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Bebop, there were two stone heads unearthed in the clay quarry just outside of Trinidad in the Trinity River bottom.
The pit (which I think was gravel, not clay) is now under Cedar Creek Lake. The pit was located just a few yards inside the Cedar Creek Lake dam (not to be confused with the spillway on Highway 274). The dam can be seen by driving on Forehand Road, which runs between Trinidad and Mankin.
The rumor around Malakoff was that they were fake, and were carved by the Cuban immigrant workers who found them. A UT archaeologist reported finding them "in situ," though. There is still controversy as to whether they are real.
There were once replicas of the heads located in the Malakoff elementary school. I have no idea where these replicas have gone (the school itself burned a few years ago -- not the rock building, but the 1973 building).
The heads were indeed stored in the basement of the Texas Memorial Museum on the UT campus for many years. My father once asked how they could be viewed (they were not on exhibit), and was told that Malakoff residents who wished to see them could write a letter to the museum director to set up a viewing. We never did so.
Turns out the Malakoff Historical Museum has set up an exhibit with the three heads, which they note "will be the first time that the heads have been together in Malakoff since their discovery."
I have not gone to view them, but something tells me these are not the real deals, but instead, the replica heads that were displayed at the elementary school.
Here's a link about the exhibit. I'm not sure whether the heads (real or replica) are still there, though.
http://canton.kltv.com/news/arts-culture/74695-open-house-malakoff-historical-museum-dec-10Here's some pics of the heads:
http://www.utexas.edu/tmm/exhibits/glen_evans/archeology/malakoff_heads.htmlThe reason that they are called "Malakoff Men" instead of "Trinidad Men" is because the pits were owned by the Bartlett family of Malakoff who owned the Texas Clay brickyard in town, which is now owned by Acme. That's just the way it goes sometimes.
Speaking of the Bartlett family... Thomas Bartlett invented a method of coloring brick while in Malakoff in 1904.
Their home, which still stands in pretty bad shape just outside the brick yard has been bought by the local garden club and is supposed to be fixed up to its former splendor.
Here's some pics of the Barlett house in Malakoff. My grandfather said that they used to dance on the roof and have some pretty good parties there.
http://www.greenpickup.us/genealogy/histories/t_a_bartlett_house_in_malakoff.php