This archive also encompasses the source of one of Mr. Jones's vast lumber empire, the business that fueled his nephew Jesse's profound impact on Houston's development and growth. Austin, the Allen Brothers and, from the more recent past, many notable people, buildings and events. It includes documents involving Stephen F. This collection embodies a large part of Houston's history. ![]() Only property records involving New York City are organized by address. Jones invested primarily in Harris County, the volume and scope of the material dictated that the collection be further divided by leagues, surveys, additions and sub-divisions as well as blocks. Jones conducted significant building programs, the property records have been sub-divided into city blocks with their corresponding buildings. Includes documents involving two or more entities VARIOUS BUILDINGS, VARIOUS CORPORATIONS, VARIOUS PROPERTIES. VARIOUS DOCUMENTS-includes contracts, correspondence, deeds, inventories, maps and receipts Stock book dates indicate the years during which stock was issuedĪrticles of incorporation dates indicate the day the corporate officers signed the incorporation papers (articles of incorporation sometimes appear as a separate document may appear in the front of the minute book or, if there are two or more minute books, may appear with the dissolution certificate in the last book)ĭissolution certificate dates indicate the day the state issued the certificate An explanation of certain entries in the corporate and property indexes follows:īOOK OF ACCOUNT-includes ledgers and journalsĭATES-indicate the age range of documents within each entry, even though they may relate to an event that occurred on a specific date, such as a loan or saleįranchise and income tax dates indicate the years taxes were incurred The alphabetically listed corporate and property records may not adhere to that arrangement within a box due to the material's varying shapes and sizes. The accompanying indexes are general guides to provide easy access to the collection's documents. (Folders containing this material have stars on the left corner to distinguish them from the more specifically categorized and refined original material.) Now that this task has been accomplished, the archive is complete. ![]() In January of 1995, it was decided that similar material, housed in temporary storage, should be included in the collection's corporate and property records. I remained and continued to work on the Foundation's exhibit, which I began soon after we moved into the new building. Scardino completed her portion of the project in May of 1994, and, before leaving, created an index to the archive's personal papers. Jones's philosophies, achievements and contributions also began to emerge.Ībout one year later, we moved the evolving archive to Houston Endowment's new office and went to work in one of the conference rooms. As the mass of material slowly took form, our awareness of Mr. Jones built back in 1908 for the Texas Company. We established a work space in that same fifth floor office, in the vacant, ten story building on Main Street Mr. Houston Endowment had recently moved its offices to the Texas Commerce Tower and had emptied Bankers Mortgage Building of its few remaining tenants, leaving behind these remarkable relics for Ms. Jones's public, business and personal lives. Little did we know that the stacks of plain, white bankers boxes arrayed before us were filled with treasures from Houston's past and would reveal rare insight into Mr. Scardino and I were assigned the job of creating an archive from a maze of documents and photographs that had been retrieved from the building's faded green file cabinets, old painted safes and walk-in vaults. ![]() In mid-December, 1992, architectural historian Barrie Scardino and I met with Houston Endowment President, Joe Nelson, on the fifth floor of the Bankers Mortgage Building, in what was once Jesse Jones's office.
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