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Cochran County, on the southern High Plains, is bordered
on the west by New Mexico, on the north by Bailey County, on the
east by Hockley County, and on the south by Yoakum County. It
was named for Robert Cochran,qv who died at the Alamo. The center point of the county is 33°35'
north latitude and 102°50' west longitude, some fifty miles
west of Lubbock. Cochran County covers 783 square miles of level
prairie with elevations varying from 3,500 to 3,800 feet above
sea level; loamy or sandy soils predominate. Many small lakes
dot the county, including Silver Lake, a small salt lake known
to Spanish explorers as Laguna Quemado. Rainfall in the area averages
15.62 inches a year; the average minimum temperature in January
is 23° F; the average high in July is 92° F. The growing
season lasts 189 days. The county's agricultural income averages
$50 million a year, derived from cotton, sorghums, wheat, and
cattle; county farmers irrigate more than 110,000 acres. Mesquiteqv and grama grasses provide much of the ground cover.
According to archeological evidence, Indians hunted
in the area that is now Cochran County 5,000 to 10,000 years ago.
In the 1600s Kiowas and Apaches made war and hunted in the region
after acquiring horses from the Spanish. In the 1700s, Comanches
of the Quahadi or Antelope band took the area in battle; relying
on buffalo huntingqv and raiding of other Indians and whites, they were dominant until
the United States Army subdued them in the 1870s. In 1880, a detachment
of Texas Rangersqv led by George W. Arringtonqv stopped at Silver Lake on the way from Yellow House Canyonqv to New Mexico in search for the legendary "Lost Lakes."
In 1876 Cochran County was formed by the Texas legislature
from land previously assigned to Bexar and Young counties. It
was a land of grass, sand hills, mesquite, jackrabbits, coyotes,
bison, and pronghorn antelope. Until the 1920s, when farmers began
to move into the area, the county's economy was dominated by ranches;
the huge XIT Ranchqv controlled much of the land. In 1879 and 1880, the Capitol Reservation
was surveyed, and in 1885 its land title passed to the XIT, which
covered about 3,000,000 acres of land in the region. In 1887 XIT
manager A. G. Boyceqv divided the XIT into seven divisions; Cochran County was within
the southernmost division (known as Las Casas Amarillas, or Yellow
Houses). The Yellow House division was used as the XIT's breeding
range.
The 1890 census does not show any residents in the
county, and in 1900 only twenty-five people lived there. In 1901
George Washington Littlefieldqv bought 238,858 acres, including some of Cochran county, for his
great ranch; other parts of the county were ranched by C. C. Slaughter.qv The first headquarters of Slaughter's ranch was established in
1898 near the site of present-day Lehman, but was moved a year
later to a site two miles southwest of Morton. For all his interest
in cattle breeding to produce crossings of Herefords and shorthorns
of record size, Slaughter foresaw other economic developments
for West Texas. In 1907 he predicted that "the fertile Plains...will
become the breadbasket of the great Southwest."
Nevertheless, as late as 1920 only fourteen ranches
and farms had been established in the county, and only sixty-seven
people lived there. During these first years of its existence,
the judicial administration of the area was assigned to Hockley
and Lubbock counties. A post office was located in the county
at Mexline, now a ghost town, from 1903 to 1905. Another post
office was established at Edwards in 1905, and named for the county's
first storekeeper, Edward P. Kirkland, the postmaster. This post
office closed in 1913. Until the 1920s, county residents got their
mail from the Yoakum County post office of Bronco.
Cochran County began to grow rapidly after 1921,
when Slaughter's heirs dissolved the Slaughter Cattle Company
and began to sell its ranchlands to farmers. The area's limited
rainfall had helped to deter settlement of the county for many
years, but the new farmers tapped into underground water supplies
a shallow depths. By 1925, there were fifty-six farms and ranches
in Cochran County, which was now experiencing a minor farming
boom. By 1930, 285 farms and ranches had been established in the
county, and the population had increased to 1,963.
In 1924, after the influx of new farmers had begun,
the county was formally organized, and a spirited political struggle
ensued between Morton J. Smith, a rancher, and the Slaughter heirs.
The Slaughter family, having failed on two earlier attempts to
secure rail connections to their ranch, had founded Ligon four
miles south of the site of Morton, in hopes that Ligon would become
the county seat. Smith, meanwhile, was pushing to have the new
town of Morton made county seat. In the 1924 election, Morton
received seventy-nine votes to Ligon's twenty and thus became
the county seat.
All of the towns presently in the county were established
in the 1920s. When the Santa Fe Railroad built into Cochran County
from Lubbock in 1925, the towns of Whiteface, Chipley, Lehman,
and Bledsoe sprang up, and Ligon was moved four miles south to
become Lehman. The railroad made Bledsoe Cochran County's largest
town in the 1920s, but its population declined afterward as most
of the county residents moved to Morton.
During the 1930s many residents were hurt by the
Great Depressionqv and the Dust Bowl.qv The county had some of the worst sandstorms ever seen; new sand
dunes as high as twenty-eight feet were reported. Nevertheless,
the number of farms in the area increased to 431 by 1940, and
cropland harvested in the county increased from 28,045 acres in
1929 to more than 90,500 acres in 1940. Many farmers in the county
were turning to cotton during the 1930s, as land devoted to cotton
production increased from about 5,300 acres in 1929 to almost
24,500 acres in 1940. By 1940 sorghum, which became the county's
other important crop, was sown on more than 52,000 acres.
The discovery of oil in 1936 also helped to provide
jobs and to stabilize the economy during this period. The first
producing well in the county was drilled in 1936 at the Duggan
ranch, south of Whiteface, and in 1938 Cochran County produced
95,458 barrels. Reflecting this growth during the 1930s, the county's
population also increased significantly during this period, rising
to 3,735 by 1940. The oil business boomed in Cochran County during
World War II;qv production was 5,087,237 barrels in 1944. The area's agriculture
also continued to grow; by 1947 county farmers worked on 108,000
producing acres, compared with 38,647 acres in 1935. Girlstown,
U.S.A.,qv was established on Duggan ranchland near Whiteface in 1949, and
a Lehman gasoline plant started operations in 1954. As the county
economy continued to develop in the 1940s and 1950s, the population
grew to 5,928 in 1950 and to 6,417 in 1960. After the 1960s, however,
it declined. The population was 5,326 in 1970, 4,825 in 1980,
and an estimated 4,377 in 1990.
The decline is largely traceable to the trend toward
larger farms and does not necessarily indicate poor economic prospects
for the future. Most Cochran County farm families live in Morton
and commute to their jobs. Prosperity since the 1960s owes much
to the tapping of underground water for irrigation, mostly for
cotton raising. By 1986 the county included about 300,000 acres
of cropland, 110,000 of which was irrigated. Cattle range comprises
almost 191,500 acres of county land, and the county has a feed
lot and a horse-meat packery. By the mid-1980s the Santa Fe Railroad
had abandoned its tracks in the county.
Oil production has continued to be significant for
the local economy since World War II. County wells produced almost
6,902,000 barrels in 1948, almost 7,348,000 barrels in 1956, more
than 6,215,000 barrels in 1960, and more than 12,315,000 barrels
in 1978. Production dropped in the 1980s before rising slightly
again in the early 1990s. In 1990, it was almost 8,266,000 barrels.
The cumulative total was more than 428,357,000 barrels by 1991.
State highways 214 (north-south), 114 (east-west),
and 125 (east-west) serve the county. The county's communities
include Whiteface (1980 population 463) and Bledsoe (125). Morton
(1992 estimated population 2,597) is the county's largest town
and its seat of government. Cultural events include a rodeo, county
fair, and a museum.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Elvis Eugene Fleming, Texas' Last
Frontier: A History of Cochran County (Morton, Texas: Cochran
County Historical Society, 1965).
John Leffler
This information comes from the Texas State Historical Association
Handbook of Texas Online.
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