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Cactus and former
church in Allamoore
Photo
Courtesy Jason Penney, 2001
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History in
a Pecan Shell
Allamoore
in 1884 was named Acme (not to be confused with the ghost town
in Hardeman County).
The post office under that name closed in 1886.
No one knows for sure how the town got its name, but it may have had
something to do with the first postmistress - Alla R. Moore who reopened
the post office in 1888. By 1900, 200 people were coming into Allamoore
to pick up their mail - from Alla Moore.
Plato and H. C. Clifford, owned and managed the Hazel Mining Company,
across the county line in Culberson
County. At one time the Hazel Mines were the most productive silver
and copper mines in Texas.
The post office closed again in 1895, but after another two years
of no mail, they opened another post office, retaining the name Alla
Moore.
Only ten people occupied the town in 1914 and in the mid-1920s it
had swollen to 25.
Fifty more people squeezed into town just in time for the Great Depression
- making Allamoore a metropolis of 75. Within five years fifty people
left Allamoore, but it can't be said for certain they were the same
50 late arrivals.
Five miles east of town Gifford-Hill and Company operated a business
in the late 30s. They owned a lot of crushing equipment and in searching
around the area for something in abundance that could be crushed -
they wisely decided on rock. Detailed maps of the area still show
the word "crusher"and a crossed pick and shovel.
The population never broke 100 and from the mid-1940s to the mid-1960s
it remained fairly constant at 75.
According to local folklore - a rancher once paid a teacher to occupy
the otherwise empty school "just in case a student happened to walk
in."
Two companies producing Talc opened one in 1960 and one in 1971. The
second one closed within a few years and the Gifford-Hill rock-crushing
business closed in the early 1980s.
In
1988 the Allamoore school had only eight children enrolled for it's
2,100 square mile district - making it the smallest enrollment in
the entire state. |
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Forum:
Subject: Allamore School
"The rancher who paid for the yearly teacher salary and expenses
of keeping the doors open at A.C.S.D. (Allamore Consolidated School
District) name was W.D. Garren.
The spring of 89 the total attendance was 2 students:
A boy in kindergarten. K. King
Also a 5th grade student. J.E. Garren
Teacher. Mrs Brownfield
Just wanted to let you know that it was factual information not just
rumor. The rancher in question paid to keep doors open when there
was 0 students or as many as 8 students.
Thanks for all you are doing to preserve the fast disappearing history
of West Texas." - Marya Garren, May 05, 2017 |
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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