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History in
a Pecan Shell
Andrew B. Cook
opened a general store on the Omaha to Mount Pleasant road just two
years after the Civil War. The town was granted a post office in 1870
under the name Clay Hill, Texas but ten years later it was
changed to honor Cook.
When railroad construction started back after the war, Cookville became
a station on the East Line and Red River Railroad. A narrow-gauge
railroad - but still a railroad. In 1884 the population was a substantial
500 people and both Titus
and Morris counties
used Cookville as a shipping point.
The "Gay 90s" weren't good to Cookville. From a population of 600
- the town shrank down to only 250. As the twentieth century got under
way, Cookville not only rebounded but reached its zenith with 800
citizens in 1914. The economy was fueled by cotton
and when the boll
weevil arrived and the price of cotton
dissolved - so did Cookville's population. By the mid 1920s there
was just over 400 people in Cookville.
The population continued to melt away and by 1990 there was just over
100 people calling Cookville home. |
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Cookville
Public School
Early 1900s photo courtesy texasoldphotos.com
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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 and vintage/historic
photos, please contact
us. |
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