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Comanche County TX
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DE LEON, TEXAS

Comanche County, Central Texas North

32°6'35"N 98°32'19"W (32.109746, -98.538488)

Hwy 6, Hwy 16
15 miles N of Comanche the county set
12 miles W of Dublin
24 miles SW of Stephenville
30 miles SE of Eastland
ZIP code 76444
Area code 254
Population: 2,198 Est. (2019)
2,246 (2010) 2,433 (2000) 2,190 (1990)

De Leon, Texas Area Hotels Comanche Hotels

De Leon TX - Aerial View, Comanche County, 1909
Bird's eye view of De Leon, ca 1909
Click on image to enlarge

Old photo courtesy Dan Whatley Collection

History in a Pecan Shell

De Leon was born when The Texas Central Railroad sold lots off the bed of a flatcar on July 7, 1881. The name is attributed to Alonso De Leon, a Spanish explorer who also lent his name to the nearby Leon River.

The post office was opened within the year and by 1882, the town had a newspaper and a doctor. Like most of Texas, cotton was the major cash crop until the 1906 infestation of the boll weevil decimated the crop. Peanuts were the replacement crop and increased technology and irrigation insured its continuation. It is the primary regional crop to the present.


Forum:

Subject: De Leon Update


Peanuts are no longer the predominant crop in the De Leon area and haven't been for quite a few years. Even though it's hard to consider it a "crop", you could say that coastal bermuda is now the predominant crop solely grown to produce hay for the cattle and the hay itself is sold far and wide. Driving around the area, you'll see more acreage of coastal bermuda than anything else. You rarely see a field of peanuts anymore. The peanut growing business pretty much moved to west Texas.

Cotton has been making a comeback in recent years and has been doing fairly well considering how little rainfall we get, but it's dry land cotton and does well if small rains come at the right time.

The only known "farmers" who are actually growing edible food in Comanche county are someone in Gustine that grows large amounts of squash and tomatoes and a small time onion grower around Comyn that grows a few thousand sweet onions every year. A farmer's market exists in De Leon but has no participants.

P.S. Back in they heyday of the peanut business around De Leon and Gorman, duck man Phil Robertson used to hunt ducks in the area because of the huge number of ducks that flocked to the peanut fields. There are hardly any ducks anymore but there are thousands of sandhill cranes that flock to the few remaining peanut fields and do their resting at Lake Proctor. - Shane Hall, De Leon, July 25, 2014


De Leon TX downtown
Downtown De Leon
Photo courtesy Shane Hall, November 2008


Sandhill Cranes
Photo courtesy Shane Hall


DeLeon Texas Downtown
Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson, December 2005


De Leon's Wall of Recall mural
De Leon's Wall of Recall
Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson, December 2005


DeLeon Auto Supply mural, De Leon Texas
De Leon mural
Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson, December 2005
More Texas Murals


De Leon TX - water tower
De Leon water tower
Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson, December 2005
More Texas Water Towers

Take a road trip

Central Texas North

De Leon, Texas Nearby Towns:
Comanche the county seat
Eastland
Dublin
Stephenville
Weatherford
Fort Worth
See Comanche County

Book Hotel Here:
Eastland Hotels | Stephenville Hotels | More Hotels

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