Winter Texan Times

FEBRUARY 28, 2024 www.wintertexantimes.com 14 WINTER TEXAN TIMES Within A Few Minutes Drive Of • Public River Access • Hiking Trails • Shopping • Dining Pull-Through and Back-In Sites Graded Sites Include Full Service Hookups No RV, No Problem Pop-up, 32’ Camper, & Rustic Camp Site Available Wi-Fi and Firewood Included FREE With All Sites Call Now – Limited Sites Available Reserve your site before leaving the RGV (417) 372-7301 Nightly Rates Start @ $50 Just off US 60 in Van Buren, MO https://rivertimerv.com/ • rivertimerv@gmail.com RioValleyEstates@gmail.com www.RioValleyEstates.com • 1 FREE High Speed Internet Modem with WiFi • 1 FREE Spectrum TV Cable Box • Swimming Pool & Hot Tub • Recreation Hall • Fun Activities • Concrete Pad Sites • Full Hookups • Wide Paved Streets • Gated Community 715 N. Westgate Dr. • Weslaco 956-968-2708 Expwy 83 Business 83 W Pike Blvd Panther Dr Westgate Dr RVs at Rent One Week Get One Week FREE OR Rent One Month Get One Month Call and reserve your space TODAY! Limited time offer expires March 31, 2024. Rio Valley Estates ROGO Winter Texans create quilt to celebrate Alamo’s centennial By Herb Moering A centennial quilt, created by two Winter Texans, was officially presented to the City of Alamo at the February 20 city commission meeting. The quilt, created by Audry Stewart and Carrol Moering, is part of Alamo’s year-long celebration marking 100 years since its incorporation from a town to a city on April 26, 1924. Several museum “Friends” along with the Centennial Queen, 102-year-old Wanda Boush, long time Alamo resident, were at the presentation where the Mayor J.R. Garza and commissioners indicated they were pleased with the gift to the city. The quilt will be on display first at the Alamo City Hall until the end of the year and then can be seen at the local museum starting in 2025. The quilt idea was hatched at a Friends of the City of Alamo Museum meeting a year ago where the two women took on the project. Moering researched embroidery patterns and Stewart laid out the quilt after purchasing background fabric. Several historic photographs from the City of Alamo Museum archives were printed on fabric with the help of the museum Director Alex Oyoque. Moering embroidered the pictures and Stewart sewed them on the quilt. A quilter finished the work on what the pair see as a piece of art. Besides the names of “Friends” of the museum, there are three memorialized names—the late Alamo Fire Chief, historian and museum founder, Rolando Espinoza, and museum supporters, the late Cheddy Balli and the late Demaris Swint. The quilt carries some important aspects of local history. Other events are planned for the rest of the year to call attention to the 100th anniversary of the city. The next major event as part of the centennial celebration is the long-running Texas Independence Day parade on Saturday, March 2 at 11 a.m. Its theme is “Alamo Is Out of This World.” March also has a program remembering the tragic train/ truck crash in Alamo that drew national headlines, which took 29 lives on March 14, 1940. The Easter Extravaganza of egg gathering for the children is at the Nature Park on March 28. April 27 will be the city’s “party of the century” celebrating the city’s many accomplishments. It will feature music, food, games, fireworks, and more from 4 to 9 p.m. in Central Park. The annual Watermelon Festival and cookoff is another centennial event, which will be held May 11. July 3 is an Independence Day celebration, and Rancheritas National Hispanic-American Heritage will be noted in September, The Halloween and Red Ribbon events are in October, with Dia de los Muertos in November and the Christmas parade in December. Additional centennial events are still in the planning stages. Park residents and members of the Friends of the City of Alamo Museum Carrol Moering, left, and Audry Stewart, right, were joined by Alamo’s 102-year-old Centennial Queen Wanda Boush to present the Centennial quilt to the City of Alamo at the Feb. 20 City Commission meeting. Carrol and Audry made the quilt over the past nine months to mark the city’s 100th year since its incorporation in April of 1924. The birthday bash of the Century is coming up on Saturday, April 27 at Central Park from 4 to 9 p.m. Photo courtesy of Alex Oyoque, City of Alamo Museum director/curator

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