White Deer Land Museum
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  • Eloise Lane Articles 1-100
    • Articles 1 - 20 >
      • About Eloise Lane
      • The "White Deer" Name
      • The Log House
      • Obtaining The Land
      • The Lands Organized
      • Cattle Brands Tell Story
      • Ghosts And All . . .
      • Southern Kansas Railroad
      • Fire Guard Dam
      • When The Railroad Came
      • The Sutton RR Station
      • Post Office At Pampa
      • The Bell Family
      • J. C. Short
      • Pampa 1892-1902
      • Pampa Laid Out in 1902
      • Crystal Palace Founded
      • Gray County Organization
      • Organization - Continued
    • Articles 21 - 40 >
      • The "White Deer" Name
      • Gray County - Lefors
      • McLean - The Largest Town
      • Gouge Eye
      • The "Mother Road"
      • German Family Reunion
      • Desks From Hopkins
      • Grandview School Begins
      • The Oil Money
      • History Wall Painted
      • Boydston Or Boydstun?
      • Ontario???
      • Laketon - Early Farming
      • Laketon - Continued
      • First Couple To Marry
      • Hoover
      • Water Well Drilling
      • Kingsmills Visit Pampa
      • George Tyng Left
    • Articles 41 - 60 >
      • Tragedy In Utah
      • T.D. Hobart - Manager
      • M.K. Brown Arrives
      • Rider Livery Stable
      • The Pioneer Cottage
      • Pampa's First Doctor
      • Doctor Makes House Calls
      • A Red Cross Nurse
      • Pampa's First School
      • Hobart Went To London
      • Cemetery Began In 1904
      • First Business District
      • C.P. Buckler Arrives
      • Five Barrett Brothers
      • Influence Of The Santa Fe
      • Trains Still Roll
      • John V. Thomas - Teacher
      • Cattle-loading Center
      • Rolla J. Sailor & Arrowheads
      • A.H. Doucette Arrives
    • Articles 61 - 80 >
      • Lands Are Advertised
      • The Holland Hotel
      • Wheat Left Pampa
      • First National Bank Begins
      • Pampa News Begins
      • First Denominational Church
      • 2nd Office Of WD Lands
      • J.N. Duncan Arrives
      • Nels Walberg Sells. . .
      • Dormer Simms
      • Fourth Of July Celebrations
      • Pampa's First Cars
      • Pampa In 1907-08
      • J. S. Wynne Family Arrives
      • Gray County State Bank
      • Baptist Church Organized
      • Joe And Lizzie Bowers
      • Threatened By Prairie Fire
      • Library Began In 1907
      • J.R. Henry
    • Articles 81 - 100 >
      • Sir Gordan & Lady Cunard
      • Three Vicars Brothers
      • Dodd Grain And Produce
      • December 29, 1991
      • D.C. Davis Family
      • Long Christmas Celebration
      • First Christian Church
      • Facts About Pampa
      • Buster Brown
      • The Last Hanging
      • Bones Hooks
      • The "Red Brick" Is No More
      • The Purviances Family
      • The Dr. E. von Brunow Park
      • Boards Of 1st Headquarters
      • Mary Jane Purvis
      • Cook - Adams Addition
      • Nativity Scenes
      • Clyde Carruth
  • Eloise Lane Articles 101-200
    • Articles 101 - 120 >
      • The Mine Tragedies
      • Additions To Pampa
      • Third Family In Pampa
      • Frank Dittmeyer
      • Bricklayer Indian Jim
      • A.A. Tiemann
      • First Movies And Lights
      • Pampa Incorporated
      • Mark And Sara Fletcher
      • Annie Baker Daniels
      • Pampa's Business District
      • Birthday Tea Of 1919
      • Former Pampa Minister
      • John Mack Patton
      • The First Brass Band
      • Early Graduating Class
      • "How We Met"
      • F.P. Greever Is Assassinated
      • George Tyng's Father
    • Articles 121 - 140 >
      • L. H. and Lula Greene
      • John and Lena McKamy
      • Robert and Mary Yeager
      • "Dear Old PHS"
      • Supt. Believed in People
      • William A. and Ruth Greene
      • Jason A and Alice Poole
      • Wayside School
      • Pampa Football Begins
      • The Pampa School Building
      • Rev. C. E. Lancaster
      • Panhandle Lumber Co.
      • Will Wilks & Mora Hughey
      • An Unusual Valentine
      • Charles A. Tignor
      • O. A. Barrett
      • Poppies In Flanders Fields
      • Barnard & Williams Families
    • Articles 141 - 160 >
      • 4th of July Celebrations
      • Cuyler Street Underpass
      • The King Family
      • Kretmeier and Baer Families
      • Stephen B. Oates
      • Phebe Worley
      • Organization of Gray County
      • First Courthouse
      • Pampa Laid Out in 1902
      • Pampa in 1902
      • W. R. Kaufman
      • The Pampa Country Club
      • Living In Pampa in 1902
      • Pampa Buildings of 1902
      • May Foreman Carr
      • Scaffers - Early Residents
      • Nita Luna
      • Former Sub Debs Reminisce
      • PHS In 1932
    • Articles 161 - 180 >
      • PHS Appreciated
      • The Forth Worth and Denver
      • From Pampa to Childress
      • The Origination Of "Taps"
      • The Warners
      • J. C. Studer
      • Floyd, John and Otto
      • Our American Flag
      • Stories and Memories
      • Museum in Pampa?
      • The Franklin Farm
      • The Franklin Family
      • Beryl Wayne Vicars
      • Historian Made Cookies
      • The Pioneer Cottage
      • The Orginial Swastika
      • Library Clerk
      • Women's Clothing Store
    • Articles 181 - 200 >
      • Jon and Pat McConal
      • Whitey Walker Gang
      • How Rudolph Began
      • Gwendolen Avenue
      • Jerry Kerbow
      • Two Paintings
      • Second Part - Paintings
      • Bones Hooks
      • Original Nativity Figures
      • Why "V" Instead of "U"
      • Pampa Incorporated
      • Prairie Fires
      • Abert's "Day of Anxiety"
      • George Autry's "A Fable"
      • Girls Basketball
      • Thomas and Lard
      • Henry and Jenny Ledrick
      • C. J. Walstad
      • Ledrick and Walstads
      • Bert and Annie Lard
      • Peter Gray
      • H. H. and Kate Heiskell
      • The Story of Elsie (Lard) Hall

The Dr. E. von Brunow Park Is Named For Pampa's First Doctor

Eloise Lane
Pampa 's first resident doctor was Dr. Vittorio Emanuel von Brunow who was generally known in this area as Dr. Brunow. The German word von means "the house of" and the initial "v" is not capitalized.

He was born in Charleston , South Carolina on October 27, 1862. His parents were Count Phillip von Brunow and Countess von Brunow. Count von Brunow was prominent in diplomatic circles in the service of Russia for many years. Count von Brunow's family returned to their old home in East Prussia in 1864.

Dr. von Brunow received his elementary education in Wittenberg , Saxony, and later studied in Austria and Russia . He was a graduate of the University of Vienna and the University of Warsaw where he took a degree in 1887. This was followed by study in the medical clinics in Berlin and at Koln and Hamburg .

In 1892 he returned to America and took a very important part in medical research and the scientific development of therapeutics. His medical attainments were the result of exceptional training, ripened by broad experience and constant study.

He practiced at New Orleans for a time, and later at St. Louis and in Chicago .  He then went into Indian Territory, and after a short period of practice here moved to Gainesville in 1900.

Dr. von Brunow came from Gainesville to the Texas Panhandle in a surrey. Being German, he had probably heard of the Thut family who were German speaking Swiss and he stayed at first in the Thut Hotel near Lefors.

Soon after arriving in Pampa in 1903, Dr. von Brunow had a white frame building constructed at 101 South Cuyler. The von Brunows lived upstairs, and the lower floor was used as a doctor's office, drugstore, post office and telephone office.

The building at 101 South Cuyler was the third location of the Pampa Post Office ... from 1903 until 1913. Records in the National Archives show that Vittorio E. von Brunow was appointed the fourth postmaster of Pampa on October 23, 1903.

Whenever a bag of mail was thrown from a train, someone brought it to the post office where people stood around and waited until the letters and other items were sorted and placed in the 24 pigeon holes reserved for them.

The first telephone service in Pampa was in the von Brunow house. There were 24 plugs which connected Pampa with Miami and Panhandle.  Some ranchers in Roberts County ran a telephone line into Pampa where the "central" part of the service was in Dr. von Brunow's drugstore. The line was run on the fences, with wires over the gates and places where it could not be used on the fences. This caused some confusion as the cowboys would come by and staple the wire to the post, not knowing it was the telephone line.

When Dr. von Brunow first came to this area, he drove a beautiful fast team of brown horses. After a few years he purchased the first car in Pampa . The car was a red, one-cylinder Velie with a steering bar instead of a steering wheel. The doctor tore over the rough wagon paths and frightened most horses within hearing or seeing range. He got tired of having to fight roads full of chug holes, so he borrowed a road grader and evened some of the country roads.

He could not pronounce the letter "V."  One day Beryl Wynne (Mrs. DeLea Vicars) asked what he did when the car would not run. He replied, "I just put some 'waseline on the 'walwes' and then the 'Wealie' runs."

On one occasion Dr. Walter Purviance accompanied Dr. von Brunow on his calls. The Velie stopped and would not run again. Dr. Purviance remarked that the car needed doctoring, too.

During the early days here (ca 1915-1917) the doctor helped a U.S. Marshal apprehend a desperado working on the Shoe Nail Ranch. The desperado had written to his gang in Oklahoma that he had located some good horses for them to steal, and the doctor had recognized the desperado's picture on the postcard.

D.r. von Brunow had many birds and animals stuffed and mounted. Once each year a taxidermist came from Amarillo to clean these stuffed birds and animals and oil their eyes. A bald eagle, which the doctor shot before it was illegal to do so, is mounted on the wall and seems to look down on the office of the White Deer Land Museum.

The doctor liked hunting and fishing but his real hobby was in research work. He was also a philanthropist but only his closest friends knew of his many gifts and kindnesses. For nearly forty years he served the people in and around Pampa with ceaseless effort and application. His practice was along general lines since he felt that he could best serve his community that way.

He organized the Republican party in Gray County and was its only chairman until the time of his death. He was a member of the Elks Club and the Kiwanis Club.

He took a keen interest in current events and subscribed to numerous magazines and newspapers. He was one of the best informed men in the Panhandle and had a remarkable memory.

In 1926, when Pampa was growing rapidly because of the oil boom, the white frame von Brunow house was moved to 825 West Kingsmill and a red brick building was constructed at 101 South Cuyler. Mrs. von Brunow (Lemuel Ganell Smithers) went every day to watch the men at work on the new building to be sure that everything was the way she and the doctor wanted.

The von Brunows had a large apartment in the building and a beautiful rooftop garden where they walked their two white dogs. A picture of a castle in Germany hung on the wall of the apartment, and Dr. von Brunow said that it was his family home.

Lemuel Ganell Smithers von Brunow (Lemmie" or "Biddy") was a Red Cross nurse at Camp Travis near Austin during World War I when Spanish influenza was rampant. While waiting in New York to go overseas, she caught a cold that developed into pneumonia and contributed to her bad health in later years. She died in the summer of 1936.

At Pampa on February 25, 1937, Dr. von Brunow was married to Mrs. Lonna D. Lan Franco. She had a thirteen-year daughter, Vera Lee (Mrs. Bob Andis) who was adopted by the doctor.

Dr. von Brunow died on May 7, 1941, and was buried in Fairview Cemetery. He was survived by his wife and step-daughter and four children by a former marriage Julia (Mrs. Roy) Wilson of Pampa; Edward of Freeport; Fred of Benton, Louisiana, and J.H. of Port Arthur.

Lonna D. von Brunow died in Amarillo on November 15, 1993.  The red brick Brunow Building burned on Christmas night in 1981. An electrical short was blamed for the blaze that was estimated to have caused close to $1 million in damage.

In November, 1996, B and N Farms, Inc. sold Lots 11 and 12 of Block 5 of the original town of Pampa to the City of Pampa. It was stipulated that the site should be used as a public park known as "The Dr. V.E. von Brunow Park" in honor of the man who is remembered by his family as one who loved his community, its people and this particular part of the country.

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116 S Cuyler St | Pampa, TX 79065 | Phone (806) 669-8041 | Fax (806) 250-2185

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