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Ochiltree
County Towns
Source: The Handbook of Texas Online
PERRYTON, TEXAS
OCHILTREE, TEXAS
GROGAN, TEXAS
JINES, TEXAS
CRESSWELL, TEXAS
TWICHELL, TEXAS
BULER, TEXAS
NOTLA, TEXAS
FARNSWORTH, TEXAS
WAKA, TEXAS
HUNTOON, TEXAS
BOOKER, TEXAS
PERRYTON, TEXAS
Perryton is on U.S. Highway 83 in northern
Ochiltree County. It was named after George M.
Perry, an early county judge, who had been
involved in the disastrous Enid, Ochiltree and
Western railroad scheme. Perryton was founded in
1919 and designated the county seat. Most of the
early settlers were former citizens of Gray,
Oklahoma, and Ochiltree, Texas, who moved to the
new Spearman branch of the Panhandle and Santa Fe
Railway.
When Perryton was incorporated, the citizens
adopted a mayor-council form of city government.
Advertisements soon attracted farmers and related
businesses, and by 1920 the community had a
population of 2,000. Two leading businessmen,
Charles E. Whippo and Fremont Meat, built modern
water and electrical distribution plants, which
they later sold to the city.
Five grain elevators had been erected by 1925, and
by 1930 the community's population numbered over
2,500. Since Perryton was a designated mailing
station between Amarillo and Wichita, Kansas, an
airport was constructed near the city dump in
1932; it became known as the "Sewer-Side Airport."
In 1951 Perryton adopted a council-manager form of
city government. In addition to its importance as
an agribusiness center, the city received a
further economic boost in the 1950s with the
successful drilling of oil and gas reserves
nearby. New buildings, including three schools, a
fire station, a city hall, a police station, a
county jail, and a library, were built at Perryton
between 1957 and 1968.
A hospital and a nursing home were also opened in
1968. In the mid-1980s Perryton's industries
included creameries, oilfield services and
equipment manufacturing, a trailer manufacturer,
farm-machinery distributors, and cattle feedlots.
The yearly Ochiltree County Fair is an important
local event.
In 1907 remains of a buried Indian settlement were
discovered eighteen miles southeast of Perryton,
and archeological investigation began in 1919.
The population of Perryton increased from 4,399 in
1950 to 7,991 in 1984. In 1990 it was 7,607.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
F. Stanley [Stanley F. L. Crocchiola], The
Perryton, Texas, Story (Nazareth, Texas, 1975).
Wheatheart of the Plains: An Early History of
Ochiltree County (Perryton, Texas: Ochiltree
County Historical Survey Committee, 1969). H.
Allen Anderson
OCHILTREE,
TEXAS
Ochiltree, on State Highway 70 nine miles south of
Perryton in central Ochiltree County, was
established in 1885 and named for a Texas
politician and Confederate officer, William B.
Ochiltree. The post office opened in September
1886, and the town was elected county seat when
the county was organized in 1889.
Population growth was sporadic, but by 1915
Ochiltree had a population of 500, a bank, a
school, and two or three churches. It also had two
newspapers, the Eagle Investigator and the
Ochiltree News, and a community orchestra
organized by the James Whippo family.
Chautauquas, movies, and automobile races also
provided recreation. On September 23, 1909, the
Enid, Ochiltree and Western Railroad Company began
construction on a railroad to connect Ochiltree
and Dalhart. The section from Dalhart to Dumas was
graded, but only 13.7 miles of track were laid
before the company failed.
The Panhandle and Santa Fe Railway came through
the area in 1919 but missed Ochiltree by several
miles. The same year, the town of Perryton was
established on the railroad eight miles north of
Ochiltree and was elected the new county seat.
The citizens of Ochiltree moved their homes and
businesses to Perryton. After 1920 Ochiltree was
an unorganized community. The post office was
discontinued in September 1921.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Millie Jones Porter, Memory Cups of Panhandle
Pioneers (Clarendon, Texas: Clarendon Press,
1945). Wheatheart of the Plains: An Early History
of Ochiltree County (Perryton, Texas: Ochiltree
County Historical Survey Committee, 1969). H.
Allen Anderson
GROGAN, TEXAS
Grogan was centered around a school and a post
office in northeastern Ochiltree County. Although
there is some doubt as to its exact location, the
community was probably on land settled before 1901
by Leona Grogan, who had moved with her parents,
James Gaston and Caroline (Gober) Grogan, to
Ochiltree County from Shackelford County and had
homesteaded 160 acres of land north of the site of
present Perryton, on the state line.
Leona Grogan taught school on her land in the
1901-02 school year, and in September 1903 a post
office was established with Leona as postmistress.
Known throughout the county for her progressive
teaching methods, Miss Grogan taught at the
Ochiltree community school and other schools in
the area.
She married Henry Coffee in 1909. After living on
her homestead for a time, they moved to Ochiltree
and then to Perryton after the railroad came
through the area.
Compounding the confusion concerning the Grogan
community's location, one Perry A. Grogan
(probably no relation to Leona) moved in 1901 to
Ochiltree County and established a ranch and
homestead on four sections of land northwest of
Ochiltree in the central part of the county.
A combination school and church was erected and
was much used by area farmers and ranchers. A late
blizzard in March 1907 killed 700 cattle, after
which Perry Grogan sold his claim and moved his
family to Amarillo. The community of Grogan
continued with some ten residents, and its post
office remained in operation until November 1915.
With the construction of the Panhandle and Santa
Fe Railway and the rise of Perryton, the Grogan
townsite, along with that of Ochiltree, was
eventually abandoned.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Ed Ellsworth Bartholomew, 800 Texas Ghost Towns
(Fort Davis, Texas: Frontier, 1971). Wheatheart of
the Plains: An Early History of Ochiltree County
(Perryton, Texas: Ochiltree County Historical
Survey Committee, 1969). H. Allen Anderson
JINES, TEXAS
Jines, in southern Ochiltree County, was named for
the brothers Alfred M. and Sherman Jines.
Originally from Illinois, the Jines brothers had
already enjoyed success as ranchers and real
estate promoters in western Kansas and Sherman
County, Texas.
In 1894 the brothers bought choice land on Wolf
Creek south of Ochiltree and soon built up their
cattle herds. Seeking to start a new town, they
established a post office in December 1895, with
Sherman as first postmaster. From 1896 to 1901 A.
M. Jines served as Ochiltree county sheriff.
The brothers' plans suffered a setback when severe
weather in the winter of 1902-03 temporarily
depleted their livestock herds. Although the
brothers eventually recovered financially, their
townsite failed to develop, and in November 1905
the post office was discontinued.
A. M. Jines then opened a real estate office in
Ochiltree, and both brothers continued ranching
and banking successfully. After Perryton was
founded in 1919, the Jines family made it their
home and center of operations.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Wheatheart of the Plains: An Early History of
Ochiltree County (Perryton, Texas: Ochiltree
County Historical Survey Committee, 1969). H.
Allen Anderson
CRESSWELL,
TEXAS
Cresswell was on Wolf Creek about two miles west
of the Ochiltree County Cemetery in central
Ochiltree County. The town was founded in 1887 by
brothers Gus, John, and Edward P. Klapp, and named
for Henry Whiteside Cresswell, on whose Bar CC
range the site was located.
Richard S. Cutter and his sons brought in lumber
from Dodge City and elsewhere to construct several
frame buildings and to open a lumberyard there.
Cutter also began the first Sunday school in the
area. John Klapp served as the town doctor, and
his brother Ed opened a general store.
In addition, Ed and his wife, Hannah, planted a
cherry orchard and built a greenhouse for
vegetables. A post office was established at the
Klapp store in November 1888. Cresswell was in the
running against Ochiltree to become county seat in
1889, but began to decline after railroads came to
the area.
By January 1897 its post office had been
discontinued. Some of the buildings constructed by
the Cutters were moved to Ochiltree or sold for
ranchhouses, and Cresswell was abandoned.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Pauline D. and R. L. Robertson, Cowman's Country:
Fifty Frontier Ranches in the Texas Panhandle,
1876-1887 (Amarillo: Paramount, 1981). Wheatheart
of the Plains: An Early History of Ochiltree
County (Perryton, Texas: Ochiltree County
Historical Survey Committee, 1969). H. Allen
Anderson
TWICHELL,
TEXAS
Twichell, on State Highway 15 in northern
Ochiltree County, was founded as a stop on the
Panhandle and Santa Fe Railway in 1919. It was
named after Ginery Twichell, president of the
railroad.
In 1940 Twichell had a store, a school, and
twenty-five residents. By 1960 it had a store, a
grain elevator, and fifty residents. Only the
elevator and railroad depot remained in 1980, when
Twichell listed twenty-two residents.
Mail was received from Perryton, five miles to the
southwest, and students were bused to school
there. The Perryton-Ochiltree County Airport was
nearby. In 1990 twenty-two residents were still
reported.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Wheatheart of the Plains: An Early History of
Ochiltree County (Perryton, Texas: Ochiltree
County Historical Survey Committee, 1969). H.
Allen Anderson
BULER, TEXAS
Buler, on State Highway 70 in south central
Ochiltree County, was named for Davis H. Buller,
who owned and operated a store there for several
years.
A local post office was established in June 1922
with Buller as postmaster, but it was discontinued
at the advent of rural mail delivery from Perryton
in November 1924.
In 1940 Buler reported a population of
twenty-five, but by 1950 its store had ceased
operation, depriving the community of its center.
In the 1980s a grain elevator stood about two
miles south of the townsite at the intersection of
State Highway 70 and Farm Road 281.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Wheatheart of the Plains: An Early History of
Ochiltree County (Perryton, Texas: Ochiltree
County Historical Survey Committee, 1969).H. Allen
Anderson
NOTLA, TEXAS
Notla, on Farm Road 281 in the southeast corner of
Ochiltree County, began in 1906, when Bud
Westerfield and Frank L. Hamilton purchased land
in that vicinity. That fall Westerfield and his
family built a house, a barn, and a camphouse for
transients.
Since the site was on the freight route between
Canadian and the ranching area around Ochiltree,
it was originally dubbed Half-Way.
In 1916 Hamilton, who was part owner of the Alton
Grocery Company of Enid, Oklahoma, moved his
family out to the land he had bought a decade
earlier. There he farmed and later opened a store
and filling station.
In 1920, when the Hamiltons applied for a post
office, the name Notla was chosen as a reversed
spelling of the Alton company. Established
initially at the Hamiltons' house, the post office
was shortly afterward moved to the store. By that
time several families had moved into the vicinity
to farm.
The Hamiltons continued to operate the store until
February 1944, when they sold their farm and moved
back to Enid. The post office was discontinued in
October of that year, but the store remained in
business until about 1950.
From 1940 to 1990 Notla reported a population of
twenty.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Wheatheart of the Plains: An Early History of
Ochiltree County (Perryton, Texas: Ochiltree
County Historical Survey Committee, 1969). H.
Allen Anderson
FARNSWORTH,
TEXAS
Farnsworth, on State Highway 15 ten miles
southwest of Perryton in west central Ochiltree
County, was established in 1919 when the Panhandle
and Santa Fe Railway arrived.
Ranchers had begun settling this area in the early
1880s, and by 1900 had established a school and
community called Olds. A post office was
established at the site in 1905 and initially
named Nogal, but in November 1906 the name was
changed to Rogerstown.
The present post office dates from 1920 and was
named for H. W. Farnsworth, director of the
railroad. Population estimates have fluctuated
between a low of twenty, first recorded in 1925,
and a high of 200 in 1949.
In 1947 Farnsworth had five businesses, two
churches, and two schools.
In 1984 the community had six businesses and an
estimated population of 149, which was still the
population figure reported in 1990.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Wheatheart of the Plains: An Early History of
Ochiltree County (Perryton, Texas: Ochiltree
County Historical Survey Committee, 1969). H.
Allen Anderson
WAKA, TEXAS
Waka, on State Highway 15 twenty-two miles
southwest of Perryton in west central Ochiltree
County, was settled in 1885 by German immigrants
and was first called Wawaka. A post office was
located in the home of the founder, J. N. Stump,
from 1901 to 1919.
In the latter year Burnside, a stop on the
Panhandle and Santa Fe Railway three miles north
of Wawaka, was laid off as a townsite and shipping
point for area farmers. In order to be on the
railroad, residents of Wawaka (including the Stump
family) moved their post office to the Burnside
site.
By 1921 the Burnside community had been renamed
Waka.
However, the post office did not officially assume
the new name until 1927.
The population was 200 in 1930 and 150 by 1947,
when the community had three businesses, two
churches, and a school.
In 1980 and 1990 Waka had a population of 145 and
four businesses.
Many of the Stump family's descendants still
reside in the vicinity.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Kathleen E. and Clifton R. St. Clair, eds., Little
Towns of Texas (Jacksonville, Texas: Jayroe
Graphic Arts, 1982). Wheatheart of the Plains: An
Early History of Ochiltree County (Perryton,
Texas: Ochiltree County Historical Survey
Committee, 1969). Claudia Hazlewood
HUNTOON,
TEXAS
Huntoon, on State Highway 15 in northeastern
Ochiltree County, was laid out in 1919 on the
Panhandle and Santa Fe Railway and named for Joel
M. Huntoon, a former director of the railway.
A general store and a grain elevator were built in
1927, but by 1933 the store had closed.
A post office operated in Huntoon from 1921 until
the 1930s.
In 1948 the school was discontinued, when Booker,
five miles east, absorbed part of the school
district.
In 1984 and 1990 Huntoon had a population of
twenty-one and no businesses.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
A History of Lipscomb County, Texas, 1876-1976
(Lipscomb, Texas: Lipscomb County Historical
Survey Committee, 1976). Texas Almanac, 1984-85.
H. Allen Anderson
BOOKER, TEXAS
Booker, at the intersection of State highways 15
and 23, in northwestern Lipscomb County,
originated seven miles to the northwest in 1909 as
La Kemp, Oklahoma.
The town, including the post office, was moved
piecemeal from Oklahoma to Texas in 1919, when the
Panhandle and Santa Fe Railway was extended from
Shattuck, Oklahoma, to Spearman, Texas. The new
townsite was platted in August 1917 by Thomas C.
Spearman and named for B. F. Booker, a civil
engineer with the line.
By 1920 the town had grain elevators,
cattle-shipping pens, a bank, a school, three
churches, and a population of 600. By 1929 modern
utilities had been installed. Due to the Great
Depression and Dust Bowl, Booker's population
decreased from 495 in 1930 to 386 in 1940.
But by 1949 agricultural recovery, new farming
techniques, and oil exploration had caused the
population to increase to 1,500.
In 1984 the town had 1,219 residents and fifty-two
businesses. In addition to its farm and ranch
economy, after 1956 Booker greatly benefited from
local oil and gas production. A new sewage plant
was completed in 1966, and a new hospital and
clinic were built in 1973. The town is
incorporated.
In 1990 it had a population of 1,236 and reached
into Ochiltree County.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Mrs. Lowell Bowdle and Mrs. Mason Lemons, eds.,
Dimensions of Progress: Fiftieth Anniversary of
Booker, Texas, 1919-1969 (1969). A History of
Lipscomb County, Texas, 1876-1976 (Lipscomb,
Texas: Lipscomb County Historical Survey
Committee, 1976).
H. Allen Anderson
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