|
Marie Beth Jones
Freeporters remember hectic boom town days
Dan Kessner, who is a native of Freeport, remembers before Dow’s arrival, Freeport was a small town. Although it had indoor plumbing and other amenities, some streets were dirt, so “when it rained people left their cars and walked home or spun their wheels through the mud.”
November 16, 2009
Prequel dives into mystery
Book Beat for November 15
November 15, 2009
Sudden prosperity burdened county
Merchants benefited from the growing number of residents brought to the area by jobs offered by Dow in the 1940s — and from the overall increase in the county’s prosperity — and many new businesses opened to meet the demands of increased population and affluence.
November 09, 2009
Animal lovers likely to dig ‘Gardening' book
Book Beat for Nov. 8, 2009
November 08, 2009
Doctor had ‘cure’ for what ailed ’40s workers
In his book, “Episodes: Texas Dow,” Bill Colegrove remembered that when the construction of Dow Chemical Co. began in Brazoria County, the entire county was “dry,” with only beer allowed.
November 02, 2009
‘Finger Lickin’ Fifteen’ is good to the bone
Book Beat for November 1
November 01, 2009
Single men made their own fun in early 1940s
Roads were in poor shape and Freeport could be reached by only one that led from Angleton and one from West Columbia when Dow arrived in Brazoria County.
October 26, 2009
Author’s body of work hits new peak
Book Beat for October 25
October 25, 2009
Writer recounts Brazoria County ‘boom’ times
In a tongue-in-cheek article called “Boom Comes to Town,” printed in the nationally distributed weekly Collier’s magazine for Dec. 28, 1940, J.D. Ratcliff featured the impact Dow’s arrival had at Freeport — which he describes as being 50 miles below Galveston on the Gulf Coast.
October 19, 2009
Book is definitive biography of local pioneer
Book Beat for October 18
October 18, 2009
Camp Chemical cramped, chaotic
The changes Dow brought to Brazoria County were no greater than those newcomers faced when they arrived in what they considered an alien atmosphere.
October 12, 2009
Kinky Friedman to speak at Freeport Library
Book Beat for Oct. 11, 2009
October 11, 2009
Rough, rowdy times at Camp Chemical
Built to house construction and plant workers when Dow moved to Brazoria County, Camp Chemical’s 3,000 housing units, along with a post office, grocery, drug store, beauty parlor, barber shop, variety stores, a self-service laundry, and even a jail, formed a brand new town.
October 05, 2009
‘Devil’s Punchbowl’ serves up mystery brew
Book Beat for October 4
October 04, 2009
War production expanded Dow, area population
When Dow Chemical Co. began to build its first plant in Brazoria County in 1939-40, and for several years afterward, it triggered a population explosion much like the one that occurred in California during gold rush days some 90 years earlier.
September 28, 2009
‘Roadside Crosses’ offers masterful suspense
Book Beat for September 27
September 27, 2009
Simpler times, pleasures once prevailed here
In the late 1930s Brazoria County was a sleepy area in which agriculture had always been — and still was — the main source of livelihood for the majority of its residents.
September 21, 2009
Sheriff has hands full ‘Night and Day'
Book Beat for September 20
September 20, 2009
‘Fignolias’ not enough to save Angleton plant
Searching for additional products to keep their canning factory busy during the late 1920s and early 1930s, the Angleton Fig Plant developed a product it called Fignolias.
September 14, 2009
Readers needn't fear "Fear"
Book Beat for September 13
September 13, 2009
|