163: FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS AND I WAS BUSHED

My companions woke to Tom’s alarm at 7:00am on October 15, 2021. It was Friday; and Friday means only one thing in West Texas: High School Football. Ninety minutes after my photographer and his wife rolled out of bed, we were on our way to Midland, Texas, which was roughly 115 miles south of our Lubbock hotel. During the long drive, where we saw mile after mile of cotton fields, Vicki asked the timeliest question of the trip: “Since it’s Friday, is there a chance we can go to a high school football game tonight? You know, Friday Night Lights?” Tom immediately checked the high school football schedule for Midland High, and it turned out the Bulldogs were hosting the Permian Panthers at seven o’clock. I couldn’t believe my resin ears – Permian High in Odessa was the school featured in the movie ‘Friday Night Lights’. Once my photographer saw that matchup, he replied to his wife: “How cool is this? Permian, the team from Friday Night Lights, plays in Midland tonight. Let’s get a hotel near the stadium and maybe we’ll walk to the game.” That news put a newfound bounce into Vicki’s step; even though she was seated behind the Jeep’s steering wheel.

While the football game sounded cool, I was focused on the primary reason for our journey to Midland, Texas – a visit to the childhood home of George W. Bush. We hadn’t been to a Presidential site since Mount Rushmore, and I had grown increasingly impatient. Don’t get me wrong, I loved the Buddy Holly stuff and the film locations from the movie ‘Vacation’, but every once in a while, I need a Presidential bone thrown my way.

It was roughly 10:45am when we arrived at the one-story gray home on Midland’s West Ohio Avenue. I was excited. This was not just another Presidential home; it was the home to two Presidents – George H.W. Bush and his son George W. Bush. Only the Adams’ homes in Quincy, Massachusetts could boast the same distinction. When the oil boom hit the area, George Herbert Walker Bush moved his family from Connecticut to West Texas. The Bush’s lived in several rented homes in nearby Odessa and Midland before George and Barbara bought their permanent home on November 7, 1951. Within days of the purchase, they moved into their new home with their two children George W. and Pauline (Robin). During their four years in that house, Barbara gave birth to two more children – Jeb and Neil. Tragedy struck the Bush’s in 1953, however, when daughter Robin was diagnosed with leukemia. She died six months later in New York City after treatments had failed.

Tom carried me to the front of the historic house where he photographed me at several locations. One spot of interest, at least for me, was where George W. and Laura Bush had been photographed during a visit on October 4, 2008. Another was where George H.W. stood on the porch during the home’s dedication ceremony on April 11, 2006. I love standing in the footsteps of Presidents; and at that home, I hit two Bush’s with one stone. Just as Tom and I finished our photo-shoot in front of the home, the tour guide arrived with a small group for the 11am tour of the interior.

During renovations to the home, the interior was returned to its early 1950s appearance when George and Barbara owned it. I thought our visit inside the home was incredible, even though all of the furnishings were period pieces. Usually, I can’t tolerate period pieces in a historic home, but that place seemed different to me. Perhaps it was because I knew both Presidents and two First Lady’s had walked through the home after it had re-opened in 2006. They walked on the same floors; they looked at, and maybe touched, the same furniture and decor. Please sit back and join me for a tour of the George W. Bush Childhood Home in Midland, Texas.

George H.W. Bush purchased this one-story home on November 7, 1951. At that time, the future 41st President moved there with his wife Barbara, son George W, and daughter Robin.
I’m standing in the footsteps of where George H.W. Bush stood when he cut the ribbon during the dedication ceremony on April 11, 2006.
George and Barbara Bush cut the ribbon to dedicate the childhood home of their son, President George W. Bush. The First Lady of the United States, Laura Bush, helped hold the ribbon during the ceremony.
I loved our visit to this home as it was owned by one President and served as the childhood home of another President.
When I stood on this sidewalk, it felt as though I was on the pathway of greatness; mainly because First Lady Laura Bush had walked nearby. Her husband, George W, walked where I’m standing.
On Saturday October 4, 2008, President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush came to Midland, Texas to visit the President’s childhood home. At that time, Bush had less than four months left in office.
George W. Bush lived in this house during his formative years. He moved there with his parents at age five and left when he was nine years old.
Even though all of the furnishings inside the Bush home were period pieces, it was still extremely cool for me because I knew two Presidents and both First Lady’s had walked the same floors in the past 15 years.
The Bush family shared stories and a few laughs in the home’s living room on April 11, 2006.
As I stood on the fireplace mantel, I wondered how many times the Bush children curled up in front of the fire to keep warm.
Books, such as these, helped young George W. become edjaumicated!
I’m standing in the kitchen of the Bush home. The 1950s General Electric refrigerator came from the Welch home and was donated by Jenna Welch; First Lady Laura Bush’s mother.
As I stood on the kitchen table, it was as though I could see George 41, Barbara, and Laura Bush as they visited this room.
My resin heart was broken when I thought about little Robin Bush who likely ate breakfast in this area of the kitchen. Robin died at the age of three on October 11, 1953 from leukemia.
In 2006, George and Barbara were reunited with their kitchen, while Laura Bush saw what happened to her mother’s refrigerator.
My favorite room in the home was George W’s bedroom. I’m standing close to the spot where the President was photographed in 2008.
On October 4, 2008, President George W. Bush posed inside his Midland childhood bedroom. Since Bush was a Cub Scout as a youth, a scout uniform was placed on the bed.
During his visit in 2008, President Bush told the curator his room looked exactly like he had remembered from his childhood.
George W’s bedroom was filled with toys from the 1950s. Unlike a lot of children during that time, it appeared George didn’t go without much.
I’m standing on the original wooden floor of the Master Bedroom. Unfortunately, the only piece of furniture in that room was the phonograph player behind me.
At first, I thought my photographer would place me inside the bathtub. But when he discovered the tub wasn’t original to the home when the Bush’s lived there, he set me on the back of the toilet instead.

When we finished our tour of the George W. Bush childhood home, I was exhausted. Tom had placed me on nearly every flat surface he could find inside that house; and our incredible tour guide was okay with that. Had the furniture and decor been originally owned by the Presidential family, I knew the stuff would’ve been off-limits to me. But just the fact that two Presidents, two Governors, and a First Lady all lived there made the visit extremely special to me.

The next Midland site on our “Bush 43 Tour” was located a dozen or so blocks northwest of the “Official” childhood home we had just visited. After the births of Jeb and Neil, George and Barbara needed a larger house. That home on Sentinel Drive was the last house the Bush’s resided in before they moved to Houston in 1959. Even though the home was a private residence and off-limits to Presidential enthusiasts like my photographer and me, there was a park behind the house where young George once played baseball. After I posed for several images in front of the house, Tom carried me into Cowden Park where I stood on the old baseball field. As I stood in the grass of what once was the infield, I envisioned George H.W. on a sunny Sunday afternoon having a catch with his sons.

George and Barbara Bush moved their family to this home on Sentinel Avenue in 1956 and they lived there for nearly three years before they moved to Houston.
I wanted to get closer to the house, but my photographer and I weren’t comfortable venturing onto private property in Texas.
This was a section of the 10-acre neighborhood park in Midland, Texas known as Cowden Park. The house in the background, past the concrete wall, was where the Bush family once lived.
As I stood near the former home plate area of the ball diamond, I felt George W. Bush’s presence there. The future President was 10 to 12 years old when he played in that park.

We met Vicki back at the Jeep after our walk through a small section of Cowden Park. I was surprised no one else was in that 10-acre park during our visit. After all, it featured a large playground, soccer field, and disc golf course. I laughed to myself when I heard Tom say more people would flock there if they knew a former President of the United States once played baseball on that very field.

With my photographer’s wife behind the wheel, we headed east for roughly three miles until we arrived at a very small, one-story home in the Loma Linda section of Midland. It was in that house, on East Maple Avenue, where George H.W. and his family had moved when they left Odessa in early 1950. As I posed for a couple of images in front of the house, I couldn’t help but wonder why it had been constructed on an angle to the street. Perhaps that was the reason the Bush’s had moved out and relocated on West Ohio Avenue. A more-likely reason, however, was their family had grown larger, and they needed additional room. Oil wasn’t the only thing on Ol’ George’s mind in West Texas!

George W. Bush was four years old when his family moved into this house on the north side of Midland, Texas in 1950.
While I would’ve loved to have stood on the doorstep for at least one image, I’m glad we didn’t attempt to get closer. There appeared to be someone inside the house, and I didn’t want to see my photographer, or me, get shot.

The three of us were finished seeing the Midland childhood homes of George W. However, there were four houses in the “Tall City” that were either owned by George 43 before he met Laura Welch or after the couple were married on November 5, 1977. During our crisscross journey in and around Midland, we found three of the four homes – each were a private residence. One of the homes where George had lived before he met his future wife had been razed years ago. Here are the photos and descriptions of our visits to the three Midland homes owned or rented by George W. Bush.

The first home, on Bedford Avenue, was where George W had lived in 1975. This house was located roughly six blocks north of his “Official” childhood home on West Ohio Avenue.
Bush moved into this house after he was honorably discharged from the Air Force Reserve in late 1974.
George and Laura Bush owned this Midland home from 1985 to 1987. This was the last home they owned in Midland.
While the Bush’s didn’t live in this house full time, they owned it and likely stayed there whenever they visited West Texas and Laura’s parents.
When George and Laura bought this home, their twin girls were only four years old. As I stood in front of the elegant home, I envisioned Jenna and Barbara as they climbed the cool looking tree in the yard.
Our last Bush home of the day proved to be the hardest to photograph. It appeared as though the owners had constructed a privacy barricade near the home’s entrance.
George and Laura Bush owned this home after their marriage in late 1977 and lived there until sometime in 1984. Even though their twin daughters were born in Dallas, this would’ve been the girl’s first Midland home.
Barricade or not, Tom carried me as close to the entrance as he could. This home was located on West Golf Course Road, about six or seven blocks from Laura Bush’s childhood home.

When Tom and I returned to the Jeep where Vicki had parked it along a nearby side street, I watched as my companions scoured the internet for a reasonable rate on a hotel. They wanted to stay in a place that was within walking distance of Grande Communications Stadium, which was where the Midland Bulldogs were scheduled to host the Odessa Permian Panthers at seven o’clock. Once Vicki had worked her magic and secured our room at the Hilton Garden Inn, the three of us headed to a Cracker Barrel restaurant where I stood in the camera case and listened to my photographer as he filled his face with fried chicken and mashed potatoes.

After a brief 45-minute stop at Wall Street Antiques, where my companions left empty-handed, we arrived at the Hilton Garden Inn around 4:30 pm. Once they had registered, Tom and Vicki unpacked their belongings for our two-night stay at the hotel. There was no rest for the weary; even though the three of us were “Bush”ed! My travel mates managed to sneak a quick nap before the three of us headed on foot to Grande Communications Stadium, which was less than a half mile from our hotel.

We arrived at the 15,000-seat stadium roughly 45 minutes before game-time; Tom and Vicki wanted to bask in the atmosphere of West Texas football. The Waxing Gibbous Moon looked brilliant in the clear evening sky and the temperature was in the mid-50s. Even though my companions had purchased two ten-dollar tickets for admission to the game, they didn’t realize some of the Midland season ticketholders had designated seats. Tom quickly became agitated when he and his wife were forced to switch seats several times just before kick-off. My photographer and his wife had been going to high school football games in Michigan since the 1970s and they had never experienced reserved seats before.

Once the game started, and they finally settled into their 50-yard-line seats, I could easily tell Tom and Vicki were impressed by the style of play from the two teams. The play was polished, spirited, and intense; it seemed like a college atmosphere rather than a high school football game. And that was exactly what my photographer and his wife had hoped for. The Permian Panthers, the visiting team from nearby Odessa, had gained fame from the 2004 motion picture ‘Friday Night Lights’. And like the movie, ‘Mojo Nation’ did not disappoint. Although they fumbled the game’s initial kick-off that led to an early Midland touchdown, the rest of the game was dominated by Permian. Two of the Panthers’ players looked like future college stars – Junior QB Rodney Hall and Sophomore tailback Juzstyce Lara couldn’t be stopped. While Lara had 104 yards rushing and a TD, it was Hall who led the charge from behind center. The signal-caller rushed for a game-high 111 yards and two scores, while he threw for an additional 143 yards and two touchdowns in Permian’s 34-23 victory. A late fourth-quarter TD by the Bulldogs, however, made the game appear closer than it actually was. Throughout the contest, as well as during the impressive half-time show, my photographer captured some pretty cool images. Please sit back and check out his version of “Friday Night Lights”.

Our view as we headed to our seats in Grande Communications Stadium in Midland, Texas where the Midland Bulldogs prepared to meet the Permian Panthers from nearby Odessa.
The captains of both teams met at mid-field for the pre-game coin flip; won by Midland. The Bulldogs were represented by Luke Manning (14), Matteo Houston (4) and Landry Wells (6). The Permian captains were Jaxon Dorethy (35), Johnny Martinez (7), and Kayden Baze (10).
Surrounded by the marching band and cheerleaders, the Midland Bulldogs hit the field; led by Senior Tackle Jerry Villela (74) with the school’s flag.
Midland quarterback Landry Wells (6) pitched the ball to wide-out Jakob Vines (2) who scored the game’s first touchdown on a three-yard run.
In a similar play on the following possession, Permian signal-caller Rodney Hall pitched the ball to receiver Lucas Salazar (15) for a good gain.
Even though Midland receiver Brianzai Perez (5) couldn’t hall in this first quarter pass, he did catch three balls for 62 yards and a TD in the game. Kayden Baze (10) was the Permian defender.
The Moon over Midland.
Star quarterback Rodney Hall, a Junior, outran Midland’s Cade Williams (9) for 74 yards before he was tackled on the two-yard line. The Panthers scored on the next play to take the lead for good.
The famous “7th Flag Over Texas” crew celebrated another “MOJO” touchdown.
Superman Rodney Hall could definitely run, but he also possessed a cannon for an arm. Hall finished the game with 8 completions in 8 attempts for 142 yards and two touchdowns.
With Permian defenders Jadyn Pruitt (14) and Jaxon Dorethy (35) closing in, Bulldogs’ QB Landry Walls looked to pitch the ball to one of his backs. Walls had a great game on the ground as well – he rushed 16 times for 92 yards.
Permian tailback Juzstyce Lara (23) broke a tackle by Kayden Baze (10) and headed downfield for a good chunk of the 104 yards he gained in the game. Lineman Harris Sewell (73) made a great block to pave the way for his running back.
My photographer and his wife thought the Permian High School half-time entertainment was better than most college shows.
Midland’s half-time show was great as well, which was a credit to both schools whose students obviously had worked hard to achieve excellence.
The final score was written in lights, but the game wasn’t as close at it appeared. The Permian Panthers dominated the game from start to finish.
Nothing says “West Texas” like Friday Night Lights!

The game was over and my two companions were chilled. When the sun dropped below the horizon during the first quarter, the temperature also dropped; down into the 40s by game’s end. While I stayed snug inside the camera case, I knew Tom and Vic hadn’t planned on sitting through a night football game on the trip. As a matter of fact, my two companions had wished they’d brought their Michigan football-weather clothing to West Texas.

Our half-mile hike back to the hotel had pumped some warm blood through Tom and Vic’s veins and by the time we were in our room, they were fine. It didn’t take long before my photographer extinguished the lights on Friday night, either. As I stood alone in the darkness, I couldn’t help but think about the game and the way the Permian Panthers and Midland Bulldogs conducted themselves. The sportsmanship on the field and in the stands was something to behold. High school football is a way of life in West Texas; and the three of us were proud to have been part of it for one night. I will never forget what my photographer said right after the game: “Someday, we’ll see Rodney Hall play football on Saturday. And who knows? If he gets a bit taller, he just might play on Sunday as well.”

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Thomas Watson

My name is Thomas Watson and I've been a U.S. history fanatic since I was 9 years old. In 2013, I decided to take my passion to the next level when I purchased a Thomas Jefferson bobble head with the sole intention of photographing that bobble head at Presidential sites. From that first day on July 10, 2013 at Spiegel Grove in Fremont, Ohio, this journey has taken on a life of its own. Now, nearly 40,000 miles later, I thought it was time to share the experiences, stories, and photos of Jefferson's travels. Keep in mind, this entire venture has been done with the deepest respect for the men who held the office as our President; no matter what their political affiliations, personal ambitions, or public scandals may have been. This blog is intended to be a true tribute to the Presidents of the United States and this story will be told Through the Eyes of Jefferson. I hope you enjoy the ride!

4 thoughts on “163: FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS AND I WAS BUSHED

    1. Seems like a lot of the Presidents moved around a lot during their childhoods…look at all the Ford sites we’ve to. You’re right, the early Bush homes were simple and small; but some of that was due to the area and the times. Thanks for reading and posting a comment, Bob.

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