The Lake Jackson Historical Association provides Education relative to the
History and Culture of Lake Jackson, Texas.
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The History Museum and Plantation Site
continue to mix the OLD with the NEW
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AND THE WINNER IS ............A LAUNDRY APRON
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WINE REVUE owner Autumn Barrister holds a picture of the apron she deemed winner of LJHA’s apron contest. The apron featuring one large pocket for clothespins was designed and crafted by Linda Louise Fossett-Hensen, a professional seamstress. For 30 years, she owned, operated, and sewed at Brazoswood Cleaners, last located at #20 Circle Way. Provenzano Properties now occupies the site. Linda made the apron from flour sacks collected by her mother, who lived on a farm during the Depression years. While a student at Brazosport High School in the late 1950’s, Linda created the apron and tucked it away in her “hope chest.” The flour sacks came by way of the FANT
Milling Company (which subsequently became the Calumet Milling Co.) in Sherman, Texas. According to Linda, the materials in the apron are about 100 years old!
CONGRATULATIONS, Linda, and thanks for participating in the contest.
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NEW…………………Traveling Exhibit Continues
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June 16-August 11, 2021
Tuesday -Saturday
10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
Gingham, tulle, bibs, intricate embroider, carpenter’s apron. You name it; the new exhibit shows it!!!
Apron Strings: Ties to the Past, features fifty-one vintage and contemporary examples that review the apron’s role as an emotionally charged vehicle for expression with a rich and varied craft history that is still viable today.
A Program of ExhibitsUSA, a national division of Mid-America Arts Alliance with Texas Commission on the Arts and The National Endowment for the Arts.
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Oldie, but Goodie..........Shaddock's Supermarket
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My father, Bill Shaddock, moved to Lake Jackson in the early 1950's. I believe it was 1954 when he went to work for Gerland's grocery store as manager, just across the street from what would be Shaddock's Rainbow Supermarket in years to come. When he went to work, he made a deal with the Gerland brothers for a bonus based on profits and sales. Due to my dad’s efforts, the LJ store became the most profitable in the chain. As a result, the Gerlands intentionally started writing off tax expenses to that store, which cut into my dad's bonuses. From the beginning, my dad had told the Gerlands to hold onto his bonuses and he would ask for them in the future.
In 1957, due to the Gerlands’ action, he handed in his notice and asked for all of his bonuses. If I remember correctly, the amount was in the $50,000 dollar range. That was a fortune back then!
Because my dad was so well liked, the community encouraged him to open his own grocery store. At that time, Dow owned the land where the store and future shops would be located. Surprisingly, he talked Dr. Beutel into conducting a straw vote on a proposal to sell the land to him. Approximately 1,200 favorable votes were cast. Only 19 voters wanted to use the land as a park. An outcome unheard of back then! So, Dad went to work putting together his plan. With backing from the local community and tremendous support from Groce Wearden, a huge grocery supplier in Houston, he was able to make his dream come true.
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During the next year, he planned and built his new grocery store. In June 1958, Shaddock's Rainbow Supermarket opened its doors. My mother, Mildred Shaddock, cut the ribbon. Several employees from Gerlands followed my father. One I remember well, a man named Willie. Even after my father sold his business interests, he was still part of the family. In the photo below, he is shown sacking groceries. Subsequently, Dad opened stores in Angleton in the Beachway Shopping Center and in Dickinson.
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I remember a funny story. A relative of Bing Crosby lived a few doors down from us on Poinsettia. One Christmas Mr. Crosby and family came to visit. My father had to open the store late at night for them to shop so they would not be bothered by the public.
After opening the first Shaddock's, Dad formed the Lake Jackson Improvement Co., Inc. which became the parent company of his property and the rest of the block, apart from where the bank sat. Brockman's was located on this site, as well as a variety store. I think it was Wacker’s, but I’m not sure. The entire project cost close to $650,000 which was a tremendous amount back then!
In 1961-62, Buddy Baker, a friend of my father’s, walked into the grocery store and said to Dad, “Bill, let's open a bank.” They flew to Dallas to start the ball rolling. In September 1963, B. E. Shaddock and H.L. “ Buddy” Baker opened the doors of the First National Bank of Lake Jackson. My father also served on the Board of Directors at the Angleton Bank of Commerce.
In 1961, he travelled to Ft Bliss with a select group of men from Lake Jackson to witness the firing of one of the first guided missiles. James Nabors from The Brazosport Facts and several other prominent businessmen were in the group.
In 1963, my father tried to retire and thus, sold the grocery stores to the Stanley Brothers from Bay City. My mother always told him, you wanted your younger daughter, Casey, so you need to retire to help rear her. He served in WWII when my brother and sister appeared, my sister being 18 years older than I. Retirement did not last long, however! In 1964, Dad went into partnership with Roland Travis. They opened Roland's restaurants all around the state. In 1968, he and three other men opened the Beacon Theatre in Angleton.
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My dad was a board member of the Chamber of Commerce for years. In addition, he was a huge supporter of all charities, sports clubs, and the Methodist church. If he knew of a family in need, he would take groceries from the store to them. For fourteen years, I watched him help so many people. Even to those who had done him wrong, he would go back and help. When we lived on Surfside Beach while building our ranch, he helped build the Surfside Baptist Church.
My father was one of the most important men in the early days of Lake Jackson. He worked to make a town in which he felt comfortable, one with a foundation upon which to grow. Many people today might not remember the Shaddock name, but many years ago it was an important part of the community. I am so proud to call Bill Shaddock my father, not because I am biased, but because he was a man of strong values, honesty, and honor. He never put himself above anyone else and he would help anyone in need. I, myself, have learned these values from both of my parents, and I hope I have carried the name forward through fundraising and by exemplifying their values. When my father passed away, the church at the cemetery could not hold all the people. Close to 1,000 stood outside. Simply a very special man!
-------- by Casey Shaddock
(with editing)
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NEW………………………………FLAG DEPOT
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The History Museum will accept your worn out, tattered, or faded American flags. They will be held in safekeeping until the Boy Scouts conduct another retirement ceremony.
Drop off Tuesday-Saturday from 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
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SAVE THE DATE... Saturday, September 18, 2021
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Leave your lasting imprint AND support the LJHA at the same time. Honor a friend. Memorialize a relative.
Pave the walkway to the museum or the Jackson Plantation Historic Site with a personalized brick.Order a Brick here.
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A Word from the Executive Director
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What would it be like if the Star Wars films robot R2D2 got a job delivering the mail? Well, it may not quite be R2D2 but LJHA will soon add a display of a robot that did just that, deliver mail.
Officially known as a ‘Mailmobiles’, these service robots were developed by Lear Siegler, Inc. which then sold their robotics division to Bell & Howell in 1980, who produced the automated machines and sold them for use in corporate offices.
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The Mailmobile made its first appearance on the job in Chicago, in 1976, at the offices of Sears, Roebuck & Co. in what was then the tallest building in the world. Since then, thousands more have made their scheduled deliveries in corporate and government offices, each christened with a unique name. The FBI included their Mailmobile, “Marvin” among their model employees, noting that although he might run over you, or pin you to the corner, he also never took a cigarette break or asked for a raise!
The unit on display at Lake Jackson Historical Museum did his duties for Dow Chemical where he was known as “Herman”. Although some employees began to refer to him as “Hal”, in reference to the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, and suggesting that Herman/Hal was plotting to take over! The Mailmobile did eventually land its own acting role too. The 2017 hit drama by FX, The Americans rocketed the Mailmobile to stardom, inspiring essays, articles, internet chats and it even has its own Twitter account.
Whatever the name, Herman/Hal or Marvin, or even MOM, yes MOM, as in ‘Mail on the Move’; the robot is a beeping, blinking, 600-pound machine. He can haul 800 pounds of mail without the help of a human. He has cells of black lights beneath his metal frame that ‘reads’ an invisible fluorescent pathway sprayed onto the floor. He beeps and flashes along his route in an effort at safety and rings a bell when he stops to deliver your mail. Some units even open doors and summon elevators and cost upwards of $80,000.
See ‘Egore’, a mailmobile working at Sears in 1979, in action with the following link:
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Trivia Answer:
The U.S. Air Force was interested in the Windecker Eagle airplane because it was undetectable by radar.
New Trivia Question:
Who was the architect of the Historical Museum??
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A Special Thank You to Our June Contributors
Brazosport Rotary and Wine Revue
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David Thomas
Executive Director
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Angela Villarreal
Curator
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Deborah Duty
Marketing Coordinator
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