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Texas
| Counties
EDWARDS COUNTY,
TEXAS
29° 58' 12"
N, 100° 18' 0" W (29.97, -100.3)
Population: 1,911 est. (2016) 2,002 (2010)
Total area: 2,120 square miles (5,500 km2)
2,118 square miles (5,490 km2) land
2.0 square miles (5.2 km2) water |
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Edwards County
History
1936 Texas
Centennial Marker (on US Hwy 377, 2 miles N of Rocksprings):
EDWARDS COUNTY
Formed from Bexar County; created
February 1, 1858.
Organized September 10, 1883.
Named in honor of Haden Edwards 1771-1849. Empresario leader of
the Fredonian War in 1827.
County seat, Leakey
1883
Rocksprings,
since 1890.
Historical
Marker (on courthouse
square):
EDWARDS COUNTY
Atop the Edwards Plateau, extending into the scenic Nueces Valley.
Angora goat capital of the world. The economy is based on ranching.
Wild game is abundant. Created in 1858 and organized 1883 from old
Bexar district. Named for Haden Edwards (1813-1865), an early leader
and colonizer in Texas. First county seat was Leakey;
present boundaries were created, and county seat was moved on April
13, 1891, to Rocksprings.
First courthouse and jail were built that year. After a fire in
1897, the present courthouse was erected; it withstood a destructive
tornado that claimed 72 lives in the county in 1927. First officials
to serve the county (1891-1893) as it is presently constituted were
the following: James M. Hunter, County Judge; W. M. Sanford, County
and District Clerk; Ira L. Wheat, Sheriff and Tax Collector; S.A.
Hough, County Attorney; W.H. Cowan, County Treasurer County Commissioners:
John Eaton, Precinct No. 1; C. H. Kirchner, Precinct No. 2; H. Schweithelm,
Precinct No. 3; M. M. Bradford, Precinct No. 4 (1967)
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Edwards
County Town List
Cities, Towns &
Ghost Towns: History, attractions, landmarks, architecture, monuments,
museums, cemeteries, bridges, parks, vintage & contemporary images,
area destinations, hotels,
and forum.
County Seat - Rocksprings
Book Hotel Here - Junction
Hotels |
Edwards County
Vintage Maps
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Edwards County
1907 postal map
From Texas state map #2090
Courtesy
Texas General Land Office |
Edwards County
1920s map
From Texas state map #10749
Courtesy
Texas General Land Office |
Edwards County
1940s map
From Texas state map #4335
Courtesy
Texas General Land Office |
Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history, stories,
landmarks and vintage/historic photos, please contact
us. |
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