Texas Archival Resources Online

TABLE OF CONTENTS


Descriptive Summary

Biographical Note

Scope and Contents

Restrictions

Related Material

Administrative Information

Description of Series

Inventory

University of Texas, Center for American History

A Guide to the Robert Runyon Photograph Collection, 1907-1987



Descriptive Summary

CreatorRunyon, Robert
TitleRobert Runyon Photograph Collection
Dates: 1907-1987
Identification: [2007-223]
Extent6 ft.
LanguageMaterials are in English and Spanish.
RepositoryCenter for American History, The University of Texas at Austin

Biographical Note

Robert Runyon was born on a farm near Catlettsburg in Boyd County, Kentucky, on July 28, 1881, the son of Floyd and Elizabeth (Lawson) Runyon. On September 16, 1901, Runyon married Norah Young in Ironton, Ohio. The couple's only child, William, was born on August 6, 1904, in Ashland, Kentucky, where Runyon had taken a job selling insurance. On December 3, 1908, Norah died. In an effort to put the impact of her death behind him, Runyon left William with his late wife's parents and went to New Orleans and then to Houston looking for employment. In early 1909 the Gulf Coast News and Hotel Company hired him to sell sandwiches, fruit, candy, and cigarettes to passengers on the St. Louis, Brownsville, and Mexico Railway between Houston and Brownsville, Texas. Within a couple of months the railway offered to make him manager of Gulf Coast's lunchroom and curio shop in the Brownsville depot. Runyon accepted the position and, in April 1909, rented a room across the street from the railroad station and began a period of residency in Brownsville that continued without interruption for fifty-nine years until his death in 1968.

Arriving in Brownsville, Texas, in 1909, Robert Runyon entered a world very different from his native Kentucky. With its tropical climate and close proximity to Mexico, the town embraced two cultures and thrived on diversity. Throughout the rest of his life, Runyon took an avid interest in studying and recording this unique area. His photographs of the Lower Rio Grande Valley and Northeastern Mexico both document the region's history and stand as testimony to Runyon's affinity for the land and its people.

Runyon returned to Kentucky in the summer of 1910 to bring William back to Texas to live with him. On July 31, 1913, Runyon married Amelia Leonor Medrano Longoria, a young woman from a respected middle-class family with deep roots in northern Mexico. Between 1914 and 1926, Amelia bore five children: Lillian, Amali, Virginia, Robert, and Delbert.

Robert Runyon worked as a commercial photographer from 1910 to 1926. During that time, he focused his camera on the mundane and the dramatic alike. His first images recorded urban life in Brownsville and Matamoros as well as the Rio Grande terrain. Then, during the summer and fall of 1913, he turned his attention to political events in Mexico as the Mexican Revolution reached the Texas border. On June 3, General Lucio Blanco and his Constitutionalist forces captured the Federal garrison at Matamoros. The next day, Runyon moved throughout the city, photographing the results of battle. He later recorded Blanco's land distribution cerermony and Los Borregos in August and proceeded to travel with Blanco's army south to Ciudad Victoria. Several months later, he returned to photograph Revolutionary events in Monterrey. Back in Texas, Runyon also photographed the results of two 1915 bandit raids across the U.S. border: the August 15 raid at Norias Ranch and the October 10 train wreck at Olmito. Although small in number, Runyon's images of the Mexican Revolution have great historical significance. The conflict between Rebels and Federals in Northeastern Mexico has gone largely undocumented; his photographs provide a unique record of this important event.

After the tumultuous decade of the 1910s, Runyon returned to familiar subjects in the peaceful and prosperous 1920s. He continued to document city life in the Lower Rio Grande Valley and in Matamoros, Mexico, and he also took many photographs of local beaches, lakes, and, especially, the Rio Grande. He began to pursue a growing interest in botany as well and used his camera to record native plants, including palm trees, yucca, and cactus. Runyon also continued to make and market postcards, but his most profitable enterprise during the early 1920s was studio photography. He aggressively promoted his small studio opposite the Brownsville railroad depot, drawing in thousands of customers and enjoying unprecedented popularity as a commercial photographer. In addition to studio work, he photographed school groups, sports teams, and the numerous excursion groups which came to Brownsville in the early 1920s as potential participants in the Valley land boom.

By 1926, however, Runyon decided to leave commercial photography for the more profitable trade in curios and souvenirs. He became a partner with this brother-in-law in a curio store in Matamoros, and later owned a store in Brownsville. Although he continued to take pictures of plants in conjunction with his botanical studies, after the late 1920s Runyon built his reputation as a highly successful amateur botanist and local politician rather than a photographer. Runyon published two books on native plants, Texas Cacti (1930) and Vernacular Names of Plants Indigenous to the Lower Rio Grande Valley (1938), and in the 1920s began a crusade to save the native Texas palm, Sabal texana. Local politics became Runyon's passion in the late 1930s. He was appointed Brownsville city manager in 1937 and in 1941 was elected mayor. The "stormy petrel" of Brownsville politics, as Runyon was known, held the position through 1943. In 1952 he unsuccessfully ran for Texas House of Representatives. Runyon published a newspaper in the 1940s and wrote a small volume on family history, Genealogy of the Descendants of Anthony Lawson of Northumberland, England.

Robert Runyon died on March 9, 1968, in Brownsville after a short illness at the age of eighty-seven.

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Scope and Contents

The Robert Runyon Photograph Collection documents the diverse interests and multiple careers of Robert Runyon, including commercial photography, retail sales, local political office, and botany. The collection includes glass negatives, lantern slides, nitrate negatives, prints, postcards, correspondence, business records, and botany specimens.

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Restrictions

A portion of this collection is stored remotely. Advance notice is required for retrieval. Contact repository for retrieval.

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Related Material

This collection forms part of a digitized collection. See also The South Texas Border, 1900-1920: Photographs from the Robert Runyon Collection.

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Administrative Information

Cite as

Robert Runyon Photograph Collection, 1907-1987, Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin.

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Detailed Description of the Collection

 

Inventory

box
2007-223/1Politics (includes clippings, speeches, correspondence):
Untitled
Letters of Thanks
Letters, January 1942
Untitled
Applications for jobs (city)
Politics
Proclamations by Runyon
Letters, Oscar C. Dancy
Letters, Menton Murray
City Politics
Politics
City of Brownsville
Travel, R. Runyon
Untitled (miscellaneous loose items)
Letters, Famous People (primarily elected and government officials)
Politics:
Untitled
City Bond Case
Miscellaneous City Business
“Runyon 702”
Runyon
Housing Authority, 1941
Untitled
Whitney (clippings)
Untitled (miscellaneous)
Miscellaneous Files:
Stationery
Cancelled checks
Travel Guide
Untitled (legal documents)
Tax Receipts, 1913 and later
Tax Receipts, Queen Theatre
Tax Statements, Brownsville Consolidated ISD and City of Brownsville
Untitled (personal financial)
Untitled (assorted items)
Printer engraving plate for invitation, 1963
box
2007-223/2Miscellaneous Files:
Catalogs and brochures
Weather Diaries, 1939, 1943, 1958-1967
The Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonels
Mirrors – how to silver
Honor for Robert Runyon
Biographies, Robert Runyon
Brownsville History
Fort Brown letters
Clipping, Bandit Raids (photocopy)
Copies, Robert Runyon Papers
Old Papers
Resaca Park
Paper on telegraph lines
Letters about Brownsville Railroad
Monty’s Monthly Magazine, 1925, 1927, 1936
Map of Matamoros
Maps
Untitled (miscellaneous loose items)
Tax Receipts, 1920-1939, 1956-1960
Building Permits
Microfilm copies of book, Houston Displayed, or Who Won the Battle of San Jacinto?
Weather–Hurricanes
Insurance, 1909-1911, 1940
My Copies (photocopies of correspondence), 1909-1910
Property, 1911-1940
Miscellaneous letters and receipts-rent, paper (includes financial documents and correspondence), 1911- 1940
Letters-Runyon to Editor, 1948-1949, 1956
Dobie-letters
Early Correspondence-Runyon, 1910-1920, 1940
Letterhead-Robert Runyon
Letters to Runyon-Matamoros, 1911-1912
R. Runyon-Miscellaneous Letters, 1910-1966
Old Receipts (includes Mexican identification papers), 1916-1946
Receipts-Runyon, 1909-1912, 1927, 1934
Anniversary-50th, 1963
Port Isabel, 1936
Brownsville News, 1936-1953
Robert Runyon letters, 1910-1912, 1928, 1937
For an album/scrapbook (telegrams, letters, bills, receipts)
C.L. Williams, County Clerk, 1911, 1939
Publications (tourism and church brochure, program)
Financial documents (letters, receipts)
Assorted letters and cards
box
2007-223/3Book Manuscript (Genealogy of the Descendants of Anthony Lawson):
Corrections
Orders, 1939, 1952-1953
Manuscript Drafts and Edits
Botany:
Botany Books donated to Jernigan Library, Texas A&I University
Notes on Plants
Field Notes, 1926-1928, 1937, 1940-1941
Lists of Plants Identified
The Basket Place, Jumping Bean
Letters, Ellen Schulz, 1930, 1956
Letters, Dr. Thorp, 1946-1950
Requests for plants, 1920-1922
Herbarium
Palm Grove
Botany (multiple folders)
City Parks
Printed items (newsletters)
Correspondence (membership, specimens, research)
Store:
Notices to appear (Equalization Board, Brownsville CISD)
City of Brownsville, Tax Statements (property of Robert Runyon), 1948-1960
Tax renditions, school district
Bank Books
Address Book (lists addresses and costs of various perfumes)
Curt Teich & Company
Buckhorn Letters
Products manufactured in Brownsville, 1931
Purchase Orders-Stores
Receipts
Basket Place
Correspondence
box
2007-223/4Photography:
“mine” (assorted correspondence)
Southwest Caller magazine and San Antonio pictures
Litigation (regarding copyright), 1927-1928
Clipping-Postcards, 1987
Requests for Photographs (photocopies), 1912-1965
General Electric Photo Data Book, business card, photographs, 1947, 1965, undated
Curt Teich & Company letters, 1912
Clipping-Photographing Flowers, 1913
Kodak Exposure Record (photocopies) (2 folders)
Inventory of Lenses, 1918, 1940, 1953
Photographic Lenses, etc., 1920-1923, 1953-1954
Brownsville Herald, 1925, 1948
Botany:
Correspondence
Flower Grower and Southern Florist magazines, 1928-1929
Mrs. Ellen D. Schulz (Witte Museum), 1923-1932
Correspondence (personal and business) (some in Spanish), 1933-1943
Miscellaneous:
Robert Runyon (business receipts and records in Spanish)
Assorted Correspondence, Financial and Photography Records (includes clippings, Exposure Records, business and personal receipts, 1939 British Journal of Photography)
Botany Specimens
box
2007-223/5Scrapbooks:
1935-1937
1938-1941
1938-1939
1940
1955-1956
1946, 1964-1967
1954-1966
1939
1943
1942
1944
box
3S437Photographic Materials:
Negative Envelope, empty
Copies of original film box lids (lantern slides in box 3S471b and glass plate negatives in box 3S077a)
Polyester negatives:
April 21, 1958
Resaca Park, 9-10:30, September 30, 1958
May 30, 1962
February 7, 1962
Glass negatives 12x5, circa 1920's:
Alamo, San Antonio
San Jose Mission, San Antonio
box
3So77aGlass negatives, 5x7:
Man on donkey
Amelia Runyon
Runyon family
Amelia and Amali Runyon, 1917
Amali and Virginia Runyon
Runyon family
Robert, Amali, Lillian Runyon
Amali Runyon
Jose Maria Medrano
Brownsville train station
Virginia Runyon, 1921
Article in Spanish (parts 1 and 2)
Amelia y Leocadia
Amali Runyon, 1921
Flower
Carranza’a troop trains, Matamoros
Amali Runyon
Rio Grande railroad engine
Family portrait
Man and woman portrait (5 shots)
Lillian, Amali, Virginia Runyon, circa 1921-1922
Oil derrick
Man and woman portrait
Felipe L. de Medrano
Car outside Runyon Studio
Oil derrick
Mission (2 shots)
Cowboy portrait
Cowboys and cowgirl
Aerial view of town square park
Mission
Cattle-Steers (3 shots)
box
3So77bLighthouse, Padre Island
Map of Mexico
Lillian, Amali, Virginia Runyon
Map of Mexico
Constitutional soldiers, Mexico
Don V. Carranza and Don P. Gonzales
Touring car
Runyon family
Amali and Virginia Runyon
Virginia Runyon, 1921
Lillian, Amali, Virginia Runyon
Robert Runyon
Amali Runyon, (2 shots) 1921
Football game (3 shots)
Cowboy portrait (3 shots)
box
3S471aGlass negatives 5.5x3.5:
Amali Runyon
Runyon family, circa 1919
Amelia Runyon, circa 1919
Soldier on horse
Girl toddler, Runyon daughter?
Glass plate negatives 4x5:
Men fishing on beach (5 different shots)
box
3S471bLantern slides, Cramer’s Photo Dry Plates, 3x5:
Outdoor monument
Omnibus
Bridge
Pier
Civilian army parade, Mexico?
Civilian soldiers, Mexico?
Building Ruins
Man with donkey
Lantern slides, Hammer Lantern Plates, 3x5:
Man with flower
Map of Matamoros
Troop of soldiers
Mission
Church
City street
City street

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