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TEXLINE, TEXAS
Dallam County, Texas
Panhandle
36° 22' 40" N, 103° 1' 27" W (36.377778, -103.024167)
US 87
1 mile from the New Mexico border
35 miles NW of Dalhart the county
seat
11 miles SE of Clayton, New Mexico
117 miles NW of Amarillo
ZIP code 79087
Area code 806
Population: 539 Est. (2019)
507 (2010) 511 (2000) 425 (1990)
Book Hotel Here Amarillo
Hotels |
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History in
a Pecan Shell
It should come
as no surprise that the town gets it's name from it's location on
the Texas-New Mexico line.
The Fort Worth and Denver City Railway purchased land for a division
point there in 1888. Railroad
shops were constructed almost immediately and by the end of the year,
a post office, depot and hotel were all built.
The editor of the Tascosa Pioneer, predicted that Texline would
become a wild town. It was. Texline actually served as the Dallam
county seat (1891 to 1903) until it became Dalhart.
Dallam County's
first public school opened in Texline in 1892. The town struggled
with inconvenience and isolation (the nearest doctor was in nearby
Clayton, New Mexico).
Texline incorporated in 1916, but when the railroad closed its shops
in 1923, the population decreased dramatically.
The population in 1940 was 385 and by 1984 it had risen slightly to
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Texline, Texas
Forum
Subject: Marooned
in Texline
When I was sixteen (from the big town of Palestine,
Texas) my mother sent me to a summer camp in Colorado. I remember
on the bus trip that about noon we stopped to have lunch at the cafe
in Texline. As we enjoyed our meal the bus driver [returned to] the
bus and when I was in the restroom washing my hands, the driver left
without me.
Being stuck in Texline, I wondered what to do and where to go. A very
nice lady at the cafe had heard the route the bus driver was taking
and called the Dallam County Sheriff's Department to notify the New
Mexico Highway Patrol to stop the bus so it could return to the Texline
cafe and rescue the one it had gone off and left. I don't know if
I was hurt that no one noticed that I was not on the bus or that I
missed the bus because I had wanted to wash my hands... - Rodney Paul
Smith, Palestine, Texas, March 06, 2007 |
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Dallam
County 1920s map showing Texline
From Texas state map #10749
Courtesy
Texas General Land Office |
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
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