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A number of Europeans, beginning with the Spanish Indian trader
Athanase de Mézières, visited the area that became Wichita County
during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Among
these were Pedro Vial and José Mares, who crossed the region in the
course of developing trails from San Antonio to Santa Fe, New
Mexico, in 1786 and 1787, and members of the Texan Santa Fe
expedition in 1841. Although local lands had been granted to
survivors and heirs of soldiers who fought in the Texas Revolution
as early as the 1830s, the first surveys of the area that is now
Wichita County took place in 1854 under the direction of the Texan
Emigration and Land Company. Mabel Gilbert, a pioneer of the
settlement that became Dallas, became Wichita County's first
permanent Anglo-American settler when he built a house on a bluff
above the Red River, ten miles north of the site of present Wichita
Falls, in 1855. |
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Although Native Americans twice drove him from his isolated
farm, in 1855 and 1862, he returned in 1867 and died there
three years later. Wichita County was established by act of
the Texas legislature on February 1, 1858, from the Cooke Land
District, and was attached to Clay County for judicial
purposes. The new county was named for the Wichita Indians,
and settlement was hindered by Indian attacks. Most of the
area's Anglo-American pioneers arrived after 1870, when school
lands were purchased to become cattle ranches, which have
remained an important part of the economy.
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On June 7, 1882, Robert E. Huff, a recently arrived attorney,
presented a petition bearing 150 signatures-some of which
allegedly were fraudulent-to the Clay County commissioners court
seeking independence for Wichita County. Elections for county
officers took place on June 21 of that year. The Fort
Worth and Denver City Railroad reached the tiny settlement of
Wichita Falls from Fort Worth in September 1882. This connection
ensured the existence of Wichita Falls, which adopted the date
of the arrival of the first train, September 26, 1882, as its
birthday. Additional railroad-building activity resulted, in
large measure, from the efforts of two Wichita Falls
businessmen, Joseph A. Kemp and Frank Kell. Between 1884 and
1911 these men, acting independently and in concert, organized
and promoted three rail lines out of Wichita Falls: the Wichita
Falls and Northwestern, the Wichita Falls and Southern, and the
Wichita Falls and Wellington. The construction of these roads,
all of which were purchased by the Missouri, Kansas and Texas
line in 1911, established Wichita Falls as a regional
transportation and distribution center. |
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Wichita County War Memorial
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Cities and towns |
Unincorporated areas |
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Cashion Community
Burkburnett
Electra
Iowa Park
Wichita Falls
Pleasant Valley |
Kamay
Haynesville
Valley View
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ONLINE DATA |
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Mockingbird
State Bird
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Surrounding Counties
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Tillman County, Oklahoma (north)
Cotton County, Oklahoma (northeast)
Clay County (east)
Archer County (south)
Wilbarger County (west)
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Copyright ©2006 Genealogy Trails
All data on this website is © Copyright 2006 by Genealogy Trails with full rights reserved for original submitters.
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