Prior to Robert E. Howard owning an automobile it was his
custom when no ride was available, and he wanted to go somewhere, to simply
start walking down the road until he could hitch a ride with a willing
passerby. This practice is confirmed by his father, Dr. I.M. Howard, in a June
21, 1944 letter to E. Hoffman Price. Dr. Howard told Price, “[I] have known him
to start hitchhiking to Ft. Worth or Brownwood to see a fight before he owned a
car of his own. And when he was just [a] slender youth.”[1]
Going to fights was not the only reason Robert would take off down the road
attempting to hitch a ride to his destination. He also hitched when he wanted
to go see friends, movies, and on occasions when he just wanted to explore.
East Pecan Street Coleman, Texas; circa late 1920s |
While at this bootleg joint, Howard ran into an old-timer,
who was around 80 years old, whom Howard had known for some time. Howard bought
the old-timer a beer and listened to his stories while everyone else did their
own thing. The place was probably hopping with a few locals who knew the joint
existed. When I initially read Howard’s account it struck me as odd. First, in
Central and West Texas in the middle of Prohibition, bootlegging operations
were simple and small, located in areas in the sticks away from any town and
difficult to reach. Second, these operations typically contained only a small
distillery run by one or two people. And they were intentionally located in
hard to reach places to keep others away, such as a small hole in the sides of
hills, or the walls of creek and/or river beds. This was also to keep the
outfit hidden from the Texas Rangers who were busy shutting these small
operations down. Moreover, the alcohol that was made at these small operations
were bottled on site and distributed away from the operation itself. So, for
Howard and his friends to be at a bootleg joint that was large enough to serve
people on site was extremely rare. It also probably meant the local police were
aware of the place and were paid in cash and alcohol to look the other way. I
found this interesting enough to include it in a research road trip I was doing in
and around Coleman, Texas. What I managed to dig up is, to say the least, quite
intriguing.