John D. Ourand
John D. Ourand
was born
in Maryland in 1834. His
father, David Aurand, probably was born in
Frederick County, Maryland;
and his
mother was also born in Maryland. The
Ourands had two children: John
and Thomas
Walker Ourand, born on December 9, 1831.
Later Thomas lived and died in
Tiffin,
Ohio, where he was a merchant and leading
citizen for 38 years.
By the early 1860s, John D.
Ourand was in
California. He enlisted in the Union
Army at San Francisco on June 15,
1864,
and was assigned to Company I,
California First Cavalry Regiment. Soon
he was
fighting Indians in Arizona, where he
remained until the end of the
Civil War.
He mustered out of the Army at
the Presidio in San
Francisco on May 22, 1866.
Conflicting sources state that he
had achieved the rank of first
sergeant or
full first lieutenant.

TEXAS
DICTATIONS (Grayson County.) 1887.
H.
H. Bancroft Collection
Bancroft
Library, University of California at
Berkeley
Department of Texas
L.
S. Hatch, Manager
Denison, Texas
July
5, 1887
Taken from John D.
Ourand
Mr. Ourand was born
in Frederick County, Maryland,
Feb'y 22, 1834.
Parents old
residents of Maryland. Father of French
descent and mother Irish. Was born and
raised in the United States. Parents
died early and was raised by an uncle and
did not have much education, as his
uncle was a farmer and thought education was
not needed. Remained with his
uncle until 1840, then was anxious for
something [other than] farm life and
went to Georgetown and went to work for Dry
Goods house, remaining there only 6
months and returned home. In 1857 went to
Chicago and kept books for Harvey and
Parker two (2) years. In 1860 went to Pike's
Peak, Colorado, remaining only a
short while, then to California and was
mining and speculating there some time.
While in California entered the Union
Service. He then went to San Antonio,
Texas, then Collier County, and farmed a few
years and came in Denison in 1874.
Since that time has been actively engaged in
business and also largely
interested in Denison Real Estate.
In 1882 built his
residence, which is considered the
handsomest in Denison. Married in 1878 at
Fort Smith, Arkansas, and since has
been living in Denison.

He was one
of Denison's first settlers. Ourand
has been
reported
serving as postmaster of Red River
City on the Red River, on January
7–June 1
of 1874.
As a
cavalry veteran,
undoubtedly John Ourand knew a
great deal about horses. It is perhaps
worth noting that Denison's
first mayor,
Dr. L. S. Owings, had been governor of
the Arizona Territory and
operated an
early stable in town. Owings brought
with him to Denison his old
friend,
newspaperman Bredette C. Thomas, who
had edited the Mesilla
(AZ) Times and
organized a regiment of Confederate
cavalry
in Mesilla during the Civil War. It
seems likely that these men had
much to
talk about when they crossed paths in
Denison.
Ourand
purchased
property at 109 West Main Street at
auction in 1872 and put up a wooden
structure, where he opened the
Railroad
Headquarters Saloon. The census taken
June 1, 1880, listed John as a
single male
saloon keeper. He was living in his Main
Street building, two doors
from the
Alamo Hotel. Living with John were five
other single men classed as
"boarders."
1880 was a
big year for
Ourand. In addition to the census, he
married Jerdie or E. Birchfield
(1857–1933) and made a visit to
relatives in Washington, D. C. Jerdie
was 23 years his junior; on June
15 that
year, she was married but living with
her widowed mother, Eliza Jane
(Mrs. Robert)
Birchfield (1822–1910).
In
January of 1881, John and Jerdie had a
daughter, Pearl (1881 - 1960).
In 1881 they also built a landmark home
at 106 West Sears Street.
This was the only Italian Villa
style house in Grayson County with
John Schott as
architect. (The Sunday
Gazetteer, Sunday, February 10,
1884, pg.4)
Jerdie's mother, Eliza, lived
there with them.

View
more photos and read the house history

Ourand House
106 West Sears Street
Photograph by Mavis Ann Bryant, ca.
2000
That
same year, John built the Ourand
Hotel on the site of his bar at
109
West Main Street, and he opened
his new Congress Hall Saloon on
the
first floor. Upstairs were
rooms for rent.
Ourand's Furnished Rooms : Clean
beds a specialty, 190-1/2 W.Main
Street. Office second floor.
New phone 335.
This
place
is indeed very centrally located,
just one block west of the
depot, and offers superior
accommodations in the way of well
furnished
rooms and clean beds. Mr.
J.D. Ourand, the manager, has been
conducting the place since 1893,
and has always received a good
share
of patronage from the general
traveling public. His prices
are
reasonable, and every courtesy and
consideration is extended to
patrons. It is indeed a
homelike place in which to stop.
Source:
“Denison, the Texas Gateway: A Busy,
Progressive City with Golden
Opportunities.” 16pp. Brochure. N.p.:
N.d. [ca. 1908].

100 Block
West Main Street,
north side
The Ourand Hotel is the tall building.


Stereoscopic Views of
Denison, Texas by
Hardesty & Dean Photographers, 1883
In 1891, the City Directory
listed John as treasurer
of the Denison Cemetery Association.
Fifteen
years later,
Ourand
added the Electric Theatorium (the
second movie theater to be opened in
Denison) to his Ourand Hotel. The
theater opened on December 22, 1906,
to a
roaring crowd of over 700 patrons. A
short film, followed by a live
performance, made up the initial
program. The film showings were
short-lived,
however, and live shows took over
after a few months. The Electric
Theatorium
ceased showing movies in March 1907,
but live shows were mounted there
for years.
In 1898,
John D. Ourand
applied for a U.S. Army
pension. On June 23, 1913, at age
79, he died. He was buried in Fairview
Cemetery,
Denison, along with his daughter
Pearl, his wife
Jerdie E., and
Jerdie's mother, Eliza J.
Birchfield.
Robert Rentz bought the hotel and
operated it for a decade before
selling to J.W. Parrott in 1924.

March
1917 issue of the M. K.
& T. Employees' Magazine

In 1924,
too, Ms.
Guvania
Burriesci opened her White Swan Cafe
on the hotel’s bottom floor, where
she,
along with Joe and John Burriesci,
remained for ten years, serving
hearty,
traditional Italian food.
Jesse
Cook bought the
hotel in 1926 and renamed it
the "Modern Hotel." C. B. Mize was
next to operate the hotel, taking
over in 1934. Vera Rich took over in
1938 and gave the hotel its final
name,
Main Hotel. It was known by this
name until it was demolished three
decades
later, in 1968. Owners during the
interim included Pearl Chumbley,
Hugh
Shepard, and Lula Grantland.
[Note: Some information from
Billy
Holcomb, Theater Row:
Movie Palaces of
Denison, Texas
(1999).]


Biography Index
Susan Hawkins
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