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TEASELVILLE,
TEXAS
AKA Loftin, Texas
Smith
County, East Texas
32° 8' 53" N, 95° 24' 17" W (32.148056, -95.404722)
FM 344 and FM 346
4 Miles W of Bullard
S of Tyler
the county seat
Population: 150 (2000)
Teaselville, Texas Area Hotels Tyler
Hotels |
A drive thru
coffee house on the 4-way intersection in 2009
Photo courtesy Maryon Wright |
History in
a Pecan Shell
Colonel John Dewberry opened his plantation home to voters in 1846
and six years later the town was founded. In 1854 Dewberry built a
larger estate on a state land grant. The fledgling community that
formed had the benefit of being on the Tyler-Palestine
Road.
Teaselville was bypassed by the railroad
in the 1870s. Another prominant family gave the town it's second name
of Loftin when a post office opened in 1900 although it closed
in the early 1930s. The community had two churches and a factory of
some sort in the 1930s, but the school merged with Bullard
in the late 1940s and the local Baptist Church started using the vacant
school. The name of Teaselville came back into usage for the few remaining
citizens which numbered 150 for the 2000 census. |
Myrtle-Vale,
Colonel John Dewberry's Home
By Bob Bowman
"The $194,000 restoration was completed in 2001 and Colonel
Dewberry’s proud old home is now open for tours, receptions and
other events. The restoration also earned the Bergfelds the prestigious
Terry Preservation Award given annually by the East Texas Historical
Association. Today, Myrtle-Vale is one of the most magnificent pre-Civil
War homes still standing in East Texas." See
full article
15 miles southwest of Tyler.
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A barn in Teaselville
Photo courtesy Lori
Martin, May 2011 |
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