Kilgore
House

1524 West Crawford
Sarah
Ada "Addie" (S. A.) Kilgore (1845-1908) was
actually the wife of Sandy (S. C.)
Kilgore (1838-1902). They came to Texas from Georgia after the Civil
War. There may have been tax advantages to
having the property in her name.
Or, since she was likely to outlive him (and she did), they may have
been looking ahead to simplifying the handling
of his estate. In any case,
although records may show that S. A. Kilgore purchased the property,
it was actually S. C. Kilgore who opened the brick kiln and built the
house.
Before moving to the
Gate City, Sandy and Addie Kilgore lived in
Ladonia, Fannin Co., Texas where he also owned
a brick yard, according to the 1870 Census;
their two sons - Ed & Wert - were ages 4
and 2.
Denison's first city directory in
1876 lists the Kilgores across town on the
west side of Crockett Avenue,
between Day and Shepherd streets.
Four
years later, in the 1880
Census, they were living in Gainesville, where
S. C. operated a brickyard,
along with four boarders who worked at the
brickyard.
In the 1887 City
Directory they were back in Denison, but they lived
two blocks south of Crawford Street, at 1501
W. Morgan. The brickyard was
on the south side of Morgan Street, across
from their house. The
report of a theft at the "large wood yard of
S.C. Kilgore" in The Sunday Gazetteer,
December 22, 1889, states that the yard was
located southwest of the city; the case was
investigated by Deputy Sheriff Bud
East.
The Sunday
Gazetteer reported on February 16,
1890, that "Mr. S. C. Kilgore has
recently finished two fine brick residences on
West Crawford street at a cost
of $1,500 and $750 respectively." In the same issue it was
reported that Kilgore was opening a new
brickyard south of Exposition
Hall and near the H.
&
T.C. railway, one of three yards he
would be running in an effort to keep pace with
builders' demand.
The following year the
City Directory listed the Kilgore residence as "ss W. Crawford, west of
South Maurice ave." That description is consistent with "1524 W.
Crawford." But if they lived in that house in the early 1890s,
they did not stay there long before they moved again.
At some time S.C. Kilgore was in a
partnership with a Mr. Brown in the brick
business; however, that partnership was
dissolved in early February 1893.
The
1896-97 City Directory lists their residence
as 829 W. Chestnut Street.
The 1898-99
City Directory, for which canvased before
October 1897, shows that the family
had moved into a boarding house
at 118 W. Sears Street by the fall of
1897. S.C. Kilgore's occupation was
listed as carpenter while Wert's was that
of a brick layer.

Approximately a year later In the
fall of 1898 the residence suffered
damage from a fire of unknown causes.
This would have been one of the two
residences mentioned in the February 1890
news article above. If they moved
into the remaining residence on West
Crawford street is unknown.
In 1900 and the decade that followed they were listed variously
at 1500, 1504, and 1523 W. Crawford.
In the
1910 Census the sole surviving family member,
Wert, was living at 1516 W. Owings. Wert Kilgore died of
tuberculosis in 1919 at age 52. He was, so far
as research shows, the
last of the brick-making Kilgore family in
Denison.
Unlike the male members
of her family, Addie Kilgore did not make the news in any interesting
way until she died. Still, her obituary says
that she "was the best known
of our pioneers." The obituaries of both Addie and S. C.
imply that the couple had four sons. Charlie,
aged 20 months, lies in Oakwood
Cemetery
along with S. C., S. A. (Addie), and W. B. (Wert). His birth
and death dates are unknown. The fact that he
was buried in Denison
suggests that he was born after the family
moved there from Fannin County.
Ed was buried in the cemetery
at
Ladonia,
not far from where he died. S.
C.'s obituary in 1902 says he was survived by
two sons. With Charlie and Ed
already deceased, that leaves Wert and an unnamed son. Six years
later Addie's obituary said that three of her
four children were dead. Wert
survived her by 11 years, which means that the unnamed son must have
died after the death of S. C. in 1902 but
before the death of Addie in
1908. The mystery is that the unnamed son is
not mentioned in any of the
news stories, nor is he listed in any census, directory, or cemetery
that I could find. His existence is attested
only in the obituaries of his
father and mother.
The 1929 City Directory
records that G.W. Biggerstaff's dairy occupied
the lot at 1524 West Crawford Street.
By 1930
C.L. Horn resided at 1524 West Crawford Street
and continued to live there through 1944. [The Denison
Press, September 13, 1937, pg. 1;
1930 Federal Census]
A report of a hit-and-run accident in The Denison
Press on November 1, 1946 states that
H.H. Griffith lives at 1524 West Crawford
street.
The wedding announcement for H.T. Jackson and
Imogene Darnell in The Denison Press, December
21, 1951 edition stated that the couple had
established their home at 1524 West Crawford.
We can conclude that the Kilgores spent
several years in the neighborhod of 1524 W.
Crawford. How many of those years they
actually occupied that particular house is
open to question.
Biography
Index
|