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History in
a Pecan Shell
In 1880 when the
Katy Railroad was building from Denison
to Greenville, Kingston
was given a depot. A former Confederate named Nick Hodges donated
the land for the railroad right-of-way named the place Kingston, after
Kingston, Georgia where he and his fellow combatants surrendered at
the end of the Civil War.
A post office was granted in 1880 and the town due to its railroad
connection - drew off populations from smaller towns. Calhoun College
breifly operated in Kingston - from 1885 to 1897.
The Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway was building through Hunt
County in 1886 and asked Kingston citizens for a bonus to route
the rails through their town. Since they had a railroad connection
already, they refused and the railroad moved three miles north - buying
up land and establishing the town of Celeste.
As in many of these cases, Kingston lost businesses to Celeste,
and the population declined accordingly.
From a population of 600 in 1890, it declined to half that figure
by 1914. The post office closed its doors sometime during the Great
Depression and yet the town managed to maintain its separate identity
- keeping a population of 150 in 1947 which has stayed more or less
at that figure to the present.
Birthplace of Audie Murphy. |
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Kingston
United Methodist Church
Photo courtesy Mike
Price, September 2009 |
Kingston
Baptist Church
Photo courtesy Mike
Price, September 2009 |
Kingston Baptist
Church historical marker
Photo courtesy Mike
Price, September 2009 |
Kingston Baptist
Church historical marker:
Founded in 1880
by 26 charter members, this church was formed when the town of Kingston
was created on the route of the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad. When
the Gulf, Colorado, & Santa Fe Railroad built another line three miles
north of here in 1886, growth in Kingston was halted. Many businesses
moved to Celeste, the town formed
at the new crossing. The church remained in Kingston, and built a
second sanctuary in 1947. A new building was constructed in one week
in 1985 by volunteers from Kingston area churches and East Mountain
Baptist Church.
See Texas Railroads
| Texas Churches |
Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history
and vintage/historic photos, please contact
us. |
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