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Texas
| Counties
STERLING COUNTY,
TEXAS
31°
49' 12" N, 101° 3' 0" W (31.82, -101.05) |
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Sterling County
History
Historical
Marker (on courthouse grounds):
STERLING COUNTY
This prairie region split by the north Concho River is old Comanche,
Kickapoo, Kiowa, Lipan, and Wichita hunting ground. Possibly it
was crossed by six or so Spanish explorations between 1540 and 1654.
In the 1860s and 70s, Anglo-Americans hunted buffalo commercially
in this area. An 1860s hunter, Capt. W. S. Sterling, had a dugout
home on the creek that bears his name. In the 1870s, bandits Frank
and Jesse James kept horse herds on a tributary of Sterling Creek.
In 1874 the United States Army occupied Camp
Elizabeth, a Fort Concho
outpost hospital, about ten miles west of here. Ranchers from other
counties began to bring in large cattle herds in the 1870s, to capitalize
on free grass. After keeping out small herds for a time, they permitted
actual settlers to share the range. Family men staked land claims,
grew crops in the valleys, and opened stores, schools, and post
offices. On March 4, 1891, on the petition of 150 citizens, the
county was created out of part of Tom
Green County, and named for its first regular resident. Sterling
City became the county seat. Petroleum production has been important
to the economy since the 1950s; yet the land essentially remains
range country, grazed
by cattle and sheep.
1976
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Sterling 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 - Sterling
City
Book Hotel Here - San
Angelo Hotels | Big
Spring Hotels |
Sterling County
Vintage Maps
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From 1907 Texas
state map #2090 showing Sterling County
Courtesy
Texas General Land Office |
From 1920 Texas
state map #10749 showing Sterling County
Courtesy
Texas General Land Office |
From 1940 Texas
state map #4335
showing Sterling County
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 recent or vintage photos, please contact
us. |
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