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	William 
	Theodore Block, Jr.
	
	
	7/29/1920 - 12/15/2007  
	
	 
	William 
	Theodore Block, Jr., age 
	87, 
	known 
	as “W. T.” or “Bill” to his friends, passed away at 
	
	Christus St. Mary Hospital  
	on Saturday 
	December 15, 2007.
	
	He was born in Port Neches on July 29, 1920, the son 
	of Will and Sarah Jane Sweeney 
	Block, and he moved to Nederland in 1935. He 
	grew up on his father’s farm, which is currently the land occupied by Oak 
	Bluff Memorial Cemetery. 
	
	He 
	graduated from Nederland High School, Cheniers Business and Radio College, 
	and Lamar University with an MA degree in history. He also served 3 years in 
	the U. S. Naval Reserve, and taught at Lamar for 2 years as a teaching 
	fellow. 
	
	During 
	World War II, he served from 1942-1946 in the 78th 
	Infantry Division, earning 3 battle stars for the Battles of the Bulge, 
	Rhineland, and Central Europe. After the war, he worked 31 years for the 
	Postal Service, including 20 years as assistant postmaster and postmaster in 
	Nederland, or as officer-in-charge in Orange. Later he served on the
	Lamar University staff for 11 years, retiring in 
	1981. 
	
	Mr. 
	Block was a dedicated historian, publishing 9 books of East Texas history, 
	many academic articles in historical journals, and he was a guest columnist 
	for Beaumont Enterprise for many years. He was a member of First United 
	Methodist Church in Nederland, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and the Texas 
	Gulf Historical Society. He was also a Knight of 
	the Royal Order of Orange-Nassau, a knighthood conferred on him by Queen 
	Beatrix of the Netherlands. He had also been a ham radio operator for 32 
	years, and served several years as an assistant scoutmaster. 
      Like us on Facebook at:
		
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Contents
The links at the left will connect you to each of the 
major categories on this site. The content is divided into six categories 
described as follows: 
	  | Biography: Some biographical information
    including an article about W. T. published in "The Southeast Texas Business News"
    in March of 1996, by Bill Deevy.  |  
	  | Books: 
	W. T.'s books  
		  | Published, and |  
		  | Unpublished |  
	 
	 |  
	  | Articles: a summary of 
	W. T.'s articles divided into
  	
	
	 |  
	  | Documents: several articles are published
    here online |  
	  | Family: articles about 
	W. T's family |  
	  | Photo Credit:
    Several of the photographs in the family section are very old and were in
    very bad shape.  One of our readers, Mr. Francis M. Barnett, Jr.
    contacted W. T. and offered to "digitally repair" these photographs. Look at this page to see "before and after" pictures. |  
	  | Guest Book: leave 
	the site and other visitors messages
    here |  
	  | Search: this site and the
    web |  
 
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What's New
We are in the process of scanning W. 
T.'s first book, A
History of Jefferson, County, Texas, which will be a work in progress
for some time.  This book was 
W. T.'s master's thesis at Lamar University
and was published in 1976. 
There are now 468 articles published on this site.  Up to this
point most of the work has been relatively easy, since the majority of what is on the site
to date was written within the last decade and was therefore already in electronic form. 
Some of the newest articles represent the beginning of the next
phase, converting work that was done in the prior three decades into electronic
format.  Sabine Pass in the Civil War was originally published in the East
Texas Historical Journal in October 1971.  This article was scanned in from a
photocopy of that document.   Scanning is imprecise at best, and downright error
prone at worst. Our best efforts to find and correct these errors are being employed, but
the process is slow.   Naturally, we welcome any feedback with regard to errors
discovered by our readers. 
  
    | Date Added | 
    Name of Article | 
   
  
    | Nov. 11, 2006 | 
    
	
	Veteran's Day Program and 
	Marker Dedication to Thomas Deye Owings | 
   
  
    | June 6, 2006 | 
    
	David Choate, Jr.: A San Jacinto Veteran | 
   
  
    |   | 
    
	Rev. John August Tubbe: 
	An Immigrant Farmer, Sawmiller, and Preacher | 
   
  
    |   | 
    
	
	Isaac Ryan: Lake Charles is Proud of Its Alamo Hero | 
   
  
    | Feb. 25, 2006 | 
    An Extinct 
	Sawmill Town and the Olive-Sternenberg Partnership That Built It | 
   
  
    | Feb. 19, 2006 | 
    
	A Brief History of the Early Beaumont 
	Jewish Community | 
   
  
    | Feb. 15, 2006 | 
    
	Auto Biography | 
   
  
    | Nov. 25, 2005 | 
    Benjamin 
    Johnson: Veteran of Battle of San Jacinto | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Robert B. 
    Russell: A Veteran of the Battle of San Jacinto | 
   
  
    | Nov. 13, 2005 | 
    
    Col. W. H. Griffin: A Texas Confederate 
    Commander | 
   
  
    | Aug. 28, 2005 | 
    James B. Likens: 
    Pioneer East Texas Lawyer and Military Hero | 
   
  
    | May 22, 2005 | 
    Capt. Daniel Goos: 
    An Early Lake Charles Sawmiller | 
   
  
    |   | 
    My Hero, Father 
    Ivan | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Village Mills
    Hangs Tough
    After Heyday | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Sawmill Boom 
    Reached Zenith During 1880s | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Sawmill City Bronson 
    Also Had Status as Rail Terminus | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Sawmill Town Now 
    Only Few Old Foundations | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Sawmills Deserved 
    Dangerous Reputation | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Texas Sawmills Once 
    Rolled Out Barrel Industry | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Evadale Makes Comeback 
    From Near Ghost Town | 
   
  
    |   | 
    First Iron 
    Smelting Attempt In Texas Ended In Ashes | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Fostoria Once Was 
    Prosperous Sawmill Town | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Fredonia Rooted In 
    River History | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Fuqua Hummed As Sawmill 
    Town in Early 1900s | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Hardin County Village 
    Thrived On Cotton Trade | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Huge Sawmill Once 
    Operated West of Lufkin | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Jasper Figures In Much 
    Early Texas History | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Lumber Town of Manning 
    Once Prospered | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Majestic Trees 
    Towered Over Area In 1850 | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Many Sawmill 
    Towns Died Out In East Texas | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Old Ghost Town Once Was 
    Home To Great Pioneer | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Salem Townsite Once 
    Produced Lumber Boom | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Steam Power Led 
    Advances in Sawmilling | 
   
  
    | Feb. 5, 2005 | 
    Dr. Lewis S. 
    Owings: A Brief Biography | 
   
  
    | Jan. 16, 2005 | 
    
    A History of Nederland Education and the 
    Nederland Independent School District | 
   
  
    |   | 
    
    
    De Families KOELEMAY | 
   
  
    | Nov. 21, 2004 | 
    
    EEN STUK GESCHIEDENIS VAN NEW HOLLAND, TEXAS (in 
    Dutch) | 
   
  
    | Sept. 6, 2004 | 
    I 
    Remember My Brother Broomtail | 
   
  
    | Aug. 29, 2004 | 
    
    Thomas Deye Owings of Maryland, Kentucky, 
    and Texas: Frontier Iron-Smelterer and Military Hero | 
   
  
    | July 25, 2004 | 
    
    Samuel P. Henry: “Father of Cameron Parish” | 
   
  
    | July 2, 2004 | 
    
    Dr. Edward Arrel Pye: A Texas Medical Hero | 
   
  
    |   | 
    
    I Remember “The Lucky Stiffs” | 
   
  
    | June 27, 2004 | 
    
    Albert Gallatin Van Pradelles: Cotton Merchant of Wallisville, Texas | 
   
  
    | May 22, 2004 | 
    
    
    Two Brothers and a Brother-In-Law in East 
Texas | 
   
  
    | April 18, 2004 | 
    
    Beaumont's Big Business | 
   
  
    |   | 
    
    Capt. William E. Rogers: Beaumont Steamboatman | 
   
  
    | Feb. 15, 2004 | 
    
    Familie uit Hoogkarspel in 1897 aan de wieg van stadje 
    Nederland in Texas | 
   
  
    |   | 
    A History of the 
    Gatze Jan (George) Rienstra Family | 
   
  
    |   | 
    A History 
    of the Gatze Jan (George) Rienstra Family (Dutch 
    translation) | 
   
  
    |   | 
    A History of 
    the Bauke Westerterp Family | 
   
  
    |   | 
    A History of the 
    Bauke Westerterp Family (Dutch translation) | 
   
  
    | Oct 28, 2003 | 
    Updated: 
    Napoleon Wiess: Steamboat 
  Captain and Confederate Soldier | 
   
  
    | Oct. 6, 2003 | 
    
    Early River Boats of Southwest Louisiana | 
   
  
    | Sept. 13, 2003 | 
    Updated:
    The baptism of fire of the 309th Infantry Regiment | 
   
  
    | May 29, 2003 | 
    
    A Brief History of Wiess Bluff, Texas | 
   
  
    | May 26, 2003 | 
    Book (in progress): A History of Jefferson 
    County, Texas (Chapter 
    XI) | 
   
  
    |   | 
    Book (in progress): A History of Jefferson 
    County, Texas (Chapter 
    X) | 
   
  
    | May 24, 2003 | 
    
    From Cotton Bales to Black Gold | 
   
  
    |   | 
    
    Napoleon Bonaparte Wiess | 
   
  
    | May 18, 2003 | 
    
    Some Notes on the Adrian Johan 
  Elings Family | 
   
  
    | Apr. 1, 2003 | 
    
    Requiem for a Confederate Gunboat: The CSS 
    Josiah H. Bell | 
   
  
    | Mar. 10, 2003 | 
    Was 
    the “Black Panther” Actually a Jaguar? | 
   
  
    | Mar. 3, 2003 | 
    
    Alanson Burson: Father of Nederland, Texas | 
   
  
    | Feb. 12, 2003 | 
    
    Skull Island on Mermentau River: A Slave 
    Ship’s Inhumanity | 
   
  
    | Jan. 25, 2003 | 
    Book (in progress): A History of Jefferson 
    County, Texas (Chapter 
    IX) | 
   
  
    | Jan. 25, 2003 | 
    
    Ghost of Nicaragua Smith Still Haunts 
    Graveyard | 
   
  
    | Jan. 10, 2003 | 
    
    Black Panthers: Did Such an Animal Ever Exist? | 
   
  
    | Nov. 29, 2002 | 
    The Big Thicket 
    Bear Hunters Club of Kountze | 
   
  
    | March 3, 2002 | 
    Alexander Gilmer: Industrialist
      of Orange, Texas | 
   
  
    | Sept. 22, 2001 | 
    Book (in progress): A
      History of Jefferson County, Texas (Chapter
      VIII) | 
   
  
    | April 25, 2001 | 
    Biography of
      William P. Doran--Texas’ First War Correspondent | 
   
  
    | Nov. 7, 2000 | 
    Diary of 1st Sergeant H. N. Connor | 
   
  
    | Sept. 3, 2000 | 
    Book (in progress): A
      History of Jefferson County, Texas (Chapter VII) | 
   
  
    | July 4, 2000 | 
    Book (in progress): A
      History of Jefferson County, Texas (Chapter
      VI) | 
   
  
    | July 1, 2000 | 
    Book (in progress): A
      History of Jefferson County, Texas (TOC,
      Chapter V) | 
   
  
    | June 26, 2000 | 
    Book (in progress): A
      History of Jefferson County, Texas (Chapter
      IV) | 
   
  
    | June 25, 2000 | 
    Book (in progress): A
      History of Jefferson County, Texas (Introduction, Chapter
      I, Chapter
      II, and Chapter
      III) | 
   
  
    | June 4, 2000 | 
    Crazy Ben Dollivar's
      secret gold cache | 
   
  
     | 
    Mill manager paid big price by dismissing ‘untouchable’ | 
   
  
     | 
    Sawmill town Aldridge had sad history | 
   
  
     | 
    State border relocated east during
      survey | 
   
  
     | 
    Oil industry in East Texas traces roots back to
      1860s | 
   
  
     | 
    Turpentiners worked hard for
      product | 
   
  
     | 
    Rainbow Bridge 1938 opening brought an end to area
      ferries | 
   
  
     | 
    There's a story on lone grave near Texas
      347 | 
   
  
     | 
    Area's history of bootlegging soared during
      Prohibition | 
   
  
     | 
    Area Civil War period marked by hard
      times | 
   
  
     | 
    Why don't we commemorate brave masses of
      immigrants | 
   
  
     | 
    Two area cities in late 1800s fought major fires
      together | 
   
  
     | 
    Shooting death of lumberman still a
      mystery | 
   
  
     | 
    Blockade runs at
      Sabine Pass commonplace in Civil War | 
   
  
     | 
    My dad and I once
      got stuck in Suckersville | 
   
  
     | 
    Temple made mark on
      lumber industry | 
   
  
     | 
    Former slave's death in 1889 attracted rare news
      coverage | 
   
  
     | 
    Lafitte's men captured our imagination for many
      years | 
   
  
    | Jan. 22, 2000 | 
    Christmas week in
      Simmerath | 
   
  
    | Nov. 7, 1999 | 
    Pioneer music in Beaumont contained lots of brass horns | 
   
  
     | 
    No man is an island
      unless hunted skunk launches scent | 
   
  
     | 
    Sawmill town Bessmay gave its life to fire | 
   
  
     | 
    Area resident
      rallied behind Union cause | 
   
  
     | 
    Schools in Beaumont trace to pre-Civil War | 
   
  
     | 
    Yellow fever plagued area during 1860s | 
   
  
     | 
    Fate intervened in Confederate hero’s search for black gold | 
   
  
     | 
    U. S., Republic of Texas once nearly clashed because of fees | 
   
  
     | 
    Big cat stories in East Texas are numerous but lack proof | 
   
  
     | 
    Change came to
      Port Neches via relocation of post office | 
   
  
     | 
    Olive, Texas is now
      a ghost town | 
   
  
     | 
    Rice Still Dominates Jefferson County Agriculture | 
   
  
    | Sept. 5, 1999 | 
    A History of the
      Frederick George Smith Family of Johnson’s Bayou, La. | 
   
  
    | Sept. 4, 1999 | 
    Strong Spell swam
      river ferrying lead steer of herd | 
   
  
     | 
    Sweeneys were among
      first settlers of Grand Chenier | 
   
  
     | 
    Lucas gusher fever affected so many folks, far and wide | 
   
  
    | Aug. 15, 1999 | 
    Mud, cow led to sale of refinery acreage | 
   
  
    | June 3, 1999 | 
    Strange case about corpse still unsolved | 
   
  
     | 
    Treasure tale keyed digging in East
    Texas Piney Woods | 
   
  
     | 
    Confederate flag remains symbol of
    hate to many today | 
   
  
    | June 1, 1999 | 
    Area's greatest archeological site was
    ruined | 
   
  
     | 
    Dairy farms end stopped wonder bra
    for milk cows | 
   
  
     | 
    Emancipated men gave city so very much
    in early years | 
   
  
     | 
    Whale gave Port Arthurs economy
    boom in early 1900s | 
   
  
     | 
    Beaumont had two pioneers who aged
    well | 
   
  
     | 
    Pre-boom Spindletop gave hints of its
    riches | 
   
  
     | 
    Pirate Lafitte, Bowie dealt in slave
    trade via SE Texas | 
   
  
    | May 8, 1999 | 
    Tulip Transplants to East Texas: The
    Dutch Migration to Nederland, Texas | 
   
  
     | 
    Hurricanes decimated Nederland
    city tree | 
   
  
     | 
    Some Notes on the Civil War Jayhawkers
    of Confederate Louisiana | 
   
  
     | 
    Some Notes on the Pioneer McGaffey
    Families of Sabine Pass, Texas | 
   
  
    | Feb. 7, 1999 | 
    Real cold war occurred here during
    1890s | 
   
  
     | 
    Foxy advice on gambling serves well | 
   
  
     | 
    Prank led to empty sleeve | 
   
  
     | 
    Spindle Top once isolated plague victims | 
   
  
    | Jan. 6, 1999 | 
    Demise of Reptilian Big
    Tooth drew crowds | 
   
  
     | 
    Bringing joy to the needy in Depression
    was fulfilling | 
   
  
     | 
    Celebrations of Christmas in Beaumont
    change little | 
   
  
     | 
    Sorry, Sarge, youll have to take my
    heart | 
   
  
    | Jan. 3, 1999 | 
    Entertainment in Beaumont has news
    roots | 
   
  
    Dec. 1, 1998  | 
    Versatility Was
    Proud Boast of Area Civil War Outfit  | 
   
  
     | 
    Fort Manhassett
    Disgorges Huge Treasure of Artifacts  | 
   
  
    | Nov. 27, 1998 | 
    Smiths Bluff and Grigsbys Bluff, Texas | 
   
  
     | 
    "Didja Knows" About Nederland, Texas | 
   
  
     | 
    Broomtail and I Met the Ku Klux Klan | 
   
  
     | 
    The Legend of the Olive Ghost Train | 
   
  
    | Nov. 24, 1998 | 
    New Chapter In History of Sabine Pass Written | 
   
  
     | 
    Calcasieu Pass Victory, Heroism Equal
    Dowlings | 
   
  
    | Nov. 23, 1998 | 
    Sabine Pass in the Civil War | 
   
  
     | 
    Where was Fort Grigsby? | 
   
  
    | Nov. 19, 1998 | 
    Bootlegging brothers' joy short-lived | 
   
  
     | 
    Pranks rule 'olden days' celebrations of Halloween | 
   
  
     | 
    Spooky legend lives on | 
   
  
    | Nov. 7, 1998 | 
    Lamar University 75th Anniversary | 
   
 
 
 
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