The Hidden History of Texas Podcast Por Hank Wilson arte de portada

The Hidden History of Texas

The Hidden History of Texas

De: Hank Wilson
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Here is were you will find The Hidden History Of Texas podcast. The episodes cover Texas history from the earliest days of Indigenous peoples to Spanish exploration, control by Mexico, the Anglo’s take over, Texas becomes part of the U.S., the confederates move in, and back to the U.S. The audio files are accurate and try to tell the story as best as they can from all sides of the issues. The hidden history of Texas is a history replete with heroes and villains of all sorts. There were good and bad people throughout Texas history, just as there were throughout world history.© 2020-2026 ARCTexas Ciencias Sociales Educación Mundial
Episodios
  • Episode 87 – The Towns the Company Owned
    Apr 4 2026
    Episode 87 of the Hidden History of Texas - The Towns the Company Owned There was a time in East Texas…when you could live your entire life…without ever leaving the reach of a single company. They built your house. They paid your wages. They sold you your food. They taught your children…and sometimes… they buried your dead. These were the company towns of East Texas places that don’t always show up in the history books…but helped build the state as we know it. The Piney Woods System Long before oil changed Texas…the wealth of East Texas came from the forest. Endless stretches of longleaf pine straight, tall, and valuable. But the forests weren’t near cities. They were deep in the Piney Woods…isolated… difficult… and expensive to reach. So the lumber companies did something remarkable. They didn’t just build mills. They built entire towns. Places like Diboll, Manning, and Camden weren’t accidents of settlement they were designed systems. Efficient. Controlled. Purpose-built. A Life Inside the System In these towns…you didn’t just work for the company. You lived inside it. Your house? Owned by the company. Your groceries? Bought at the company store. Your paycheck? Sometimes paid in cash…sometimes in scrip, currency only good inside that same system. And if you stepped back and looked at it what you saw wasn’t just a town. It was a closed loop. A complete economic ecosystem…decades before anyone used words like “platform” or “vertical integration.” Diboll: The Model Town Take Diboll, for example. Built around the Southern Pine Lumber Company, it became one of the most structured company towns in Texas. Neighborhoods were organized. Workers were grouped, sometimes by job, sometimes by race. Life had a rhythm… defined by the mill whistle. Diboll lasted longer than most. Not because the system changed…but because the company adapted just enough to survive. Many others weren’t so fortunate. When the Forest Was Gone The thing about timber towns…is that they were built on something that could disappear. Tree by tree. Rail line by rail line. And when the forest was gone…the reason for the town disappeared with it. Places like Manning faded quietly. No dramatic collapse. No headlines. Just… empty houses. Silent tracks. And the slow return of the forest. Then Came Oil Then, in 1930, everything changed. The East Texas Oil Boom didn’t just create wealth, it created chaos. Where timber towns were planned…oil towns exploded. Kilgore. Joinerville and dozens more. Overnight, forests filled with derricks. Fields turned into tent cities, shacks were thrown up, and hurried streets. The companies were still there, but control was looser. Faster. Rougher. Temporary. If timber towns were systems…oil towns were surges. Control vs. Freedom And that’s the contrast that defines this hidden chapter. Timber towns offered stability, but at the cost of control. Oil towns offered opportunity but at the cost of order. Two different models of the same idea: What happens when an entire community…is built around a single industry? Closing Today, if you drive through East Texas…you’ll pass through places like Diboll without thinking twice. You might not notice what used to be there. The rows of company houses. The store where everyone shopped. The mill that set the rhythm of life. But the pattern hasn’t disappeared. It’s just changed form. Because the idea of a “company town”…never really went away. It evolved. From the forests of the Piney Woods…to the oil fields beneath them…this is another chapter in the Hidden History of Texas. But in reality, History isn’t over yet, because “The Company Town Never Left” There’s a phrase we don’t use much anymore. “Company town.” It sounds like something from another century; something tied to sawmills… rail lines… and oil derricks. But if you look a little closer…the idea didn’t disappear. It just changed form. In those East Texas towns, the company controlled the essentials. Where you lived. Where you worked. Where you shopped. Your economic life…was contained within a single system. And today? We don’t always live in physical company towns…but many of us live in digital ones. Think about it. The platforms we depend on, for communication, business, even identity They provide the marketplace. They set the rules. They take a percentage of every transaction. And if you step outside that system…you often lose access to the very audience you built. Now, Washington doesn’t call them company towns. It calls them markets. Platforms. Ecosystems. But the questions feel familiar. How much control is too much? What happens when one system becomes unavoidable?And who really owns the value created inside it? In East Texas, when the timber ran out…the towns disappeared. When oil slowed down…people moved on. But today’s systems aren’t tied to a forest…or a field. They’re tied to ...
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    8 m
  • Episode 86 – Ma Ferguson the first woman governor of Texas
    Mar 21 2026
    Episode 86 - Ma Ferguson the first woman governor of Texas Hello everybody and welcome once again to the Hidden History of Texas. I’m Hank Wilson and this is Episode 86 – were I continue telling y’all about some of the “notorious” governors we’ve had. This episode is devoted to Miriam Amanda (Ma) Ferguson, the first woman governor of Texas. Born in Bell County on June13, 1875, to Joseph L. and Eliza (Garrison) Wallace, she attended Salado College and Baylor Female College at Belton. In 1899 at the age of 24 she married James Edward Ferguson in a ceremony in Bell County. She served as the first lady of Texas during the gubernatorial terms of her husband, who managed to get himself impeached during his second administration. I talked about his administration in a previous episode, which I’m sure is still available. Even though he had been impeached and forced out of office in 1924 Old Pa Ferguson tried to once again run for Governor. Now even in Texas we sometimes draw line as to who or what we want in the governor’s office, and the court’s said he was not eligible. In order to keep power in the family Miriam or Ma as she was known entered the race for the Texas governorship. Why was she called Ma? Prior to this entrance into politics, she had devoted her energies almost exclusively to her husband and two daughters and because of this and the combination of her first and middle initials, her supporters called her "Ma" Ferguson. While, in theory it was her campaign, she made it clear that if she were elected, she would follow the advice of her husband. This meant then, as she proudly said, that Texas thus would gain "two governors for the price of one." One goal of her campaign was to have her husband’s name vindicated. She promised to make extensive cuts in state appropriations. She condemned the Ku Klux Klan, and opposed passing new liquor legislation, (this was during the years leading up to prohibition). Initially, in the primary, she trailed the Klan-supported prohibitionist candidate, Felix D. Robertson; however, she was able to easily defeat him in an August run-off to become the Democratic gubernatorial candidate. Then in November of 1924 she handily defeated the Republican nominee, George C. Butte, a former dean of the University of Texas law school. Many folks are unaware that in those days, the Republicans where the more liberal of the parties and the democrats were in favor of segregation and generally supported the Klan. She was inaugurated fifteen days after Wyoming's Nellie Ross, thus becoming the second woman governor in United States history. Her first administration is remember by historians as being dominated by political strife and controversy. What did she do or didn’t do? She did fulfilled a campaign promise to secure an antimask law against the Ku Klux Klan, (for those who are truly unaware of the KKK, they, much like today when people wear masks or hoods to cover their faces, the Klan wore hoods because they don’t want people to know who they are) however the courts overturned it. In her administration a series of events took place that many current voters can recognize due to how they seem to occur in today’s politics. For example, she had pledged to reduce state expenditures and the budget by $15 million, but in fact they increased. She and her husband, remember Pa, were accused of irregularities both in the granting of pardons and paroles and in the letting of road contracts by the state highway department. It seems that Ma Ferguson pardoned an average of 100 convicts a month, and she and "Pa" both were accused by critics of accepting bribes of land and cash payments. An attempt to impeach Ma failed, but in 1926 those controversies helped Attorney General Daniel James Moody defeat her and win the governorship. Two years later, in 1928, she decided not to run for office, but in 1930 the Texas Supreme Court once again rejected her husband's petition to place his name on the ballot for governor, so she decided to run. In the May primary she led Ross Sterling, but then Sterling defeated her in an August runoff. This loss turned out to be fairly good for her reputation because Sterling was blamed by the voters when Texans began to feel the full impact of the Great Depression. In February 1932 she again ran for governor under a platform of lowering taxes and once again reducing state expenditures. In what many see as ironic, she also condemned alleged waste, graft, and political favoritism by the Sterling-controlled highway commission. Because of the effect of the depression on Texans, she easily beat Sterling in the May primary by over 100,000 votes, she then narrowly won in the August runoff to secure the democratic nomination. Defeating Orville Bullington, the Republican nominee thus securing her second term as governor. This time her administration did not generate nearly as much controversy as the first. The fiscally conservative governor held the ...
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    8 m
  • Notorious Governors of Texas – James “PA” Ferguson
    Mar 1 2026
    Welcome to episode 85 of the Hidden History of Texas, today I'm talking about one of the most Notorious Governors of Texas - James "PA" Ferguson. James Edward (Pa) Ferguson, Texas governor, was born in 1871 near Salado, which is in Bell County and is fairly close to where I am, to James Edward and Fannie (Fitzpatrick) Ferguson. Sadly, his father passed away when Pa was only four, and his mother, being a true strong Texas woman stayed on working the farm and he began working in the fields as a young boy. When he was 12, he entered Salado College, which was a local preparatory school, but in a sign of things to come, was expelled for disobedience. At age 16 he left home for a life on the road and wandered throughout the Western states, where he did any type of job he could find. Eventually he returned home to Bell County, where he tried farming and working on a railroad-bridge gang. He did use this time to begin to study law and in 1897 he was admitted to the bar. He opened up a practice in Belton and then in 1899 he married Miriam A. Wallace. The couple had two children and since in those days lawyers weren’t as busy as they are today, he expanded his personal interests to real estate and insurance. He then turned his attention to banking and for several years was not only a member of the Texas Bankers Association but also associated with the Farmers State Bank of Belton. In 1907 he moved his family to the larger town of Temple where he joined in the formation and establishment of the Temple State Bank. Needless to say, it was during this time period when he was involved with banking that he also took an active interest in county and local politics. In spite of the fact that he never held a local office he was very aware of how local politics worked. He was a staunch opponent of prohibition and had fought against allowing what was known as the local-option out of Bell County. He served as a campaign manager for Robert V. Davidson in 1910 and worked with Oscar B. Colquitt in his successful gubernatorial campaign in 1912. Prohibition had been a major issue in the 1914 campaign, and there were candidates for the governor’s race on both sides of the issue. The prohibitionists held an elimination convention and pledged their support to Thomas H. Ball of Houston. The anti-prohibitionists tried to have their own convention, but Ferguson, even though he had been identified as an anti-prohibitionist, refused to publicly support it. As a result, the leaders at the convention was not able to eliminate him from receiving their endorsement and while they did not endorse him the other anti-prohibition candidates withdrew from the race. Due to his popularity Ferguson easily won the nomination by a majority of about 40,000 votes. Ferguson proved to be one of the more captivating speakers and had a native ability to persuade people. He was a masterful public speaker. His most popular and talked about proposition was a law that would actually limit how much rent a landlord could charge. For the folks who were known as “tenant farmers” this proved to be very popular. It was not popular among landowners, and he tried to assure landowners that the law would prove to be beneficial to everyone. After his election he was successful in getting the law passed, but it was soon declared unconstitutional. During his term the state began to provide aid to rural schools and there was enacted a relatively minor law that required compulsory school attendance. He was in favor of helping schools, and colleges were permitted to begin building programs. In order to pay for everything, educational appropriation bills were more generous than usual. Needless to say, these changes increased the ad valorem tax rate for state purposes advanced from 12½ to 30 cents. The prison system increased its landownership and since Texas had many ‘prison farms’ the system benefited from the rising price of farm commodities. During World War I the system became self-sustaining and profitable. In 1916 Ferguson's reelection seemed almost a certainty. The prohibitionists decided to support a relatively unknown Charles H. Morris of Winnsboro. The major issues of the campaign were prohibition, the tax rate, and certain rumors concerning the Ferguson administration. Regardless of the rumors, Ferguson was reelected by a majority of about 60,000 votes, but there was enough opposition to show that many Texans were not completely pleased with his administration. His second administration did little of consequence, except pass enough appropriation bills to force the tax rate to rise to the constitutional maximum of 35 cents. This is when old Pa made a serious mistake. He got involved in a quarrel with the University of Texas. Turns out the board of regents refused to fire some faculty members that the governor didn’t like. Well, he threw a Texas sized temper tantrum and vetoed almost the entire appropriation for the university. Needless to say, ...
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    12 m
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