Memories of my Dad, Kermit King Hollingsworth: Part Two: From College to Marriage
In 1929,
Kermit Hollingsworth resided at 3410 Haynie Avenue, Dallas, Texas. In Google
Maps, the address is on the north side of the street and is now a parking lot
shaded by trees on the south side of the perimeter. His address was published
in the Dallas, Texas, City Directory, 1929, page 554, John F. Worley Directory,
Publishers, 905 Main Street, Dallas, Texas, at www.ancestry.com.
Kermit's
residence was one block west of SMU's northwest corner of the campus. As a freshman,
he would have possibly attended classes nearby in the main north quadrangle of
the campus. Fondren Library was approximately three blocks to the east and
three blocks south of where he lived.
In 1929,
at age 18, Kermit Hollingsworth appears as a freshman at Southern Methodist
University, SMU, Dallas, Dallas County, Texas on page 90 of the Rotunda
Yearbook. I wish I knew how he was able to afford to go to college, especially
at SMU, a private Methodist connected university. He talked about being an evangelistic
singer for a tent revivalist in Texas at the time and I have located newspaper
articles in Lubbock, Texas and east Texas newspapers about his leading the
singing, leading youth groups in singing, and leading children in singing in
tent revivals. His attendance in college was not steady during every semester,
but sporadic, I imagine, as he could afford it, for many years.
In 1930,
at age 19, Kermit did not live with the rest of his family as listed in the US
Federal Census. A later newspaper article that appeared in one of his later
pastorates in Athens, Texas states that he was a student at Paris Junior
College during the year in 1930. As of yet, I have not discovered the yearbook
for that year at Paris Junior College, Paris, Texas, but believe the newspaper
article to be true about him.
In the
1930 US Federal Census, Kermit's older brother Dan also did not live at home.
The family resided in the home at Denison, Grayson County, Texas including the
father, James William Hollingsworth, the mother, Lula Elizabeth Mason
Hollingsworth, Kermit's and Dan's brother Frank, and sisters Gae and Litha Sue.
By 1932,
at age 21, Kermit was accepted as a student at North Texas Teacher's College in
Denton, Texas and graduated from there in 1936. Again, he appears to have
perhaps skipped a few semesters according to the yearbooks where he was not
listed including 1933.
In 1934,
Kermit appears several times in the Yucca Yearbook. He was shown as Secretary
Treasurer of the Debate Club with his picture. Also in the 1934 Yucca Yearbook
he was shown as a sophomore member of the Music Club. During this year he
served as the Kappa Delta Pi Secretary Treasurer for the local chapter of the
International Honor Society in Education. The Alpha Iota Chapter was installed
on January 23, 1926, at the North Texas State Teachers College, now the
University of North Texas in Denton, Texas.
In 1935,
Kermit is listed as a senior in the NTSTC Yucca Yearbook with his picture. His
hometown was listed as Whiteright, Grayson County, Texas. During this year, he
was President of the Debate Club with his picture. He was listed as a member of
Kappa Delta Pi, the Spanish Club, and as an Evangelistic Singer. The 1940 US
Federal Census lists the address of the respondent for the residence in 1935 and
lists Kermit Hollingsworth as living in Denton, Texas during this year.
Kermit
graduated in 1936 with a Bachelor of Arts Degree that included Debate and
Spanish.
On May 7,
1936, Kermit Hollingsworth was admitted into the North Texas Methodist Church
Conference after fulfilling requirements to become an ordained Methodist
minister.
In
1936-1938, Kermit was a student at Perkins School of Theology, Southern
Methodist University. Here again, it may be that some semesters were
skipped as Kermit was an evangelistic singer to help pay for his college
expenses. I recall also that he was employed in one of SMU's dorm's dining
rooms, but do not know more details.
Kermit was
the Secretary-Treasurer of the Theology School Association as listed on page 51
at the Perkins School of Theology, SMU, in Dallas, Texas as listed in the 1937
Rotunda Yearbook.
In the
1938 SMU Rotunda Yearbook, Kermit Hollingsworth, was listed as a member of the
Student. Council of Religion at SMU along with his Secretary Treasurer position
in the Theology School Association. Kermit's address for that year was listed
as 3533 Asbury Place, Dallas, Texas in the Dallas,
Texas City Directory, 1938.
As an
aside, twenty-six years later, I also lived on Asbury Place in 1964 when I
attended Perkins School of Theology, SMU, as a church music graduate student.
By 2007, as shown in Google Maps, the residence where Kermit lived and I lived
have changed dramatically, as the homes now are larger, and no apartment houses
are there. The street has been renamed Asbury Avenue.
In 1938,
Kermit Hollingsworth received the Master of Arts and Bachelor of Divinity
degrees from SMU Perkins School of Theology.
By
November 1938-1939, Kermit Hollingsworth lived in east Texas at Lovelady,
Houston County, Texas, and served as pastor of a five-point Methodist Church
circuit for Lovelady, Riverside, Pleasant Hill, White Rock, Center Hill in the
Huntsville District. Sometimes churches were assigned to other circuits.
On
November 15, 1939, Kermit was transferred Texas Annual Methodist Conference to
the Tomball, Harris County, Texas Methodist Church and remained its pastor for
two years during which time he married my mother, Opal Murriel Hollingsworth.
The 1940
US Federal Census shows that Kermit Hollingsworth resided in the Texas, Harris
County, Houston Enumeration District 101-47, completed pages 1-9 of the 1940 US
Census 101-193, Village of Tom Ball.
I remember
my mom telling that when she married my dad on Monday, June 23, 1941 at 5:00
p.m. that they, Opal Murriel & Kermit King Hollingsworth were married
by Dr. W. F. Bryan at The First Methodist Church in Cleveland, Liberty County,
Texas. Cleveland was the town of my maternal grandparents. Kermit and Murriel
spent their honeymoon at the Rice Hotel in Houston, Harris County, Texas.
Mom would
tell us about the Tomball Methodist Church. The church was connected to the
parsonage where the pastor and his wife lived. Any time there was a function at
the church where a kitchen was needed, the women came into the parsonage and
used the minister's wife's kitchen to prepare and serve the food. I image it
was a "close encounter" of some kind to have church members in your
home's kitchen.
This will conclude Part 2 of my dad's life between high school and when he got married to my mom. There are many pictures, maps, sources, and other documents I will add to this post in the near future.
I wish
that I had grown up in a family that had talked even more than they did about
growing up in their families. I was not wise enough to ask questions about
stories or detailed information about their prior lives. We lived our lives in
the present, as most families do.
I am very fortunate to be able to piece most
of this together due to the preponderance of information on the Internet and the occupation my father chose to be in,
a minister who was written about often in newspaper articles, yearbooks, and
other publications. He was very visible in the communities he was asked to
served, and I am grateful for all the information I have found
that gives me the basis for writing about my father's life, Kermit King
Hollingsworth.
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