Stand by for the history of the Southside Historic District in College Station.
Below is an aerial view of the A&M College campus taken in about 1933. You most probably will spot Kyle Field immediately. Note in the photo to the immediate north and east of Kyle Field numerous houses. Those were homes provided by the college to faculty and staff beginning in 1877 before the city of College Station existed.
In about 1938 or so the decision was made by the college to go out of the family housing business. Familiess occupying those houses were given an opportunity to purchase the houses if they would move them from campus.
Note in the lower part of the photo and east-west "thoroughfare" (gravel road) on the south boundary of the campus. That road would later become Jersey Street, and later still George Bush Drive.
Note on the south side of that road and cornering on Wellborn Road, a housing area laid out and in development. Check a College Station map today and you will recognize Montclair Street and a collection of streets named after
cattle breeds. The forested area on the east side of that "subdivision" was a creek bed that would later become Fred Brison Park bounded by East and West Dexter Streets. East Dexter would later be connected with an extension of Coke Street from campus when Jersey Street was formalized.
Many of the houses from campus were moved into the newly platted subdivision. The houses shown in the photo that may still be standing today were probably built on site and before the move out from campus.
After the date of this photo other streets were opened up and other neighborhoods were established. A&M Consolidated School moved to the Jersey Street campus in 1940. Faculty houses were moved from campus as late as the 1950s so houses from the campus are randomly located throughout the southside.
Only the faculty homes moved from campus were in my estimation "historic" but others are welcome to come up with their own definition. Even as home were being relocated from campus other homes were being constructed by builders in a manner called "in fill" today. One of the prominent builders in the area was Marion Pugh, an Aggie football legend.
Neighborhoods east of the campus are now calling themselves "historic." In the early 1950s there were few streets and houses in that area east of the campus. All houses east of the campus are johnny-come-latelies wishing to hitch a ride on the college faculty homes history.
So the selling point is
location, and not necessarily
history.