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History in
a Pecan Shell
Named for the original
(1835) grantee José Antonio Caro. There was some settlement prior
to the Civil War, but like much of East
Texas, things didn’t get underway until the railroad or the lumber
industry appeared.
Around the turn of the century, the exploitation of the forests was
in full swing. Caro was one of the centers of logging operations and
there was money to be made sending logs off to be converted to lumber.
So much money that a small railroad could be subsidized. The Caro
Northern Railway (around 1906) started carrying logs to Mount
Enterprise (Rusk County).
Caro was thriving just prior to WWI.
The population was reported to be around 1,300 people. Caro had its
own sawmill in operation and businesses included a grocery, two drugstores
and a general store.
But after the war came a slump. The sawmill closed even before the
Great Depression arrived, sending the economy to lower depths. By
the mid-1930s the population had fallen to a mere 150 residents where
it remained for decades. Having lost all of its businesses over the
years, Caro became a ghost town, it’s building either falling into
decay or being salvaged for other uses. It was designated a “dispersed
rural community” – which could be loosely translated as a ghost town
with no infrastructure.
The dispersed residents were counted as 113 for both the 1990 census
and the 2000 census. |
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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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