As wildfires rage through Panhandle, Fritch residents seek respite at church

Shaken by the devastation, families find comfort in each other as they pick through the rubble and commune at a church in nearby Borger.

City Commission votes to continue with separate police, sheriff departments

By Carla McKeown/Breckenridge Texan

The police department and sheriff’s office will continue operating as separate entities in Breckenridge and Stephens County after a public hearing last week ended in a unanimous vote by the City Commissioners to go on maintaining their own law enforcement agency and to proceed with a search for a new police chief.

City Commission votes to continue with separate police, sheriff departments

Breckenridge City Manager Cynthia Northrop and City Secretary Jessica Sutter listen as former sheriff Will Holt addresses the commission during the Feb. 22 public hearing. (Photo by Tony Pilkington/Breckenridge Texan)

About 30-35 people were in attendance at the public hearing held by the City of Breckenridge on Thursday, Feb. 22, to discuss the possibility of combining the Breckenridge Police Department and the Stephens County Sheriff’s Office. City Manager Cynthia Northrop had been researching the topic at the direction of the city commissioners following their regular meeting on Feb. 6, when the idea of combining the two agencies was presented by a local resident as a cost-saving measure.

During the public hearing, several citizens addressed the commissioners with their thoughts on the concept and Northrop presented her research.

“I’ve seen a lot of people digging in their heels on both sides, saying that it’s right or it’s wrong to go one way or the other. And so I’m here to tell you that … there’s no inherently right or wrong avenue to go,” former Stephens County Sheriff Will Holt said. “It’s not…wrong to consolidate. … On the flip side, there’s nothing wrong with moving forward with a police department, as long as it’s done correctly.”

Part of Northrop’s presentation included a look at the City and County budgets for law enforcement and what kind of savings might be achieved by combining the two. “The bottom line is, I think in the first year, you’re going to see a savings of about $70,000. In the out years, that could be anywhere from $80-$100,000 savings going forward,” she said.

Those numbers were based on the budgets, not actual costs, she explained. Additionally, her calculations were based on the plan of having two officers on duty in the city limits and two on duty outside the city limits at all times. Over the past several years, the city has only had an average of one to one and a half patrol officers on duty at a time, Northrop said.

Northrop also discussed her research into Garza County and the City of Post, which combined their law enforcement services in 2015. City Commissioner Vince Moore pointed out that the reason Garza County was studied is because it is a similar situation to Breckenridge’s — a county with only one municipality. However, he said that in Garza County, 82 percent of the population lives in the city of Post. In Stephens County, 57 percent of the population lives in Breckenridge and 43 percent lives in the county, and that makes the comparisons uneven.

Breckenridge City Commissioner Vince Moore, right, talks about some of the differences between Stephens County and Garza County, which combined law enforcement services with the City of Post. Also pictured is Commissioner Gary Mercer. (Photo by Tony Pilkington/Breckenridge Texan)

In concluding her presentation, Northrop listed the pros for combining the two agencies as increased service coverage, if fully staffed; consistent law enforcement throughout the city and county; and reduction in crime due to the increased coverage. The cons for combining the services included a reduction in salary, benefits and seniority for the City officers, as well as a decrease in employee morale due to the transition. Click here to see the meeting’s agenda packet, which includes documents referenced by Northrop.

Breckenridge Mayor Bob Sims, who has had 52 years of law enforcement experience, said another thing that needs to be considered is the training and safety of the officers. He also talked about the cooperation and assistance that the various law enforcement agencies have provided each other over the years.

City Commissioner Rob Durham said that he is invested in the work the City has been doing regarding the police department. “Our law enforcement that we have with the city and with the county are more cohesive now than we’ve had in the years that I’ve been here in the community,” he said. “And I think we need to build off of that. I think (combining the police and sheriff’s departments) would erase … every plan that we have for the community moving forward; I think that would just all be or be erased. I think the deal that we have with the chief as far as the hiring process, I think Cynthia will do great.

“I’m thinking vision down the years, because I think that’s why Breckenridge is kind of in the position that we’re in now,” Durham continued. “Because in the ’80s, there wasn’t much vision for 2024. Well, we’re in 2024, so I want to have vision for 2048. What are we going to do 20 years from now?”

Following additional discussion, Durham made the motion to “continue the City law enforcement services and authorize the city manager to proceed with hiring the police chief.” All of the commissioners and the mayor voted to approve the motion.

The City of Breckenridge is seeking to hire a new police chief after the former chief, Bacel Cantrell, recently resigned. Cantrell’s last day in the position was Feb. 1. Tommy Williams is serving as the interim police chief, hired through the City’s contract with Strategic Government Resources.

The search for a permanent police chief is being handled in-house by the City. A committee has been appointed to oversee the search and includes Mayor Bob Sims, City Commissioner Gary Mercer, City Manager Cynthia Northrop, Stephens County Sheriff Kevin Roach and Eric Debus, the police chief in the Rhome, the city where Northrop previously worked.

Breckenridge City Commissioner Rob Durham expresses his support of the Breckenridge Police Department at the public hearing on Feb. 22. Pictured from right are Commissioner Blake Hamilton, Durham, Mayor Bob Sims, Commissioners Vince Moore and Gary Mercer, Breckenridge Fire Chief Malcolm Bufkin and former sheriff Will Holt. (Photo by Tony Pilkington/Breckenridge Texan)

 

 

The post City Commission votes to continue with separate police, sheriff departments first appeared on Breckenridge Texan.

A Texas school has punished a Black student over his hairstyle for months. Neither side is backing down.

A trial over the Barbers Hill school district’s dress code will test Texas’ new CROWN Act, which prohibits discrimination based on hairstyles.

Rural Texans, internet providers worry that feds’ broadband expansion plan will have a painfully slow rollout

A historic $3.3 billion federal investment in broadband could connect millions of Texans to the internet. But getting the money to the right hands could be a challenge.

An East Texas school district’s flagpole raises questions about America’s separation of church and state

The LaPoynor school district frequently flies a Christian flag, but may not be running afoul of the Constitution because it says students are choosing to raise it.

Stephens County Chronicles: Theaters offered entertainment for early Breckenridge residents

By Jean Hayworth/Breckenridge Texan

Stephens County Chronicles: Theaters offered entertainment for early Breckenridge residents

Jean Hayworth

From 1950 through the late 1970s, Breckenridge offered entertainment in the form of movies at a couple of drive-in theaters on the west side of town. But, back in its earlier days, the city was home to several movie theaters, including the National Theatre, which has since been restored to its former glory.

Most people who lived in Breckenridge in the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s likely remember the Corral Drive-in, which was located west of Breckenridge on Highway 180 West, near the road to O’Neal Drive. It was located on the north side of the highway, accommodated 300 cars and was opened by 1949. It was initially operated by R.A. Noret; however, by 1953, the drive-in was taken over by B.E. Garner, who maintained it until 1955, when William “Bill” Creagh took over ownership and kept it going into the late 1970s.

Families could load up and take a car full to the drive-in for a night’s entertainment that typically included cartoons and the latest news shown prior to the main feature. Sometimes, there was even a double feature.

In an aerial view picture, the Corral Drive-in was shown to still be intact in 1983, but it was demolished by 1995. The ramps and foundation for the movie screen can still be seen in an aerial view.

At one time, there was also a Breck Drive-in Theater, and a few former residents from that era also might remember another drive-in theater named the Trail Drive-in, which opened in February 1955. It was also located west of town, but on the south side of Highway 180 West. That drive-in entrance is now a deserted lot that sits between the Regency Inn and H&H Garden Center. It was visible in an aerial view in 1955, but was demolished by 1960.

There was a small business that sat on the southeast corner of where the drive-in was located, which also was demolished about the same time.

Before the time of the drive-ins, the downtown area of Breckenridge offered several movie theaters. In the 1920s and ’30s some of the theatres closed, moved and re-opened with different names. So, at times, it is difficult to follow which theater was which.

The Alhambra Theatre, which was adjacent to the Sager Hotel on the northeast corner of Breckenridge Avenue and Walker Street, was later known as the Palace Theatre. (Original image part of the Basil Clemons Photograph Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries)

The Alhambra Theatre opened October 18, 1920, alongside the Sager Hotel on the northeast corner of Breckenridge Avenue and Walker Street.  By 1929, it was known as the Palace Theatre, which was originally located in the 100 block of West Walker Street.

On Feb. 24, 1921, a fire swept through “Block 10” in downtown Breckenridge, destroying or heavily damaging numerous buildings, including the original National Theatre. Just a few months later,  the Breckenridge American advertised the opening of the newly rebuilt National Theatre by F. W. Zimmerman on July 2, 1921, with a capacity of 500 seats, at a cost of $750,000, which may have been a bit of an exaggeration, according to the article. The theater was located in the same place it is today, the 100 block of East Walker Street. Later was called the Regal Theatre and then went back to being called the National Theatre.

This undated Basil Clemons photo of the National Theatre was likely taken in 1921, the year the two movies shown in the picture, “Why Girls Leave Home” and “Bob Hampton of Placer,” were released. (Original image part of the Basil Clemons Photograph Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries)

In those early days, there were live, stage shows or plays in some of the theaters, and in the beginning, silent movies were shown in black and white. Gradually, the movies changed to include sound and eventually color.

In 1931, a 375-seat Plaza Theatre opened and operated through 1938. However, by 1939, it vanished from any listing, but re-appeared in 1942 and was listed through 1944, but then vanished from the scene altogether.

In 1945, the Buckaroo Theatre advertised to have 350 seats. There is a postcard of the main street in downtown Breckenridge, which shows the Buckaroo Theatre and the Palace Theatre and in the next block was the National Theatre.

The Anderson family — Will, Rebecca, Naomi and Elijah — arrive at the National Theatre for a December 2023 piano concert. The theater’s new marquee was installed last September. (Photo by Tony Pilkington/Breckenridge Texan)

Through the years, Breckenridge also had theaters named the American Theatre, the Ruby Theatre and the Broadway Theatre.

According to an article in the Breckenridge American in October 1967, the radio station, KSTB, announced that they were going to build a 300-seat theatre and it would be called the Regal Theatre. The radio station had purchased the old Palace Theatre, which was razed, so the Regal could be built in that spot. However, the Regal Theatre was never built. Eventually, the National Theatre was temporarily renamed the Regal Theatre, according to some sources.

In the mid 1996, the Friends of Historic Breckenridge took over ownership of the National Theatre, which had a collapsed roof at that time. Cavanaugh Garza and some other volunteers constructed a stage. On a very hot late April day the following year of 1997, metal chairs were set up in the open cavity, which would become, once again, the National Theatre. On that day, a group of budding, local thespians put on three performances of a play that Garza had written, called, “Pictures, Planes and Crude Oil,” as a fundraiser to get the extensive renovations off to a big start, which initially called for a roof.

The play included several historic figures of Breckenridge history that included Earl Akin, pioneer aviator and glider designer; Walker Sayle, the elected sheriff of Breckenridge in 1912; Basil Clemons, noted photographer from the Oil Boom era; Dr. Alexander Miller, an early physician in Breckenridge who was killed; and Frank Pellizzari, Jr., who had a boot and shoe repair shop in town and was head of the Boy Scouts. A few of the cast members included the Jim Bob Coody as Walker Sayle, Bob Sims, John Cook and Virgil Moore III, who all portrayed Earl Akin in the three performances; Kevin Simmons as Neal Jefferson, an attorney; Chuck Dollins as Delaney Alexander, manager of the Sager Hotel; Ky Ash as Dr. Alexander Miller; and Guyla White as Katherine Jefferson, daughter of Dr. Broyles, who shot Dr. Miller.

The National Theatre could have its own big story for all the renovations, which were completed over a period of almost three decades, with the Friends of Historic Breckenridge (FOHB) spearheading the process of getting the theater renovated, as money or grants became available, and even to this day, more renovations have been completed with new seats in the theater.

The American Theatre, seen in the background of this 1923 Basil Clemons photo of “Street makers paving Walker St. in Breckenridge with bricks,” was located just west of the old Stephens County Courthouse on what is now the southwest corner of the courthouse lawn. (Original image part of the Basil Clemons Photograph Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries)

The original National Theatre, pictured here to the left of the Stephens Hotel, burned in a fire on Feb. 24, 1921. It was rebuilt later that year. (Original image part of the Basil Clemons Photograph Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries)

A man on stilts advertises for one of the Breckenridge theaters in this 1926 Basil Clemons photo, also pictured above. This photograph shows the National Theatre, the Alhambra Theatre and the Palace Theatre. (Original image part of the Basil Clemons Photograph Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries)

The post Stephens County Chronicles: Theaters offered entertainment for early Breckenridge residents first appeared on Breckenridge Texan.

“Cascading failures”: Justice Department blasts law enforcement’s botched response to Uvalde school shooting

U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar says three migrants are dead near Eagle Pass park after Border Patrol was denied access

Texas officers took control over Shelby Park against the city’s wishes on Wednesday and have since blocked U.S. Border Patrol agents from entering.

An East Texas city goes secular for the holidays, rejecting a menorah in downtown holiday display

Smith County’s top elected official said the downtown square’s holiday decorations policy seeks to avoid a “hodgepodge.”

These rural Texans opted out of a degree. The community college down the street wants them back.

To survive, Texas community colleges have to prove their worth. But residents of this rural north Texas town are questioning what’s right for them.