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History in
a Pecan Shell
In 1908 Hugh Sheridan
sold land to a loan company who in turn partnered with the San
Antonio and Aransas Pass Railway. The plan was to subdivide the
acreage into small farms and town lots. The town was granted a post
office that opened in September of 1908 and early the following year
a plat was filed and a hotel opened in anticipation of potential buyers.
Advertisements were placed in various newspapers across the midwest
and soon the town was thriving with future fig farmers who thought
the "tropical" climate was heaven compared to their frozen farms up
north. Sheridan was soon a fig capital - if there ever was such a
thing - and trainloads of figs were shipped out to wherever figs were
shipped back then. In 1914 the town had a population of 150 and all
essential businesses.
The Shell Oil Company drilled a well in 1940 which brought in the
Sheridan oil and gas field. Farms declined as wells were drilled and
soon a plant was built which exploded in the mid-1950s. |
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The
Rock Island Gas Plant Explodes in the mid-1950s
Photo
Courtesy Nesbitt Memorial Library # 00652
More Texas
Disasters |
The railroad
stopped running after WWII.
Today the Sheridan water tower proclaims the town to be the "Deer
Hunting Capital of Texas." Small cattle ranches have replaced the
farms and the oil and gas field is still producing.
There is no evidence of a "downtown" since over the years the Sheridan's
businesses have migrated over to the highway. |
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Sheridan's
Water Tower
TE Photo, February 2006 |
"H. E. Griffith,
in wheel barrow, being pushed from Sheridan to Rock
Island by Oscar Houchins, August 24, 1942. Houchins had lost a
bet to Griffith on the governor's race. Large crowds gathered in Sheridan
and Rock Island to see the departure and the arrival. The photograph,
taken at Sheridan just before the two men departed, ran in the Colorado
County Citizen of August 27, 1942"
- from the Nesbitt Memorial Library #01083 |
Texas
Escapes,
in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing Texas,
asks that anyone wishing to share their local history and recent
or vintage/historic photos, please contact
us.
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