Hidden Dallas History

Ever want to test your nervous system and rigger of your bowels? Then tow an RV through Dallas, TX! Upon leaving my training, I decided to jot over to Dallas to visit some long-time friends and spend a few days with them before making the trek home to Oklahoma to see my Son. Thankfully, I had found a state park that was literally right outside the city. Cedar Hill State Park, located just a short drive from Dallas, Texas, is a hidden gem that offers visitors a chance to escape the hustle and bustle of the city and experience the natural beauty of the area. I was able to stay connected to my camper and just take an Uber to and from the various points in the city to meet up with friends and really enjoy my time there without having to navigate big city traffic. While at Cedar Hill State Park, I took a short hike and found a hidden gem. Penn Farm is a beautifully restored historical farm that offers a glimpse into the past and serves as an educational center and museum. The farm, which dates back to the 1850s, was once a working farm that produced cotton, corn, and other crops. Today, it serves as an educational center and museum that offers visitors a glimpse into the lives of the people who once lived and worked on the farm. Visitors can take a tour of the farmhouse, which has been restored to its original condition and furnished with period pieces, as well as the barn, smokehouse, and blacksmith shop. In addition to touring the farm, visitors can also participate in the educational programs offered by Penn Farm. These programs include guided tours, workshops, and hands-on activities that teach visitors about the history and culture of the area. These activities are great for families, as they are designed to be both educational and fun. After a visit to Penn Farm, visitors can also take advantage of the many outdoor activities offered by Cedar Hill State Park. The park offers hiking, fishing, and boating, as well as playgrounds, picnic areas, and campgrounds. Visitors can also take in the beautiful views of the surrounding area, including the Joe Pool Lake and the Cedar Hill Nature Preserve. Overall, a visit to Penn Farm at Cedar Hill State Park is a must-do for anyone visiting the Dallas area. The farm offers a unique and educational experience that provides a glimpse into the past, and the surrounding state park offers a variety of outdoor activities that will appeal to visitors of all ages. It’s a great option for a day trip or weekend getaway, and it’s a perfect opportunity to explore the natural beauty of Texas while learning about its history. This will be my go-to stop if I ever have to big in the big city again!

Deep South Mansion

The Bragg-Mitchell Mansion is a historic house located in Mobile, Alabama. Built in 1855, the mansion is an excellent example of antebellum architecture, with its grand columns and sweeping verandas. It was built by Judge John Bragg, a prominent lawyer and politician, and his wife, Eliza. The mansion was later purchased by Dr. Peter Mitchell, a renowned physician, and his wife, Caroline, who added many of the home’s distinctive features, including the elaborate ironwork and the formal gardens. One of the most striking features of the Bragg-Mitchell Mansion is its grand entrance, which features a sweeping staircase and a double parlor with intricate plasterwork and marble fireplaces. The home is adorned with beautiful chandeliers and antique furnishings, giving it a feeling of elegance and sophistication. The mansion’s grand ballroom is the perfect setting for events such as weddings and parties, and it has been used for many such occasions over the years. As a woman, it’s always exciting to discover a place with a rich history and beautiful architecture, and the Bragg-Mitchell Mansion in Mobile, Alabama is just that. This antebellum mansion is a true gem, with its grand columns and sweeping verandas. Antebellum History Antebellum refers to the period before the American Civil War (1861-1865). The term “antebellum” is derived from the Latin words “ante” (meaning “before”) and “bellum” (meaning “war”). In the United States, the antebellum period is often associated with the Old South and the plantation culture that existed in the southern states. During the antebellum period, the economy of the southern states was largely based on the production of cotton, tobacco, and other crops. Plantations were a common sight in the South, and they were typically large tracts of land that were worked by enslaved African Americans. Many plantation owners were wealthy and lived in grand mansions, which were often referred to as antebellum houses or plantation houses. These houses were typically built in the classical style, with grand columns and sweeping verandas, and were designed to evoke a sense of sophistication and elegance. The antebellum period was a time of great social and economic change in the United States. In the North, industrialization was on the rise, and many people were moving from rural areas to urban centers in search of work. In the South, however, the economy was largely based on agriculture, and many people lived and worked on plantations. The North and South were also divided politically, with the North being more supportive of abolition and the South being more supportive of slavery. The antebellum period came to an end with the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861. The war had a profound impact on the United States, and it marked the end of the plantation culture and the beginning of a new era in American history. Me, personally, I love the architecture and its beauty of it, but the history really upsets me and makes me sad. One of the first things that will catch your eye when you arrive at the Bragg-Mitchell Mansion is its grand entrance, complete with a sweeping staircase and a double parlor with intricate plasterwork and marble fireplaces. As you wander through the mansion, you’ll be struck by the beautiful chandeliers and antique furnishings that adorn the rooms, giving the entire space a feeling of elegance and sophistication. But the Bragg-Mitchell Mansion isn’t just a pretty face. It’s also home to a grand ballroom, which has played host to countless events over the years, including weddings and parties. If you’re in the market for a unique and beautiful venue for your own special occasion, the Bragg-Mitchell Mansion might just be the perfect fit. In addition to the mansion’s interior, the exterior is equally as stunning. Surrounded by lush gardens and landscaped grounds, the mansion provides a beautiful setting for outdoor events. The gardens, which feature a variety of plants and flowers, including camellias, azaleas, and magnolias, are a true sight to behold. And if you’re a fan of outbuildings, you’ll be pleased to know that the mansion is home to a carriage house and stable, which have been beautifully restored and now serve as event spaces. If you’re in the Mobile area, the Bragg-Mitchell Mansion is a must-see. It’s open to the public for tours, so you can explore the mansion’s beautiful rooms and gardens and learn about its rich history. And if you’re looking for a unique venue for your next special occasion, the mansion is available for rent. Don’t miss out on the opportunity to experience this beautiful and historic gem for yourself.

Digging For Diamonds

One of the only places in the world where the public can search for natural diamonds in their original volcanic source, Crater of Diamonds is a one-of-a-kind experience that brings people from all over the world to Murfreesboro, Arkansas. Visitors to the park search a 37-acre field, the eroded surface of a volcanic crater, for a variety of rocks, minerals, and gemstones – and any rock or mineral you find is yours to keep. You may bring your own mining equipment to search with (no battery-operated or motor-driven mining tools allowed), or rent tools from the park. LET THE SEARCH BEGIN Your diamond search begins here, where you can prepare for your visit by learning about diamonds and how to search for them. There are 3 main ways to search for diamonds. Surface search – Walk around and look for something shiny. Surface Search Dig – Dig the first 2″ of dirt with a hand trowel or spade and sift with a large sifter into a fine sifter. Water Sifting – Wet the fine sifting in the provided stations You can view real, uncut diamonds at the park’s visitor center and interact with exhibits illustrating the area’s unique history and geology. At the Diamond Discovery Center, you can learn more about rocks and minerals found at the park and how to search for diamonds using various techniques. Diamonds come in all colors of the rainbow: the three colors found here at the park are white, brown, and yellow. Amethyst, garnet, jasper, agate, quartz, and other rocks and minerals naturally occur here. Park staff provide positive identification of rocks and minerals found at the park, as well as diamond mining demonstrations and other interpretive programs. The cost for admission into the state park is only $10. Equipment is an additional fee based on the amount of equipment that you want. I went with a basic set which included: a 5-gallon bucket, spade, large sifter, fine sifter. This set was $57 upfront and once returned, I received $45 back. Making the rental actually only $12 for the entire day. Other items that would be helpful to bring would be: Water to drink Old sweatpants/jeans Rubber boots Rubber or waterproof gloves Rubber apron, waders, or coveralls if doing water sifting A collapsable step stool to sit on Knee pads Trekking poles or something to assist in getting up and down Wagon (can be rented at the store as well) Earbuds to listen to music Lunch. Lots of picnic tables around I spent more than 2 hours there and I left extremely dusty from head to toe, sore, and with nothing to show for it except a small piece of turquoise, a couple of neat agate-like rocks….and a dirty butt!!! More than 33,100 diamonds have been found by park visitors since the Crater of Diamonds became an Arkansas state park in 1972. Notable diamonds found at the Crater include the 40.23-carat Uncle Sam, the largest diamond ever unearthed in the U.S.; the 16.37-carat Amarillo Starlight; the 15.33-carat Star of Arkansas; and the 8.52-carat Esperanza. WHERE TO STAY I stayed at Cowhide Cove (old part) which was located about 14 mins from the state park. The cost was $20/night for electricity and water. Paved entry all the way in. All back-in sites but not very level. Bathrooms are located here but no shower house. Right on a peninsula and great lake views. There is a newer section campground which is really pretty hairy to get into. Steep, narrow road with hairpin turns. Showers are located at the newer section. There is a campground at the state park which was super full and was under construction when I visited. So that made traffic more congested. There is also an RV park that is around 5 miles away called Murfesburro RV Park in Murfesburro, AR. The cost was $30 a night.

Where Time Stands Still

Nestled at the base of a hillside sits Hot Lake Lodge in La Grande, OR. Native Americans often used the hot springs themselves for it’s medicinal powers before settlement and colonization occurred in the area; the lake was named “Ea-Kesh-Pa” by the Nez Perce. Later it became a popular stop for weary travelers on the Oregon Trail. The famous 1906 brick hotel, now under renovation, was once called the “Mayo Clinic of the West” and attracted visitors and patients from around the world. Hot Lake’s heyday lasted into the mid-1930s. A devastating fire in 1934 destroyed all wooden structures, but the 1906 brick building survived. History of Hot Lake Lodge In 1864, Fitzgerald Newhard built the first wooden structure of the building, which faced toward the bluff rather than outward toward the lake. The structure was similar to the contents of a modern-day shopping mall, containing a post office, blacksmith, dance hall, barber shop, bath house, and several other businesses. By 1884, the Union Pacific Railroad commenced its construction, running near Hot Lake. In 1903, the original wooden structure was demolished, and construction began on a new hotel and various bathhouses. Dr. Phy became involved with the project in 1904, and the brick structure of the building began to be built two years later. Well-renowned architect John V. Bennes of nearby Baker City has been attributed to the architectural design of the building, reminiscent of the Colonial era; Bennes also designed countless buildings on the Oregon State University campus, as well as several buildings in Portland, Oregon. By 1908, the brick building was complete, housing just over 100 guest rooms. Soon after, the Central Railroad of Oregon built a 4-mile (6.4 km) line from Richmond directly to the hotel in 1912. In 1917, Dr. Phy purchased the hotel and resort, renaming it “Hot Lake Sanitorium”, housing guest rooms, medical wards, offices, and a kitchen/dance hall. The building was from then on known not only as a resort for the rich, but also as a hospital for the ill; the geothermal mineral waters from the springs were used and experimented with to help treat patients and guests, making the resort a pioneering figure in western experimental medicine. By 1924, the hotel was a major tourist attraction; countless new visitors arrived daily from all over the world. The Mayo brothers, founders of the Mayo Clinic, were frequent visitors to the hotel, as well as Wild Bill Hickok. Dr. Phy, the central manager and owner of the property, died in 1931 of pneumonia. On May 7, 1934, a fire destroyed the majority of the building’s right side, completely demolishing the wooden structures of the hotel; the 65,000-square-foot (6,000 m2) brick portion of the building, however, survived. The building had contained nearly 300 rooms and dining areas for over 1,000 guests prior to the fire. From then on, business at the hotel declined, and eventually, the hospital area on the third floor was the only functioning business. A flight school and nurse’s training center were established at the hotel during World War II, and U.S. Route 30 was later built, with Oregon Route 203 branching off of it and running right by the front of the hotel grounds. The attraction of the complex declined in later years, and its use as a resort came to a halt in 1953 when it was converted solely to a nursing home by Dr. Roth. By 1975, ownership of the building had changed, and a short-lived restaurant and nightclub was opened, which only ran for two years. In the mid-1980s, Dr. Lyle Griffith purchased the property and used one corner of the hotel as a bathhouse; by 1991, the bathhouse closed down, and the hotel was abandoned, falling prey to local vandals and the elements. Today In 2003, the building, which was literally falling apart, was purchased from Charles and Louise Rhea by David Manuel. Restoration began soon after; the building was greatly dilapidated, with all 368 windows broken and/or missing, and a sparsely-remaining roof. After two years of construction, it was opened to the public for tours in 2005, while individual guest rooms were still being sponsored and renovated. In 2008, the west wing of the building collapsed. In 2010, the building functioned as a bed and breakfast, with dozens of restored rooms, a spa, a restaurant, a bronze foundry, and a museum. By 2019 the harsh Eastern Oregon elements had begun to undo years of hard work by the Manuel family. The owners of Grande Hot Springs RV Resort next door to Hot Lake Springs purchased the Hot Lake property in 2020. Restoration is underway and will include many historic preservation projects, including the Grand Entry Porch, Veranda, Balustrade, and Historic Spring House. Current amenities include an updated hot springs soaking area, updated rooms, and beer, wine, and cider sales on-site.  My Experience I have been fortunate to work next door at the RV park and also join the other staff in the theater and ballroom for staff events. I have been known to frequent the pub on some occasions as well. But I never got to soak there in the hot tubs overlooking the lake, nor got to go up onto the third floor where the old medical equipment is stored until recently. And let me tell you that was an experience! The hotel has an ancient Otis elevator that is no longer in service but the inner workings and the gated car is on display for all to see. With no elevator on site, you have to take the grand staircase up to the third floor which was hot and musty. Old ornamental radiators line the hallways and grace each room. Pretty sure some of them were on because it was HOT in there! The rooms proudly displayed how the days of old might have looked when the upper floors were a medical facility used for nursing staff and patients. An x-ray room with the oldest x-ray machine in existence (that’s what the sign said) was in …

A Stroll Through Time

Upon driving home one day I decided to go through a tiny town that is known for a one-of-a-kind steakhouse. Haines, OR boasting a population of 710, sits quietly on the back roads of eastern Oregon. A railroad town like all the rest in the area. But this one had a few surprises. Driving through, I saw a park bordering railroad tracks and parked and took a stroll through time. Cabins that had been moved there and preserved along with the history of each place scattered this beautifully manicured park and meandering walkways. Mail stations to barns to residential homes graced the walkway and told their tales of old. These buildings were in great condition for their age and the size of them was pretty impressive as well. Back in the “good ol’ days”, one could not find the materials to build big, but some of these structures were pretty large. The country store across the street was a one-stop shop for clothing to ice cream, so naturally, I had to sample the selection! Next on my list will be the steakhouse, which was unfortunately closed when I rolled through. It’s small surprises such as these that make those “wrong turns” so worth it!

The Prince’s Cabin?

Welcome Gypsy Souls! Let us travel back in time, to the days of early settlements, homesteads, and a race for religion and for the races. I visited the site of The Prince’s Cabin in Southeastern Washington on one of my trips. The Prince’s cabin is thought to be the oldest standing cabin in the state of Washington. It originally stood at a Cayuse wintering place just upstream of Marcus and Narcissa Whitman’s Presbyterian mission, two miles east of the Frenchtown Historic Site. Narcissa Whitman refers to its presence in a letter from January 1844, telling of the recent move by an immigrant family from the crowded mission building to “the Prince’s house up the river.” After the killing of the Whitmans in 1847, and during the ensuing war of 1855, the village site and the cabin were likely abandoned. In 1855, the Cayuse, Walla Walla, and Umatilla Indian Tribes signed a treaty ceding more than 6.4 million acres of what is now northeastern Oregon and southeastern Washington to the United States, including the Frenchtown area. Although the treaty was ratified by Congress in 1859, the last Cayuse were not forced off the land in this area until early 1861, when white settlers demanded their removal, threatening to hang hostages if they stayed. In the same year, Albert and Elizabeth Blanchard laid claim to the property where the cabin still stood. The Homestead Act of 1862 officially opened the land up for settlement, and the Blanchards filed their land patent in Vancouver, Washington in 1866. The land and cabin were acquired by the Smith family around 1888. While oral history indicates the cabin was moved from its original location “across water,” the first Government Land Office survey of the area in early 1860 notes a house on the precise spot where the cabin was located when Kriss and Robin Peterson purchased the property in 1990. It was Robin Peterson who recognized the cabin as a fur trade relic and began the process of researching its origins and construction. In 2013, his widow Kriss Peterson donated the cabin to the Frenchtown Historical Foundation, to be moved, restored, and interpreted at the historic site. The Cayuse name of the Prince was not recorded. “Prince” was often used in fur trade culture to refer to a headman or trading partner’s younger brother or son. The Prince was a younger brother of Hiyumtipin, headman at Pašx̣ápa (pronounced Pash-KA-pah), the Cayuse village just east of the Whitman Mission. It was Hiyumtipin who discovered the drowned body of young Alice Clarissa Whitman in the Walla Walla River in 1839. Hiyumtipin and the Prince were from the same extended family as Wilewmutkin (Old Joseph) and Wilewmutnin (Twisted Hair, who was Lewis and Clark’s Nez Perces Guide), as well as Young Chief (Tauitau), Looking Glass, Homlie, and others, all leaders in a regional indigenous political alliance. Around 1834, Looking Glass of the Nez Perces, Young Chief of the Cayuse, and the Prince became involved in a dispute with Pierre Chrysologue Pambrun of the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) over prices for furs and horses. They allegedly seized Pambrun and interpreter Jean Toupin, threw blankets over them and beat them severely. In response to this incident, the HBC cut off trade with those involved, blacklisting all three leaders and their families. When the three men returned to the HBC to seek reconciliation, Pambrun used “gift diplomacy” to resolve the conflict. Gift diplomacy was the common practice of offering gifts (typically European-style homes) in exchange for goods, horses, or promises of good behavior. It is documented that Pambrun built a cabin for Young Chief in or before 1840. In fact, and in part because of the Prince’s involvement in this conflict, we believe Pambrun built at least two cabins: one for Young Chief on the Umatilla River, and one for the Prince at Pášx̣apa. It is not known if Looking Glass received a cabin. Although there is no official record linking the Prince’s cabin to Pambrun, his connection to its construction is apparent through these and other pieces of evidence. The 1844 letter by Narcissa Whitman referencing “the Prince’s house up the river,” attests to the location and ownership of the Prince’s cabin. In addition, as discussed later, the cabin itself exhibits structural characteristics typical of the 1830s, and a level of construction skill specific to French-Canadian artisans of the time. The Prince’s notoriety as a Cayuse leader waned in the years following the attack. During a council with Indian Agent Elijah White in 1843, the Prince is reported to have said: “Perhaps you will say it is out of place for me to speak, because I am not a great chief. Once I had influence, but now I have but little…yet, I am from honorable stock. Promises which have been made to me and my fathers have not been fulfilled…But it will not answer for me to speak, for my people do not consider me their chief.” Unfortunately, the Prince did not long enjoy the shelter of his cabin – he was slain by members of another tribe in about 1845, while en route to the buffalo country. At the same site where The Prince’s Cabin now rests, was a burial marker and memorial garden for many pioneers and natives that had been in that area. The dates go as far back to the 1870’s.