All of the information the Museum of the Gulf Coast has about Port Arthur's West Side before 1960 fits in a small, blue binder. Sarah Bellian, the museum's curator, began compiling the tidbits about two years ago but has only received a few oral accounts and a handful of photos of the city's segregated past. In a new tour program titled "West Side Stories," Bellian will share the limited history of the city's West Side while continuing to hunt for more stories. The information the museum displays about Port Arthur's origins mentions little about its black population. West Side police officers, for example, couldn't arrest a white man, and most of the homes were aging and in need of upgrades - many of the homes dating back to 1905, when blacks were first allowed to live in the city.