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| Coleman County was formed in 1858
from parts of Brown and Travis counties. Organization began in
1862 and was completed in 1864. The county was named for
Robert M. Coleman, a signer of the Texas Declaration of
Independence and an aide to General Houston at San Jacinto. |
| After
organization was completed settlers began moving into the
county. Some of the more notable were Rich Coffey, William
Day, Mabel Doss Day Lea, and John Chisum. Chisum established a
store at Trickham and maintained a ranch headquarters on Home
Creek in the southern part of the county. Coffey
established himself on a ranch between the site of present
Leaday and Voss about 1866. He also served as a county
commissioner, participated in the first county grand jury, and
was part of a commission to select a new county seat.
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| William Day ran a ranch in the
southwestern corner of the county. His holdings sprawled from
Grape Creek in the north, eastward to Elm Creek and then
southward to the Colorado River. He died in June 1881 from
injuries received in a cattle stampede. His wife, Mabel, whom
he had married in 1879, continued to run the ranch for a time
after his death. Because of debts she sold the ranch to
homesteaders in 1904.
Camp Colorado served as the county seat from 1864 to 1876.
But with an increasing population, a new county seat in a more
central location was needed. In 1876 a commission was selected
to find a suitable site. Early that year a tract on Jim Ned
Creek was chosen as the site of the future city of Coleman. In
July 1876 town lots were sold to settlers. The "second city"
of Coleman County, Santa Anna, came into existence three years
later. It had formerly been called Gap because of the cleft in
the Santa Anna Mountains but changed names when the residents
petitioned for a post office. |
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Cities and towns
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Talpa (unincorporated) |
Hamrick |
North Talpa |
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Valera (unincorporated) |
Mount View |
Webbville |
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Voss (unincorporated) |
Robinson |
Silver Valley |
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Mozelle |
Atoka |
Goldsboro |
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Gouldbusk |
Centennial |
Harmony |
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Lake Coleman |
Rockwood |
Shields |
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Hardin |
Cleveland |
Five Ashes |
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Liberty |
Trickham |
Fisk |
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Obregon |
Burkett |
Leaday |
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ONLINE DATA |
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