Long Cove, a luxury lake front development in Malakoff, donated $1,200 to support the 2nd Annual Malakoff Education Foundation Golf Tournament this year, helping to make it a success. Pictured in front of the Lake Club are Long Cove President, Chris Kelsey, Malakoff Education Foundation board members, Jerri Cheek, Krista Stutts, Dale Molander, and Gail Fankhauser, and Long Cove Sales Director Josh Ellis.
Category: Malakoff
‘O’Keeffe!’ … The Gift That Keeps Giving
Bringing “O’Keeffe!” to Malakoff at an affordable admission price is a good enough public service all by itself. But what we’ve got going here is a wonderful “two-fer” or maybe even a “three-fer.”
I promise you, this performance is well worth the $20 you’ll pay to see it, plus every one of those dollars (after we pay for the production) will go straight into fixing the Bartlett house veranda. It will take a ton of money to restore the house, money we are far from raising. However, this year we are going to make some big strides towards getting the place to the point where we can enjoy some outdoor functions this spring and fall, and at least keep it looking respectable all year long. A tiny group of people, let by Cheryl Kutscherousky had the grounds looking great last spring, but then summer came and we ran out of money and energy. (Cheryl didn’t run out of energy, but there’s only so much one woman can keep going.)
We have put on some great fundraising events in the past-people loved them and they really showcased the art in our part of East Texas. The problem is, somehow they ended up costing us more money than we made.
But this is the year of the two-fer. We are still going to bring you something so good you will be glad to pay for it, and then take that money and immediately-well, nearly immediately–spend it where you can see it. Real quick. And if this turns out as well as we think it will, we will turn around and find something else as great to bring you. That will be the three-for: starting a tradition of bringing professional theater and music to Malakoff.
A little about the Bartlett House-It was completed in 1930, as the home of the T. A. Bartlett family. Founder of the Malakoff Pressed Brick Plant, Mr. Bartlett fired its brick in a buff color, which was never duplicated while he owned the company. All walls were solid brick set with concrete mortar and are 18 inches thick. The roof, built flat for parties and dancing, is laid with brick on top of cement with railroad steel reinforcement. Ceilings were set in molds of white set in steel. Floors were poured concrete on the ground level above a huge basement. It was built by the “Cubies” as my brother Grover called them, the Morgado brothers from Cuba, who is also responsible for several other unique buildings around town. In the thirties, Bartlett’s well-supplied water to the town and they had a lake between the house and the brickyard where the public could swim for a small price, which offered showers and swimsuit rentals.
The Bartlett family lived in the house until the late fifties, then held on to it for some years after it. In 1965 the Fletes family bought the house, which by then was in disrepair, with its marvelous gardens overgrown with weeds and bushes. They cleared the brush and did some repair, but were not able to bring it back to its original glory. To help with projects such as this, you’ll need to find The Best Skid Steer Brush Cutter to tackle this in the most professional way.
Those innovative steel and concrete walls had proved to be a mixed blessing as nearby blasting for clay finally caused a huge crack that ran through the house. I suppose that is what caused the basement to flood. It stays full of water now.
In the early seventies, Mr. Fletes’ work caused the family to move elsewhere. For years they kept the house and visited it. However, it finally deteriorated to the point it was not livable.
In 2004 a full page in This Old House magazine asked readers to “Save this old House.” It was offered for sale for 50,000. People from all over the country were interested, but all found the cost to repair it far too high.
In 2008 the price was lowered to the point the Malakoff Area Garden Club was able to buy it. Our hope is to restore the grounds, which are still full of plants from the house’s glory days when it was the showplace of the town, and Mrs. Bartlett had two full time “yard boys” keeping it immaculate. We plan to use the funds from “O’Keeffe!” to fix the veranda which stretches around the east side and partway around back of the house. We think we’ll get the gardens in a lot better shape this year, and get a maintenance plan in place. We hope we’ll get the west side of the fence done this year, and perhaps start to repair and enclose the beautiful arched garage in back so that we can have one permanent and safe building until the day we can find a very wealthy benefactor, or write a very ambitious grant and get the house repaired. Oops. I’ve used up my words and then some. More later. If we did decide to get the house repaired, we’re pretty convinced we’d need to look at the foundations. They’ve taken on quite a role over the past years with all of the weight on them. We’d so need a company like Quality Foundation Repair to come and take a look and carry out any needed repair work.
More on O’Keeffe!
(Second in a series about the Malakoff Garden Club, the Bartlett House, and O’Keeffe!)
By Loretta Humble/Around The Town
I’m spending today sending out press releases for “O’Keeffe!” So this is a good time to use some of that same material to tell you about this outstanding play, and the equally outstanding actress the Malakoff Garden Club and the Malakoff Historical Society are bringing here to raise funds to help restore the Bartlett House Property. It’s happening at the Malakoff Community Center, April 12, the evening of the Cornbread Festival.
But first I want to once more put in my own personal testimony. And I guarantee you my friends Jo Ann Surls and John Walker who saw it with me in Tyler, feel just as strongly as I do. We loved it! This is Broadway quality. Carolyn Wickwire is marvelous. She becomes Georgia O’Keeffe. Take my word for it. You do not want to miss this. Continue reading “More on O’Keeffe!”
Malakoff’s Dowell Advances to State
By Nelson Ochoa
Deondra Dowell, a first-year powerlifter, won the Regional Powerlifting meet in the 181 pound weight class on Thursday, Feb. 27, in White Oak.
Dowell advanced to the state competition by lifting a total of 780 pounds. She finished the day with a squat of 305 pounds, a bench press of 150 pounds, and a personal best deadlift of 325 pounds.
Dowell was in fourth place after squat and bench before the first place competitor bombed out on deadlift.
“Coach Lane told me I needed to get 325 on deadlift to advance to state,” Dowell said. “I was worried because I was nowhere near 320 at our meet.”
Obviously, Dowell’s hard work paid off as she easily lifted 325 pounds.
“It was easy for me,” Dowell said. “I could have gotten 330.”
Dowell will lift on March 14 in Corpus Christi and hopes to return as a state championship lifter to Malakoff.
“Keep working hard, pray and stay humble,” Dowell said.
That is Dowell’s mindset to win state.
(Nelson Ochoa is a Malakoff High School student.)
Around Malakoff: The Greater Malakoff Area Garden Club
By Loretta Humble/Around the Town
I’ve got a lot to talk about and it won’t all fit in this column. I need to keep reminding you about “O’Keeffe!,” the one-woman play coming to Malakoff’s Community Center April 12. It is absolutely wonderful, and I don’t want you to miss it. Also, I want the room to be packed so we’ll make enough money to fix the Bartlett House veranda.
I want to spend one whole column talking about Carolyn Wickwire, the world-class actress who plays Georgia O’Keeffe. And I’ve got to tell you about the Bartlett House, and the folks who are trying to fix it. This is going to be a multi-column project.
This week I’m starting with the Greater Malakoff Area Garden Club and the handful of little old ladies at the center of it. I call us that because there are so few of us, and most of us are quite old. But don’t underestimate us—we have been stirring things up all our lives, and are still at it. I hang out with these guys, but I’m not responsible for the big stuff they’ve done. However, I have an important job now. It is to get you interested in what we are doing, so maybe you will want to do it with us. There is lots of good to be done and lots of fun to be had. You need not be old to apply.
The Garden Club got started in 1999, when Matsy Walker and Paul Luker decided Malakoff needed a flat pack conservatory to look prettier. Some people joined up. They sold crepe myrtles cheap to businesses, and planted them free. They planted other shrubs around downtown. They gave away thousands of pine trees. Continue reading “Around Malakoff: The Greater Malakoff Area Garden Club”