resurrect this thread, fossil!
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If this story did not have an interesting West Texas connection I probably would not be passing it along, since the majority of you have never heard of the walkway and the buildings that are involved in this bit of Texas A&M history. But for us in the dwindling bunch of old timers it does trigger a few memories of earlier times on campus.
Three weeks ago, August 5, 2006, was the deadline for Architectural/Engineering responses to a request for proposals from TAMU to RESTORE MILITARY WALK ... to some semblance of its former self.
The majority of you will reply "What and where was Military Walk?" And the remainder of you will be aware of the old location of the Walk but never had occasion to traverse it in an organized manner.
As a clue, this picture gives a glimpse of a remnant of Military Walk as it appears today. To see it, stand on the steps at the main entrance to Sbisa and look toward the Rudder Theater.
In earlier times, when Dr. Giesecke designed Sbisa Dining Hall, his center main portal opened on to the north end of Military Walk and it faced the building that would be the southern terminus of the Walk, which would be Guion Hall that was built in 1918. Guion Hall was majestically designed as a Chapel and Auditorium for the Cadet Corps. The Walk was wide enough for a 16-man front formation (approximately 40 feet), and connected the two primary interests of students (eating and entertainment), and was lined on either side by dormitories, academic and administrative buildings (most of which are long gone.) Military Walk in those early days was the center of Corps and academic life.
(Edit): Modifications to the original Military Walk began in the early 50s when the Walk was narrowed to provide more setback distance for new buildings facing Houston Street, i.e., Coke Bldg and Beutel Health Center. The narrowing reduced the width to about 15 feet and oak trees were planted along side per the photo above. In the 70s the south end of the Walk was torn out for a pedestrian plaza.
So back to the big question, how and why does one Restore Military Walk? .... when the military who had occasion to use it were displaced long ago, when the persons who might use it now know nothing of its significance, and mainly when its main terminus, Guion Hall, was demolished 35 years ago? (Can you un-ring a bell?) Oh well, the plan is to put MONUMENTS up as stand-ins for the old building that are no longer among us: Assembly Hall (1889-1929); Foster Hall (1899-1951); Ross Hall (1891-1955); Gathright Hall (1876-1933); Mitchell Hall (1912-1972); and Guion Hall (1918-1971.)
And they demolished beautiful Guion Hall in 1971 to make way for the Rudder Theater building ... what a travesty. Dr. Caroline Adair, Registrar in the 1960s and 1970s, told me in 1976 how the old-time faculty and staff watched and cried as the wrecking ball slammed into the sides of the old building and the structure resisted its best shots for two days before finally beginning to crumble. The last to fall were the six Greek columns. And that was the end of Military Walk.
Guion Hall was completed in 1918. I could not verify that the building was designed by Dr. Giesecke or that he supervised construction, but it was during his period and it had all the marks of a Giesecke building.
Guion Hall was constructed of poured concrete, granite and marble. The auditorium seated 2,000 and had a wrap-around balcony. The interior was formal with chandeliers and had Greek columns on either side of the stage. Sure the college had outgrown it for college-wide events but it had many uses similar to what the Rudder Theater hosts today.
For some reason, back in the early days our name for Guion Hall was "Gunion Hall." It was used in the 50s for formal events as well as concerts, stage shows, Aggie Players, etc. When not otherwise in use, it was the campus theater. Without doubt the antics and hi-jinx of the Corps audience was much more comical than whatever was on the screen and in itself well worth the 25 cents admission.
But back to the West Texas connection ... Guion Hall was named for Judge J. I. Guion of Ballinger. Judge Guion was a member of the Board of Regents at Texas A&M 1910-1918. This was the Board that was responsible for the grand and historic building construction on the early day campus. Judge Guion's father had been a Governor of Mississippi before the Civil War and because of exigencies of the times chose to move his family to Runnels County to resume life as a planter. No doubt Judge Guion's background figured significantly in his guidance of Texas A&M in those early times.
Of additional note, Judge Guion had a son, David W. Guion (1892-1981), a Ballinger boy who achieved world-wide fame as a musician and composer. After the best schooling in Europe, David Guion returned to his West Texas roots and concentrated his talents to tell the western story in music to a national audience.http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/research/fa/guion.html
So, anyway, you can look forward in a few years for a new and revised version of Military Walk ... and you can take your family along the Walk and point out (as I did with my family in 1976) where certain buildings "Used To Be." My guided tour was not too well received in 1976 ... and I doubt if your family will be any more receptive when the Military Walk restoration work is completed.
Women and girls wore Bonnets (Sun Bonnets or Poke Bonnets) any time when working outside along with long sleeve shirts and long pants (females did not allow sun to touch skin.) Everyone hated new shoes ... they were made of stiff leather and took drastic action to break in (such as filling with water or rubbing alcohol and wearing until they dried in the shape and width of the foot.) For work boots or cowboy boots the method sometime used to stretch the foot part was to fill it with dry red beans and water and to let the sprouting beans swell and stretch the leather. 






