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NenaE

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Posts posted by NenaE

  1. 196Glendale.jpgGlendale6.jpg

    Look what's sitting at the end of Glendale St. in Pineview Place. @196 Glendale.

    My brother took these for us, he's an engineer, has a different viewpoint than we do.

    He said it was spooky-looking. Reminds me of the one in Forest Hill, and ones in Meadowbrook.

    Thanks Brett!

    Notice the stairs leading down, outside, it slopes.

  2. Supposedly, there was once a landing field around Old Galveston Rd. and Meadowbrook, Glenbrook Country Club. They had tents set up, too. Circa 1920's or before, military, I believe it said.

    I just ran across the story on the Park Place Facebook site, older posts.

    I had heard of a Park Place landing field before, but had never found any other mention of it or map reference 'til just now. Must have been soft field.

    http://www.archives....groups/018.html

    reference no. 18.9.1...date of PP location, 1918-19...just lists the name and date.

  3. I found an entry for the Roosevelt Hotel at 1111 Clay so it looks like the cross street was supposed to be San Jacinto instead of San Antonio..

    Thank you, small chance for it's survival, if the location is the middle of "newer" Downtown. There is one old bldg. that faces Fannin at Clay, faces corner, wrong way. It's nice, though.

  4. http://houstorian.wo...d-houston-maps/

    ...a HAIF member's site, tmariar.

    http://www.lib.utexa...aps/historical/

    ...two great locations for maps, the topo. maps are lised by names, in some cases, such as Park Place (one map will have a listing for the next section, on each edge) when they are dividied up, in blocks. I refer to these two map lists all the time.

    I recently noticed a Buffalo st. name in one of the old maps, was very close to Downtown. Houstonians were fond of the name. It was my High School mascot, as well, school dates back to the late 1920's.

  5. Seems from your story that you truly love what you do, you must, 'cause that's a lot of work, stripping.

    Interesting, about the blond in the redwood. Good for you, salvaged some wood from another dead mod.

    I love real wood, stained or unstained, despise white paint, but know it has it's reasons for being. haha...When sold, I hope the purchaser is a mod lover, and not a style destroyer.

  6. If you plug sylvan at Idylwood into Google Maps, it should take you pretty close, then move toward the bend where Sylvan goes into MacGregor Way, and you will find it (over-exposed because of the sunlight) right at the beginning of the bend. It's still a beautiful house.

    ETA: Attached file of what it looks like on Google Maps.

    Thanks Travelguy, nice to know it's still there, with elevated sloping lot, love that neighborhood!

  7. http://idylwood.org/...ylwood/history/

    ...this was posted earlier in another Idylwood topic.

    Thanks for the pics, wow, you can tell the age of the neighborhood from viewing Wallingford's photos.

    Love those auto models and time period.

    Is that house still there? I tried to look for it on GoogleEarth, but the site doesn't work as good as it used to, IMO, garbles the street view most of the time :(

  8. Welcome to HAIF, Wallingford! and thanks for the personal stories. Wish I could have walked through those gems.

    I just wrote to the Houston Country Club Place Association, yesterday, to ask why the archives aren't available. Was referred to a second source. I asked if they were making a handbook, I would love to get ahold of those papers again. The historian get great work, not only on the neighborhood, but the whole surrounding area. I'll let everyone know if or when I hear something.

    I had no idea that Simms Estate was there, I grew up in the 1960's, passed the location many times.Dinner Bell was a frequently visited restaurant, even when I was grown.

    No one in my family ever mentioned it (4 generations- East End) or the huge house that still stands, in Forest Hill subdivision, on Pasadena St.

  9. "Are you sure this was not at Telephone and Wheeler instead of Telephone and Winkler? I know about the house at Telephone and Wheeler with the circular drive and Palm trees. It is next to the Houston Parks and Recreation building" ...isuredid's post, a while ago. post #8, above.

    isuredid was right about the location, Telephone and Wheeler, here's an aerial shot. I'm wondering if that wasn't Mr. MacGregors estate. Does anyone know? His wife donated the land nearby for a park.Griggs Rd. is in the top left corner, above the estate. This is very close to Riverside Terrace. Says at the time of MacGregor's death, he was thinking of developing the area, believe it was in the 1920's he died.

    It's ironic that a trailer park community sits next to the property now, the palm trees are huge, beautiful. The estate had two roads leading to the actual mansion, you can follow them in the aerial shot to the house, sits to the right.

    You can still see the foundations of the house on GoogleEarth, there is a business that sits behind the location of the actual mansion.

    TeleWhlrFrtVw6-1.jpg

  10. http://books.tax.hct..._23-24_0066.jpg

    ...posted this for Cemetery Wolf and others who may be interested.

    I was looking for the property for "Delmonico", a name for a treed area in the East End, on the old ward maps. I mistakenly thought it was in this block book location.

    It was actually north of this area, closer to Harrisburg Rd.

    But I did run across a church and two references to two very small cemeteries, by Slaughter Pen bayou, think it was later called Country Club bayou.

    Anyway, notice now there is nothing at the end of Kemp St.

    Womder what happened to the grave sites, moved maybe?

    This land sits in the area of the Howard Hughes operations, close to Polk Ave. Imagine it changed quite a bit during the war effort, in the 1940's.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Six_wards_of_Houston

    two early ward maps

    • Like 1
  11. Strange when such a huge, beautiful house could be making someone some money, by leasing it out, or living in it themselves.

    Maybe it has problems passing inspection codes. But I've seen far worse places that people live in. Looks like it's been taking care of, or is GoogleEarth playing tricks on me?

  12. I think its rather brilliant.

    If you get food poisoning or choking, then you're right there!

    LOL.....I love this design. Maybe they wanted the shops to be visible to traffic from I-10.

    They do wrap around the corner, a little bit. This desing reminds me of the one close by, at Town & Country. The hospital patient drop of, pick up entrance takes priority status, maybe

    ..

  13. Thanks for showing your interest. Due to a lack of interest in 2010, I took the Chicago forum down. But if there's renewed interest in it, I'm more than happy to make it active again.

    I joined the CAIF this year, I thought. I was asking a question or two. Wasn't much activity, but I enjoyed looking. I haven't been back.

    It's strange to me how a city with so much architectural heritage doesn't want to talk about it, on-line.

  14. My friends and I use to rent a house on the Comal, mid 1980's, probably. It sat right by a train track bridge, across from the Wurst Fest Hall.

    That old house is no longer there, swallowed up by condo rental units. Those were some fun times.

    Just Googled it, was off Landa St.

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