped-IMG_2750.jpg

Allen Martinets of Austin found this little gem on E-Bay and submitted it to the Coupland Times.

Someone from St. Peter’s Church or the Coupland Civic Organization might want to add this to their historical collection. Click on the link below to see the front and back. The message appears to be written in German.

Postcard from Rev. Krebs

A City on a Hill – Religion, Politics, and Lighting the Way

[Publisher’s Note: This is the final installment and the controversial message of the pastor 40 years ago seems amazingly prescient to the circumstances of our time.]

From “A City on a Hill: A Story of a Community, a Church, a People” by Jewel R. Johnson, Second Edition, 1979, Merchants Press of Taylor, Texas

This is part of a continuing series of stories. If you want to see previous postings in this series, just go to the search bar at the top of the home page and type in: “A City on a Hill”. They will appear in chronological order. There is more than one page of listings. In the near future, we will post a PDF copy of the entire publication.

Individual pages appear below in the JPG format. Your browser may not display them automatically, depending upon your security settings. If they don’t open for you, even after you click on them, you can download a PDF copy of this portion of the series by clicking on this link: Religion & Politics

Religion & Politics 1

Religion & Politics 2

A City on a Hill – Gumper & Johnson

From “A City on a Hill: A Story of a Community, a Church, a People” by Jewel R. Johnson, Second Edition, 1979, Merchants Press of Taylor, Texas

This is part of a continuing series of stories. If you want to see previous postings in this series, just go to the search bar at the top of the home page and type in: “A City on a Hill”. They will appear in chronological order. There is more than one page of listings.

Publisher’s Note: When the series is complete, we will make a PDF copy of the entire booklet available to download.

Individual pages appear below in the JPG format. Your browser may not display them automatically, depending upon your security settings. If they don’t open for you, even after you click on them, you can download a PDF copy of this portion of the series by clicking on this link:Gumper & Johnson 1 Gumper & Johnson

Gumper & Johnson 1

Gumper & Johnson 2

A City on a Hill – Johnson & Dollgener

From “A City on a Hill: A Story of a Community, a Church, a People” by Jewel R. Johnson, Second Edition, 1979, Merchants Press of Taylor, Texas

This is part of a continuing series of stories. If you want to see previous postings in this series, just go to the search bar at the top of the home page and type in: “A City on a Hill”. They will appear in chronological order. There is more than one page of listings.

Publisher’s Note: When the series is complete, we will make a PDF copy of the entire booklet available to download.

Individual pages appear below in the TIFF format. Your browser may not display them automatically, depending upon your security settings. If they don’t open for you, even after you click on them, you can download a PDF copy of this portion of the series by clicking on this link: Johnson & Dollgener

Johnson & Dollgener 1

Johnson & Dollgener 2

Johnson & Dollgener 3

A City on a Hill – Interracial Relations

From “A City on a Hill: A Story of a Community, a Church, a People” by Jewel R. Johnson, Second Edition, 1979, Merchants Press of Taylor, Texas

This is part of a continuing series of stories. If you want to see previous postings in this series, just go to the search bar at the top of the home page and type in: “A City on a Hill”. They will appear in chronological order. There is more than one page of listings.

Publisher’s Note: When the series is complete, we will make a PDF copy of the entire booklet available to download.

Individual pages appear below in the TIFF format. Your browser may not display them automatically, depending upon your security settings. If they don’t open for you, even after you click on them, you can download a PDF copy of this portion of the series by clicking on this link: Interracial Relations

Interracial Relations 1

Interracial Relations 2