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"U.S.
Post Office - Speaks, TX 77985"
Photo Courtesy Cheryl Thompson-Draper, June 2006 |
History in
a Pecan Shell
Speaks dates from
1828 when Jesse H. Cartwright received a land grant from the Mexican
government. The grant was near the crossing of the Atascosito road
at the Navidad River. A few years later Archibald White received a
grant that surrounded Cartwright's grant and it was part of White's
land that became Speaks.
By 1866 the time had come for the community to apply for a post office.
The submitted name was Speaksville. It was granted and the
post office operated under that name until it closed in 1876. The
community was thereafter called Boxville. The Boxville post
office stays open until 1882 when the store / post office closed.
J. W. Koonce reopened the store in 1928 and the post office was renamed
Speaks. Population figures for the thirties and forties aren't available
but in 1950 Speaks had fifty people living there, served by two stores.
Oil was discovered nearby on two new fields, but with the days of
boomtowns long gone, the oil merely increased property values. |
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Bradbury
Store and former Post Office
Photo
Courtesy Cheryl Thompson-Draper, June 2006
More Texas Post
Offices |
Speaks Texas
Today
Photographer's
Note:
"My husband and I have a ranch near Speaks, Texas...which
lies between Lavaca County Road 18 and Lavaca County Road 14 on FM
530 ( which runs from Edna
to Hallettsville).
I did not see anything about Speaks so on our way out to the ranch
today I photographed the only structures in Speaks. I have attached
them to this email. Speaks "city" sign, Speaks Community Center building,
Speaks Cemetery and Mrs. Bradbury's store and (former) Post Office."
- Cheryl Thompson-Draper, June 10, 2006 |
Speaks
Community Center, former schoolhouse
Photo
Courtesy Cheryl Thompson-Draper, June 2006
More Texas
Schoolhouses |
Speaks Cemetery
& Tombstones
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The
1868 Speaks Cemetery
Photo
Courtesy Cheryl Thompson-Draper, February 2015 |
Tombstones
"My Dad was a WW
II Vet, a member of the "Greatest Generation." He was already
in the National Guard when the Japanese attacked Pearl
Harbor. His young life drastically changed and he was in the army
for five years. I was born in 1943 and he only got to see me one time
before he shipped out. He fought in Belgium and Germany. Like most
combat vets, he was very reluctant to talk about the war. He was in
charge of five tank retrievers which were large flatbed trucks with
armored cabs and a .50 machine gun on top. Their job was to chase
Gen. Patton's 3rd Army, bringing him new tanks and picking up damage
ones, the ones that could be repaired. He was just behind the battle
lines and was shot at and bombed by German planes.
I found the Civil War stone also in the Speaks Cemetery where Dad
is buried. I'm going to try to do some research on that Confederate
soldier. If my math is correct, he was 16 when that war started and
was 89 when he passed away.
My Dad was just two months short of his 88th birthday when he passed.
Also, my brother is a veteran of Vietnam - a door gunner on a helicopter,
he was shot down three times and nearly captured once. He has the
Purple Heart and numerous other medals - he won't talk about it much
either. He was in the 101st Airborne Div." - Murray
Montgomery, 2012 |
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Speaks
Cemetery
Photo Courtesy Cheryl Thompson-Draper, June 2006 |
Speaks
Cemetery
Photo Courtesy Cheryl Thompson-Draper, June 2006 |
Speaks
Cemetery
Photo
Courtesy Cheryl Thompson-Draper, 2006
More Texas Cemeteries |
Speaks
city sign
Photo
Courtesy Cheryl Thompson-Draper, June 2006 |
Speaks Texas
Forum
I was putting
together a list of government (national, state and local) website
links for my website and stumbled onto yours... I have "gotten lost"
for two days now reading about my home state of Texas. This is wonderful
and I do understand it's a labor of LOVE!!!!! Thank you for all
the wonderful memories you are preserving for the future (and for
us today). God Bless you. Thanks for the good work you do. - Cheryl
Thompson-Draper, June 10, 2006
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Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history, stories,
landmarks and recent or vintage photos, please contact
us. |
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