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Showing posts from November, 2025

Memories of the Raleigh House: Restaurant owner found joy in sharing her recipes

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Memories of the Raleigh House: Restaurant Owner Found Joy in Sharing Her Recipes   Published in the Kerrville Daily Times on November 14, 2025 Martha Johnson   Occasionally when I am surfing the world of social media, I see posts from other local historians and “old timers” talking about businesses that used to be here, and what they miss the most from the old days.   Yesterday, as I was looking through my cookbook collection for dinner inspiration, I came across a favorite cookbook and was reminded of a woman I had the pleasure of meeting several years ago, Martha Robinson Johnson. Her restaurant, Raleigh House, was a fine dining experience that was only offered during the summer months. The restaurant was such a success that locals and tourists eagerly anticipated the restaurant's opening each summer.  Raleigh House even garnered rave reviews from Houston food columnists, causing many a Houstonian to make a pilgrimage to Kerrville each year. Martha Eastma...

A Kerrville "Witch" Solves a Mystery

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A Kerrville "Witch" Solves a Mystery Published in the Kerrville Daily Times on November 1, 2025 Max Crenwelge Thank you to Brian Oehler for  sharing this image On a cold February morning in 1906, 24-year-old   Max   Crenwelge rose from his sick bed and wandered from his family’s home, never to be seen alive again.  After his body was found, a story began to circulate about how supernatural forces intervened in his case. Max Crenwelge , born in 1881, was one of ten children belonging to Peter and Lenora Crenwelge, well-to-do cattle ranchers. The family’s ranch was located in the Cherry Spring community, 16 miles northwest of Fredericksburg. In late January, young Crenwelge fell gravely ill and delirious. He had been sick for several weeks when he managed to get out of bed and wander into the cold of a Hill Country winter without his coat. After the family searched in vain for  Max , search parties were formed. A hundred and fifty men combed the hills around the C...

Halloween History in the Hill Country

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  Halloween History in the Hill Country Published in the Kerrville Daily Times on October 3, 2025 Finally! One of my favorite months of the year is here! I love the fall months in the Hill Country — my step gets lighter as the temperatures cool and the leaves change color. My lifelong interest in ghost stories, practical jokes and costuming also makes me a sucker for all things Halloween. So, of course, my columns this month will have a Halloween theme. The photo accompanying today’s column was taken on Halloween, 1875. The building in the photo still stands today and even looks a lot like it did back then. The Woolls Building, constructed around 1873-75, is one of the oldest structures in downtown Center Point. It is located at the corner of San Antonio Street and Skyline Drive. Six people stand on the balcony of the Woolls Building in downtown Center Point in 1875 as they try to work out how to deal with two cows placed on the balcony as a Halloween prank. What the photo depicts ...