Difference between revisions of "Bruce, Lloyd E 1981-01-15"

From SWC Oral History Collection
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 110: Line 110:
 
{{UsageStatement}}
 
{{UsageStatement}}
  
[[Category: Needs Review ]]
+
[[Category: Needs Review ]] [[Category: SWC Interviews]] [[Category: 1980s]] [[Category: Boomtowns]] [[Category: Ranger, Texas]] [[Category: Ku Klux Klan]] [[Category: Trucking]]

Latest revision as of 22:05, 17 June 2019

Lloyd E. Bruce discusses his life in Ranger, Texas, during the oil boom days and the history of that area.

General Interview Information

Interviewee Name: Lloyd E. Bruce

Additional Parties Recorded:

Date: January 15, 1981

Location: Eastland, Texas

Interviewer: Richard Mason

Length: 1 hour, 35 minutes


Abstract

Tape 1, Side 1: Born (January 28, 1898), Phillip J. Bruce, father, Jannie Atherton, mother, Family history, Ranger, Texas, Name origin, Hagerman family, Water supply, Crops, Cotton, Gins, Oil discovery, Unions, Featherbedding, Transportation, Drought, Walter Prescott Webb, Ranger, Texas, Businesses (pre-oil boom), Ranger Mercantile, John and Charlie Goldstein, Texas Pacific Oil Company, Frank Champian, driller, Hotels, Depot, Nanny Walker

Tape 1, Side 2: Ranger, Texas, Nanny Walker, J. H. McClesky, Wells, Drilling, Grocery business, Trucking, Swampers, Streets, Mud, Population (1919), Shorty Woods, Crime, Ku Klux Klan, Prices, Insurance business, Peanuts, Meat packing, Ranger Furniture Exchange, Fire, Second Baptist Church, Former Texas Pacific office, Oil camps

Tape 2, Side 1: Jake Hamon, Lonnie Flewellen, city judge, McClesky well, Anecdotes, Desdemona, Texas, Name origin, Car theft, Ranger, Texas, Railroads, Schools, Societal changes

Tape 2, Side 2: Anecdotes, Religion

Range Dates: 1898-1981

Bulk Dates: 1898-1981


Access Information

Original Recording Format:

Recording Format Notes:

Transcript:



Thank you for your interest in this oral history interview. Our oral history collection is available to patrons in the Southwest Collection's Reading Room, located on the campus of Texas Tech University. For reading room hours, visit our website. Please contact Reference Staff at least one week prior to your visit to ensure the oral history you are interested in will be available. Due to copyright issues, duplications of our oral histories can only be made for family members. If an oral history transcript has been made available online, the link will be provided on this page. More information on accessing our oral histories is located here. Preferred citation style can be found here.