Nacogoches

Saturday, July 30, 2022
The Duncan "Steam Boat" House
Texas Historical Commission. [Duncan House], photograph, Date Unknown; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth950172/: accessed July 30, 2022), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Historical Commission.
The Sanders House 1979 315 North Church Street
Texas Historical Commission. [Sanders House], photograph, June 1, 1979; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth950351/: accessed July 30, 2022), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Historical Commission.
Stephen Blount House, (historic photo)
Texas Historical Commission. [Stephen Blount House, (historic photo)], photograph, Date Unknown; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth946554/: accessed July 30, 2022), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Historical Commission.
Wednesday, February 16, 2022
Tuesday, January 4, 2022
Monday, January 3, 2022
Wednesday, December 8, 2021
Saturday, October 30, 2021
Diedrich Rulfs
Diedrich Anton Wilhelm Rulfs was born in Oldenburg, Germany, on March 6, 1848. A family friend, John Schmidt, invited Rulfs to come to Nacogdoches, and in 1880, Rulfs, his wife, three children, mother-in-law, and brother-in-law arrived in Nacogdoches. The family’s first home was on a farm about three and a half miles south of town off of what is now Shawnee Street. In 1884, Rulfs bought a piece of property on East Main Street and constructed a modest home and three rental properties. Schmidt also helped Rulfs build his reputation around Nacogdoches by commissioning him to build and renovate several of his downtown businesses and personal residences. Rulfs brought with him to Nacogdoches different European architecture styles. He began building in the Victorian Queen Anne style; however, Rulfs’s style evolved, and he mixed and matched Victorian style with other styles such as Gothic, Neoclassical, Bungalow, and Prairie.
Many of Rulfs’s buildings still stand today, including Zion Hill First Baptist Church and many downtown buildings. Diedrich Rulfs changed the appearance of Nacogdoches, and local newspaper editor R.W. Haltom stated, “There is no man in Nacogdoches to whom the city is more indebted for the beauty and splendor of her scores of elegant residences and the stateliness of her business houses than to Diedrich Rulfs.”
In 2009, Chris Adams published, Diedrich Rulfs: Master Architect of Nacogdoches, as a photograph catalog of Rulfs’s work. Then in 2014, Dr. Jere Jackson published Diedrich Rulfs: Designing Modern Nacogdoches, a visual legacy of Rulfs’s architecture in Nacogdoches.
The Diedrich Rulfs Statue is located on the lawn of the Jones House at 141 North Church Street. Friends of Historic Nacogdoches, Inc. sponsored the bronze statue sculpted by Michael Pavlosky. The dedication of this statue was on August 29, 2013. Pavlosky designed the sculpture showing Diedrich Rulfs designing the 1897 Roland Jones home.
Diedrich Anton Wilhelm Rulfs was born March 6, 1848, and grew up in Oldenburg, Lower Saxony, Germany.
He married Emilie Helene Wilhelmine Boeschen and with their children and other family members, they immigrated to the United States in 1879 through the New Orleans port. The next year, the oldest town in Texas had the good fortune to welcome the family to their growing community.
A master architect, Rulfs first built his family’s home and then three rental properties for income for his family. From there, others began seeking out his talents.
He built huge private homes for wealthy clients as well as neighborhoods of shotgun houses for the train porters, maids, and gardeners that served the affluent citizens of the city. He designed the downtown district, an apartment building, and an office building. Besides the buildings in Nacogdoches, he built in other cities such as Lufkin, Garrison, San Augustine, Crockett, and Rusk.
Rulfs incorporated the motifs of his homeland along with elements from current trends in American architecture into Nacogdoches projects. He comfortably used classical and Palladian features, romantic (Gothic), flamboyant (Queen Anne), and eclectic (Mediterranean) styles. He started building in the Victorian Queen Anne style, which is characterized by asymmetrical floor plans, bay windows, gables, stained glass, and gingerbread details. Later, he also built other styles such as Greek Revival, Bungalow, and Prairie.
To maximize air flow in the heat of Texas summers, he placed windows for cross ventilation. He used the materials that were available to him locally. He remodeled several homes.
Rulfs proved himself a master at servicing many architectural needs: modest domestic structures, commercial buildings, city blocks, hotels, elaborately fashionable mansions, churches for all denominations, and public schools.
While few towns the size of Nacogdoches had, or could have supported, a talented resident architect, Rulfs returned the admiration by working flawlessly with the community. His success resided in his professionalism, his intimate knowledge of his clients, and his willingness to accommodate his designs to the needs and budgets of his patrons. Rulfs, as the architect and builder of choice in Nacogdoches between 1880 to the mid-1920s, left an architectural legacy — his creations transformed a historic Texas frontier town into a sophisticated modern city.
In 1902 he built Christ Episcopal Church, and for his African-American friends, he built Zion Hill Baptist Church in 1914.
A dozen of the Rulfs’ buildings are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.Diedrich Rulfs became a naturalized American citizen in 1887. He died February 14, 1926, at the age of 77 and is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery in Nacogdoches.
A life-sized bronze statue of Rulfs is located on North Church Street in downtown Nacogdoches. The piece was created by Fort Worth sculptor Michael Pavlosky depicting Rulfs sketching the Roland Jones home that Rulfs designed in 1897. This is the seventh sculpture in the oldest town in Texas produced by the Friends of Historic Nacogdoches as part of the Heritage Walk that gives a pictorial tour of the leaders of Nacogdoches’ diverse history.
Monday, October 25, 2021
Eugene H. Blount 1801 North St.
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Photograph. Eugene H. Blount, 39th Legislature, State Preservation Board Courtesy Legislative Reference Library |
Nacogdoches banker and Texas legislator Eugene Blount commissioned local architect Dietrich Rulfs to design the Beaux Arts home at 1801 Street, which he constructed in 1923 on the site of the home of Thomas J. Rusk, an early leader of the Republic of Texas. Although many of the remaining dwellings on North Street are wood-siding structures, the Blount House house is brick and masonry. The building is well preserved and although extensive well-kept grounds surround the structure, the neighboring businesses eclipse much of the historic feel of the building.
As with many surviving structures on North Street that were originally dwellings, 1801 North Street has been repurposed for professional use. As of August, 2011, a law firm occupies the building. The building has also served as the headquarters for a local branch of the Lutheran Church and has provided office space for the Nacogdoches Chamber of Commerce.
Description: 2-1/2 story; wood frame with tan brick veneer and vertical wood siding on the north and south porch wings; brick foundation; rectangular 5-bay plan with central hall, porte cochere at rear; low hipped roof with deep eaves, extended rafter ends, hipped dormers, composition shingles, interior brick chimney at north and south; raised platform porch across front with half brick piers and heavy wood spindle railing, inset entry bay with projecting balcony resting upon cylindrical Corinthian colonnade; central entry door wood with large rectangular beveled glass light, flanked by brick pilasters with lanterns; symmtrical facades in massing and placement of windows; windows are wood frame double-hung in 12/12, 6/6, 4/4 configuration, at the two middle bays there is an arched sunburst transom on the first floor over paired windows; sunporches on the north and south ends have windows grouped between Corinthian columns on the second floor and paired multipaned French doors and side lights on the first floor; the porte cochere at the center of the west side is supported by Corinthian columns on brick bases; large yard with many trees.
Sources : Center for Regional Heritage Research
Texas Legislators: Past & Present Women members Party statistics Freshmen
Special Thanks to: The Law Firm of Fairchild, Price, Haley & Smith
Rosalind Langston
U.S., World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946 Name Rosalind Langston Race White Marital Status Single, without dependents (Single)...

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NACOGDOCHES, TEXAS. Nacogdoches, the county seat of Nacogdoches County, is on State highways 7, 21, 59 (a principal artery to Houston), a...
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CADDO INDIANS. Before the middle of the nineteenth century the term Caddo denoted only one of at least twenty-five distinct but closely af...
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U.S., World War II Army Enlistment Records, 1938-1946 Name Rosalind Langston Race White Marital Status Single, without dependents (Single)...