Author Archive: KathyMSlaughter
KathyMSlaughter
May 17, 2018
For 79 years—1901 to 1980—Weingarten’s was one of Houston’s popular grocery stores. Weingarten’s advertised “Better Food for Less.” It emphasized self-service and cash-and-carry. The grocery chain’s founder, Joseph Weingarten, was born in 1884 in Galicia, Poland. Joseph’s father, Harris, emigrated…
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KathyMSlaughter
May 10, 2018
James A. (for Addison) Baker is a famous name in Houston. The first James Addison Baker came to Texas in 1852. The 31-year-old widower came to Huntsville from Alabama to establish a law practice. He bought land, built a business,…
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KathyMSlaughter
May 3, 2018
Many cities in Texas, including Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, Lubbock, and San Antonio, have a council-manager form of city government. In this setup, the city manager is basically the chief executive who implements the decisions of the city council, and…
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KathyMSlaughter
April 26, 2018
When the University of Houston was founded in 1927 as Houston Junior College, the first organized extracurricular activity was the student newspaper. John Bender, a physical education instructor, suggested “The Cougar” for the paper’s name. He thought the cougar symbolized…
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KathyMSlaughter
April 19, 2018
In its day, the Spaghetti Warehouse in downtown Houston was known for excellent cuisine. Now that it’s closed permanently, it’s perhaps best remembered for its ghosts. The restaurant was located at 901 Commerce. It was once called the Desel-Boettcher Warehouse….
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KathyMSlaughter
December 1, 2016
The man often called “The Father of the University of Houston,” grew up on his father’s farm in San Antonio. He left school at age 12 to make $3 a day working in a candy store. Later he worked in…
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KathyMSlaughter
November 8, 2016
One of the most striking examples of Houston public art was created by 1,050 children, three artists, an urban designer, and an architectural firm in 1998. The Seven Wonders are seven 70-foot towers located along Buffalo Bayou in Sesquicentennial…
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KathyMSlaughter
November 1, 2016
For more than two decades, Jean Dubuffet’s sculpture, Monument au Fantôme, has sat among Houston’s downtown skyscrapers at 1100 Louisiana. In 2008 it was relocated to 1500 McKinney (Avenue de las Americas) in Discovery Green Park on the eastern edge…
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KathyMSlaughter
October 27, 2016
Elisha Marshall Pease, Texas’s 5th and 13th governor and public servant, was born to Lorrain Thompson and Sarah (Marshall) Pease on January 3, 1812, at Enfield, Connecticut. After attending Westfield Academy in Massachusetts, he clerked in a general store and…
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KathyMSlaughter
October 25, 2016
Houston’s first mayor, James Sanders Holman, was born on February 7, 1804, to Isaac and Polly Anne (Wiggleworth) Holman in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. Holman married his cousin, Martha Wilson Holman, on February 23, 1822. Holman left Tennessee and traveled to San…
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