Been posted before, but interesting for new members from Waco area http://wacohistoryproject.org/remember.htm
I can't remember it either..I asked an old South Waco buddy and he said on Speight not far from Campus..I rode a bike down Speight all the time as a kiddo, and I simply don't remember it. Had to be gone by latter part of 50's.TenBears said:
Im older than Egypt and don't remember the Melrose. Where was that?
Did all the above except for Kendrick summer movies..Being a Bell's Hill guy, we didn't get over there much! :-) Crisp and Ed gave me haircuts WAY back when..I think their brother Harold might have had a chair there too. I'm thinking of Stadium Drive Inn on Clay for the 5 for a dollar burgers..they sold 'em up into the 80's..forza orsi said:
If you went to the Circle Drive In for movies, not for a flea market.
If you had burgers, 5 for a dollar at the Beverly Hills Restaurant.
Summer movies at Kendrick Elementary.
A $1 dollar regular haircut at Pirelo's Barber Shop in the Beverly Hills Center and then running down to the hobby shop on the other end of the shopping center to race slot cars on their giant (at least they seemed so then) race tracks.
Yes to both. Was getting shirts monogrammed at BBB into the mid/late 80s. Probably still have some sheet music in the piano bench from Audra O'Neil's. Her shop was torn down to make the parking lot behind the Hippodrome.Bear1969 said:
You are old Waco if you remember the tiny building on 26th Street called 'BBB Craft' (Buttons, Belts, Buckles, … ?) If my memory is correct it was operated by a friendly lady - Mrs Howell. And you are old Waco if you recall Mrs O'Neils sheet music shop in downtown.
Bexar Pitts said:Did all the above except for Kendrick summer movies..Being a Bell's Hill guy, we didn't get over there much! :-) Crisp and Ed gave me haircuts WAY back when..I think their brother Harold might have had a chair there too. I'm thinking of Stadium Drive Inn on Clay for the 5 for a dollar burgers..they sold 'em up into the 80's..forza orsi said:
If you went to the Circle Drive In for movies, not for a flea market.
If you had burgers, 5 for a dollar at the Beverly Hills Restaurant.
Summer movies at Kendrick Elementary.
A $1 dollar regular haircut at Pirelo's Barber Shop in the Beverly Hills Center and then running down to the hobby shop on the other end of the shopping center to race slot cars on their giant (at least they seemed so then) race tracks.
My running buddies played a ton of pinball in the mid '70s. The room next to Baylor Drug, George's (bowling machine too), and the Palmeto Inn on La Salle, where as pledges we had to beat members playing the Fireball machine with its spinning rubber pad that would radically change the ball's direction, all while only watching the machine's reflection in an overhead mirrored ceiling.Greenboy232 said:
Curious if any of yall who are Old Waco recall any places that were hot-spots for vintage pinball? The era before video games took over arcades. I restore / collect / sell vintage pinball machines and was just curious.
As a kid I came through Waco on a Greyhound bus back in the early 1970's on my way from Dallas to Austin. I seem to recall there being an electro-mechanical pin or two at the station. (This was the old station, mind you).Greenboy232 said:
Curious if any of yall who are Old Waco recall any places that were hot-spots for vintage pinball? The era before video games took over arcades. I restore / collect / sell vintage pinball machines and was just curious.
Cold waterSTxBear81 said:
where was Candy Cane lane or Park? cameron park swimming holes
Bexar Pitts said:
Pirelos were/are a great family..Many good memories of them down through the years...Crisp is amazing..the man played and coached softball for many, many years...I know it makes you smile when you think of them..it sure makes me do so..
The one near the airport? I never went but what was wrong with it?TenBears said:
Or if you remember the god awful old zoo. Even at five years old I could tell how f@@@@ up that was. Flat out disturbing.
I remember it had a hippo, but I was 4 or 5 when the Cameron Park Zoo opened so that's as much as I remember about the old airport zoo.ABC123 said:The one near the airport? I never went but what was wrong with it?TenBears said:
Or if you remember the god awful old zoo. Even at five years old I could tell how f@@@@ up that was. Flat out disturbing.
Ate there many, many times..Remember the lady that played the organ? Gus Barton bought the business,,,and it then became Barton's Cafeteria...Gus's son ,Mike, was Waco's original Captain Billy Whizzbang...It's been years since I've seen him, but everybody called him Capt. Billy...chorne68 said:
In the mid sixties there was an all you can eat cafeteria named Lavenders where you could walk out hurting for a couple of days you ate so much. As college students we ate there often.
Chain link and concrete. Looked more like a pound than a zoo.TenBears said:
Or if you remember the god awful old zoo. Even at five years old I could tell how f@@@@ up that was. Flat out disturbing.
BUDOS said:
You're almost old if you remember Pete's Diner just across from Brook's Hall, which became one of the earliest Scholtzsky's.
This is cool stuff. We are having a 55 year high school reunion this spring in Waco and this stuff will make great conversation!!