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Cibolo Creek
forms the boundary between Guadalupe
and Bexar counties.
The word is Spanish for "buffalo." According to legend, Indians stampeded
buffalo over the steep banks of the creek, which was easier than hunting
them from horseback. |
Cibolo History
in a Pecan Shell
Jacob Schlather is credited with being one of the first
settlers in the late 1860s. Jacob’s son opened the area’s first store.
When the store was sold to Charles Fromme in the early 1880s, the
village that had grown up around it was collectively known as Fromme’s
store. That designation became obsolete with the arrival of the Galveston,
Harrisburg and San Antonio Railroad in 1877. The railroad designated
their stop “Cibolo Valley.” The name Cibolo was submitted for a post
office and in 1883, with a population estimated at 100 residents,
Cibolo, Texas started appearing on maps.
By 1904 the townsfolk had constructed a simple one room school, but
by 1914 this was replaced by a larger building. Two years later a
two-story brick high school was constructed. The town survived the
Great Depression and had a population of 250 prior to WWII,
growing slowly to 398 in the late 1960s. In the 1980s the inevitable
growth of San Antonio
reached Cibolo and from 657 in the late 1980s it has increased to
the present (2010) 15,349. |
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Cibolo, Texas
Landmarks
& Photo Gallery
Photos courtesy
Stephen
Michaels, January 2008 |
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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