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Posted at 08:41 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
The Hale County Historical Commission met with Troy Carter, James Belk, Jack Oswald, and Commissioner Vicki Milner, on Wednesday, September 27, 2023, for a story time with the Texas Tech Southwest Collection Oral History department in the home of Nancy & Troy Carter.
The HCHC began its oral history series in 2022-2023 and has plans to continue into 2024.
The new HCHC oral histories, as well as the 1980s series, will be available online once the TTSWC goes through the uploading process, possibly in late 2024-2025.
Posted at 09:42 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
Posted at 06:50 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)
We have a January 1912 Third National Bank postcard added to the collection. The back of the postcard reads...
"Make a thousand resolutions and break them all, except the one to"put a part of your earnings in the bank," and the end of the year cannot fail but find you better off in every way than the beginning."
Posted at 03:32 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)
What a beautiful day to celebrate the memory of a Plainview Pioneer, Dr. Mary D. Bublis, the first psychiatrist to serve in the mental health field in Plainview. What a tremendous life she lived as she served from her bottomless wealth of knowledge and compassion.
The program ...
Dr. Mary's children who were present at the unveiling tribute ...
Opening words from Mayor Charles Starnes ...
Pastor Joe Barrera welcomes God to this place ...
Alice Lockeby, marketing & public relations director for Central Plains Center, introduces the Directors...
Bill Dillard from Victoria, Texas, was the first full-time CEO for the Center in 1971 and shared his Dr. Mary thoughts...
The Tribute group plus Pete Laney, who was instrumental in the push for mental health for our counties while in Austin along with Judge Abernathy (deceased).
Doctors Mary D. and Norbert J. Bublis (from the Plainview Centennial Circle Celebrating Legacy Leavers)
Doctors Mary and Norbert Bublis were prominent local physicians for over four decades. Both
had practiced medicine for years when they moved to Plainview in 1957. Her M.D. degree was
from Washington University in St. Louis, and his was from St. Louis University, in the same
city. She was born Mary Davis on the last day of 1920 in Utah, and he was born in 1910 in
Illinois. They had seven children and 17 grandchildren.
“Dr. Mary,” as she was known, was a leading force in modernizing mental health issues and
treatment in Plainview and West Texas. As her reputation grew, people in need of mental health
attention knew they could count on her professional insight and personal sympathy. In addition
to her local private practice, over the years she served as medical director of the High Plains
Children’s Training Center, Hale County Law Enforcement Center, Hale County Health
Department, and Central Plains MH-MR Center. Dr. Mary also taught psychology at Wayland
Baptist University and served on the boards of the Hale County Child Welfare Unit, South Plains
Health Provider Organization, City-County Health Unit, and Council on Domestic Violence. She
was named Plainview’s Woman of the Year in 1968.
Dr. Norbert Bublis, a board-certified orthopedic surgeon, had practiced medicine in Missouri,
New York, and Temple, Texas, for nearly two decades when the Bublises moved to Plainview,
where he continued until 1988, for a practice more than 50 years long. He was a member of the
American Medical Association, Texas Medical Association, Texas Orthopedic Association, and
the Tri-County Medical Society.
As one of their services to the community, for years, the Bublises conducted complimentary
physical examinations for the members of a number of sports teams and local organizations, such
as the Boy Scouts.
Dr. Mary Bublis died in 1995 and Dr. Norbert Bublis, in 2004.
Posted at 03:53 PM | Permalink | Comments (2)