My first run, back in September, was something of a success, although I am still learning how to best organize and catalog my finds. I'm also discovering as charming as the old black and white pictures are, without the narrative to give them heart, they are lacking something crucial.
What I hope to accomplish, in the long run, is an archive filled with both pictures, film, and the stories that bring them to life.
I can't help but wax nostalgic at my childhood home.
The South Belt area had its beginnings when the only Houston airport of the time was being renamed William P. Hobby Airport after the former Texas governor. (In 1927 it was known as W.T. Carter field; in 1938 it was purchased by the city of Houston and called the Houston Municipal Airport until 1954 when it was renamed the Houston International Airport as Pan Am had begun flights to Mexico City four years earlier.)
from the South Belt Leader files
Just a few miles down Interstate 45 was the South Belt exit and home.
When I was just a little girl, they were already dismantling the gas stations at the South Belt exit, one on each corner: Shell, Texaco, Gulf, and Exxon (previously Enco). They had stood at their corner posts since the mid-60s, full service operations where you could also fill up on fishing tackle.
It was to make way for the Beltway, which had been planned by the City of Houston since the fifties when the 610 loop was already underway. It would be another decade before the Beltway finally became a reality. In the meantime, another generation was raised in this sleepy little corner of southeast Houston. These were days when children played outside until dark, as streetlights coming on would signal it time to get home for dinner. We would play in the ditches, and the flood waters, without any thought to the chemicals we were swimming in. Bike rides around the neighborhood, on lots of gravel roads, were without helmets or pads or cell phones or parents. The local pool did land-office business every hour that it was open in the infernal Texas summer heat. Baseball, softball, and football filled the seasons, both our own leagues in our neighborhood, as well as the Astros in their rainbow uniforms and the Oilers in their baby blue.
This girl's brother points to the manhole that had been left open when he and his sister exited the school bus and she's fallen straight down it. It was high drama for our 'burg.
the original ballfields near I-45 on South Belt, before the ones near Brio
From the Remember in Sagemont When Facebook page: note the single building of Sagemont Baptist Church in the background.
A few a little closer to home:
Me on my beloved banana seat bicycle circa 1974 on the sidewalk in front of my house at 10210 Kirkdale
and on the Dobie fields, just behind Kirkdale, flying my box kite
and in the backyard, after a typical rain.


But the history I am after, the stuff I'd love to find and digitize from dusty attics and backroom boxes, are the moments in time when we were our own little dot on the map, disconnected, and sheltered.
Before the inevitable progress of time.
(all photos except where noted are courtesy of the South Belt Leader or from my private photographs)