Difference between revisions of "Sanders, Liff 1958"

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Right here will be a general overview of the oral history interview. It will be roughly 3-5 sentences for new interviews, shorter for older interviews.  
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Liff Sanders, retired circuit rider and founder of the First Church of Christ in Lubbock, discusses the early history of Lubbock and the role the churches played in it.  
  
 
==General Interview Information==
 
==General Interview Information==
  
'''Interviewee Name:'''
+
'''Interviewee Name:''' Liff Sanders
  
'''Additional Parties Recorded:'''
+
'''Additional Parties Recorded:''' None
  
'''Date:'''  
+
'''Date:''' June 20 and July 5, 1958
  
'''Location:'''
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'''Location:''' Lubbock, Texas
  
'''Interviewer:'''
+
'''Interviewer:''' Jean A. Paul
  
'''Length:'''
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'''Length:''' 5 hours
  
  
 
==Abstract==
 
==Abstract==
  
'''Tape 1, Side 1:'''
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'''Tape 1, Side 1:''' Recollections of the open range,
 +
Cattle costs and prices,
 +
Panic of 1883,
 +
Cattle drives,
 +
Early preaching career,
 +
Revival meetings,
 +
Brush arbors,
 +
Church met in courthouse.
 +
<br>
 +
 
 +
'''Tape 1, Side 2:''' Lubbock Leader, early newspaper,
 +
[dropped microphone here],
 +
Building the first church,
 +
Railroad (1909),
 +
Ice plant venture and failure.
 +
<br>
 +
 
 +
'''Tape 2, Side 1:''' Butchering livestock,
 +
Lubbock’s growth,
 +
Wolf hunts,
 +
Church construction,
 +
Early ranches in Lubbock County.
 +
<br>
 +
 
 +
'''Tape 2, Side 2:''' Town section,
 +
Problem of small-town lots,
 +
Blacksmith shop,
 +
Early baptisms,
 +
Fish kept in baptismal tank,
 +
Weddings,
 +
Funerals,
 +
First undertaker.
 +
<br>
 +
 
 +
'''Tape 3, Side 1:''' Typhoid epidemic of 1909,
 +
Early doctors,
 +
Methodist circuit riders,
 +
Church services in courthouse,
 +
Early school houses and teachers,
 +
Acquiring bell for the new church,
 +
Problems of keeping time in Lubbock,
 +
Residential district in early Lubbock (1900).
 +
<br>
 +
 
 +
'''Tape 3, Side 2:''' Renaming of streets in Lubbock (1920s),
 +
Freighting goods from Canyon City,
 +
Burros used by local freight company,
 +
Early stage hacks and stage service,
 +
Liquor delivery by mail hack,
 +
Opportunities in Lubbock before railroad’s entry in 1909,
 +
Land settlement on eight and four section settlers’ acts.
 +
<br>
  
 +
'''Tape 4, Side 1:''' Land rush on Lynn County school land,
 +
First proposed railroad route through Lubbock,
 +
Building of first railroad and its boosters,
 +
Prairie fires,
 +
Mirages and illusions on the Plains,
 +
Phelps White and first automobile in Lubbock.
 
<br>
 
<br>
  
'''Tape 1, Side 2:'''
+
'''Tape 4, Side 2:''' First ice plant in Lubbock and financial losses of investors,
 +
Mention of Jug Reynolds’ part in Ice Company,
 +
Building the ice plant and promotion scheme,
 +
Sale of personal land lots by Rev. Sanders,
 +
Church of Christ moved in one piece to new location,
 +
Description of J. D. Caldwell’s store,
 +
Experience of being lost one night out on the Plains.
 +
<br>
 +
 
 +
'''Tape 5, Side 1:''' Van Sanders and Nicolett Hotel,
 +
Establishment of the technological college on the Plains and the celebration that followed the announcement that Lubbock had won the college (1923).
 +
<br>
 +
 
 +
'''Tape 5, Side 2:''' Experience with severe winters on the South Plains,
 +
Burning corn and maize for fuel during cold weather,
 +
Wagon loads of cow chips sold for $3.00 a load,
 +
Rabbits sold by the car load during severe weather,
 +
Severe sandstorms,
 +
Cyclones,
 +
Mr. Merrill’s dugout,
 +
Mr. Merrill’s watering trough and apple orchard,
 +
The Merrill Hotel,
 +
Concrete blocks used in construction of Lubbock Mercantile,
 +
Fires in Lubbock and their causes,
 +
Activity of volunteer fire department,
 +
Description of early Lubbock business district (1900),
 +
Mention of the Lubbock Leader.
 +
<br>
 +
 
 +
'''Tape 6, Side 1:''' Bob Penney’s barber shop,
 +
Jug Reynolds,
 +
"Poker Tom" Collins,
 +
Will Taylor shoots Poker Tom and Jug Reynolds and is tried and acquitted for self defense,
 +
Sheriff Roberts kills man named Haynes in Penney’s barber shop,
 +
Railroad laborers and mules killed by freak lightning.
 +
<br>
  
 +
'''Tape 6, Side 2:''' Blank
 
<br>
 
<br>
  
'''Range Dates:'''
+
'''Range Dates:''' 1883-1923
  
'''Bulk Dates:'''
+
'''Bulk Dates:''' 1900-1923
  
  

Revision as of 20:13, 24 August 2015

Liff Sanders, retired circuit rider and founder of the First Church of Christ in Lubbock, discusses the early history of Lubbock and the role the churches played in it.

General Interview Information

Interviewee Name: Liff Sanders

Additional Parties Recorded: None

Date: June 20 and July 5, 1958

Location: Lubbock, Texas

Interviewer: Jean A. Paul

Length: 5 hours


Abstract

Tape 1, Side 1: Recollections of the open range, Cattle costs and prices, Panic of 1883, Cattle drives, Early preaching career, Revival meetings, Brush arbors, Church met in courthouse.

Tape 1, Side 2: Lubbock Leader, early newspaper, [dropped microphone here], Building the first church, Railroad (1909), Ice plant venture and failure.

Tape 2, Side 1: Butchering livestock, Lubbock’s growth, Wolf hunts, Church construction, Early ranches in Lubbock County.

Tape 2, Side 2: Town section, Problem of small-town lots, Blacksmith shop, Early baptisms, Fish kept in baptismal tank, Weddings, Funerals, First undertaker.

Tape 3, Side 1: Typhoid epidemic of 1909, Early doctors, Methodist circuit riders, Church services in courthouse, Early school houses and teachers, Acquiring bell for the new church, Problems of keeping time in Lubbock, Residential district in early Lubbock (1900).

Tape 3, Side 2: Renaming of streets in Lubbock (1920s), Freighting goods from Canyon City, Burros used by local freight company, Early stage hacks and stage service, Liquor delivery by mail hack, Opportunities in Lubbock before railroad’s entry in 1909, Land settlement on eight and four section settlers’ acts.

Tape 4, Side 1: Land rush on Lynn County school land, First proposed railroad route through Lubbock, Building of first railroad and its boosters, Prairie fires, Mirages and illusions on the Plains, Phelps White and first automobile in Lubbock.

Tape 4, Side 2: First ice plant in Lubbock and financial losses of investors, Mention of Jug Reynolds’ part in Ice Company, Building the ice plant and promotion scheme, Sale of personal land lots by Rev. Sanders, Church of Christ moved in one piece to new location, Description of J. D. Caldwell’s store, Experience of being lost one night out on the Plains.

Tape 5, Side 1: Van Sanders and Nicolett Hotel, Establishment of the technological college on the Plains and the celebration that followed the announcement that Lubbock had won the college (1923).

Tape 5, Side 2: Experience with severe winters on the South Plains, Burning corn and maize for fuel during cold weather, Wagon loads of cow chips sold for $3.00 a load, Rabbits sold by the car load during severe weather, Severe sandstorms, Cyclones, Mr. Merrill’s dugout, Mr. Merrill’s watering trough and apple orchard, The Merrill Hotel, Concrete blocks used in construction of Lubbock Mercantile, Fires in Lubbock and their causes, Activity of volunteer fire department, Description of early Lubbock business district (1900), Mention of the Lubbock Leader.

Tape 6, Side 1: Bob Penney’s barber shop, Jug Reynolds, "Poker Tom" Collins, Will Taylor shoots Poker Tom and Jug Reynolds and is tried and acquitted for self defense, Sheriff Roberts kills man named Haynes in Penney’s barber shop, Railroad laborers and mules killed by freak lightning.

Tape 6, Side 2: Blank

Range Dates: 1883-1923

Bulk Dates: 1900-1923


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.