In close proximity to most old college campuses is (or was) a small
business strip known as "The Drag," so-called, as nearly as I can
determine, because of its similarity to what one dictionary defines
as the main street of a small American town. Built in the days before
campus student unions and university stores, the Drag provided not
only drug and dry goods to the campus and the neighboring communities,
but more importantly, places for friends to meet and to generally
"hang out."
Situated at the south edge of the campus, TCU's Drag occupies
half of the east side of the 3000 block of South University Drive.
(I see that I still use present tense, although my guess is that
the Drag is moving inexorably into the past.) Most who attended
TCU and went on to spend their lives elsewhere remember that particular
block in no more than four- or five-year spans, those being the
years that they spent as undergraduates. Today, as I walk along
what remains of TCU's Drag, I feel the air heavy with association
that reaches back beyond fifty years. Almost palpable, it is still
so full of all that has passed from it.
Once this summer, I sat on the east side of the Bailey Building,
which stands on the west campus across University Drive from the
Drag, and tried to remember just where everything was when I first
knew it, my mind painting a sort of historical mural, with what
is present in the foreground and forms of images past filling in
the background. Far back and faint in that background is a short
row of shops that run a quarter way down the block. On the northernmost
corner stands the TCU Drug Store, and next to it is Rilda Smith's
Portrait Studio, and then Mr. Sampley's TCU Cleaners.
Recall becomes jumbled here. I think I know the names of the other
shops, but placement eludes my memory's brush. An old annual picture
taken in the forties helps to sketch in the alignment: the TCU Beauty
Shop next to the cleaners, then the TCU Shoe Shop, the TCU Barber
Shop, Blackburn's Five and Dime, and last in the row, TCU Plumbing.
This was a time when shop doors stood open in the hot Texas summer,
and overhead fans moved the unconditioned air about, and flyswatters
stood at the ready. Some, as did the TCU Drug Store, had screen
doors, and Blackburn's had friendly bells that jangled when the
door opened so as to alert proprietors to the presence of customers.
In cold weather, heaters that hung far back and from the ceiling
provided warmth. In the here and now, all doors are closed against
whatever weather and only occasionally does one encounter a flying
critter inside.
The people who tended the shops in that long ago and whose faces
are just visible in the distant scene were, for the most part, friendly.
I recall especially the TCU Barber Shop's Dudley Peacock, who performed
his tonsorial artistry on the menfolk and who, one day when I was
twelve, pulled my long, thin red hair back, worked it into a single
braid, cut it for the first time in my memory, and handed the severed
bunch to my mother for safekeeping or keepsaking or, as it turned
out, for both. His jovial banter kept the experience -- my rite
of passage -- from being a painful one for the still-shy pre-teen
who sat so silently while he cut.
As I sat across from the drag on that summer day in 1990, scenes
appeared that reached farther back and were fainter still, back
beyond my own memory. Flickers flashed from another's past giving
a momentary glimpse inside the Drug where an old Victrola plays
and a young highschool girl named Elizabeth dances the Charleston
with a young college boy named Arthur while another young college
boy, Willis, looks on and decides then and there he will have that
girl to wed, and did. Dancing was forbidden on the campus, but Mr.
Rogers at the Drug liked the kids and allowed it, sometimes. And
as I sat, I thought I could hear the streetcar clacking down the
University Drive tracks toward the Drag which was the end-of-the-line
from town, the trolley loaded with student celebrants returning
from the Central Christian Church downtown where a TCU basketball
team had triumphed. Legend has it that the students would rock the
car so hard that the conductor had to stop several times along the
way out to the campus to allow it to settle and to keep its wheels
from jumping the track.
Sometime in the forties, the original line of Drag shops was extended
south almost to the corner of Berry St. This was when the TCU Theatre
was built, the popular Spudnut Shop was opened, Dave Bloxom's Pool
Hall teemed with players and kibitzers, and Mary Evelyn's and the
University Men's Shop became classy places to buy classy clothes.
For those of us who went to TCU in those days and in the early
fifties, the Drag included the Colonial Cafeteria across University
to the west, then turned east on Berry and continued down a couple
of blocks past the Zip, the Hi-Hat Lounge, the Rathskeller, Owen's
Drug Store, El Chico's Mexican Restaurant, Carshon's Delicatessen,
and Schotta's Cafe and Cake Shop. Most of these places are gone
altogether now and some are in new places away from the Drag toward
better accomodations with more traffic. The buildings that housed
Dave's place, the Spudnut Shop, and Mary Evelyn's were torn down
to be replaced by the ultimate replacer, a parking lot.
The Drag is not so popular and, thus, not so populated as it once
was. Convenience of goods and eats in the Student Center and the
mobility of today's students have contributed to the decline of
business there. A car, now, is part and parcel of going off to college
and there are few who do not have ready conveyance to the local
malls and strip shopping centers that offer "more and better."
What fills the present is short to tell. The old Drug building
is being remodeled (for yet another time) from a night spot called
the Klymaxxx! into the ready-to-wear Sweat Shop. The TCU Cleaners
doggedly holds its old place between the newcomer modelling agency
and Jon's Grille, next to which are the Greek House restaurant,
Flash photo shop, and some vacant places with "For Lease" signs
in the windows. Of all these I like Jon's Grille the best. Its interior
spans what was the beauty shop, the shoe shop, and Dud's barber
shop; its ceiling tiles, windows, and floors, still speak of the
past -- and the folk are friendly.
The saddest aspect of all that remain is that of the TCU Theatre,
a silent ghost, silently waiting for its time to end, doors shut
and boarded up, as if to lock inside the memories of Saturday matinees
when neighborhood kids filled front row seats and followed the latest
episode of western serials and watched the cartoon antics of Popeye,
Roadrunner, and Daffy Duck; as if to hide away the secrets of Saturday
nights when young couples sought out its most remote balcony seats;
as if to block the view of a patriotic public who cheered the Allied
victors and hissed the Axis villains as they watched the world at
war brought to horrible life in those pre-TV days of the RKO newsreels.
On that summer day in 1990 as I sat sketching this mural, the
past seemed closer than the present. And as I watched, I got the
notion that the buildings were watching too, looking back at me,
marking my aging as I am marking theirs, as if we are both gnomons,
measuring the shadows that we cast on the mural, recording our time
on this TCU hill.
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