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Information from Keith about Houston Historical Tours

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Keith’s Blog September 29 – October 5, 2019

Keith's Blog

Welcome Fans, Friends, and Visitors,

 

Hi.  October is the best sports month in Houston.  The Houston Astros baseball team is in the playoffs again;  The Houston Texans football team is season is well underway.  The Houston Rockets basketball team will begin play.  The Houston Dynamo and Dash soccer teams are playing, also.  Only our SaberCats rugby team is not playing in this month.  There is almost a sport for everyone!

Weather in Houston

With the end of September, we have ended the worst part of the hurricane season.  We enter one of the two best months for weather in Houston.  Click here for the weekly report.

Monthly Special for a 2.5-Hour Walking Tour – Discounted by 17 to 29% Based on the Number of People

The monthly special for October is Downtown Walking Tour E. This is a great month to be outside walking.  The focus of this tour is Buffalo Bayou, 6 performance halls, statues, parks, and historic sites and buildings.  This tour starts in the rotunda located on the first floor of the City Hall building at 901 Bagby Street, Houston, Texas 77002.  Click here to read a description.

Weekly Special for Driving Tours – September 29th through October 5th. Discounted 20%.

September 15th through October 15th is Hispanic Heritage Month.  We offer 3 geographically different Hispanic themed tours.  Schedule one or both; save one for next year.  LOL. Click here to read a description.

Weekly Special for National Food Days – September 29th through October 5th.  

These are 3-hour customized tours that can be blended.  The price is the same as a regularly priced 3-hour City Tour.  You pay for anything that you consume.   These include:

  • September 29th – National Biscotti Day.
  • September 30th – National Hot Mulled Cider Day.
  • October 4th – National Taco Day.
  • October 4th – National Vodka Day.

 

See you on a tour.

Sincerely,

Keith Rosen
Houston Historical Tours
P. O. Box 262404
Houston, Texas 77207-2404
(713) 392-0867
(713) 643-4086 Fax
houstonhistory@aol.com
www.houstonhistoricaltours.com

Keith’s Blog – August 1 – 7, 2019

Keith's Blog

Welcome Fans, Friends, and Visitors, Hi. Welcome to the city where you can save money on moisturizer that you will spend on deodorant. Weather in Houston Congratulations on your bravery to come outside in our month that has the second … Continue reading →

Keith’s Blog – July 22 – 31, 2019

Keith's Blog

Welcome Fans, Friends, and Visitors, Hi. Welcome to the city where you can save money on moisturizer that you will spend on deodorant. Weather in Houston July is often a drought month.  The month serves as a prelude to the … Continue reading →

Keith’s Blog – July 15 – 21, 2019

Keith's Blog

Welcome Fans, Friends, and Visitors, Hi.  Welcome to the city where you can drink the air. Weather in Houston Hurricane season starts out slow.  By mid-July, we begin to track some named tropical storms in the Caribbean Sea, but not … Continue reading →

Keith’s Blog – July 1 – 14, 2019

Keith's Blog

 

Introduction

I want to start off with an apology for anyone who reads and looks forward to these blogs as we did not send out one for Mid-June and this July one is late.  Here at Houston Historical Tours, we have been dealing with a number of issues:

  1. My long-time webmistress’s husband of over 60 years passed away. She was dealing with his decline for years and now is in the process of mourning and rebuilding her life.  Gail, you have my condolences, patience, and support for you to grieve and rebuild your new life.
  2. Internet and telephone service was cut off for 4 days due to yours truly accidentally cutting a transmission cord. I had to wait for ATT to send out a technician to make repairs.
  3. In May, I was advised to:
    1. Send out shorter blogs of less than one page.
    2. Include one or more photos with each blog.
    3. Send out weekly or semi-weekly blogs instead of semi-monthly blogs.
  4. Beginning with this month, I will try to make these changes and see what the results are. This is a work in progress.  As such, I will:
    1. Include links to Houston Historical Tours’s website for detailed descriptions of tours.
    2. Post one or more photos with each blog.
    3. Post each week 1 discounted driving tour only for the upcoming week and the discounts for daily National Food Day specials only the week that the day is within.
    4. Include a link to weather forecasts for each week.
    5. Continue to offer monthly specials on driving tours for designated months such as Black History Month in February.
    6. Increase the monthly discount for driving tours from 10% to 20%.
  5. We will keep advertising one monthly 2.5-hour walking special with a link to its description on the Houston Historical Tours’s website.

 

This blog will still be longer than 1 page because of the above introduction.  It is still shorter than the typical 3-page blog that I have sent out.  I hope you will like these changes.  Feel free to give me your feedback and input.  Thank you.

Welcome Fans, Friends, and Visitors,

Hi.  Welcome to the city where we can have 100% precipitation and no rainfall.  The air is damp.  The heat is extreme.  This is an excellent month to:

  1. Stay in an air-conditioned vehicle during city tours.
  2. Plan a tour that involves being in buildings such as museums and Space Center Houston (SCH).
  3. Go on tunnel tours inside air-conditioned environments in downtown and the Texas Medical Center (TMC).
  4. Go on an out-of-town tour such as to Galveston or San Antonio where the temperatures and or humidity will not be as oppressive.

Weather in Houston

July is the hottest month of the year, but just barely ahead of August.  You might want to wear a cap or hat with a bill to keep your forehead and face a little cooler.  Bring sunscreen and perhaps a portable hand-held fan that can spray water on you.  The monthly average high temperature is 94 degrees Fahrenheit/34 degrees Centigrade.  Click here for the weekly report.

Monthly Special  for a Walking Tour – Discounted by 17 to 29% Based on the Number of People

The monthly special for July is a 2.5-hour Texas Medical Center (TMC) Walking Tour B.  Click here.

Weekly Special for Driving Tours – July 1st through July 14th.   Discounted 20%.

  1. 3-Hour City Tour. Click here,
  2. 3-Hour Museum Tour. Click here.

Because this blog is going out late, we are including two weeks of different weekly specials.

Weekly Special for National Food Days – July 1st through July 14th.

These are 3-hour customized tours that can be blended.  The price is the same as a regularly priced 3-hour City Tour.  Because this blog is going out late, we are including two weeks of National Food Days.  These include:

  • July 1 – National Creative Ice Cream Flavor Day.
  • July 4 – National Caesar Salad Day.
  • July 4 – National Barbecue Day.
  • July 5 – National Apple Turnover Day.
  • July 6 – National Fried Chicken Day.
  • July 7 – National Macaroni Day.
  • July 7 – National Strawberry Sundae Day.
  • July 8 – National Chocolate with Almonds Day.
  • July 9 – National Sugar Cookie Day.
  • July 10 – National Pina Colada Day.
  • July 11 – National Blueberry Muffin Day.
  • July 12 – National Pecan Pie Day.
  • July 13 – National French Fries Day.
  • July 14 – National Grand Marnier Day.

 

If you know anyone who would be interested in receiving our blogs, please let us know at houstonhistory@aol.com.  Provide a clear name and email address for the person or group and we will sign them up.  Thanks.

See you on a tour.

Sincerely,

Keith Rosen
Houston Historical Tours
P. O. Box 262404
Houston, Texas 77207-2404
(713) 392-0867
(713) 643-4086 Fax
houstonhistory@aol.com
www.houstonhistoricaltours.com


 

Keith’s Blog – June 2019

Keith's Blog

Welcome Fans, Friends, and Visitors,

Hi.  Welcome to the land of heat and humidity.  Houston is the most air-conditioned city in the world.  Bring sunscreen and wear appropriate clothing.

Weather in Houston

June is the first month of the hurricane season that lasts through November 30th, for six months.  However, have no fear.  With the exception of a freak storm that began in the Pacific Ocean and crossed Mexico, Hurricane Patricia on October 25, 2015, 100% of all major hurricanes that have hit Houston do so in a six-week window during the last two weeks of August and the first four weeks of September.  The monthly average high temperature is 91 degrees Fahrenheit/33 degrees Centigrade.  The monthly average low temperature is 74 degrees Fahrenheit/23 degrees Centigrade, and the mean is 82 degrees Fahrenheit/28 degrees Centigrade.  It is the third hottest month of the year and the first of three consecutive months when the high temperature is normally in the 90 degrees Fahrenheit/30 degrees Centigrade.  The average rainfall is 6.8 inches/17.4 centimeters.  It is by far the wettest month of the year.  It is the only month with 6 or more inches of rainfall or 145 or more centimeters of rain.

Tours

Mention that you read about the tours below from the blog and you will receive a 10% discount.

African-American Music Appreciation Month

June is African-American Music Appreciation Month.  Would you like to schedule an evening tour to listen to some jazz,  rhythm and blues, or soul music?

Gay and Lesbian Themed Tours

June is LGBT Pride Month.  We go to a variety of bars, restaurants, clubs, unisex shops, and boutiques, and neighborhoods.  This is usually a late afternoon and or evening tour.

Brewery Tours

Nowadays, Houston has over 2 dozen breweries.  All but one, the St. Arnold Brewery (the grand-daddy), has started since 2011.  We offer brewery tours from 2 to 10 hours, from 1 to 4 breweries, from 1 to dozens of people.  We can play Irish, German, and country and western beer drinking songs along the way or play DVDs of movies and television shows that focused on beer drinking and where everyone knows your name.  Most breweries have either restaurants or food trucks on the premises to eat meals.

Galveston Tours

Galveston tours range from 5 to 14 hours depending on what you want to see.  Galveston has about 6 museums including the Ocean Star Oil Rig museum, The Bryan Museum whose specialty is anthropology, the Texas Seaport Museum, and the 4th largest Railroad Museum.  Perhaps, you would like to tour one or both of the 1890s mansion homes:  the Bishop’s Palace and or Moody Mansion.  You might want to go shopping on The Strand; this area looks a lot like a mini-, cleaned up version of Bourbon Street in New Orleans.  You could see one to three movies about the history and main events in the history of Galveston, including the greatest natural disaster in United States history.  The Galveston Hurricane, also known as the Great Storm killed between 6,000 and 8,000 people in just one city.  That figure was greater than the total number of people killed by all of the hurricanes that have hit the US since that time COMBINED with the exception of Hurricane Maria that hit Puerto Rico in September 2017.  We will also take you around to see the different neighborhoods, and Victorian homes and public structures and to tour downtown, and drive along The Seawall.

National Food Day Tours

Did you know that:

  • The first Friday of June is National Donut Day?
  • June 2nd is National Rocky Road Day?
  •  June 3rd is National Egg Day?
  • June 4th is National Cognac Day?
  • June 5th is National Gingerbread Day?
  • June 6th is National Applesauce Cake Day?
  • June 7th is Chocolate Ice Cream Day?
  • June 10th is National Iced Tea Day?
  • June 11th is National German Chocolate Cake Day?
  • June 12th is National Peanut Butter Cookie Day?
  • June 15th is National Lobster Day?
  • June 16th is National Fudge Day?
  • June 17th is National Eat Your Vegetables?
  • June 20th is National Vanilla Milkshake Day?
  • June 21st is National Peaches “N” Cream Day?
  • June 25th is National Catfish Day?
  • June 26th is National Chocolate Pudding Day?
  •  June 28th in National Tapioca Day?

 

We will create a customized 3-hour themed tour for your enjoyment anytime in this month for the above gastronomical sensations.  We can combine two or more of the above holidays.  Who does not like comfort food and drink?

Monthly Special  – Discounted by 17 to 29% Based on the Number of People

The monthly special for June is the 2.5-hour Tunnel Tour B.  THE TUNNELS ARE AIR CONDITIONED!  CELEBRATE!  Of the three tunnels tours that we offer, this is one of the two most popular tunnel tours.  It has the most visual stimuli, variety of activities, and a moderate amount of walking.  We will see hundreds of different stores and shops, go through the largest food court in the tunnel system, walk through at least 3 skybridges/skywalks from building to building and with smaller groups of 10 or less, go to 59th and 58th floor observation decks.  We walk through the busiest sections of the tunnels.  The walking is 2.0 miles/3.2 kilometers.  Shoppers and people with attention deficit disorder (ADD) tend to love this tour.

The downtown walking tours in May, June, September, and October all begin in the rotunda on the first floor of the City Hall building at 901 Bagby Street, Houston, Texas 77002.  You can enter from either the east or west side of the building.

It goes into the:

  • Wells Fargo Plaza
  • 1 Houston Center/LyondellBasell Tower/1200 McKinney Street,
  • 2 Houston Center/909 Fannin Street,
  • 3 Houston Center/Fulbright Tower/1301 McKinney Street,
  • 4 Houston Center/Shops at Houston Center/1221 Lamar Street, and
  • 5 Houston Center/1401 McKinney Street.

 

It goes under:

  • The Kinder-Morgan Building,
  • 919 Milam,
  • 1000 Main,
  • One City Centre,
  • 1001 Fannin,
  • 1001 McKinney/ International Bank of Commerce (IBC),
  • The Commerce Towers, and
  • 811 Louisiana.

 

You will walk through skywalks/skybridges over:

  • Caroline Street twice,
  • McKinney Street, and
  • San Jacinto Street.

 

A walking tour only moves as fast as the slowest person.

Warnings:

  1. Use a bathroom before the tour begins. Only about two public bathrooms are accessible during this tour.  Most of the businesses in or operating over the tunnels do not allow the general public to use their bathrooms.
  2. Not all of the tunnels are Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990 accessible. Thus, you should NOT select this special tour if you use a walker, a wheelchair, or any other device that you need to enable you to move.
  3. If you use a cane, we will be moving at such a slow pace that we will not be able to complete the whole tunnel tour. Thus, we will have to omit some buildings.
  4. We go on elevators and escalators. Thus, you should NOT select this special tour if you have a phobia about either of these mechanical devices.

 

You cannot take photos inside the banks.  Taking photos elsewhere is fine.

  1. 1927 32-story tall Niels Esperson Building. This was Houston’s tallest building from 1927 to 1929.
  2. 1929 37-story tall J. P. Morgan Chase Building. This was Houston’s tallest building from 1929 to 1963.
  3. 1939 17-story tall City Hall. The architect was Joseph Finger.
  4. 1942 19-story tall Mellie Esperson Building. The architect was John Eberson.
  5. 1971 50-story tall One Shell Plaza. This was Houston’s tallest building from 1971 to 1980.
  6. 1975 36-story tall Pennzoil Place. This is Houston’s most award-winning skyscraper. Philip Johnson designed it.
  7. 1982 75-story tall J. P. Morgan Chase Tower. This is the tallest building in Texas. I. M. Pei designed it.
  8. 1983 71-story tall Wells Fargo Plaza. This is the second tallest building in Texas. Richard Keating designed it.

 

We will discuss the architects, histories, different building usages, styles architectural features and changes to the buildings over the years. This tour can include going to an art gallery and seeing sculptures.

The downtown walking tours in May, June, September, and October all begin in the rotunda on the first floor of the City Hall building at 901 Bagby Street, Houston, Texas 77002. You can enter from either the east or west side of the building. Metered parking is usually available in the 500 block of both Walker Street and McKinney Street for up to 3-hours. Underground garage parking beneath Tranquility Park is accessible in the 500 block of Rusk Street.

A walking tour only moves as fast as the slowest person.

Warnings:

  1. Use a bathroom before the tour begins. Only one public bathroom is accessible during this tour after we leave the area close to City Hall.
  2. Not all of the tunnels are Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990 accessible. Thus, you should NOT select this special tour if you use a walker, a wheelchair, or any other device that you need to enable you to move.
  3. If you use a cane, we will be moving at such a slow pace that we will not be able to complete the whole tunnel tour. Thus, we will have to omit some buildings.
  4. We go on elevators and escalators. Thus, you should NOT select this special tour if you have a phobia about either of these mechanical devices.

You cannot take photos inside the banks.  Taking photos elsewhere is fine.

Monthly Special Prices

  • 1 person – $40.00.  This is a 43% discount off of the regular price of $70.00

$40.00 + $3.30 (Sales tax of 8.25%) = $43.30 Total.

  • 2 people – $30.00 each.  This is a 25% discount off of the regular price of $40.00 per person.

$30.00 + $2.48 (Sales tax of 8.25%) = $32.48 per person x 2 people = $64.96 Total.

  • 3 or 4 people – $25.00 each.  This is a 17% discount off the regular price of $30.00 per person.

$25.00 + $2.07 (Sales tax of 8.25%) = $27.07 per person.
$27.07 per person x 3 people = $81.21 Total.
$27.07 per person x 4 people = $108.28 Total.

  • 5 to 9 people – $20.00 each.  This is a 20% discount off the regular price of $25.00 per person.

$20.00 + $1.65 (Sales tax of 8.25%) = $21.65 per person.  $21.65 x 5 people = $108.25.
$20.00 + $1.65 (Sales tax of 8.25%) + $3.00 (15% gratuity for parties of 6 or more people) = $24.65 per person x 6, 7, 8, or 9 people.

  • 10 to 19 people – $15.00 each.  This is a 25% discount off the regular price of $20.00 per person.
    $15.00 + $1.24 (Sales tax of 8.25%) + $2.25 per person (15% gratuity for parties of 6 or more people) = $18.49 per person x the number of people.

 

If you know anyone who would be interested in receiving our blogs, please let us know at houstonhistory@aol.com.  Provide a clear name and email address for the person or group and we will sign them up.  Thanks.

If you have any suggestions for special tour discounts in July, send us an email.

See you on a tour.

Sincerely,

Keith Rosen
Houston Historical Tours
P. O. Box 262404
Houston, Texas 77207-2404
(713) 392-0867
(713) 643-4086 Fax
houstonhistory@aol.com
www.houstonhistoricaltours.com

Keith’s Blog – Mid-May 2019

Keith's Blog

Hello to all of our new and continuing members. In the past month from April 15th, to the present, my tour guides and I have had the pleasure to conduct tours for hundreds of people to and of: Customized City … Continue reading →

Keith’s Blog – May 2019

Keith's Blog

Welcome Fans, Friends, and Visitors, Hi. Welcome to the beginning of the five-month heat wave. We go from our air-conditioned homes to our air-conditioned vehicles to our air-conditioned places of business or buildings and return. After May, the climate is … Continue reading →

Keith’s Blog – Mid-April 2019

Keith's Blog

Hello to all of our new and continuing members.

In the past month from March 15th to April 15th, my tour guides and I have had the pleasure to conduct tours for hundreds of people to and of:

  1. African American Tours A and B
  2. African American Tour C
  3. Customized City Tour
  4. City Tour A
  5. City Tour B
  6. City Tour C
  7. City Tour G
  8. Haunted Tour D
  9. Monthly Special Haunted Tour
  10. Space Center Houston Tour
  11. Customized Tunnel Tour A1 & B1
  12. Tunnel Tour A1
  13. Tunnel Tour A3
  14. Tunnel Tour A4

 

If you know anyone who would be interested in receiving our blogs, please let us know at houstonhistory@aol.com.  Provide a clear name and email address for the person or group and we will sign them up.  Thanks.

Please look at our beginning of the month blog to see the various monthly specials and discounts.

Additionally, we are going to begin offering other specials based on monthly cultural themes in May.

If you have any suggestions for special tour discounts in May, send us an email.

The best month in sports is October when professional baseball, basketball, and football are all being played as well as college football. The second best month is April. Professional baseball, basketball, and hockey are all being paid including the playoffs for the latter two professional sports, as well as college basketball’s Final Four.

Here is a Houston sports challenge. The first person who can submit in an email the answers to all of the following 10 questions about Houston sports teams will win a free 3-hour City Tour B starting from downtown. Some people may not realize that a couple of Houston’s professional teams originated elsewhere and moved to Houston.

  1. What year were the Houston Astros found?
  2. What year were the Houston Rockets found in its original city?
  3. What year were the Houston Texans found?
  4. What year were the Houston Dynamo found in its original city?
  5. What year were the Houston Dash found?
  6. What was the original city in which the Rockets played?
  7. What year did the Rockets move to Houston?
  8. What was the original city in which the Dynamo played?
  9. What were the Dynamo’s original name?
  10. What year did the Dynamo move to Houston?

Best of luck.

See you on a tour.

Sincerely,

Keith Rosen
Houston Historical Tours
P. O. Box 262404
Houston, Texas 77207-2404
(713) 392-0867
(713) 643-4086 Fax
houstonhistory@aol.com
www.houstonhistoricaltours.com


 

Keith’s Blog – April 2019

Keith's Blog

Welcome Fans, Friends, and Visitors,

Hi.  Because of our comparatively great weather in Houston, this month is great to be outside on walking tours, wine tours, garden tours, and more.  It is also a good month to go on tours to avoid long queues once the summer vacation from colleges and universities begin in May.

Annually, our best month is normally October because of the good weather and the spike that we get from conducting haunted tours in the month of Halloween.  We conduct haunted tours throughout the year, but we conduct more in October than any other month.  April is often our second or third busiest month, again due to the good weather.  We have already had to turn away people because we have had multiple tour requests on the same day.  If you have been thinking about taking a tour, now is the time.

Weather in Houston

April, along with October, is generally one of the two best months to visit Houston.  You can wear a short sleeve shirt or blouse and feel comfortable.  The monthly average high temperature is 79 degrees Fahrenheit/26 degrees Centigrade.  The monthly average low temperature is 61 degrees Fahrenheit/16 degrees Centigrade, and the mean is 70 degrees Fahrenheit/21 degrees Centigrade.  The average rainfall is 3.46 inches/88 centimeters.  It is the third driest month of the year after February and March.

Tours

Mention that you read about the tours below from the blog and you will receive a 10% discount.

Galveston Tours

We offer Galveston tours from 5 to 12 hours depending on how much do you want to see and experience.  Would you like to include:

  • A tour of one or two 1890s stone and brick mansion?
  • A tour of one or more of five museums?
  • Watching one to three films about The Great Storm, Jean Laffite, or Galveston as an immigration center?
  • A wine tour?
  • A brewery tour?
  • A harbor boat ride to see dolphins and a wrecked cement ship?
  • A stop at an old confectionary that makes it own ice cream, salt-water taffy, and chocolates?
  • Only a driving tour throughout the city with three stops for souvenirs, looking at the Gulf with oil rigs, and lunch?

Garden Tours

You can decide how many gardens and hours that you want.  We can take you to the following sites that are in the metropolitan area:

  • Mercer Arboretum & Botanic Gardens
  • Gardens of Rienzi – Closed on Monday and Tuesday.
  • Gardens of Bayou Bend – Closed on Monday.
  • Japanese Gardens
  • John P. McGovern Centennial Gardens
  • Houston Arboretum and Nature Center

If you want to venture further away, we can take you to beautiful gardens in Beaumont and Orange for the day.  Bring cameras.

San Jacinto State Park (SJSP) Tours (6 Hours) and or Huntsville Tours (8 Hours)

These are separate tours focusing on the history of Texas.  April 21st is San Jacinto Day, the anniversary of Texas winning its independence from Mexico on April 21, 1836.  In 2019, we discovered a monument of the site where Santa Anna was capture, a number of miles from SJSP.  As added bonuses we will:

  • See the monument commemorating the location of where Santa was captured on April 22, 1836 and
  • Drive under the Houston Ship Channel in the Washburn Tunnel.

 

The tour also includes:

  • Going to the observation deck,
  • Touring the Museum,
  • Watching the 35-minute movie “Texas Forever” about the battle narrated by Charlton Heston,
  • Seeing a special exhibit,
  • Walking on and through the Battleship Texas.
  • Travel on the Lynchburg Ferry.
  • Have lunch along the Houston Ship Channel at Monument Inn.

The SJSP is about 30 minutes east from downtown Houston.  It is the site of the second greatest victory on what is now US soil after the Battle of New Orleans in 1815. A re-enactment of the battle takes place every April.

Huntsville Tour

Another great Texas history tour is going to Huntsville with a focus on the life of arguably the greatest Texan of all-time:  Sam Houston. This tour includes going to:

  • The house in which Sam Houston died.
  • The house that was relocated there where he resided longer than any other place.
  • The Sam Houston Memorial Museum.
  • The Sam Houston Statue along I-45. This is the tallest statue of a once real American in the United States.
  • Sam Houston’s gravesite.
  • Joshua Houston’s gravesite in the “Negro Section.”
  • Assorted other historic frontier homes of the mid-1800s.
  • Sam Houston State University.
  • Downtown Huntsville.
  • Multiple Visitor Centers and gift shops.
  • Time permitting, we will also go to the Texas Prison Museum where you can see Old Sparky.

Huntsville is in the beautifully scenic hill country north of Houston and is about a 1.25 hour drive from downtown Houston.  We are happy to stop in Old Town Spring, also.  This looks like an old village from the turn of the last century at about 1900.

Walking Tours

Because of the heat and humidity, we do not offer outside walking tours from April through September.   Originally in the early 2000s, we offered outdoor walking tours year-round, but we received multiple complaints from people about their stinging eyes from sweat, and their discomfort.  We then limited the offering from October to April.  By 2016, even April was now having temperatures in the 90s Fahrenheit/30s Centigrade so we cut back the outdoor  tours by one more month.

However, we offer three walking tours of the underground tunnels and skybridges of downtown and three walking tours of the skywalks, tunnels, and hospitals of the Texas Medical Center (TMC).  Each tour is generally 2.5 hours or 3.5 hours with a stop for lunch, additional tunnels, observation deck, an additional building, and or a museum.  These are all in air-conditioning.  You will be cool, calm, and collected.  Which tours sound most appealing?  If you want a shorter tour, we can reduce the length by deleting some of the buildings, observation deck, and or more.  Just let us know how to customize it for you.

Wine Tours

We offer over one dozen options going to 5 geographic areas and including from one to four wineries and or wine tasting sites.  The tours can last from three hours to about twelve hours.  Texas has some great tasting wines.  Texas is now the fifth largest wine producing state.  These are all out of town and the tours make for good day trips.  The bluebonnets are in bloom.  Depending on which tour you select, you will be able to go out into the vineyards.

National Food Day Tours

Did you know that:

  • April 2nd is National Peanut Butter and Jelly Day?
  • April 5th is National Caramel Day and National Burrito Day?
  • April 7th is National Beer Day?
  • April 10th is National Cinnamon Roll Day?
  • April 11th is National Cheese Fondue Day?
  • April 17th is National Cheeseball Day?
  • April 22nd is National Jellybean Day?
  • April 24th is National Pigs in a Blanket Day?
  • April 25th is National Zucchini Brad Day?
  • April 26th is National Shrimp Scampi Day?

We will create a customized 3-hour themed tour for your enjoyment anytime in this month for the above gastronomical sensations.  We can combine two or more of the above holidays.  Who does not like comfort food and drink?

Monthly Special – Discounted by 17 to 54% Based on the Number of People

The monthly special for April is a 2.5-hour Haunted and Historical Walking tour in downtown Houston.  This tour is from 7:30 to 10:00 PM.  It is our only monthly special that is at nighttime.  As the temperatures heat up into the 80s Fahrenheit/30s Centigrade, this is the last outdoor tour for the next five months, until October.  It starts outside the abandoned, former Spaghetti Warehouse at 901 Commerce Street, Houston, Texas 77002.  Parking is free after 6:00 PM at all city meters.  You will see:

  • The abandoned Spaghetti Warehouse – built in circa 1903. This had been a warehouse in its early years.  This was said to be haunted.
  • The abandoned Brewery Tap, AlJ, Magnolia Ballroom, and Kryptonite – built in 1912, the building was a speakeasy during the era of Prohibition when a bootlegger was killed here. It was inundated with water from Hurricane Harvey from August 25 to 29, 2017.  This was said to be haunted.
  • See the former sidewalk of Houston circa 1903, now in front of the basement of the former Spaghetti Warehouse before the city was raised about 10 feet/3 meters around 1914.
  • See the remnants of a historic 1890s bridge before Houston was raised around 1914.
  • The Donnellan Crypt – 4 people were buried in this historic vault between 1849 and 1867 some 30 feet/10 meters below where Houston is now located.
  • La Carafe – the oldest bar in downtown Houston in the oldest building in downtown Houston dating to 1860. This is said to be haunted.
  • Baker Building – the second oldest building in downtown Houston, dating to 1861.
  • Market Square Park – it was redesigned in 2007. This was the site of the first four city halls of Houston from 1841 to 1939.  It has 9/11 memorials to a local victim who was on UA Flight 93 and to the overall victims.  A Greek restaurant, works of art, old photos and more are in the park.
  • The last former one screen movie theater in Houston. It was named The Ritz and opened in 1926.  It is now a rental facility.
  • The original Sweeney’s Jewelry Store – built in 1889, it looks like a cave inside.
  • The site of the former White House of Texas where Presidents Sam Houston and Mirabeau Lamar lived in the 1830s. The current building on the site was erected in 1909 and the first Houston building designed by a world-recognized architect, Daniel Burnham.
  • The biggest mosque in Houston in what was the old Houston National Bank. It was erected in 1928.  Hakeem Olajuwon bought the abandoned bank building in 1994 and it opened as a mosque in 2002.
  • The site where the Allen family first landed and settled Houston in August 1836. This is the oldest part of developed Houston.
  • And more depending on how fast everyone walks.

 

Monthly Special Prices

  • 1 person – $40.00.  This is a 43% discount off of the regular price of $70.00

$40.00 + $3.30 (Sales tax of 8.25%) = $43.30 Total.

  • 2 people – $30.00 each.  This is a 25% discount off of the regular price of $40.00 per person.

$30.00 + $2.48 (Sales tax of 8.25%) = $32.48 per person x 2 people = $64.96 Total.

  • 3 or 4 people – $25.00 each.  This is a 17% discount off the regular price of $30.00 per person.

$25.00 + $2.07 (Sales tax of 8.25%) = $27.07 per person.
$27.07 per person x 3 people = $81.21 Total.
$27.07 per person x 4 people = $108.28 Total.

  • 5 to 9 people – $20.00 each.  This is a 20% discount off the regular price of $25.00 per person.

$20.00 + $1.65 (Sales tax of 8.25%) = $21.65 per person.  $21.65 x 5 people = $108.25.
$20.00 + $1.65 (Sales tax of 8.25%) + $3.00 (15% gratuity for parties of 6 or more people) = $24.65 per person x 6, 7, 8, or 9 people.

  • 10 to 19 people – $15.00 each.  This is a 25% discount off the regular price of $20.00 per person.
    $15.00 + $1.24 (Sales tax of 8.25%) + $2.25 per person (15% gratuity for parties of 6 or more people) = $18.49 per person x the number of people.

 

If you know anyone who would be interested in receiving our blogs, please let us know at houstonhistory@aol.com.  Provide a clear name and email address for the person or group and we will sign them up.  Thanks.

If you have any suggestions for special tour discounts in May, send us an email.

No one attempted to answer last month’s Mid-March trivia question and win a free tour.  It will roll-over to next year.  Look forward to a new question in our Mid-April blog.

See you on a tour.

Sincerely,

Keith Rosen
Houston Historical Tours
P. O. Box 262404
Houston, Texas 77207-2404
(713) 392-0867
(713) 643-4086 Fax
houstonhistory@aol.com
www.houstonhistoricaltours.com


 

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