Driskill Hotel: A Grande Dame 125 Years Young
Transcription
Driskill Hotel: A Grande Dame 125 Years Young
AustinRemembers… “Collective Memory of Austin & Travis County” FALL, 2012 Austin History Center Association Driskill Hotel: A Grande Dame 125 Years Young By Ann Dolce Find a comfortable chair in the lobby of The Driskill Hotel in downtown Austin. Sit for awhile, quietly, notice people coming and going, let your mind drift. Many have said the hotel is haunted. Rather, it is most likely inhabited with the memories of all the people who have filled the hallways, ballrooms, and guest rooms of this magnificent building – a building that is steeped in Texas history and Texas history makers. Joe Frantz, in his book “The Driskill Hotel,” said The Driskill Hotel, from the Sixth and Brazos corner, as she appeared in the early 20th century. Colonel Driskill’s bust is high atop the hotel on the upper left, and a it best, “The sounds scatter like a will-o’-the-wisp, a soft bust of his son “Bud” is on the right, facing Brazos Street. Longhorns can be seen swirling curtain of mist that rises and falls, revealing a glimpse of indistinct shadows that dance close and then below each of the busts. The bank entrance is at the corner, in the center of the photograph on the first level. Image #C03290, Austin History Center, Austin Public retreat, leaving both the mind and the eye to wonder whether Library. the shapes were seen or just imagined.” No one goes far for long without coming to Austin to “work something out,” and at the center of these social, political, business, and just plain scheming operations is The Driskill Hotel. It has been the center since its opening in 1886. The Driskill’s story begins with its first memory maker, Colonel Jesse L. Driskill, who came to Texas from Tennessee and entered the cattle business in 1857. During the Civil War, Driskill sold beef to the Confederate Army and the Texas Rangers but was paid in Confederate dollars, so he ended up with no cattle and no money. Broke, he began to rebuild his herds and drove cattle along the Chisholm Trail to railheads in the north. He became wealthy once again, and in 1871 he moved his family to Austin. Driskill continued to trade cattle but also recognized the commercial potential in Austin, a metropolis of 11,000 in the 1880s. He was convinced Austin would be the first Texas city to reach a population of 100,000 and knew that it needed a grand hotel The corner of Pecan and Brazos streets, before the Driskill Hotel was built. to serve as the center of all social, political and business Peck’s Hall, then known as Weed and Gerhard’s Stable, is at right corner. – Image #C00697 Austin History Center, Austin Public Library. activity. Continued on Page 4 Angelina Eberly Luncheon Auction Starts Now: ONLINE By Beth Fowler Beginning now, everyone can participate in the Angelina Eberly silent auction online. Early bidding commences today through the close of the Angelina Eberly Luncheon on Wednesday, February 6, 2013. The auction features a portrait of The Driskill, a night’s stay in The Driskill with delicious meal at the 1886 Cafe & Bakery, and paintings of historic Austin scenes by Texas Sesquicentennial Artist Mary Curtis. The scenes are based on her research at the Austin History Center photograph library. The Curtis paintings and auction items can be viewed at www.austinhistory.net Continued on Page 9 Austin History Center Association, Inc. 810 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 78701 512.974.7499 www.austinhistory.net Introducing Ann Dolce, AHCA President By Jeff Cohen Mailing address P. O. Box 2287 Austin, Texas 78768 The mission of the Austin History Center Association is to help the community value our past and build a better future by supporting the Austin History Center to achieve excellence in its efforts to serve as the collective memory of Austin and Travis County. Board of Directors Executive Committee Ann Dolce, President Ken Tiemann, First Vice President Jena Stubbs, Second Vice President Maria Ines Garcia, Treasurer Robert Sullivan, Secretary Evan Taniguchi, Member-at-Large Lynn Cooksey, Immed. Past President Directors at Large AHC Archivist Mike Miller / Charles Betts / Terrell Blodgett / Cindy Brandimarte / Linda Bush / Dale Flatt / Beth Fowler / Brooks Goldsmith / Mary Ann Heller / Lauren Lovell / Dr. Fred McGhee / Kathleen Davis Niendorff / Charles Peveto / Toni Thomasson / Candace Volz / Anne Wheat / Will Wilson Austin History Center Association Staff Jeff Cohen, Executive Director Allison Supancic, Office Manager Becca Thompson, Accountant AustinRemembers… Beth Fowler, Editor/Creative Director Mark J Alba, Layout Lauren Lovell, Public Relations Jena Stubbs, Photo Coordinator Ann Dolce with Dr. Brooks Goldsmith and Bill Luedecke at the 2012 Angelina Eberly Luncheon at The Driskill. I wish to introduce Ann Dolce, AHCA’s President for 2012-13. Ann was recruited to the Board of Directors by the late Nancy Bowman three years ago. Nancy had a twinkle in her eye at the time when she said to me, “Jeff, she’s a Bremond.” Indeed, Ann is a Bremond, a fifth generation Austinite, descendant of early Austin families (Bremond, Robinson, Schneider and Kirschvink). She grew up in the shadow of the Capitol at 13th and Lavaca and later in Rollingwood. Ann has worked tirelessly on the AHCA Board as a researcher, writer, and core member of membership outreach and Eberly Luncheon efforts. Her feature article in this newsletter edition on the history of The Driskill Hotel is powerful in its research, anecdotes, and comprehensiveness. Ann first volunteered at the Austin History Center when it was the AustinTravis County Collection. Ann recounted that “Katherine Hart, Audray Batemen Randle and my late cousin, Mary Jo Cooper, all ‘sold’ me on the value of the collection. I was president of the Junior League of Austin when the old downtown public library building was renovated and opened as the home of the Austin History Center. The League provided funding and volunteers to the Center in those days.” Professionally, Ann began her career as a computer programmer and systems analyst for the Veterans Administration PAGE 2 and for Univac. She put her career on hold to raise her children, and then began teaching computer science at St. Michael’s Catholic Academy in 1984. She taught there for eighteen years. She also served as vice principal and technology director. The list of organizations that have enjoyed Ann’s volunteer leadership is voluminous. They include Volunteer Center, Junior League of Austin, United Way, St. Austin’s Church, Family Ministry, Salvation Army, Seton League House, Seton Development Board, St. Michael’s Development Board, Marywood, St. Edward’s University Building Teams and Tools for Teaching Consortium Advisory Committee, Westgate Condominium Association, and St. Michael’s Catholic Academy. As AHCA President, Ann’s goal is to continue the work of her predecessors. She hopes to help guide the Association to a most prominent position in the Austin non-profit community and to assist the Austin History Center as it prepares for expansion to the Faulk Library building. Soon after Ms. Bowman had passed away this past January, Ann reflected on her. “Nancy saw talent in people before they saw talent in themselves.” Ann knows she is talented and has tons of leadership experience, but it is evident to all that she finds inspiration to lead AHCA from her late friend. Upcoming Exhibit: “Building a Community: The First Century of African American Life in Travis County” The first record of African Americans in Texas is widely believed to have begun with Estevanico, a slave held by Spanish Explorer, Andres Dorantes De Carranza. In 1528, Estevanico was one of four survivors of the ship wrecked Panfilo de Narveaz expedition that was stranded off the Texas coast. Although he would later be killed by the Zuni Indians, he played an important role as a translator between the explorers and the native tribes they encountered. His account, along with the other explorers, offered vital information about the Texas coast that helped lead to further exploration and eventual settlement of Texas by the Spanish. Some historians estimate that Africans have been living in Texas for more than four hundred years; yet, little is known about these individuals and communities. Estevanico and other African Americans have contributed to building, protecting and supporting America, unfortunately, the African American story is lost in the pages of history due to lack of By Cynthia Evans Unidentified Clarksville resident. Image # PICA 36059, Austin History Center, Austin Public Library From the Archivist New Attal Display Cases By Michael C. Miller, CA - Archivist Early on in my work here at the AHC, Steve Schwolert, the AHC’s Exhibits Coordinator, and I were brainstorming ways to improve the AHC’s ability to showcase its collections and share Austin’s history with the community. At the top of our list was the desire, and dare I say even the need, to replace or rehab the existing display cases, which were looking worn and tired. But we did not want to replace these cabinets with any “ready-made” cabinet but with cases that would speak to and harmonize with the existing architecture of our building. At the time, our dreams for these new cases far exceeded the reality of our budget. Fast forward about four years. When the well known and loved Austin Galleries owner George Attal passed away last year, his friends and family were looking for a way to honor his memory. After discussions with the AHCA and family members, the George Attal Memorial Fund was established at the AHCA, and the funds were to be dedicated to supporting the exhibits program at the AHC. Immediately, I documentation. The AHC’s new exhibit “Building a Community” is an attempt to bring some of that information to light. The exhibit focuses on 1839-1940, the first century of African American life in Travis County, and explores the contributions, achievements as well as the obstacles faced in building a community and obtaining the American dream. Hundreds of documents and photographs, mined from the AHC’s collections, illustrate these stories and help reveal periods of this history where more documentation is needed to complete the picture. The exhibit opens at the Austin History Center on September 25, 2012 and runs through March 24, 2013. The Austin History Center is open from 10-6 Tues. – Sat. and 12-6 on Sun. The exhibit is free to the public. Related programs will be offered throughout the exhibit’s run; check the AHC’s website and emails from the AHCA for more details as these programs are planned. knew that creating the long-wanted exhibit cases would be a fitting and lasting honor for Mr. Attal’s memory and legacy. The AHC worked with Henry Levine, LLC, to design and build the new cases. In early meetings, Steve, Henry and I talked about what the cases would look like. As mentioned earlier, we wanted cases that reflected the historicity of the AHC building, but we wanted cases that were more modern, if not in appearance than in amenities and features. Things like clear tops for more views of the documents; LED lighting and modern, inert materials that would protect (or at least do no harm to) the archival documents we wished to display. For the overall design, we wanted to not only incorporate the interior architectural features of the building, but also to somehow reflect the exterior as well. With that charge, Henry set out to craft us a new case design, and a few months later, presented the AHC with two new exhibit cases that far exceeded our expectations. The new cases feature a base of stained white oak, matching the interior woodwork found throughout the building. To bring in the exterior, Henry included wood carvings into the base of one of the prominent elements in the front porch loggia paintings. The final result is nothing short of spectacular (though the pictures don’t do them complete justice; you’ll Continued on Page 11 PAGE 3 Driskill from Page 1 In 1884 Driskill purchased the site for his future hotel for $7,500. The site was an L-shaped lot of almost half a block on the corner of Pecan (Sixth) and Brazos. Over the years the lot had been the site of several establishments including a public ballroom called Peck’s Hall, a pawn shop, military offices, a feed store, a fivePainting of Colonel Driskill cent saloon, and a fire that hangs on the Grand station. Driskill hired Stairway at the Driskill. local architect Jasper N. Preston who designed Above - The the hotel in the Driskill façade Romanesque Revival on Sixth Street style that included side, showing Col. heavy rough-finished Driskill’s bust at stonework, squat the peak, and a longhorn below. columns and broad, low and massive archways. Bust of J. W. It was constructed of six “Bud” Driskill on million pressed bricks, Brazos Street. and decorative touches included busts of Driskill and his sons J.W. “Bud” Driskill, who faces Brazos, and A. W. “Tobe” Driskill, who looks over the alley on the west side. The Colonel presides over Sixth Street and is surrounded by decorative carvings including longhorns on the gable ends. The hotel, with 60 guest rooms, had four principal stories. The first floor consisted of two broad corridors, one running north and south, the other east and west. Men entered either off the alley to the west or from the south side, off Pecan (Sixth), and that end of the hotel catered to their interests with a saloon, a billiard room, a barber shop with baths, a news stand, and a cigar shop that featured thousands of brands of cigars from all over the world. Abe Frank, who operated the cigar stand from 1899 to 1934, sold over 4 million cigars during his career. To spare the ladies from exposure to cigar smoke and rough talk, they were expected to enter by the eastern, Brazos side. At the center of the building, where the corridors intersected, was a rotunda, topped with a skylight. Since the floor plan was repeated on the second level with broad hallways with huge windows and doorways at each end, this rotunda served as a vast flue, sucking up the hot air from the interior. The rotunda was closed up when air conditioning was installed in the 1940s. The second floor included a main dining room and ballroom, separate parlors for ladies and gentlemen, a ladies “Ordinary” dining room, a children’s dining room, two bridal suites, a few guest rooms, two broad corridors covered with 1,500 feet of velvet carpeting, and several large balconies. Connecting the two floors was a large stairway, vividly described by a visiting, fresh-off-the-trail, cowboy in Ben Green’s autobiography “Wild Cow Tales,” “It was about as wide as a country road and was curved up the side of the wall sort of like a trail going around a mountain, and it was covered with a rug that looked like dead curly mesquite grass when it beds down on the ground for the winter.” The third and fourth floors held the guest rooms. There was a hydraulic elevator and all the rooms were heated by fireplaces. but there were no private bathrooms. The Driskill opened for business in December 1886, at the astronomical cost of $400,000, completely furnished. The Daily Statesman wrote, “In proportion as nature has endowed Austin over all other Texas cities, causing it to be selected as the capital of the state, so also can Austin justly boast of her superiority over any other city in the south in that this city now possesses a magnificent hotel building, whose appointments would be an ornament to New York, St. Louis, or San Francisco, being the peer of any hotels in those cities.” Social Functions &Gracious Dining The hotel quickly became the social center not only for Austin but also for all of Texas. Some of the most elaborate parties and balls ever staged in the Southwest happened at The Driskill. On January 1, 1887, less than two weeks The Driskill Cigar Store was a favorite in Austin. Driskilhotel.com after the grand opening, The Driskill hosted its first gala affair, the inaugural ball of Governor Lawrence Sullivan “Sul” Ross. A tradition was quickly established and later governors including William P Hobby, Miriam Ferguson, Beauford Jester, Dan Moody, Allan Shivers, Price Daniel, John Connally, and Ann Richards all staged inaugural balls at The Driskill. Governor Hobby’s ball in 1919 was perhaps the most spectacular for it featured several orchestras playing (in stereo) from behind a forest of ferns amid lavish decorations resembling a European Court. Politicians did not have a corner on the market with social events at The Driskill. Charity balls, fraternity receptions, germans (a social gathering featuring a round dance in waltz time), graduation and debutante balls, civic club meetings, weddings and wedding receptions, and professional conventions were all on the calendar. It was and is a social place and a family place that catered to individual needs. In 1915 Governor James Ferguson PAGE 4 Driskill from Page 4 and his family arrived at The Driskill as he made the move from Temple to Austin to take over the reins of the state government. Not only did the hotel welcome Governor and Mrs. Ferguson, but also it welcomed their daughter Ouida, who carried her violin under one arm and her white Spitz dog under the other. The welcoming and pet-friendly tradition continues today. The Driskill touts itself as the most petfriendly hotel in the county and features custom dog beds, designer dishes, and homemade gourmet pet treats. Each year the hotel throws a party for pets that includes a pet costume contest, blessing of the animals, and special treats for the pet and the master. No matter how welcoming a hotel may be, a grand hotel cannot succeed without excellent food, and The Driskill has always been associated with gracious dining. The Christmas and quickly became known as Austin’s “socializing parlor.” It operated for 20 years at the corner of Sixth and Brazos in what had been the Driskill Coffee Shop and is now the 1886 Café & Bakery. The current award-winning culinary staff is no exception. Chef de Cuisine Shannen Tune’s recent addition to the 1886 Café and Bakery menu was a Blackened Salmon Burger featuring crispy wasabi shallots and sweet chili glaze. The Driskill even hosts cooking camps for children in conjunction with the Austin Children’s Museum. Politics & Politicians Just as the inaugural balls, social gatherings, and fine dining became features of the hotel, political wheeling and dealing also found a home at The Driskill. During the construction of the State Capitol, the Senate Helen Corbitt talks with Lyndon Baines Johnson. LBJ Library Collection. Photo by Yoichi R. Okamoto. convened at the hotel and legislators found themselves using The Driskill as a temporary state capitol. In 1910, Houston Senator F. Charles Hume, when asked why he and his friends had caucused at The Driskill and not in the Senate committee rooms, Senator Hume responded, “We Helen Corbitt who made discrete wanted to do it in style.” In 1934 an dining and faultless service aspiring Texas politician named a tradition at The Driskill. Lyndon Baines Johnson met his Texascooking.com future wife, Claudia Alta Taylor, for their first date in The Driskill dining room for breakfast. This first quiet meeting became a lifelong love affair for The Driskill and the dinner menu for 1897 quoted Shakespeare in future President and between its list of dishes. The menu featured First Lady of the Salted Almonds, Queen Olives, Cheese Straws, United States. In Green Sea Turtle aux Quenells, Eastern Oysters 1948 Johnson awaited on the Half Shell, Halibut Steak Maitre d’Hotel, the results of his US Tenderloin of Beef with Mushrooms, Saddle Senate race against of Venison with Jelly, Christmas Pudding with Coke Stevenson in Hard Brandy Sauce, Hot Mince Pie, and Fresh the Jim Hogg Suite, Strawberries and Cream. This listing does not again in 1960 when he include the entire menu, but it shows the variety was running as Vice of promising choices. President, and again The famous Helen Corbitt, a New Yorker who in 1964 as President. came to Texas to teach catering and restaurant During LBJ’s management at The University of Texas, presidential tenure, managed The Driskill’s dining room and catering The Driskill served as from the early 1950s until Stanley Marcus wooed the headquarters for her away to direct Neiman Marcus’ food services the White House Press department in 1955. When she was at The Corps, and a suite Driskill, Helen made the acquaintance of many of on the fifth floor was the state’s movers and shakers, who lunched and Driskill entrance on Sixth Street at the 1886 Bakery and Café. permanently reserved dealt in the old paneled hotel dining room. Under for President Johnson. her watchful eye, the staff became known for both service Forty-four years after her father’s election as President, Luci and discretion. Corbitt was the queen of food in Texas, and Baines Johnson celebrated at The Driskill as Barack Obama her cookbooks and recipes are still staples in many kitchens won his presidential election. and restaurants. Other politicians followed Johnson’s example and made Another crowd favorite was the Heritage Society’s 1886 The Driskill their headquarters. Preston Smith, Governor of Lunchroom that opened in 1971. It was staffed by volunteers Texas, regularly held court at breakfast at his Table Round PAGE 5 Driskill from Page 5 at The Driskill coffee shop. In 1982 U.S. Senator Lloyd Bensen and Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby, both Democrats, were up for reelection against strong opponents. Bentsen’s chief political aide Jack Martin and Texas political strategist Dan McClung were keys to victory, putting together a strategy for funding, phone banks, rides to the polls, and other innovative electoral mechanisms. “The effort really began at The Driskill Hotel in the coffee shop with Dan McClung and me sketching out on a napkin the outline of how it would work,” recalled Martin. The results of that meeting swept not only Bensen and Hobby into office but also Mark White, Bob Bullock, Jim Mattox, Garry Mauro, Ann Richards, and Jim Hightower. More recently, President George W. Bush interviewed potential Cabinet members at the hotel. Business & Management through the Years Other, more legitimate wheelers and dealers called The Driskill home. In fact, some of the most famous business men to walk the halls were also owners and managers, and, although the hotel changed hands many times during its Scheming & Wheeling and Dealing Political scheming often slips into the seamier side of life, and The Driskill was witness to that as well. In 1903 a desperate attempt was made to assassinate ex-Governor James Stephen Hogg in the rotunda of The Driskill by “a frenzied man who was crazed with liquor.” The would-be assassin was actually a well known railroad attorney who was angered at being called a lobbyist by Hogg. The assailant was quickly seized by friends, disarmed, and sent to his room. On April 16 1908 Mason Williams, a prominent lawyer of San Antonio, and John Dowell, president of the Austin Bar Association, were wounded as a Advertisement for result of a shotgun-pistol duel that Franklin Stuart Temple, Boy Phenomenon and occurred in the lobby of the hotel at Magnetic Healer. 1 o’clock in the afternoon. The bad San Antonio Daily Light 6 feeling between the two began in Feb 1894. court the day before when Dowell sought to have Williams disbarred from the practice of law. As the bullets flew, the hotel patrons hid behind the giant columns in the lobby. Scheming was not limited to politicians. In 1889 L. L. Magnus, a billard expert from St. Louis, moved to The Driskill and set up a hustling business, preying on unsuspecting amateurs and hotel guests. During the same era, a frequent visitor to Austin was Dr. R. C. Flower, who traveled to Austin by private railroad car and saw patients in his quarters. In 1894 he announced that he could diagnose disease by psychometric power, an “intuitive gift” that “enabled him to diagnose the disease of the patient without the invalid having to detail symptoms.” Dr. Franklin Stuart Temple also set up shop in The Driskill and billed himself as “Boy Phenomenon and the World’s Invincible Magnetic Healer.” NOW SHOWING www.austinhistory.net Lyndon Baines Johnson watching election returns at the Driskill in 1964. LBJ Library # 436-390-WH64 history, a few must be singled out. The foremost was Major George Washington Littlefield, cattle king, land financier, banker, University of Texas benefactor, and family patriarch. Littlefield moved to Austin in 1883 and in 1890 established the American National Bank in the southeast corner of The Driskill. The old bank vault still remains, with its door ajar, in the lobby next to the elevators at the Registration Desk. In 1895, five years after opening his bank, Littlefield purchased The Driskill as an investment. Local gossip insisted that Major Littlefield had bought The Driskill as much out of jealousy as for profit or civic pride. The Wilmot family had just erected a three story Austin National Bank Building, which made it the latest word in bank finery. What better retaliation George W. Littlefield, early for the Major than to buy The Driskill, owner of the Driskill who which had four stories! vowed the hotel would When Littlefield bought the hotel, never be closed. it had already changed hands several www.Utsystem.edu times. The original owner, Colonel Driskill, lost his fortune in 1888 after a cattle-killing drought and was forced to sell the hotel. Doc Day, an actor known as Sam’l of Posen, and a group of New York investors followed Colonel Driskill as owners. Littlefield was the fifth in line, purchasing the hotel for $106,000 in cash. During his tenure, Littlefield installed the first electric lighting system as well as steam heating. A local newspaper reported, “Each room will have a switch at its entrance, so that the guest entering his room will simply touch the button and his room will be brilliantly lighted.” He decorated the ceilings with oil-painted frescoes and installed 28 lavatories with bathtubs in the hotel and electric fans in every room. Littlefield sold the hotel Continued on Page 7 PAGE 6 Driskill from Page 6 in 1903 to his banking and Edwin Booth stayed Edwin Booth competitor, E. P. Wilmot, at the hotel while they in costume as but he did not retire. He thrilled audiences at the Hamlet. served as his bank’s old Millet Opera House and president until 1918, during the early days of the and was a member of Hancock. Amelia Earhart, the Board of Regents at Louis Armstrong, Michael the University of Texas. Jordan, Paul Simon, Sandra Littlefield died in 1920. Bullock, and The Dixie Carpeting in The Driskill Bar woven with In the modern Driskill Chicks are counted among famous Texas cattle brands. Bar, beautiful carpeting hotel’s guests. The record woven with famous Texas cattle brands salutes these and for the longest stay at the all cattlemen who helped to build The Driskill spirit. hotel belongs to Col. Peter Anna Held, W. L. Stark did not build or own the hotel, but was Lawless, a pioneer Texas Parisian actress manager under the ownership of E. P. Wilmot from 1906 railroad man, who served who was famous until 1944 when Wilmot’s as agent for her milkbaths. estate sold the property. for the Stark came to Austin from International & Great Northern (I&GN) Norfolk, Virginia, and was railroad for 50 years. He made his home probably the most popular at The Driskill from its opening in 1886 hotelman in the Southwest, until his death in 1931. with a love and knowledge J. J. Pickle, in his book “Jake,” recalls of true Southern hospitality his fondness for the Driskill Barbershop and a genial personality. His leadership was unequaled. He added a barber shop and woman’s spa in 1909, and in 1930 he oversaw the addition of 185 rooms in a new annex, designed by Trost and Trost of El Paso, and during the 1930s converted the original section so and 1940s, “The that each room had its own bath. Driskill Hotel’s When Stark bought the Carlota barbershop was Maximilian mirrors in their original run by mild- Driskill Barbershop where Jake Pickle and Lyndon cases from an antique dealer in mannered Harry B. Johnson often sought haircuts. Image # C00212, San Antonio where they had been Above - Maximilian Room with R e a s o n o v e r . Austin History Center, Austin Public Library. stored for about 40 years, he turned Empress Carlota’s mirrors Harry was one of the most popular barbers in town, and the old Gentleman’s Smoking beautifully displayed. Below the Driskill Barbershop was the place to go. It was a sort Room into the Maximilian Room. Maximilian and Carlota on their of men’s club where without paying dues we hung around, The mirrors were a wedding present wedding day. picked up tips on how to dress and act, from Emperor Maximilian of Mexico to his and talked jobs, politics and women.” beautiful bride, Carlota, and her likeness According to Pickle, one of the regular adorns each frame. Theirs was a tragic clients, Roy Keaton, who traveled a great story. In 1867, four years after becoming deal on business and was a close friend Emperor, Maximilian was captured and of Reasonover, knew that Harry was killed during Mexico’s Civil War while his straight-laced and easily embarrassed but wife was in Europe seeking aid for her also that he liked to be kidded. During his husband’s crumbling government. Carlota world travels, Roy sent gently risqué penny never returned to Mexico and lived a life postcards to Reasonover at the Driskill, of seclusion until her death in 1927, still addressed to “Handsome Harry” or “Ze believing that she was the Empress of Cute Barber” and the cards were always Mexico. signed “Fifi.” The cards maintained the Icons of all eras made memories at fiction that Handsome Harry was a suave The Driskill. Mixing politics and business, rogue and Fifi a sexy innocent. When a Austin’s first television station KTBC, client came in for a haircut or a shave, licensed to the Texas Broadcasting Driskill Hotel showing the KTBC studio Harry would say, “I got another card from Company (president, Lady Bird Johnson), entrance in the 1950s. Image #ND-56-244Fifi,” and all the customers knew to inquire broadcast from of The Driskill Hotel. Early 01 Neal Douglass Photograph Collection, Continued on Page 9 theatrical greats Anna Held, Stuart Robson, Austin History Center, Austin Public Library. PAGE 7 When you join, your membership in the Austin History Center Association helps promote community awareness and use of the Austin History Center. “One of the premier local archives in the country.” - LibraryJournal In 2010, our donors helped make possible the acquisition of Governor Elisha Marshall Pease’s papers. “A complete and accurate account of Pease’s entire life and his true significance to the history of Texas and the South.” Dr. Michael Parrish - Baylor University Linden G. Bower Professor of American History Gift Certificates call: 512-974-7499 or go to: w w w . a u s t i n h i s t o r y. n e t BECOME A MEMBER Please fill in the membership application below and mail with your payment. Date (please check one) New Member Renewing Member Address Phone Email Name City State Zip P. O. Box 2287 • Austin, TX 78767-2287 • 512-974-7499 • [email protected] We actively seek new individual and business members. You can help by sharing this newsletter with a friend interested in Austin’s past and present. For more information, email [email protected]. Or visit us in the O. Henry Room of the Austin History Center at Guadalupe & 9th. Membership Categories (check one) Benefactor $1,000 per year Sustainer $ 250 per year Patron Contributor Friend Other $ 500 per year $ 100 per year $ 50 per year $ Payment Information Check enclosed (payable to: Austin History Center Association) Please charge my account Visa Mastercard Card# Amount to charge $ Expiration date: Billing address: Signature: destroy card information after transaction keep card information on file If you join or renew at $250 or above, you will receive a free copy of Pease Porridge Hot PAGE 8 Driskill from Page 7 about the mysterious Fifi. Anytime Harry received a card he felt like a playboy instead of a bashful barber. The hotel’s darkest business days happened in 1969 when The Driskill closed its guest rooms to customers. A plan was disclosed later that year that called for a modernization of the hotel into a 19 story glass tower, but this plan never materialized and the hotel was dangerously close to being demolished. In September 1969 the hotel’s furnishings, except the lobby furniture and paintings, were auctioned to the public. One month later, the American-Statesman ran a story that said, “Driskill Hotel’s Fate Sealed.” The story reported the hotel was “to meet its end at the hands of a wrecking crew.” Luckily, a community The Driskill Hotel as seen from Sixth and Congress, looking east. Image #C00146, Austin History Center, effort called “Save-the-Driskill,” Austin Public Library. in 1973 and underwent a complete three-year, $35 million spearheaded by local architect R. Max Brooks, was initiated, dollar restoration in 1999. Each successive owner and successfully raising over $700,000 by selling $10 stock manager has continued to maintain, restore, and upgrade the in the Driskill Hotel Corporation. Corporate contributions hotel with a keen sense of the memories and personalities and loans pushed the total raised for redevelopment to of the past. The Driskill Hotel is a world unto itself, a world nearly $2 million, with the Austin Heritage Society as the which transcends time and place. Currently managed by major stockholder. The hotel reopened in 1973 with much Destination Hotels and Resorts, Inc., it is a fitting home for all celebration and galas attended by over 1000 celebrities the memories and echoes of the past generations of history and guests. makers and for the generations of history makers to come. The Driskill continued to change hands after its rescue Ann Johnston Dolce, current president of the Austin History Center Association, is a fifth-generation Austinite and a retired high school teacher and administrator. Sunday morning breakfast at the Driskill Coffee Shop was a family tradition, and she met her husband at a party in the Maximilian Room. Ann is currently working on a book about The Driskill. Auction from Page 1 BID ONLINE Mary Curtis Watercolor Paintings 1 Candlelight Flowers 15 x 10 ~ 1930s Era Austin 22 x 30 Pecan Street Café to St. Charles Place 1983 11 x 14 Congress Avenue: The View from Tobins 24 x 36 The Land Officeof Texas 1856 24 x 30 City County Hospital 1884 24 x 36 Walter Tips Building 1880 11 x 14 A Night’s Stay in The Driskill with Meal at American Lutheran Church 18 x 24 1886 Café & Bakery. Cruetzfeldt’s Store 1841 18 x 24 2 City National Bank 24 x 36 Honored Mayors: Bruce Todd & Will Wynn Former Austin Mayors Bruce Todd and Will Wynn, and the late Roy Butler will be featured at the fourth annual Angelina Eberly Luncheon at The Driskill on Wednesday, February 6, 2013. Charles Betts, Executive Director of the Downtown Austin Alliance, hosts Mayors Todd and Wynn in a roundtable discussion of “Highlights, Anecdotes & Laughs” during their terms in office. Funds raised will go to the Austin History Center Association, supporter of the Austin History Center archives for Austin and Travis County. “An Austin Tradition” Austin American-Statesman The historic Angelina Eberly Luncheons have reunited business associates, coworkers, and city leaders, as well as newcomers and longtime residents. Each year, close to 3 two hundred guests continue to share their love of Austin, its Description of colors: history, and its history makers. Vibrant light and “All who attend have a fantastic time, linger, and most dark blue sky, pink importantly, learn new things about Austin’s past,” said building, crimson Jeff Cohen, executive director of the Austin History Center street, green trees, green & white Association. “Hearing first-hand how the lessons from the past awnings, and black contribute to city leaders, and therefore must be preserved, and tan autos. keeps us focused on the Austin History Center, helping our city’s future.” www.austinhistory.net GO TO The Driskill, by Michael Shields PAGE 9 O. Henry’s 150th Birthday Celebration SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, Noon-5 PM Mock Appeals Trial at 4 PM recreating O. Henry Embezzlement Conviction & starring JUSTICE JAN PATTERSON, Texas Court of Appeals, GARY HALLOCK, O. Henry Pun-Off Punster, EV LUNNING, St. Edward’s University Theatre Arts Professor On Tuesday, September 11, 2012, O. Henry, aka William Sydney Porter, were he alive, would celebrate the sesquicentennial of his birth. To mark this occasion, the Austin History Center, in partnership with the Capitol Visitors Center and the O. Henry Museum, is coordinating a citywide Birthday Party on Saturday, September 15, 12pm – 5:00pm, with festivities and activities at all three locations. At the AHC, you can explore the current exhibit in the Holt Photo Gallery, “O. Henry: A Short Story” (more on the exhibit below), and design your own Austin-themed O. Henry postage stamp (the USPS is issuing a New York themed stamp for O. Henry in September). At 4:00 pm, the AHC will offer its featured program of the day, a Mock Appeals Trial of Porter’s embezzlement conviction. The mock trial will star Justice Jan Patterson of the Texas Court of Appeals, O. Henry Pun-Off punster Gary Hallock, and St. Edward’s University Theater Arts Professor Ev Lunning, with YOU starring as the Jury. Listen to the facts and arguments of the case and decide O. Henry’s criminal fate. While at Austin History Center, visit the O. Henry Room which will be open all day to see portraits and other “O. Henryana” materials. The O. Henry Room is home to the Austin History Center Association where you will find a wonderful array of Austin history books, maps, DVD, and postcards available for purchase through the Association’s publishing arm Waterloo Press. At the Capitol Visitors Center, explore the permanent exhibit on O. Henry in the historic building where he worked as a draftsman for the General Land Office. Their featured program, offered at 11:00am and again at 12:00 noon, will be a dramatic presentation of O. Henry’s story “Bexar Scrip No. 2692: Murder at the Land Office.” This is one of his most famous Texas stories and it takes place in the Land Office Building that is now the Visitors Center. Other activities include a “Pin the mustache on O. Henry” game and postal stamp coloring pages. At the O. Henry Museum, make yourself at home in O. Henry’s Austin residence and see the new exhibit, “O. Henry: Original Slacker.” Their featured program, beginning at 2:00 pm, will be a group reading of O. Henry’s “Buried Treasure,” with 12 writers take on one Texas Story. Other activities in the Museum include the unveiling of the new O. Henry postage stamp and a performance by the New Hill City Quartet, reviving the music group that Porter sang with while living in Austin. Come celebrate the birth of one of Austin’s best loved writers. The featured programs are staggered so you can enjoy each one! Free shuttle service will be available to transport you from site to site, and free parking is available in the parking garage behind the Capitol Visitors Center. “O. Henry A Short Story” Exhibit reveals 7 lives By Daniel Alonzo & Mike Miller “O. Henry A Short Story” reveals more about the man than the writer that America discovered in the early 1900s. Or it tries to. O. Henry remains an enigmatic figure because nobody really knew him. That is to say that no one living after his success knew him. Like the contemporary enigma Bob Dylan, there are also six different lives of William Sydney Porter. Chronologically: the Dandy, the Family Man, the Embezzler, the Fugitive, the Widower, the Prisoner, and the Writer. 1. The Dandy. Will Porter came to Austin in 1884 from the Richard Hall Ranch in La Salle County where he worked as a ranch Left: O. Henry “the Dandy,” ca. late 1880s. PICB 12866, Austin History Center, Austin Public hand. He spent his time in Austin working and Library. Right: Athol, Margaret, and William Sydney Porter, 1890. PICB 07185, Austin History socializing at various saloons, including the Center, Austin Public Library. Bismark Saloon (his table and chair from the Bismark are on display in the exhibit). He had a Will Porter married busy social calendar, singing on the Hill City Quartette, Athol Estes quickly and quietly in a private ceremony going to parties on the west side of town and occasionally on July 1, 1887 (a detailed description of the ceremony providing musical direction for the Southern Presbyterian is in the exhibit). That same year, Porter was appointed Church of Austin. draftsman at the Texas General Land Office. The routine 2. The Family Man. Continued on Page 11 PAGE 10 Display Cases from Page 3 need to come visit us in person to get the full effect). I never had the pleasure of meeting George face to face, though we did enjoy a couple of engaging conversations over the telephone about Austin, history, and especially the Lebanese community in Austin, a topic that was dear to him (and perhaps the focus of a future exhibit?). But I do believe that the cases we built are a fitting testament to his honor. The AHC’s exhibits program is perhaps the most visible service we offer, and as we look to improve and expand this service, we are fortunate to have the George Attal Memorial Fund to help us share Austin’s history with the greater community. O. Henry from Page 10 By Jeff Cohen It was a wonderful moment in June when the relatives of Henry Herman “ H . H . ” Luedecke v i s i t e d the Austin H i s t o r y Above right: Henry Herman Luedecke. Below: His family, Center for a left to right: William (Bill) H. Luedecke III, William (Will) H. tour, and a Luedecke IV, Scarlet D. Luedecke, William H. Luedecke celebration V, Ward Luedecke, Martelle Luedecke Wathen, Harper C. of the Luedecke, Sammatha Wathen, and John C. Luedecke. building’s dedication plaque. Who was H.H. Luedecke? H.H. served as chair of the Building Committee of the Library Commission that built Austin’s central library in 1933 - today the Austin History Center. He lived from 1883-1971 and was a leader in Austin’s financial industry. Through the Austin Community Foundation, a gift from the family in his Top: Close-up of woodcarving on side memory is made each year to AHCA. H.H.’s philosophy of life of case. Photo by Grace McEvoy. was found in a letter to his son William: “Be willing at all times A.H.C., Austin Public Library. Left: Side view of new exhibit cases being to shoulder your responsibilities, but don’t let them become a burden – carry them with a smile.” (From notes compiled by installed. Photo by Grace McEvoy. A.H.C, Austin Public Library. W.H. Luedecke at Austin History Center). of family and work seemed agreeable to him as we would later allude to in his story, “A Service of Love.” 3. The Embezzler. Much ink has been spilt speculating whether or not Porter embezzled from the First National Bank. In 1894, he was accused of misappropriating $4000. While awaiting charges, Porter quit the bank and got a job with the Houston Post, while Athol and baby Margaret stayed in Austin. Charges were filed in 1896 and Porter bought a train ticket back to Austin. On a stopover in Hempstead, Porter switched trains and fled first to New Orleans before boarding a boat to Honduras. 4. The Fugitive. Bill Porter didn’t do much in his 5 months in Honduras besides drinking in saloons. He and an outlaw named Al Jennings supposedly cut short a nascent people’s rebellion accidentally by their Independence Day celebration of fireworks and shooting guns off into the air. The events were the basis for the story “The Fourth in Salvador.” In truth, the story was art imitating art. (Full text of this story, as it originally appeared in McClure’s Magazine, can be found at: http:// texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth139334/). 5. The Widower. The Luedecke Family: a gift W. S. Porter returned to Austin after learning that Athol was dying of consumption (Active Tuberculosis). He posted bond and spent the next 5 months spending time with and nursing his wife before she died. At the embezzlement trial he did not speak up in his own defense though his lawyers asked that he do so. Some say that he was too bereft to care about the proceedings. Others say that he knew he was guilty and did not want to face questioning when he knew “guilty” would be the ultimate verdict. 6. The Prisoner. Bill Porter entered Ohio Penitentiary on April 25, 1898. The story, “The Miracle of Lava Cañon” had already been accepted by McClure’s Magazine and was published in September 1898. However, a second story sent after incarceration was rejected, necessitating a pseudonym. 7. The Writer. All of O. Henry’s former lives, the good and the tragic, provided him with the characters and scenery from which his early published work drew. Later, the stories created by roaming the city of “Four Million” would nearly replace the western characters, the grafters and the occasional Central American transplant of his past. (Full text of his short story collection The Four Million is available at: http://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth139379/). The exhibit displays photographs and archival materials from the life of W. S. Porter in the Holt Photo Gallery now through October 21, 2012. PAGE 11 Saturday, Sept. 8 Angelina Eberly Auction online bidding opens for The Driskill and Austin art at the new AHCA website www.austinhistory.net Saturday, Sept. 15 O. Henry 150th Bday & events at Austin History Center, Capitol Visitors Center, and O. Henry Museum. Oct. 27-28 Waterloo Press books & maps of TX Land Grants & Austin in 1800s. At Texas Book Festival, State Capitol. Oct. 30 – March 10 AHC Photo Exhibit: “Early Mexican American History in Downtown” in the AHC’s David Earl Holt Photo Gallery. Sept. 15 - October 21 “O. Henry A Short Story” Exhibit & new note cards by Paul E. Corrubia in AHC & AHCA office. Save these Dates Saturday, December 8 AHC and AHCA/ Waterloo Press holiday gift sale. Books, photos, maps, notecards, postcards all for sale throughout AHC. Sept. 25 – March 24 AHC Grand Hallway Exhibit: “Building a Community: The First Century of African American Life in Travis County.” Wednesday, Feb 6 Angelina Eberly Luncheon honoring former Mayors Bruce Todd and Will Wynn. See page 1. Tickets for sale and AHCA auction at www.austinhistory.net Austin History Center (AHC) Hours: Tuesday – Saturday 10AM – 6PM & Sunday Noon – 6PM Austin History Center Association, Inc. P. O. Box 2287 Austin, Texas 78768 Return Service Requested www.austinhistory.net Non-Profit Org. U. S. Postage PAID Austin, Texas Permit No. 1545