Program of Events
Transcription
Program of Events
2The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration It only happens once every 100 years This September marks the 100 year anniversary for the Sunset Heights. As representatives for the community the two civic clubs of the Sunset Heights, the Sunset Heights Civic Club and the East Sunset Heights Association, want to mark the event with some flair. Promoting our celebration was a large undertaking for our entirely volunteer organization supported only through membership funds. We are proud of all the work that we have accomplished together. The real success of our event depends on you. Our goal is to reach out to you and involve you in celebrating this community of which you are a vital member. If along the way, we have taught you something about being from Sunset Heights, our history, our local businesses, or our civic goals, then we have really made it. In this book you will find details to join us in celebrating the centennial. As the celebration on 9/25/10 comes closer, stay tuned to our website for the most current updates: www.SunsetHeightsHouston. org/100years. We have also included information about our civic clubs. We look forward to meeting you at our next meeting. If you are new to the area or a long time resident, we hope you enjoy the history of this neighborhood that we have put together. If you know something we don’t know, come see us at the Halbert Park festival, and tell us your story. We would love to hear more. Before we sign off, a special thanks goes out to the supporters of our celebration whose advertisements grace these pages. We made a point to find close-to-home truly local businesses that have invested in the Sunset Heights. Frequent them and tell them you love this place! facebook.com/sunsetheightshouston The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 3 Sunset Heights Centennial Festival Program of Events September 25th, 2010 10 AM Community Parade Parade Grand Master, Ed Gonzalez District H The Sunset Heights welcome the Reagan High School Marching Band, Homeless Animal Partnership Initiative, and more 11 AM - 2 PM Festival at Halbert Park Be there at Halbert Park for a good time with games & food Free parking provided by Prosperity Bank 2310 Yale 3PM -5 PM Cookout at the Rose Garden Meet your neighbors at 2621 Link Road 7PM Live Music at Dan Electro’s 1031 E 24th SunsetHeightsHouston.org/100years 4The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration A letter of sincere thanks Events like this come along only once in a while, every 100 years in fact. When the civic clubs of the Sunset Heights decided to host an event for the occasion they had no idea what it might become. They could only imagine what the process might be and how it would unfold. Our community has made this a reality for everyone. We want to take this opportunity to thank the people and businesses that supported our dream before we even knew what it was. Thanks to Anna Eastman, HISD trustee, for helping us put together our community parade and arrange a band. Thanks go out to Master Car Care, 2305 Yale for photos provided throughout our history. For our festival at Halbert Park we couldn’t have made it happen without Staging Solutions who donated our stage and Brian Albritton of Albritton Audio who supplied the public address system. A most warm thanks goes out to the volunteers from the civic clubs who worked so hard to make this happen. We look forward to celebrating with you and our community. See you there! Lady Cocchia Jaclyn Cribley Jason Frank Bob Gaspard Dorothy Hester Buster Pendley Sharon Pendley John Ridgway Sean Young Chuck Shoults The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 5 History of Sunset Heights By: John Ridgway Before the beginning The 240 acre area that is now known as the Sunset Heights started out as a part of the much larger 8,856 acre John Austin land grant when this area was still part of Mexico. The name Austin is still well known in Texas today. In fact, John Austin was a friend of the more famous Stephen F. Austin. John Austin asked for land and it was granted to him by the Mexican government in 1824. John Austin died in 1833 during a wide spread cholera epidemic leaving the land to his wife. In 1836 his This map demonstrates the size of the John Austin land grant. The South East corner is marked by Minute Maid stadium. The North West corner is near Shepherd and 610. 6The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration widow sold the land to the Allen brothers, who used it to create Houston in 1836. They paid her close to a dollar per acre for all 8,856 acres of land, which was still part of Mexico at the time. The battle of the Alamo was fought that same year, 1836. When Texas became a new republic in 1839, soldiers who fought for Texas and survived the war were given land grants as rewards, and previous ownership of the land was often not recognized. But the John Austin grant was recognized by the new government which included John Austin’s friend Stephen F. Austin. The Allen brothers had been working on their new city, Houston, for 5 years. But it was an unfortunate time to be creating a new city; the war with Mexico had raged on during 3 of those years and the Allen brothers were deeply in debt by 1841. By order of the Sheriff they were forced to sell several hundred acres of land to cover those debts. This The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 7 Above is a copy of the Sheriff’s deed ordering the Allen brothers to sell land to cover debts. The description of the land did not use measurements or degrees like a surveyor would use today. Instead the documentation used descriptions of trees (i.e. the big red oak) and bayous and fences to identify the land. transaction was called a Sheriff’s deed. In 1851, a 430 acre portion of the John Austin land grant was sold to J. W. Cruger and F. Moore Jr. for $1,200 or about $2.80 per acre. The firm Cruger and Moore sold the land on June 18, 1855 for $1 to James Cruger. That sounds like an amazing deal for Cruger but in buying out Moore he also assumed the debt of the company. On May 12, 1859 that same 430 acres was sold to the Houston & Texas Central Railroad for $5,000. They never built on the land, but they did use it as an asset for bond collateral. The Civil War started in 1861 stopping construction of the railroad until 1867. This lost time was cited years later as the beginning of the railroad’s demise. The cost for construction of one mile of rail line in 1857 was $6000. That price also included bridges and crossings on the route. By 1860, the rate had risen to $16,000 per mile. By 1866 it was even higher at $20,000 per mile. And by 1872 it was a staggering $30,000 per mile. With the costs rising faster than income, the railroad’s debt continued to mount. Bond holders with investments of over $23 million found out there were problems in early 1885 when the railroad failed to make its bond payments. Law suits against the railroad called for investigations and seizure of control. 8The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration This financial crisis impacted Houston but also investors along the east coast especially the financial hub of New York. For years the railroad sued the state of Texas for back payment, the bond holders sued the railroad for assets, and the trustees sued for control. This litigation tied up the assets of the railroad making it impossible to sell any of them until everything was settled. Finally, Fred P. Olcott took control of the railroad in 1888 as a receiver. He restructured the company and sold it to the Central Trust Company for use by the Southern Pacific railroad. The Houston and Texas railroad was mortgaged. To the South, the Omaha and South Texas Land Company had been working on a new neighborhood called the Houston Heights which was officially formed in 1891. The Heights became a well established neighborhood and later its own city. Most of the lots in the Heights were platted at 5,500 square feet. To the North, Independence Heights was created in 1908 by the Wright Company. Most of the lots in Independence Heights were platted at 3,000 square feet. The area in between, Sunset Heights, was still undeveloped. The Beginning On March 28, 1910 the Houston and Texas Central railroad was allowed to retire bonds which it had issued in 1881. The railroad had not made enough profits to pay off those bonds, so the railroad began selling land assets that had been used as collateral. This is the land at the center of so much controversy. The land had been used as collateral more than once causing lawsuits over ownership. Richard Rodgers purchased 100 acres of this land on June 9, 1910 for $18,750 or about $13 for each 3,000 square foot lot in his new Sunset Heights neighborhood. He also worked out a deal with the trustees of the Houston and Texas railroad to give him a 3 year loan at a rate of 6%. Clear title to this land was The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 9 challenged several times. The Sheriff’s deed from 1841 was used to challenge ownership. For example, the estate of Alfred Watson used it to make a claim in July 1910 and Rodgers had to pay the estate $250. The Second Presbyterian church made a challenge as late as 1914. They claimed rights from the estate of A.C. Allen even though the property had been sold at least twice by that time. The church agreed to back down on its claim but with so much uncertainty over ownership no title company would back Richard Rodgers so he had to bond the land himself. Acting as his own title company, Rodgers had to create a $100,000 bond for Sunset Heights. This bond was the insurance policy to protect purchasers of land in his new neighborhood if more challenges to the title arose. So who was Richard Rodgers? He was born in 1868 in Ireland and immigrated to the United States in 1893. He built his fortune by run- 10The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration Top is an advertisement for the Capitol Hotel run by Rodgers. Middle left is an advertisement for train service from 1910 showing the use of the name Sunset. Right is an advertisement for Hardin Lumber who was a partner in the Sunset realty company. Note the old fashioned phone number. ning Houston hotels. Two of his larger hotels were the Windsor at 314 Louisiana where Kim Son restaurant stands now and the Capitol Hotel which was located at 614 Main. The Capitol Hotel was demolished in 1911 and the Rice Hotel was built in its place. The Rice Hotel was later converted into the Rice Lofts. By August 15th 1910, Richard Rodgers created the Sunset Realty Company along with George W. Cater, W. B. Courtney, and Benjamin R Hardin. This was not Rodgers first attempt at developing an area. He had done smaller projects like the Rodgers addition for the Woodland Heights. That project added a few dozen lots; his Sunset Heights project was going to be much grander in scale. One of Rodger’s partners in the endeavor owned a lumber company and offered loans for homes. Why did The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration The original plat of the Sunset Heights accepted by city engineers on September 8th, 1910, the birth of the Sunset Heights. As seen in the diagram, the original end of Sunset Heights was at Link road, but the neighborhood was quickly expanded to Airline by the Sunset Heights Extension. 11 12The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration Rodgers use the name Sunset? If you picked up a newspaper from 1910 you would read that Sunset was a very popular name for everything from coffee to train lines to the new railroad hospital that opened in 1911. Rodgers was right in step with popular culture when he named his company Sunset Realty and his neighborhood Sunset Heights. On September 8th, 1910, the documents for the creation of the Sunset Heights were accepted by T.C. Edminster civil engineer for the City of Houston, creator of the 1936 Edminster Engineering Company which still exists today. People frequently wonder why the developer of Sunset Heights platted the subdivision at 3,000 square feet but sold the land as 6,000 and 9,000 square foot lots. This was Rodgers way of playing it safe in the housing market. The Heights which had been platted twenty years before had 5,500 square foot lots and Independence Heights had 3,000 square foot lots. Rodgers was not sure what The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 13 Left and above are newspaper ads from 1910 showing other nearby areas under development with land for sale. home buyers would be able to afford. The 3,000 square foot platting gave home buyers options. Someone who was interested in buying two lots could be offered a third at a discount during negotiations. The few 3,000 square foot lots that were sold were on E 29th street, which bordered Independence Heights before the 610 interstate separated the two neighborhoods. According to neighborhood platting standards, developers had to design in alleys for the homes. This standard was changed in 1911 to not require alleys. This is why areas like Milroy, Gostic, and the Sunset Heights Extension which came about after 1911 do not have alley ways. The Houston area experienced a population explosion in 1910. In a very short time a large number people settled in the Sunset Heights area. The people came from all over the United States and other countries like Poland, 14The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration Germany, Switzerland, Czechoslovakia, Australia, and England. On January 4, 1916 Mrs. Irene McBride purchased 3 lots totaling 9,000 square feet for $400 or $133 per each 3,000 square foot lot. This property is at the intersection of Aurora and Oxford. In 1947 it was sold for $7,000. Today that same land has three homes on it and is worth over one million dollars. Compare that increase with the cost of a gallon of gas which rose from 7 cents in 1910 to $2.80, a loaf of bread which sold for 3 cents and now sells for $1.50, and a quart of milk at 3 cents which is now 90 cents in 2010. Sunset Heights had enough resources that in January 1911 it was able to successfully fight annexation by the Houston Heights with the help of Senator Hume and members of the legislature. The Houston Heights was attempting to annex unincorporated areas around it to become so large that Houston would be unable to annex it. The efforts The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 15 were futile. Houston Heights was eventually annexed in 1918. Richard Rodgers died in 1922, and his wife Blanche took over the Sunset Realty Company. The drive to make the neighborhood a full fledge city seemed to have died with him as Sunset Heights was annexed by Houston in 1927. Infrastructure Two water wells fed a large concrete water tank that supplied the neighborhood’s homes with water. This was also the location of the satellite land office. The main land office was located on Franklin on the fifth floor of the Commercial Bank Building. The area did not get sewer lines until a major project was undertaken by the City of Houston in 1933. The civic club convinced the Houston Electric Company to extend its street car lines into the Sunset Heights neighborhood. In 1914, the lines were completed. A line ran up Main, turned west onto E 27th to Columbia. At Columbia the line turned north to 31st. At 31st it headed back east to Main to complete its loop. However, the growth of street cars in Houston was coming to a close in 1914. That same year saw the start of bus lines and jitney services The Sunset Heights Water Works and Power station. The tank is over ten feet deep and has trees growing up through the bottom of it. The remains are located at 714 E 27th St. This is a street car token from the Houston Electric Company good for one fare on the street car, which came to the Sunset Heights in 1914. 16The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration which would eventually replace street cars. In 1930’s the city started to pave many of its streets. Street car companies were required to pay for the street paving where their rails ran. Many decided it was cheaper to give up the lines and instead concentrate on buses. Almost all the street cars were gone by 1935. Even though Sunset Heights is at a higher elevation, it had its share of flooding. For example in 1919 the county performed drainage work after it received complaints that students and teachers were wading through knee deep water to get to class. One of the more amusing stories was that of Dan O’Hara who caught a two foot alligator in the ditch in front of his home in the 800 block of E 25th in 1929. A group of Sunset Heights residents with the alligator in tow went to city hall and demanded that something be done about the drainage. Post Offices The first location of the post office was at E 27th and Main on the southwest corner and the postmaster was H. Davis. By the 1920’s the post office had moved down the street to 417 E 27th. The building of the satellite post office at Mrs. Mamie Pridgeon Baylor and E 26th still stands. was the postmistress at that time. The post office had a rating of fourth class until 1927 when it got upgraded to presidential grade. The post office was used until 1951 along with the The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 17 cancellation stamp for the Sunset Heights. After that the building was used as a barber shop until it was demolished in the 1990’s. A small satellite post office existed at the corner of Baylor and E 26th. Some of the local residents still remember getting their mail there. It was shutdown sometime before 1948. Schools The two-story red brick building rests on a raised basement and features Romanesque arches and an inset vestibule. The building mass is sheltered beneath a low hipped roof with broad eaves typical of the Prairie School of architecture. The school still retains its four-over-four wooden sash windows. Harris County had been looking for potential school sites before Sunset Heights was even built. County Judge A. Amerman had land purchased within Sunset Heights in August of 1910 before the area was fully platted. Sunset Heights School was located in School District 25, which encompassed much of the area between the Buffalo and White Oak bayous west of downtown Houston. It was one of approximately 40 suburban and rural school districts established by Harris County in 1884. In 18The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 1911, taxpayers in School District 25 petitioned to raise $20,000 for building and equipping a new school. The referendum passed in 1912 and construction of Sunset Heights School began that same year. The school building still stands at Harvard Sunset Heights School: Back – Miss Ford, Mr, and E 27th and cur- Philipps, Mrs Welling, Front – Miss White, Miss rently owned by HISD Kibbi Hamilton middle school built in 1919 straddled Heights Boulevard. It was originally named Heights Senior High School. The name was changed to Alexander Hamilton Senior High in 1925. It became Hamilton Junior High in 1926 when Reagan High School opened. It is now a middle school. and used as a storage facility. The property is currently for sale and listed by the Preservation Texas organization in 2009 as an endangered historic site. In its first year, 1912-13, the teaching staff for the Sunset Heights School consisted of Mrs. Anna Kinsman, Miss Mabel Bouldin and Miss Irene Hartt. Robert Bunting was the principal. Sunset Heights School remained in use until 1926 when it was replaced by the newer Alamo Heights School. Long-time principal John C. Bennett remained at the school from 1923 to 1933, making the switch from the original Sunset Heights School to its replacement, Alamo. 20The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration Churches The oldest standing example of the first churches in Sunset Heights is still located at 800 Aurora. It was the former home of the Aurora Picture show and is now home to 14 Pews. The structure is almost completely original. Most of the other churches followed this same design however by the 1950’s the other churches had all replaced their small Clockwise from top left: The first Baptist church, The Brethren Church, The building at 800 Aurora, the Baptist Church Sunday School building. wooden structures with larger stone or brick buildings. The Sunset Heights Baptist Church at one time was one of the largest churches in the area. It had grown to three buildings before closing in 1998. The original church was similar in construction to the Aurora church. A stone Sunday School building that was built in 1951 stands where the original wooden church stood. The brick church to the side was built in 1945. To the north there is another more modern sanctuary that was built in 1961. For a short period of time in the 1920’s, the Bertie Fulbright Methodist Church existed at 515 E 25th. Sunset Heights Christian Church at E 28th and Harvard existed during the 1920’s but by the 1950’s ap- The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 21 peared to have been demolished. The Bethel Temple Assembly of God Church located at 300 Aurora was first built in the 1940’s and is still in operation. St. Anne De Beaupre located at 2810 Link was established in 1948. The Brethren Church was attended by many Czechs who immigrated to the United States after the 1850’s. In 1903, representatives of several of the area’s congregations gathered to create the Unity of the Brethren in Texas in the effort to resurrect the Brethren Church which had been suppressed for many years in their homeland. The Brethren Church located at Main and E 23rd was built in 1954. Businesses Top, the building that was The Sunset Heights Drug Store originally the Sunset Heights was located at 505 E 27th . It was op- Drugstore. Bottom, an old erated by Jas Cunningham. The brick map showing the layout of the building still stands and has been original Grogan Building Supply. converted into a beautiful residence. The Yates Grocery store was located on the corner of Harvard and E 23rd. Mr. and Mrs. Yates lived on the same street as their store and moved to the neighborhood in 1938. A story is told that Mr. Yates won a sum of money gambling and Mrs. Yates insisted they purchase a house with the winnings. Grogan Building Supply is in business on the west side of Yale. Grogan Building Supply was originally on the east side of Yale at the corner of E 25th Street. Just South of Grogan Building Supply is Master Auto Service. There were two pickle factories located near the neighborhood. One was the Price-Booker Pickle Manufacturing Company which was lo- 22The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration Top Left: The former PriceBooker Pickle Manufacturing Company Top Right: Master Car Care circa 1950. Photo courtesy of Master Car Care. Bottom Left: The K&K Food Mart near N. Main and Cavalcade before it was rented to Blockbuster Video. cated at W 24th and Nicholson which was a larger facility. The building still stands today but has not produced pickles in years. The other pickle factory was the smaller Adam Brothers Pickle Manufacturing Company. The Adam Brothers Company went out of business abruptly during the 1929 crash on Wall Street. The owners just walked away leaving the building full of pickles. People who remember growing up in the Sunset Heights recalled going to the vacated pickle factory and getting pickles for months after it was abandoned. The K & K Food Market was located at Main and Cavalcade. The store was run by the Kowis family. They have owned the The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 23 building since 1934 and now rent it to Blockbuster Video. Residential Treasurer of Sunset Heights Civic Club Sylvia Varva tells the following 1920’s story about her grandfather in a 1992 civic club newsletter . “When I was a child I lived over ninety miles from Houston. In those days ninety miles was a long way to travel in model T’s over rough and muddy roads. So all I knew about Houston was what I learned in school and heard from others. My grandfather used to travel a lot, so when he would come over, he would tell us about the different parts of Texas including Houston and the surrounding area. I remember hearing about his distant kin, they had the same family name (Hruska) as my grandfather, moving into or near Houston. Later grandfather was telling us that he stopped by Above: This bottle is from the Sunset Height’s Bottling Company that was located on Link road near Airline and operated by H.C. Wooley. The fancy bottle has arc designs on it with Sunset Heights Houston embossed near the bottom. The bottling company was short lived, and the building was torn down by the 1940’s. 24The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration to see these people. He told us they had bought a lot on which they had a new house built. Years later, I moved to Houston. First I lived on the south side for a short time and later in the Lindale area for several years. In 1965, as I decided to move from there, I rented a room in The house at 106 Aurora may be the oldest one in the neighborhood. It was built in 1908 on 2007 Lubbock Street. In 1929 it moved just one lot to 2009 Lubbock Street. In 1980’s it was moved from that address to its current location to make space for the Consulate of Belgium. The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 25 Right: Sharon and Buster Pendley of East Sunset Heights shared this old photo of their home and the previous owner identified as possibly being Athina or Manto Hoak. the 200 block of East 26th from Mrs. Mary Stasny. Soon, to my surprise, I learned that I was living in the same house my grandfather talked about back in the 1920’s as being in the Sunset Heights!” Mrs. M. S. Gomez and her husband were Air Raid Wardens during World War II. Air Raid Wardens were trained in fire-fighting, first aid, and patrolled to make sure everyone had their lights out during blackouts. Her grandfather named Sikes owned the property where Caninos on Airline Drive is located today. Mrs. Gomez used to go the Fulbright Methodist church and remembers going to the Reinhardt store on Yale and 27th. What’s in a Name Heights Boulevard originally ran all the way to E 23rd St. which marks part of the northern boundary of the Heights. It stopped going through when Hamilton middle school was built. This area was later replatted as part of the Milroy development. Most of the streets which run north/south in 26The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration These maps are sections of Sanborn fire insurance maps. They contain drawings of the buildings with codes that explain the purpose and type of building, information used when calculating insurance premiums. For example, the maps showed whether a structure was brick or wooden. Bottom left: A map showing where Heights Boulevard previously continued through. Bottom right: A map showing Cambridge Street, renamed after the Gostic development. the Heights were given the names of schools. Going east after Oxford the next street was Cambridge. Some maps actually show the street as Blanchard into the 1950’s. Blanchard was the merging of Blanche and Richard, the same couple that formed Sunset Realty and developed the area. At some point after the Gostic development was completed, the street was renamed to Gostic. Most of the other streets in the Gostic development had their names changed. Little became E 22nd and Barker and Bartholomew became E 21st. McNeil became Wilder and Melrose became Sheldon. The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 27 The Civic Clubs of the Sunset Heights by: John Ridgway and Dorothy Hester The start of the Club As an unincorporated area, the Sunset Heights Civic Club was the primary form of government. It was formed at the same time as the neighborhood in 1910. The Civic Club worked with the electric companies to get the street car lines extended into the neighborhood in 1914. It worked with the county to make sure roads were graveled and that there was good drainage. It worked toward getting the fire hydrant system implemented which lead to setting up the Sunset Heights Vol- 28The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration unteer Fire department in 1914, a volunteer group of eight men who used a hose wagon to fight fires. The area wanted to incorporate itself to become a city, and attempted this several times. The biggest attempt was in 1916, but it was stopped by residents in Studes Woods. Studes Woods was a neighborhood created out of Henry Studes Woods. On a side note, that is where the name Studewood came from for the street. These homeowners feared that their area would be included in the city. Even though no evidence can be found that Sunset Heights ever officially became a city, it was listed in the Houston city directories as a town. The Sunset Heights Civic Club ceased operations shortly after Sunset Heights and several other surrounding neighborhoods were annexed by the City of Houston in 1927. The second and third coming of the civic club In 1939, Charles “Chaz” Halbert decided that the area needed a civic club so he set out to recreate the Sunset Heights Civic Club. He got residents from Milroy Place, the area between E 23rd and E 25th, Gostic, the area east of Oxford and south of E 23rd, and residents of Stude, the area east of Main below E 23rd. He reached out as far west as Nicholson St. He donated a lot located on the 700 block of E 24th where a club house was built. Sadly, Mr. Halbert died in 1941 after successfully reviving the civic club. As a memorial, the club members had a Even though the telephone company was a top employer for the neighborhood, phones were still not widely used in private homes. So, in the mid 1920’s, a fire alarm system was setup in the neighborhood, and pull stations were installed at intersections every few blocks giving residents a way to call the fire department. The box shown above had cables running from its base to the fire station. Each fire box had a unique bell so the firemen would know where to go. The metal rod attached by a chain was used to break the glass window, open the box, and enable the person to pull a lever inside. The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 29 plaque created and placed on the club house. His motto on the plaque reads “To make Sunset Heights a better place in which to live.” SHCC members had been petitioning the city to purchase land for a neighborhood park and so in 1945 the city purchased the land for Halbert Park from a couple of home owners and the DePelchin’s Children’s center. In 1951 the city made some improvements to Halbert Park like the addition of a flag pole and new playground equipment including a merry go round. By the late 1960’s the SHCC had once again disappeared, but in 1984, residents once again resurrected the civic club. There were numerous abandoned properties in the neighborhood and people wanted a civic club to address these issues. Back in action, SHCC members were researching the ownership of one of the properties when they discovered the lot where the civic club house used to stand. Although the What Ben Franklin discovered, Milgaro Electric delivers like no one else! Top Service Lower Rates Dependable Choosing the right electrcity company can be confusing when you are presented with many options. Milagro Electric, located right in the Sunset Heights, will be there for you in the ups and downs of the market. If energy prices go up you’ll get the best price, and if energy prices go down, we will let you know. 30The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration You may have seen the Guinea Hen in the neighborhood and wondered who they belong to. There has been a little group of them in the neighborhood for a while. At last count there were only 3 or 4. Some suspect the Ike or a recent freeze reduced their number. No one knows where they came from, but they have been around for years. They are an unofficial mascot. club house had been demolished the memorial plaque for Mr. Halbert had survived. Once the civic club found out that years of taxes and fines had not been paid for the property they were forced to sell the land. The civic club salvaged the plaque and had it installed in Halbert Park in 1985 as part of a park rehabilitation project. Olive DeMar, the daughter of Charles Halbert was able to attend the ceremony. She was the treasurer of the Sunset Heights Civic Club for many years in the 1940’s and 1950’s. The East Sunset Heights Association forms The unofficial beginning of the East Sunset Heights Association took place in May, 2002 when several neighbors who lived on the east side of North Main concentrated their efforts to improve the area between Airline and North Main which had been deteriorating for years. The official boundaries are E 23rd, Airline, 610 North Loop and North Main. Buster & Sharon Pendley, Holly Hughes, Chuck Shoults, Juan Arroyo, and Gary & Dorothy Hester called neighbors and knocked on doors to invite residents to the first meeting; it was a huge success, and the association was officially formed in October, 2002. The purpose of the organization is to encourage and promote the enhancement of the East Sunset Heights community. In the early years of the association, speakers from the vari- A billboard announcing the recognition of the East Sunset Heights as a community star. The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 31 ous departments of the City of Houston attended the ESHA meetings educating members about what could be done to improve the neighborhood through the existing City Ordinances and the Police Department. In October, 2004 the East Sunset Heights Association was recognized with five other Houston civic associations as Community Stars of Houston. The mayor held a banquet, presented ESHA with an award, and the city placed a billboard displaying the association’s name on Yale Street to recognize ESHA’s effort to change the neighborhood. ESHA continues to improve the neighborhood today, welcoming and encouraging neighbors to attend the meetings, organizing neighborhood events, and most importantly bringing neighbors together to build a stronger community. ESHA’s motto, displayed in its newsletters, has always been “It’s All About The Neighborhood” Sunset Heights Civic Club Today The club’s recent efforts have been focused on Halbert Park. In 2007 the SHCC adopted Halbert Park via the City of Houston Adopt A Park program. Since then, the civic club has worked with the city’s Parks Department to install and maintain a doggie waste bag dispenser, an information shelter, and a butterfly garden. The SHCC was awarded a $3000 2009 Neighborhood Matching Grant which was used to resurface the tennis court and install a new 32The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration The Sunset Heights actively seeks to beautify our local park with ongoing improvement projects such as the information shelter, left, and the butterfly garden shown during construction right. bench during the summer of 2010. Halbert Park continues to be a focal point for the neighborhood and is the location of the centennial celebration on September 25th, 2010. SHCC joined forces with ESHA to assist the Houston Heights Association in the creation of the Northern Heights constable program which started this past July. The Future The Sunset Heights Civic Club has been around since the beginning of the neighborhood, and while activities have sometimes slowed, it has always rebounded. The original charter, by Charles Halbert, was simple:“To make Sunset Heights a better place in which to live”. He did not limit the organization to the strict boundaries of the neighborhood when recruiting volunteers. Rather, people living in close proximity to each other all had a vested interest in the area and the organization welcomed them all. The Sunset Heights neighborhood has multiple organizations that represents its residents. In addition to support from the SHCC and ESHA organizations which have collaborated on things like Yard of the Month, National Night Out, and the Centennial Celebration, the Houston Heights Association and Greater Super Neighborhood organiza- The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 33 34The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration tions also help to improve the neighborhood. These organizations will continue to work together to improve Sunset Heights in the years to come. You are invited to be a part. Civic Club Calendar of Events 2010 • Sept 23rd SHCC monthly meeting @ the Brethren Church • Oct 5th National Night Out • Oct 12th ESHA quarterly meeting @14 Pews on Aurora • Oct 28th SHCC final monthly meeting @ the Brethren Church The Sunset Heights Centennial Celebration 35 Defend yourself from the IRS IRS Mediators Corp.® www.IRSmeds.com 713-402-6151 We were born out of the real world, line management experience. We put ourselves in your shoes. Our services are affordable and effective for mid-sized businesses, agencies, school systems, and non-profit organizations. 713-759-1700 3200 Southwest Frwy, 33rd Floor Houston, Tx 77027 Stay up to date in your ‘hood! SunsetHeightsHouston.org •Complete Auto Repair •Audio Systems •Window Tint [email protected] (713) 869-6040 6408 N Main Houston, TX 77009 www.procarcarezone.com Join us Saturday September 25th for an all day event. A parade, a festival, a cookout! Oh my. SunsetHeightsHouston.org/100years To sponsor this event or get involved, visit Celebrate the centennial of the Sunset Heights 100 years Sunset Heights Celebration Join your civic club today! Look inside for more information. Annual memberships start at just $15 and supports the Sunset Heights Community. Come to a meeting to see what it’s all about. -- to make Sunset Heights a better place in which to live