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Arrangement in
Wood, Stone and Tin
Photo
courtesy Stephen
Michaels, January 2008 |
History in
a Pecan Shell
Named for early
settler William Bracken, who had purchased land here in 1849, the
town was first known as Davenport for a settler who had arrived
after the Civil War. The town grew as a result of its railroad
connection and would be known as Davenport today if the name hadn’t
already been in use by another post office. The name was officially
changed in 1883. After 1940, when the town reported only 50 residents,
the post office was closed and mail was rerouted.
The Davenport school merged with two others after WWII
to form the Comal Elem. School. The population reached seventy-five
in the 1970s and this figure was used for years until either a baby
was born or a stranger came to town, boosting the number to seventy-six
for the 2000 Census. |
The second
largest bat colony in the world west of Bracken
Saltpeter and
Bat Bombs by Clay Coppedge
Texas has millions and millions of bats and hundreds of bat caves.
Bracken Cave, near San
Antonio, is home to 20 million Mexican free-tailed bats every
summer. It's the largest Mexican free-tailed bat colony in the world
that's open to the public. The second largest such bat colony in the
world is west of Bracken, near Concan in Uvalde
County, where the Frio Cave is home to another 10 million or so
bats.
These two caves and as many as a couple of dozen others in Texas became
defacto ammunition plants during the Civil War because 30 million
bats produce an awful lot of guano, which produces a lot of gunpowder,
which the Confederacy needed in the worst way after a Union blockade
cut off supplies of gunpowder and everything else... more |
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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