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Towns
like Zipperlandville may take their notoriety where they can find
it, but that doesn't mean you can find the town if you go looking
for it.
Zipperlandville
If Zipperlandville isn't part of your personal or family history,
you can find it in the title of a book from Republic of Texas Press,
Texas Towns: From Abner to Zipperlandville by Don Blevins.
Not only is the community mentioned in the book but the cover shows
a picture of the Zipperlandville City Limits sign.
People who go looking for the sign and the picturesque building behind
it might notice that the book's cover photo looks a little, well,
superimposed. The assumption here is that someone must have stolen
the real city limits sign.
Zipperlandville is (was) about five miles west of Rosebud
on State Highway 53 in southern Falls
County. The Handbook of Texas tells us the town was settled
in the 1870s by German, Yugoslavian and Czech immigrants, including
the industrious Zipperlen family, owners of a gin and store that became
the focal point of the community. The Zipperlandville school district
lasted until 1950, when it was consolidated with the Rosebud school
district.
The town was sometimes called Zipperlen or Zipperlenville.
Both are a lot closer to the family name than what the post office
handed down as official. Zipperlen - not Zipperland -descendants still
live in Falls County.
The postal service named towns when it located a post office in a
particular area. Residents submitted the name they wanted and the
government at that point either approved, rejected, misread, mangled
or simply changed proposed names.
Zipperlandville is just one example.
© Clay
Coppedge
[See "Zipperlandville,
and Other Places"] |
Zipperlandville,
Texas Forum
Subject: Zipperlandville
Read your interesting article on Zipperlandville. You're right - many
Texas towns have names that are distorted from what they should be.
Often that was due to the postal system - via an application for a
post office in which the prospective postmaster provided a mistaken
spelling, or via a misreading of the name applied for by the postal
official who reviewed the application.
I do need to share, however, that the Zipperlandville community never
had a post office, under any name. - John J. Germann, July 11, 2020 |
Texas
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