Thomas Cree Homesite

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26098

Panhandle, TX After serving as a teamster in the Civil War (1861-65), Thadium (Thomas) B. Cree worked for the Union Pacific Railroad. In 1888 he and his wife came to the High Plains. They acquired this land and, with no trees for lumber, they built a dugout home. Cree traveled 35 miles at his wife’s  [ Read More ]

26097

Panhandle, TX ‘(August 12, 1860 – August 15, 1905) Born in the Texas Governor’s Mansion, the eighth and last child of Sam Houston (1793-1863) and his wife Margaret; educated at Baylor University, Texas A&M, and in a law office, Temple Houston came in 1881 to this region as district attorney for the 35th Judicial District.  [ Read More ]

State National Bank

Posted by Landmark Finder 1,135 Comments
26096

Groom, TX Founded in 1904 as a private bank by John Walter Knorpp (1867-1952), member of an established banking family of Missouri, New Mexico, and Texas, and Eugene Sherwood Blasdel (1878-1930), oil and grain business developer of this region. In 1905 Blasdel sold his interest to Knorpp. A state charter was obtained in 1908, but  [ Read More ]

The Square House

Posted by Landmark Finder 937 Comments
26095

Panhandle, TX ‘The Niedringhaus brothers of St. Louis sent lumber by ox-cart from Dodge City and built this square house on their ”N Bar N” Ranch here in Carson County in the mid-1880s. In 1887 a railroad official occupied the pioneer cottage while the Southern Kansas Railway was being extended from Kiowa, Kansas, to Panhandle  [ Read More ]

26094

Panhandle, TX Permanent citizens, forgers of local civilization. Walter Franklin (1869-1963), George Leonard (born 1875) and Dormer D. Simms (born 1884) moved to Texas in 1886 and to this county in the early 1900′s. They arrived later than visiting hunters, soldiers and others who in the 1870′s cleared this land of buffalo and hostile Indians,  [ Read More ]

Polish Settlers of White Deer

Posted by Landmark Finder 677 Comments
26093

White Deer, TX In 1854, 100 Polish families (800 persons) came to America in one small sailing ship–a voyage of 9 weeks. None spoke English. From Galveston they walked 200 miles to Panna Maria in South Texas, arriving for Christmas Eve Mass. There they toiled at manual labor. In 1909, in response to White Deer  [ Read More ]

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