In every Horned Frog annual from at least the mid-1940s to 1971,
in the back where local companies indicated their support for the
university by buying ads, there is a full or half-page spread from
the Fort Worth Transit Company. The page usually shows TCU students
boarding a bus at the corner of University and Cantey, where stands
the University Christian Church, or the corner of Bowie and University,
where stood the old TCU Drugstore.
Back in those days, few students had a car, and the bus was our
means of getting around to places removed from the immediate campus.
Called the "T" now, the Transit Company ran the city buses then.
Having no malls or any close theatres, TCU students regularly took
the bus to the main shopping district in downtown Fort Worth and
to the movie theatres on 7th Street -- the Hollywood and Worth --
and farther east, to the --Palace-- and --Majestic.
The TCU Theatre, built in 1946, was the first movie house in the
southwest sector of Fort Worth,but it didn't get the first-run shows
that the downtown places did. It was considered a pretty special
date if your boyfriend took you to town via bus, treated you to
dinner at Anders Cafe, then walked the block-and-a-half to the --Hollywood--
to see the latest film starring Dana Andrews, Spencer Tracy, Burt
Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, or Cornel Wilde, along with the beauteous
stars, Joan Crawford, Katherine Hepburn, Rita Hayworth, Elizabeth
Taylor, or Deborah Kerr.
I was certainly no stranger to the TCU bus route, even before
I entered the freshman class of 1952. Growing up on the TCU hill
in a faculty family that had known the Depression, the deprivations
of World War II, and financial crises at the university, we had
the extravagance of one Chevy that was used sparingly. The Hewatt
girls walked to Alice Carlson Elementary School and McLean Junior
High School (where Paschal is now), and rode the bus to and from
Paschal High School (where Trimble Tech is now). The Hewatt girls
rode the bus to their "lessons" -- ballet at Frances Burgess' Dance
Studio downtown, to their Aunt Tare's "expression lessons" on South
Lake Street near what is now the hospital district, and to piano
lessons on Mistletoe Ave., about a mile or so south of the TCU hill
in Mistletoe Heights. The Hewatt girls regularly rode the bus with
their mother on shopping trips to Leonard Bros., Stripling's, Monnig's,
Penney's, and to Meacham's and Wally Williams' in the heart of downtown.
Being given to visiting the scenes of my childhood and youth with
fond recollection, I had thought recently to take a nostalgic trip
on a city bus from TCU to town and back, and one day last June I
found my opportunity.
I boarded at the stop in front of the TCU library with a mix of
emotions -- anticipation and trepidation among them. I hadn't ridden
a Fort Worth bus in years, perhaps thirty-five or more, and didn't
know the fare, or the procedure to pay, or the general decorum of
bus riding anymore.
I also had a certain confidence, for I had known the old bus route
as well as the backyard of my home on Rogers Road. It ran north
on University from the Bluebonnet Circle turnaround to Park Hill
Drive, where it made a turn toward the east and on to Forest Park
Blvd. From thence, north all the way to Mistletoe Blvd., where I
disembarked for the 2-block walk to my piano lesson on Mistletoe
Drive. (Lest you become confused, or think I am, there are three
Mistletoes, the third one a Street. Each connects with the other.)
East again then on Mistletoe Blvd. to Eighth Ave.; north on Eighth
to Pennsylvania; a short jog east on Pennsylvania to the Scott Mansion
(now Thistle Hill), then north on Summit past the good smells of
Mrs. Baird's Bakery (removed several years ago to the far south
of Fort Worth), then east on Texas Street to Henderson. North on
Henderson to W. Seventh, where we turned onto the downtown streets.
I guess I didn't pay much attention once we entered that area; the
sure and certain memory gets fuzzy here.
To add credence to my memory route, I tried finding archival evidence,
to no avail. But surely, I reasoned, the neighborhoods we used to
go through as we wound toward town were much the same, so today's
way would not have been altered too much. Guessing the fare was
less than $1.00 (was it 10 cents in the long ago?), I handed my
dollar bill to the driver. He indicated that I was to deposit it
in the elevated "box" to his right. That much was familiar. However,
there was obviously not to be any change. There was no move on the
driver's part, nor was there the old metal change dispenser hanging
on the box, as of yore. I assumed, then, the fare to be $1.00, and
found out only later that it is 80 cents, and one should have correct
change.
Taking a seat in the first forward-facing twosome, I subtly looked
around. There were two other passengers, both looking like they
knew what they were doing and where they were going. A sign by the
door told me that "L. Tribble" was my driver. I looked up to see
the advertising that had always been in slots above the windows.
No advertising. Air conditioning ducts had taken their place. That
modern miracle (as I write, it is the 20th day of over 100-degree
temperatures) we did without, in the ago. On days such as this,
we lowered the window to let in at least a hot wind. Now, with conditioned
air, windows that open are obsolete. Straps to hold on to if you
have to stand up while riding may be obsolete, too; there were none
on this bus. Mr. L. Tribble pulled our bus away from the curb, and
off we headed north on University past Cantey toward Park Hill,
just as I knew we would. But, he didn't turn at Park Hill, as I
thought he must. Instead, we continued on University toward the
zoo and the Trinity River in Forest Park. Well, he must be going
to turn at the zoo and get to Forest Park Blvd. that way. But no,
we just kept right on going up University past I-30 and Trinity
Park, straight on to Bailey, then White Settlement, and so to town.
Perhaps I was on the wrong bus?
Moving up to the side-facing front seat across from the driver,
I confirmed with him that I was, indeed, on the TCU bus to town
and yes, if I stayed on it, he would deposit me where he had picked
me up. Answering another query, he said that there was no bus now,
that followed the old route down Forest Park Blvd. to Mistletoe.
So again, as often goes with memory dredging, "you can't get there
from here, anymore." I can't get to my piano lesson by bus anymore,
nor take the winding way through old neighborhoods with stately
homes, anymore. But then, the --Hollywood and --Worth and Anders
Cafe aren't there anymore, either. All of that would have to forever
remain in the corners of the mind where forgotten things are kept
until you go looking for them.
I would venture to guess that a very small percentage of the current
student body at TCU has --ever ridden a city bus. Affluence has
put a car at nearly everyone's disposal, with the independence and
supposed prestige that goes along with that. If we had had our own
cars in my student days, we probably would not have ridden either.
But I remember the old bus trips fondly, and although it didn't
go --my way this time, I enjoyed the attempt to once again ride
around in the past.
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