Author Topic: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game  (Read 486278 times)

Offline jpwagoneer1964

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A New BBM Game
« Reply #500 on: November 02, 2006, 10:58:08 pm »
New Summerfield, Tx

NEW SUMMERFIELD, TEXAS. New Summerfield is at the intersection of U.S. Highway 79 and State Highway 110, ten miles east of Jacksonville in northeast Cherokee County. The site was settled by homesteaders in the 1850s and first called Union Chapel. A union church was established there, and G. F. Fullerton deeded three acres to the Methodist Church on July 27, 1887. The McDonald and Dodson cemeteries were begun in the 1850s. There was an early school, probably taught in the church. The town began on July 29, 1895, when Caley Amos Summers gave land for a public school. On November 9, 1895, Summers sold land near the school to F. F. Fullerton and Isaac "Ike" W. Tipton for a mill and gin. Tipton also built a store. A post office was opened in the store, and Tipton was appointed postmaster in 1897. The town was named for its location in Summers's field. Soon general stores were operated by Arthur Dickson, John Sowell, Alex Tipton, and Ed Nicholson, who took over Ike Tipton's store. Clint Trotter and Charlie Connor ran a blacksmith and woodworking ship. Joe Brady had a blacksmith shop. Elmer Cowan operated a drugstore, barbershop, and shingle mill. Doctors Fullerton, Tennison, and Bell practiced medicine. Dr. Bell had a telephone switchboard in his home.

Summerfield developed rapidly because the crossroads led to towns where farm products could be marketed. In 1912 the school was one of the best in the county. By 1925 plant farms became a major industry. Greenhouses replaced open-field plant farms in the 1940s. The post office was discontinued in 1905 but reopened in 1938, when the name was changed to New Summerfield, because Summerfield, Castro County, had opened a post office. New Summerfield was incorporated, and the first town officials were sworn in on August 23, 1963. In 1988 the town had a city hall, a fire station, a post office, a school, several businesses, a Masonic lodge, three cemeteries (McDonald, Dodson, and Union Chapel), and three churches (Methodist, Baptist, and Church of Christ). Greenhouses, Christmas tree farms, and ranches are important to the economy. The population in 1988 was recorded as 314. In 1990 it was 521.
« Last Edit: November 02, 2006, 11:01:11 pm by jpwagoneer1964 »
Thank you Heath and Jake for showing us Ennis and Jack,  teaching us how much they loved one another.

Offline memento

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A New BBM Game
« Reply #501 on: November 03, 2006, 12:32:16 am »
Dickens, Texas

"Unofficial Wild Boar Capital of Texas"
Dickens County Seat, Texas Panhandle
At junction of Hwys 70 and 82
60 miles E of Lubbock
Population: 322 (1990) 332 (2000)

 
Dickens County Jail
« Last Edit: November 03, 2006, 11:03:55 am by Memento »

Offline Fran

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A New BBM Game
« Reply #502 on: November 03, 2006, 01:41:59 am »
Slater, WY



Wow!  Over 500 posts in the ROAD TRIP file!
« Last Edit: November 03, 2006, 01:45:20 am by Fran »

Offline jpwagoneer1964

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A New BBM Game
« Reply #503 on: November 03, 2006, 01:44:18 am »
Rock River, Wy

Rock River 1921


Mark
« Last Edit: November 03, 2006, 01:50:02 am by jpwagoneer1964 »
Thank you Heath and Jake for showing us Ennis and Jack,  teaching us how much they loved one another.

Offline Ellemeno

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A New BBM Game
« Reply #504 on: November 03, 2006, 02:46:38 am »
Redwater, AB

World's Largest Oil Derrick in Redwater, AB


Offline MaineWriter

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A New BBM Game
« Reply #505 on: November 03, 2006, 08:14:32 am »
Roma-Los Saenz, TX

Roma and Los Saenz have incorporated joinly and so they are listed here together. Corrales de Saenz was founded in the 1760s by a ranching family named Saenz who followed José de Escandón from the Spanish colonial city of Mier. According to the Handbook of Texas, "it is possible that what came to be known as Roma-Los Saenz and Ciudad Miguel Alemán were originally part of the same city, San Pedro de Roma, Tamaulipas."

1848 was the year Roma-Los Saenz became part of the U. S. - although that fact is thought by some to be a moot point. The only obvious change was an opening of the first post office in Starr County. The flavor of the city is definately 19th Century Mexico and is certainly one of the gem cities on "Los Caminos del Rio."

The Oblates of Mary Immaculate founded a mission in the mid-1850s and it was they who suggested the name Roma. The town was also the westernmost port for the steamships that ran up and down the Rio Grande from 1850 to 1900.

Roma was designated a national historic district in the 1970s and the historical museum itself is in an 1840 building. The main plaza, was used a backdrop for the 1953 movie Viva Zapata. Many of the downtown buildings built in the 1880s (including the old 1880s post office) were designed by noted German brickmaker and architect Heinrich Portscheller.

The population in 1904 was a mere 521. During the border unrest 1910-17, refugees from Mexico occupied the historic "Pink House." The town's isolation ended in the mid 1920s when new roads were built and the railroad arrived.

Roma's green bridge - one of the few remaining suspension bridges in Texas became Texas' international bridge when it was built in 1927. A recent restoration has painted and reenforced it, although it has yet to be reopened to pedestrian traffic.

In 1931 Roma's population was 1,000 - and the businesses were all clustered in the few blocks around the bridge. With the construction of Falcon Dam in 1953, the threat of periodic flooding was removed.

Since 1979 the town's infrastructure has been improved with a new water plant, water tower and new fire and police stations. The town is surrounded on three sides by 100,000 acres of irrigated river bottom.


Leslie
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Offline jpwagoneer1964

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A New BBM Game
« Reply #506 on: November 03, 2006, 12:05:05 pm »
Zoquiapanm, Mx

Mark
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Offline Meryl

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A New BBM Game
« Reply #507 on: November 03, 2006, 12:08:38 pm »
Muzquiz, Mexico
Ich bin ein Brokie...

Offline MaineWriter

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A New BBM Game
« Reply #508 on: November 03, 2006, 12:40:35 pm »
Zulch, TX

(not to be confused with North Zulch, played earlier by moi!)

 Settlement began in the late 1830s when the first homestead was established in what had been Grimes County. Sometime around 1850 Julius Zulch, a German immigrant recognized the potential of this place that was known as Willow Hole. It had spring water and was halfway between Midway and Boonville - the perfect place to open a store.

Zulch opened his store and in 1859 the Willow Hole post office operated within the walls of Zulch's store. The settlers (mostly from southern states) weren't settling fast enough for Julius, who wanted a broader customer base. He started placing ads back in the old country - even fronting interested immigrants their passage money.

In the early 1880s, "considerable numbers" of Germans arrived - either sharecropping for Zulch or others in order to get a grubstake for their own farms. Willow Hole soon had a respectable population of 150 - growing to around 500 by 1890.

Julius Zulch built a Lutheran school which doubled as a church. In 1893 the Bethlehem Lutheran Church was built on property donated by Zulch. The town was renamed Zulch in 1906 and the postal authorities authorized the change of the post office's name.

That same year the Houston and Texas Central Railroad on its way from Navasota to Mexia bypassed Zulch by building to the west.

Then in 1907, the Trinity and Brazos Valley Railway built a spur parallel to the Houston and Texas Central tracks. When people moved North to the railroads - North Zulch came into existence and plain Zulch shrank. The post office closed in 1920 and the school managed to hold on until a consolidation in the early 1940s.

By 1949 Zulch was down to only 50 people and by the 60s, only the Willow Hole Church and Cemetery remained.

A historical marker on Farm Road 39, (half a mile west) serves as tombstone for the town.

Leslie
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Offline jpwagoneer1964

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A New BBM Game
« Reply #509 on: November 03, 2006, 12:52:52 pm »
Hudson, Wy

Hudson, Wyoming, has quite possibly two of the most famous restaurants in the state. Today, the town is a quiet little burg in between Riverton and Lander, yet it maintains some of its charm from the days of the mines.

A Mining Legacy

George H. Rogers filed on a homestead in the vicinity of present-day Hudson, more than 100 years ago, but George didn't live to see the town that would spring up from his farm fields. George's wife, Emma (Hudson) Rogers, "proved up" on the land in 1890, following his death. On December 30, 1905, Emma and her brother, Daniel Hudson, released their homestead rights. The mineral rights were purchased by J. C. Hickey, a trustee for the Wyoming and Western Railroad. In the same year, the attorney for J.C. Hickey filed on 67 mineral and oil leases throughout the Hudson valley.

On March 8, 1909, Hudson was incorporated, a "company" town. Wagon mines were in operation before the railroad was built, but the birth of Hudson was primarily due to the building of the railroad into the area in 1907 and 1908. During those years, the Poposia Mines, number One and Two, were put into production. The railroad operated for both mines, running three shifts a day until the 1920s. The high demand for coal during World War I kept the mines in business and running strong.

At the peak, the population of Hudson reached approximately 1,500. Historians have said mining camp populations in the area approached another 10,000 people. Irish, Scotch, Italian, Yugoslavs, French and Welsh immigrants found work in the mines.

In the boom years, Hudson boasted many businesses including a bakery which supplied bread to Riverton and Lander, a hotel, pharmacy, Chamber of Commerce, two banks, a restaurant, two general stores, a lumber yard, butcher shop, jewelry store, millinery shop, a motion picture house which was called the "Opera House", a cement block factory, brick yard and kiln, a doctor, its own newspaper, a 15-piece band, railroad depot and stockyards. The stockyards at Hudson were a major cattle shipping point for all of Fremont County. Hudson was once said to have had more houses of ill-repute per capita than any other town in the State of Wyoming. Some even remained until the 1950s.

With the evolution of diesel engines and natural gas production, a sharp drop in the demand for coal let to the decline in the production at the mines and consequently a sharp decline in the population of the town.

In 1941, the last mine closed down in Hudson. Many tried in vain to keep the mines going as long as possible. The Poposia Mines were the first to close down, while the smaller wagon mines slowly closed one by one.

Hudson remains a viable community and the town has quite possibly two of the most famous restaurants in the state. Today, the town is a quiet little burg between Riverton and Lander, yet it maintains some of its charm from the days of the mines.
   

Hudson was also the name of a american car manufactured independently thru 1954 well known for wins stock car racing in the 1950's.
« Last Edit: November 03, 2006, 01:19:44 pm by jpwagoneer1964 »
Thank you Heath and Jake for showing us Ennis and Jack,  teaching us how much they loved one another.