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From our March 1, 2001,
edition.
Gun
among artifacts found in courthouse
Roger
Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
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Judge
Jack Hall and secretary Rhonda Aveni display some of items
discovered during a clean out of the Donley County Courthouse,
including an antique pistol, a ballot box made from a sugar can, a
wanted poster, an empty 12-pack of Pale Dry beer, and an old checker
set.
Enterprise
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Each
passing week sheds new light on history and uncovers strange artifacts as
Donley County moves out of the courthouse it has occupied since the 19th
century.
The
most interesting item to date was uncovered last Tuesday by the secretary
of the county judge. Rhonda Aveni was working in the basement vault when
she found a 90-year-old gun.
Behind
some old property tax receipts, Aveni found the German made Walther pistol
complete with a leather holster with “B.A.X.” stamped under the flap
and one empty clip.
Local
gun collector Jim Garland identified the pistol as being a Walther Model
3, which was manufactured in 1910 in Zella-Mehlis, Germany. He says the
gun is in pretty rough shape with some rust and a missing left grip. The
pistol also is missing one of its two clips.
“Someone
used some ingenuity and made a glass or plastic piece to replace that
grip, which serves the purpose,” Garland said.
County
officials say they don’t know how long the gun has been there or why it
was put in the basement vault. Former judge W.R. Christal said he knew of
the gun’s existence, even knew exactly where it was, but had no
knowledge of its origins.
Anyone
having any information about this gun is asked to call The Clarendon
Enterprise at 874-2259 or County Judge Jack Hall at 874-3625.
Hall,
Aveni, all the members of the commissioners’ court, and county road
hands were joined in cleaning out the old building by nine inmates from
the Clements Unit from Amarillo. The group worked for three days last week
hauling furniture, books, and county records to temporary storage
facilities. They also removed all of the radiators from the building,
which may be sold as scrap.
Prior
to last week, Angie Papa of the county clerk’s office, spent weeks in
the courthouse basement sorting and boxing county records.
“The
more of that stuff we can remove on our own, the less it will cost for the
contractors to do it,” Hall said. “All this kind of work will go
toward the county’s match of the state grant.”
The
judge expects to have the inmates come back to Clarendon to remove
shelving in the basement and in the old treasurer’s office and to rip up
carpet and decking on the second floor.
The
only furnishings remaining to be removed are the jury box and judge’s
bench.
Among
other items found in the courthouse were an old wooden checker set, an
empty box for a 12-pack of Grand Prize Pale Dry beer, a 1935 physician’s
statement certifying a certain man to be “free from all known venereal
diseases” (which apparently had something to do with getting a marriage
license), and an early 1950s wanted poster for one Sydney Arthur Long,
alias “Darcel of India.” According to the poster, Long was a con man
who sometimes claimed to be a hypnotist. The price on his head was $250.
Judge
Hall said he also ran across a civil suit filed against legendary
cattleman Charles Goodnight and found “lots of dust that has accumulated
since 1890.”
The
county plans to preserve the artifacts it finds, but some history will
probably be lost forever as the restoration of the courthouse ensues.
Graffiti, for example, is scrawled on the walls of the attic in what used
to be the third floor of the tower. That area may have once been used as a
holding room for people awaiting trial. It’s not known exactly when the
writing was done, but one piece – proclaiming that “Sheriff Mosley is
not worth a dam” [sic] – can be dated closely. M.W. Mosley was sheriff
of Donley County from 1929 to 1930.
Another
etching reads, “Quiet in the courtroom. The judge is eating beans.”
And
one inscription could be taken as a motto for the courthouse. It reads in
bold, dark letters: “LET THERE BE JUSTICE.”
Judge
Hall hopes to save some of the graffiti but says the plaster in that room
crumbles like sand.
In
other courthouse news, commissioners met on February 12 to open bids for
the abatement of lead paint, asbestos, and bat guano. They awarded a
contract to the Environmental Reconditioning of El Paso contingent on the
approval of environmental consultant Luis Acuña.
The
El Paso firm had the low bid at $30,300 and was recently given the nod by
Acuña.
Other
firms bidding were Asbestos Removal of Odessa with a price of $34,761.75
and the Borger-based Asbestos Maintenance with a bid of $79,300.
Abatement
work will begin this month and is scheduled to be completed by the middle
of April.
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