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Gary Cartwright - Galveston: A History of the Island (Chisholm Trail Series, No. 18)

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Galveston: A History of the Island (Chisholm Trail Series, No. 18): summary, description and annotation

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Galveston-a small, flat island off the Texas Gulf coast-has seen some of the states most amazing history and fascinating people. First settled by the Karankawa Indians, long suspected of cannibalism, it was where the stranded Cabeza de Vaca came ashore in the 16th century. Pirate Jean Lafitte used it as a hideout in the early 1800s and both General Sam Houston and General James Long (with his wife, Jane, the Mother of Texas) stayed on its shores. More modern notable names on the island include Robert Kleberg and the Moody, Sealy and Kempner families who dominated commerce and society well into the twentieth century. Captured by both sides during the Civil War and the scene of a devastating sea battle, the city flourished during Reconstruction and became a leading port, an exporter of grain and cotton, a terminal for two major railroads, and site of fabulous Victorian buildings-homes,hotels, the Grand Opera House, the Galveston Pavilion (first building in Texas to have electric lights). It was, writes Cartwright, the largest, bawdiest, and most important city between New Orleans and San Francisco. This countrys worst natural disaster-the Galveston hurricane of 1900-left the city in shambles, with one sixth of its population dead. But Galveston recovered. During Prohibition rum-running and bootlegging flourished; after the repeal, a variety of shady activities earned the city the nickname The Free State of Galveston. In recent years Galveston has focused on civic reform and restoration of its valuable architectural and cultural heritage. Over 500 buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and an annual Dickens on the Strand festival brings thousands of tourists to the island city each December. Yet Galveston still witnesses colorful incidents and tells stories of descendants of the ruling families, as Cartwright demonstrates with wry humor in a new epilogue written specially for this edition of Galveston. First published in 1991 by Atheneum.

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title Galveston A History of the Island Chisholm Trail Series No 18 - photo 1

title:Galveston : A History of the Island Chisholm Trail Series ; No. 18
author:Cartwright, Gary.
publisher:Texas Christian University Press
isbn10 | asin:0875651909
print isbn13:9780875651903
ebook isbn13:9780585033228
language:English
subjectGalveston Island (Tex.)--History.
publication date:1998
lcc:F394.G2C38 1998eb
ddc:976.4/139
subject:Galveston Island (Tex.)--History.
GALVESTON
ALSO BY GARY CARTWRIGHT
The Hundred-Yard War, a novel
Thin Ice, a novel
Blood Will Tell: The Murder Trials
of T. Cullen Davis
Confessions of a Washed-Up
Sportswriter
Dirty Dealing
HeartWiseGuy
GALVESTON
A HISTORY OF
THE ISLAND
GARY CARTWIGHT
Picture 2
TCU PRESS
FORT WORTH, TEXAS
Page iv
Copyright 1991 Gary Cartwright; epilogue copyright Gary Cartwright 1998
All uncredited photographs appear through the courtesy of the Rosenberg Library, Galveston, Texas.
First published 1991 by MacMillan Publishing Company
Number Eighteen: The TCU Press Chisholm Trail Series of significant books dealing with Texas, its life and history
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Cartwright, Gary, 1934
Galveston: a history of the island / Gary Cartwright.
p. cm(Chisholm Trail series; no. 18)
Originally published: New York: Atheneum : Toronto: Maxwell
Macmillan Canada, 1991.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.
ISBN 0-87565-190-9
1. Galveston Island (Tex.)History. I. Title. II. Series.
F394, G2C38 1998
976.4'139dc21Picture 3Picture 4Picture 598-3289
Picture 6Picture 7Picture 8Picture 9Picture 10CIP
For Warren and Kay Burnett; and for Pam Diamond;
and for Phyllis again, and always.
Page vii
AUTHOR'S NOTE
LET ME MAKE clear right off the top that I'm a journalist, not a historian. I'm not even sure that I know the difference, except that a journalist doesn't use footnotes and historians hardly ever get sued for libel.
Galveston is my attempt to write the profile of a place. I've written a lot of profiles of people, using place as a substratum to put the subject in perspective and give it texture; but in this book I'm reversing the process. The place is the main character. I want the reader to understand the way it looks, how it feels, what it represents, the many ways it has been used and misused over the years, and how it has responded. This place is different from other places, and it was my mission to examine and explain why this is so.
I am indebted to so many people that I don't know where to start thanking them. I spent hours and days and weeks in the Rosenberg Library archives, and I'm deeply grateful to Jane Kenamore, Casey Greene, Lisa Lambert, Julia Dunn, and all the other staff members for their patience and courtesy.
I need to thank all the native and adopted Islanders who guided me along the way, especially Steve Long, whose defunct and deeply lamented In Between magazine was a font of information; and of course my great friend and confidante Pam Diamond, who was always there when I needed her, and to whom this book is partially dedicated.
I read the works of many historians and authors, but I particularly want to thank David McComb, whose Galveston: A History was my Rosetta stone and my Bible. I slept with McComb's book
Page viii
under my pillow, and I hope I absorbed enough to ensure that this book is at least fair and accurate.
The following is a partial list of books and authors to whom I owe a debt of gratitude:
Living with the Texas Shore, by Robert A. Morton; Galveston: History of the Island and the City, by Charles W. Hays; The Early History of Galveston, by Joseph O. Dyer; Galveston: A Different Place, by Virginia Eisenhour; Bob's Galveston Reader and The Port of Galveston's Bicentennial Appointment Calendar and Compendium for 1976, both by Bob Nesbitt; Gail Borden: Dairyman to a Nation, by Joe B. Frantz; Samuel May Williams: Early Texas Entrepreneur, by Margaret Swett Henson; Tales of Frontier Texas, by John Q. Anderson; Galveston in Nineteen Hundred, by Clarence Ousley; The Galveston Era, by Earl W. Fornell; Six Decades in Texas, by Francis R. Lubbock; Adventures of a Blockade Runner, by William Watson; Lone Star, by T. R. Fehrenbach; Commodore Moore and the Texas Navy, by Tom Henderson Wells; Norris Wright Cuney: A Tribune of the Black People, by Maud Cuney Hare; Papa Jack, by Randy Roberts; When the Heavens Frowned, by Joseph L. Cline; Storms, Floods, and Sunshine, by Isaac Cline; A Weekend in September, by John Edward Weems; Progressive Cities: The Commission Movement in America, 1901-1920, by Bradley Robert Rice; The Shame of the Cities, by Joseph Lincoln Steffens; The Man Who Stayed in Texas, by Ann Nathan and Harry I. Cohen;
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