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The
family home on the Mitchell ranch, 1920
Photo courtesy Isaac Newton Mitchell V |
History in a Pecan Shell
Philip Dimitt, one of the first Americans to enter
Spanish Texas operated a horse-trading post two miles north of present
day Lolita in 1830.
Development didn't get started until 1880 when the Mitchell Ranch
was fenced with the first barbed wire used in Jackson
County.
The town came into being in 1909 and was named after the granddaughter
of Texas Revolution veteran Charles Keller Reese. The railroad installed
a switch and the town got a post office that same year.
The community of Red Bluff separated its school district from
that of Lolita's and most businesses in Red Bluff moved to Lolita.
Lolita had a population of 200 in the mid-1940s. 1969 saw 462 Lolitans.
The population has stayed fairly constant at about 300 Lolitians from
the late 1980s until the 2000 census of 548. |
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The former Lolita High School
Photo courtesy Lou Ann Herda, 2003 |
Lolita
by Mike Cox ("Texas
Tales" column)
During one of the hottest years of the Cold War, residents of a small
Texas town made national headlines in taking umbrage over what looked
to them like nothing less than a sinister Communist plot to besmirch
the name of their fair community. more |
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The Lolita water tower
Photo courtesy Lou Ann Herda, 2003 |
Lolita, Texas
Forum
Lolita
Founders, Mitchell Ranch and Mitchell School
My Great Uncle
Chester Stockdale Mitchell surveyed and founded Lolita upon the
land he owned. Charles Keller Reese was a very close friend of Uncle
Stockdale.
Many of the early population were there because of the oil field
drilling and related activity. A few also worked at the cotton
gin which was later converted to a brick factory that
also closed down. I recall bales of cotton on the platform of the
train depot. Also there were livestock shipping pens at the depot.
My grandmother Mary Mitchell donated the land for the school. During
the 1940s, I went to school in the two story tan brick building
which was the original school building. When the high school building
was built, a covered walkway was between the two main buildings.
The original two story tan brick building was torn down sometime
after 1950 when my family moved from our ranch which was immediately
on the south side of town.
The photo was taken in approximately
1920. The main subjects are the family home on the I.N. Mitchell
ranch and the swimming pool that was built a few years before this
photo was taken. At the far left of the photo, you can see the blurred
image of the two story tan brick building. It is by itself. There
were no other school buildings then.
- Isaac Newton Mitchell V, November 2003
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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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