Vidor- Texas

Located in southeastern Texas, a little over an hour east of Houston, you will encounter Vidor, Texas. The town received its name from the cofounder of the Miller-Vidor Lumber timber Company which was based in this town.

Charles Shelton Vidor, a native of Galveston, Texas, was the son of Karoly (Charles) Vidor who was born in Budapest, Hungary. Karoly Vidor came to the USA as a refugee of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848. At 19 years old, he first arrived in New York City, where he worked for a time as a reporter for the New York Herald. He then moved on, settling in Galveston around 1855. Here Vidor became one of the first cotton factors, establishing the Wolston, Wells & Vidor company which helped develop Galveston into the flourishing city it became.

Térkép

Vidor served throughout the American Civil War in Hood’s Brigade as the captain of Company L of the First Texas Regiment. Karoly Vidor was father to the aforementioned Charles Vidor—namesake of Vidor, Texas—and grandfather to King Vidor, the famed director, film producer, and screenwriter. Karoly Vidor left a significant mark on the US, despite only arriving as an immigrant.

Teleki commemorative plaque on Kilimanjaro

Sámuel Teleki started his first expedition in February 1887. With that, he was the first to explore the Greater Fissile Valley and reached the snowy border of Kilimanjaro. On the same expedition, he was the first to conquer Mount Kenya. During this expedition, he reached the Teleki volcano named after him, which, according to the discoverer, was still in operation when the expedition discovered the place.

The success of the Teleki expedition is announced on the Kilimanjaro site by a plaque. The sign, at 5200 meters, commemorates the fact that Samuel Teleki was not only the first who reached the snow border on Kilimanjaro, but later he returned to try climbing the mountain, which was an extremely risky venture under the climbing conditions of his age. The mountain has been a World Heritage Site since 1978.

Count Sámuel Teleki was born in 1845 into a noble family. From an early age, he showed great interest in geography, geology, and astronomy. He had already been thinking of an African voyage with promising and longer hunting trip and safari, according to the traditions of the time. Under the influence of the Austrian Crown Prince Rudolf, he decided to lead expeditions to Africa instead of safaris in order to reach a mythical lake, which legends have told us.

The expedition from Pangani finally reached the shores of the legendary lake, which Samuel Teleki named after the heir to the throne, Rudolf Lake. The lake was renamed Lake Turkana in 1975 from local tribes, and since 1997 it has been a World Heritage Site. After the discovery of the lake, the expedition turned south, where Teleki discovered what has since been called the Teleki Volcano. Teleki was the first explorer to lead an expedition to unexplored parts of Africa.