Author Topic: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game  (Read 428156 times)

Offline MaineWriter

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #1330 on: June 19, 2007, 07:47:42 am »
Jacinto City, TX

Named after the Battleground of the Texas Revolution, began in 1941 when Frank Sharp built a subdivision to house steel mills and war industry workers. After the war the population was 3,800 and the town incorporated.

Jacinto City holds the state record for the number of chambers of commerce in operation at one time. In the 1950s they had three separate chambers.

Most residents were refinery workers and their children attended Houston and Galena Park schools.

Population Record High 11,500 in 1964.

(XYZ again!)

L
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Offline Meryl

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #1331 on: June 19, 2007, 03:33:31 pm »
Bluesky, AB

« Last Edit: June 19, 2007, 03:39:20 pm by Meryl »
Ich bin ein Brokie...

Offline belbbmfan

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #1332 on: June 20, 2007, 04:17:11 pm »
Queenstown, Alberta
'We're supposed to guard the sheep, not eat 'em'

Offline MaineWriter

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #1333 on: June 20, 2007, 04:23:38 pm »
Nogalus Prairie, TX

From "No Gallows"
by Bob Bowman

The names of some East Texas towns can be downright confusing. And much of the confusion arises from mispronunciations which, during the passage of time, have become actual names.

Take, for example, the name Nogalus Prairie in Trinity County.

Local lore suggests the name originated when two horse thieves were hung from the branch of a large tree because the community had "no gallows."

While a morsel of truth may lie in the story, Clell Davis of Trinity County helped shed some light on the community's real origin.

The community was originally named Nogales Prairie because of the walnut and pecan trees that grew there when Texas was still a province of Mexico and Spanish families lived in the area. Nogales is Spanish for walnut and sometimes pecan.

When the first European settlers came to the area, they spelled the name like it sounded, and Nogales became Nogallis. The first post office opened in 1858 as Nogallis Prairie. In the late 1800s, it was sometimes called Logallis Prairie, but in 1894 the post office was known as Nogalus Prairie.

No less than John Wesley Hardin, the preacher's son and outlaw who spent a lot of time in Trinity County, mentioned the name in his autobiography, "The Life of John Wesley Hardin."

Hardin shot and killed a former slave near Moscow in Polk County in the fall of 1868 and was on the run from federal reconstruction troops.

His brother Joe was teaching school "on Logallis Prairie, about twenty-five miles north of Sumpter" and John Wesley fled there.

When Joe also told him that federal troops were coming to arrest him, Hardin waylaid and killed three soldiers in a bed of a deep creek. He buried the bodies in the creek bed about 100 yards from where the fight occurred.

Some 55 years ago, as a young boy growing up at Nogalus Prairie, Clell Davis was walking along a creek bed and found some bones. "That night at supper, I told my father about it, and he told me that his grandfather, Alexander Davis, told him that back in the l800s, a man shot three men and buried them near the creek bed," said Davis.

"The story really got my attention, but for some reason I never went back to look for the bones and, after 55 years, I had almost forgotten about it until I read Hardin's book," said Davis.

Today, however, the creek has been dammed and a pond covers the site. "A short distance from there, you can see the old roadbed where it used to cross the creek, and I believe this is where John Wesley Hardin shot the Union soldiers and where they were buried," said Davis.

As far as hangings are concerned at Nogalus, there were a number that occurred in the vicinity during and after the Civil War. During that time, a large group of Civil War deserters were camped in the community when they were chased down and hung from convenient tree limbs.

From the 1840s to about 1900, Nogalus Prairie was a "fair sized community," said Davis. From 1900 to 1918, the community had a Methodist church, several stores and saloons, a cotton gin, grist mill, and a Woodmen of the World lodge.

The post office closed in 1920 and today Nogalus is mostly a dispersed rural community. Its last population figure in 2000 was 106.
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Offline nova20194

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #1334 on: June 21, 2007, 05:54:38 am »

Ellscott, AB


Ellscott is located in central Alberta.

The community was named for L. Scott, railway official.



Offline Meryl

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #1335 on: June 21, 2007, 08:24:43 pm »
Thorndale Acres, WY
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Offline MaineWriter

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #1336 on: June 22, 2007, 08:29:48 am »
Sunray, TX

By Texas standards, Sunray arrived late; materializing with the oil boom of 1929.

Named after the Sunray Oil Company in 1931, the town had previously been known as Altman.

The town had a post office in 1930 and incorporated in 1937.

School students were bussed to Dumas after their numbers overwhelmed the local school. The population has remained between 1,500 and 2,000 from the 1950s until the present.

(XYZ rule...)

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Offline nova20194

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #1337 on: June 22, 2007, 09:03:54 am »

Balzac, AB

Balzac is a hamlet in the southern portion of the Canadian province of Alberta, in the Municipal District of Rocky View. It is located immediately west of Queen Elizabeth II Highway, 24 km (15 mi) north of Calgary and 12 12 km (7 mi) south of Airdrie.

Balzac is presently two miles north of the city of Calgary's northern limits (north of the Calgary International Airport). As of summer 2006, the City of Calgary was in the process of negotiating with the municipality for possible annexation of lands immediately south of Balzac - specifically south of Provincial Highway 566 and west of Highway 2. Annexation discussions are ongoing. Balzac itself is not expected to be annexed, but will be immediately adjacent to city lands once plans are finalized. Balzac is also directly west of the Crossiron Mills shopping mall development, construction of which was underway as of early 2007.

A Canadian Pacific Railway station began operating at Balzac in 1910. It was named by William Cornelius Van Horne, then president of the Canadian Pacific Railway, after one of his favourite authors, Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) a noted French novelist. The post office here was opened in April 1, 1912 under the name “Beddington” and was changed on July 1, 1925.




Offline jstephens9

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #1338 on: June 22, 2007, 08:02:52 pm »
Creston, Wyoming

Creston is in Sweetwater County, in the Rock Springs metro area. So named because it is on the crest of the Continental Divide. The latitude of Creston is 41.703N. The longitude is -107.756W. It is in the Mountain Standard time zone. Elevation is 7,106 feet.

Offline MaineWriter

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Re: ROAD TRIP: A BBM Game
« Reply #1339 on: June 23, 2007, 10:14:08 am »
Nolan, TX

Nolan, was formed in 1928 when two previously formed communities (Old Nolan and Dora) moved five miles (West and East, respectively) to form the new town. Dora and Old Nolan had each had their own functioning post office. Dora closed its post office in 1938 when its population fell to 25. The schools of the two towns were merged. After WWII Dora became a ghost town, while Nolan held on. The Nolan post office continues to function. Population was estimated at 126 in 1990.

Old Nolan and Dora each have a cemetery under their respective names. The current town of Nolan has a cemetery shown on TxDoT maps as Slater's Chapel.

L
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