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Wednesday, October 26, 2022

Charges dismissed for county commissioner

At the beginning of district court in Roby this morning, the state moved to dismiss felony charges against Fisher County Commissioner Preston Martin.

Also in court today, Brandon Baldiva and Anthony Hernandez were offered a plea deal, dropping felony assault and disarmament of Officer Josh Benitez to a Class A Misdemeanor. Both accepted the plea and were sentenced to jail time plus fines, minus time served.

Other cases were deferred.

A pretrial hearing for Shawn Adkins, indicted for the murder of Hailey Dunn, will be held at the Nolan County Courthouse, Nov. 9.

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Texas unofficial voting turnout

For those who are interested in the play-by-play of the Texas November 8, 2022 General Election, the Texas Secretary of State website has a myriad of information, right down to the names of voters.

On the site link provided above, go to Unofficial Early Voting Turnout By Date>Date>Submit to get a breakdown of unofficial early voting reports from each county. One more click to the right, on Voter Details Report, will show who has voted so far.

Fisher County reports 2,680 registered voters.

Saturday, October 22, 2022

Historical newspapers available online

- Downtown Rotan -

Newspapers are available online from Texas Tech University and the University of Texas.

UT's Portal to Texas History and Texas Tech's Southwest Collection both allow searches by keyword. 

The Portal will highlight the word being searched within the document. 

The Southwest Collection has contiguous capability, allowing the user to scroll through an entire newspaper.

The Texas Tech collection has Rotan/Roby newspapers.

Texas newspapers in the archives date back to the mid-1800's.

Sunday, October 2, 2022

Hazel Woods place

- Alamo Street -
I was doing some research on Sweetwater when I came across a 1932 article about a drowning at Lake Trammell. People familiar with Sweetwater know there is a long history of drownings at that lake.

The article seemed innocent enough, an accidental drowning when a family fishing trip went awry, but subsequent articles told a different story: a man accused and arrested for murdering his wife practically in front of their children. He wanted to cash in on several life insurance policies, and to make a future with a prostitute from Oklahoma.

Court documents from the case mentioned that the prostitute was staying at Hazel Woods place before the accused man put her up at a nice hotel.

I thought "Hazel Woods? Who is Hazel Woods?"

I went searching, searching for Hazel Woods, and, finally, found a 1937 death notice for her. She was otherwise known as Clara Bowman.

I wondered why a woman at that time would have an alias. I guess if you were a lady running a "bawdy house", you might not want to use your real name.

After reading many newspaper, book and court articles, I ascertained that Hazel Woods place was in the vicinity of 605 Alamo Street in Sweetwater. Somewhere between 1901 and 1913, Clara bought the property from Kate Morse, a madam who had arrived in Sweetwater from Stephenville in 1901.

After Hazel Woods aka Clara B Webb Bowman died in 1937, there were newspaper ads offering rooms for rent at the property, known as the Alamo Hotel. 

References: Portal to Texas History, Caselaw Access Project, Casetext, Sins of the Pioneers, Polk City Directory: Original drowning article; Parks arrest; Parks v State, Hazel Woods place mentioned; Bowman v State, Clara admits to a lot, as well as buying the house from Morse; Kate Morse in Stephenville