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RANGER, TEXAS


Eastland County, Texas Panhandle / Central Texas North

2°28'12"N 98°40'36"W (32.470102, -98.676734)

FM 717 & 101 just off I-20
10 miles NE of Eastland, the county seat
16 miles W of Thurber
65 miles E of Abilene
85 miles W of Fort Worth
27 miles SE of Breckenridge
ZIP code 76470
Area code 254
Population: 2,469 Est. (2019)
2,468 (2010) 2,584 (2000) 2,803 (1990)

Book Hotel Here › Eastland Hotels

Ranger, TX - Market old photo
Ranger Market
Click on image to enlarge

Old photo courtesy Dan Whatley Collection

History in a Pecan Shell

Back in the 1870s there had been a Texas Ranger camp two miles northeast of present-day Ranger along Palo Pinto Creek. The Ranger visits gave it the place it's initial name of Ranger Camp Valley. It did indeed have the appearance of a camp since all businesses, including schools, churches and stores were inside tents.

When the Texas and Pacific Railroad entered the valley in 1880, 160 acres were donated to the railroad and the community moved to establish the permanent town of Ranger. In the last few days of 1880, the town's new post office opened. Growth was slow but assured. By the end of the 1880s Ranger had 350 people which grew to 750 by 1904.

The region suffered a drought in 1917 - just about the time the area's first oil well came in. With daily production measured at 1,700 barrels, this produced one of the largest (and some say the most archetypical) oil boom in Texas. The Texas Pacific Coal and Oil Company had 22 wells either in production or being drilled in 1919. No fewer than eight refineries were under construction or refining and with $5 million in deposits, banking was good in Ranger. The 1920 Census figures have given the population of Ranger as 16,201, but the tent cities and transient population made an acurate count impossible. Some estimates go as high as 30,000. Ranger received a second railroad with the arrival of the Wichita Falls and Southern and soon five trains a day were stopping at the boom town.

Every silver-lining has its dark cloud and when the drought broke Ranger's dirt streets turned into a morass. Unsanitary conditions caused an outbreak of typhoid fever. An April fire in 1919, destroyed two downtown blocks. Naturally, the parasites descended on Ranger and violence, gambling and prostitution sprang up like the proverbial mushrooms.

The boom was short lived and while some in 1921 were hoping for new oil discoveries, a string of bank failures dashed all hopes. The 1930 population of Ranger (which was much easier to count than the 1920 census) was down to just 6,208.

After the bust, unrest and discontentment provided a strong base for the Ku Klux Klan. By 1980 Ranger had a population of 3,142 which has since declined to just under 2,500.

Hamilton Texas Post Office mural of Texas Rangers
Hamilton post office mural depicts Texas rangers
TE photo


Ranger, TX - Market old photo
Ranger Main Street
Click on image to enlarge

Old photo courtesy Dan Whatley Collection

Ranger, Texas Landmarks

Photo Gallery

Ranger TX - PO Mural Crossroads Town
"Crossroads Town" by Emil Bisttram
Ranger, Texas Post Office Mural
TE Photo
More Texas Post Office Murals


Ranger Texas: Adam's Grocery and Market
Adam's Grocery and Market in Ranger
Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson April 2006
More Texas Stores


Ranger Texas Depot and Second Baptist Church
Ranger Depot and Second Baptist Church
Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson April 2006
More Texas Churches


Odd Fellows Building in Ranger, Texas
Odd Fellows Building
Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson April 2006
More Texas Lodges


A closed gas station, Ranger, Texas
A closed gas station
Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson April 2006
More Texas Gas Stations


Ranger Texas brick street
Brick street view common in town.
Photo courtesy Mike Price, 2007


Ranger Texas tourist court
Tourist Court
Photo courtesy Mike Price, 2007


Ranger Texas building with architectural details
Photo courtesy Mike Price, 2007



Gholson Hotel sign, Ranger, Texas

Ranger's Gholson Hotel by Don Champion

Excerpted from the book Wood Derricks, Iron Men and Gold Women

"The Gholson was the scene of many oil deals taking place during the oil boom, and scores of the famous and the infamous were found around the hotel lobby..." Read full Article


[See Rooms with a Past › ]



Ranger Texas Theatre ghost sign
Theatre ghost sign
Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson April 2006
More Texas Theatres

The Theatre in Ranger

"I was delighted to see the photos of Ranger in the October issue of TE. I wanted to share with you some information about the picture of the old theater. It was originally called the Lone Star and later became the Columbia. Its speciality was the Western.

The old movie house has sat empty for years, but I understand that the local historical society has cleaned the inside up and has accumulated seats for the building in the future hope of making it a workable theater again. The roof is missing and that is the financial imperative for full restoration. Who knows? Maybe someday there will be a theater again in Ranger. - Billy Smith, October 21, 2007



Ranger, Texas Forum
Subject: Depot/Museum
My mother and father, Ann and B.H. Peacock contributed much to the conversion of the train depot to a museum. - Bob Peacock, November 02, 2015



TX Eastland County 1882 Map
Eastland County 1882 map showing Ranger
From Texas state map #2134

Courtesy Texas General Land Office


TX Eastland County 1920s Map
Eastland County 1920s map showing Ranger
NE of Eastland
From Texas state map #10749
Courtesy Texas General Land Office

Eastland County Town List
County Seat - Eastland
Book Hotel Here - Eastland Hotels
  • Bullock ghost town
  • Carbon
  • Cisco
  • Desdemona ghost town
  • Eastland County Seat
  • Gorman
  • Jewel ghost town
  • Kokomo
  • Mangum ghost town
  • Nimrod
  • Okra
  • Olden
  • Pioneer
  • Ranger
  • Rising Star
  • Romney
  • Scranton
  • Contiguous Counties:
    Stephens County (N) Palo Pinto County (NE)
    Erath County (E) Comanche County (SE) Brown County (S)
    Callahan County (W) Shackelford County (NW)

    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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