|
Cottle County, in the rolling prairieland of Northwest
Texas below the High Plains, is bordered on the north by Childress
County, on the west by Motley County, on the south by King County,
and on the east by Foard and Hardeman counties. U.S. highways
62/70 (east to west) and 62/83 (north to south) are its main roads.
The county was named for George Cottle,qv who died at the Alamo. Cottle County has an area of 900 square
miles; its center point is at 34°05' north latitude and 100°15'
west longitude, midway between Lubbock and Wichita Falls. The
terrain is rough in the west and level in the east. Gray, black,
sandy, and loam soils predominate. The county drains through the
Pease, Tongue, and Little Wichita rivers. Elevations vary between
1,600 and 2,100 feet above sea level. The average annual rainfall
in the county is 22.12 inches. The average minimum temperature
in January is 27° F, and the average maximum in July is 97°.
The growing season lasts 219 days. The county produces an annual
average income of $33 million from cotton, grains, guar, beef
cattle, and alfalfa. Irrigated acres total 10,000. The county
produces modest amounts of oil-135,489 barrels, for instance,
in 1990.
The area that is now Cottle County was occupied by
Apache Indians until about 1700, when Comanches moved into the
region. Comanches of the Wanderers-Who-Make-Bad-Camps band controlled
the area until the 1870s, when they were driven away by the United
States Army. The buffaloqv herds that once roamed the area were exterminated by intensive
hunting during the mid-1870s. The Texas legislature established
Cottle County in 1876 and attached it for administrative purposes
to Fannin County until 1887, when it became attached to Childress
County.
In the fifteen years between the county's inception
and its formal organization, it remained largely a grazing area.
Some cattle were apparently brought in from New Mexico, and ranches
such as the OX, SMS, and Matadorqqv established their headquarters in the area. The census of 1880
showed only twenty-four persons living in Cottle County.
Between that year and 1890 the pace of growth quickened with the
arrival of such settlers as J. J. McAdams, who had his headquarters
at the site of present Paducah, and J. H. Cansler, who had a dugoutqv on Buck Creek. In 1886 a post office was established at Ottie
Springs, near the present site of Paducah. The census counted
fifty farms and ranches in Cottle County in 1890, when the population
was 240 and growing.
A killing on the county line in 1889 induced residents
to petition for county organization so that the suspect's trial
could be held in the county. Cottle County was organized in 1892,
with Paducah as county seat; four public school districts were
established that year. Cottle County voters supported the Democratic
candidate for president in 1892 and continued to support Democrats
in national races through 1992, with the single exception of 1928.
In 1893 the county's first newspaper, the Paducah Post,
began to print, and the state legislature authorized a $12,000
bond to build a county jail.
Droughtsqv held back early settlers; pioneer H. P. Cook remembered that "it
didn't rain enough in 1892, '93, and '94 to wet my shirt."
Public-works projects such as the building of a new courthouse
and the construction of roads to Crowell, Childress, and Kirkland
helped sustain the community. By 1900, 122 farms and ranches were
operating in the county and the population had increased to 1,002.
The area continued to be dominated by the cattle industry; only
7,758 acres of the county's farmland was classified by the census
as "improved" in 1900, while more than 43,000 cattle
were counted in Cottle County that year. Between 1900 and 1930
the farming sector of the county developed rapidly, however, as
an expansion of cotton cultureqv brought hundreds of new farmers. In 1890 only fifty acres of Cottle
County land had been planted in cotton, but the building of a
gin in the county in 1898-99 indicated local interest in the crop;
farmers no longer had to travel to the gin at Quanah, some forty-five
or fifty miles away in Hardeman County. In 1900 cotton was planted
on 749 acres of Cottle County; in 1910, more than 17,000. Cotton
farming in the county particularly accelerated between 1910 and
1930; in 1920, almost 45,500 acres was planted in cotton, and
by 1930 cotton cultivation had expanded to 133,467 acres.
County farmers also moved into other areas of agricultural
production during this time. Wheat cultureqv expanded from only 100 acres in 1900 to almost 11,500 acres in
1929; sorghum cultureqv also became important for local farmers. By 1929, almost 131,300
acres of cropland was harvested in the county. Poultry productionqv also began to become significant for the county's economy; by
1929, almost 44,000 chickens were counted on local farms, and
that year Cottle County farmers sold almost 132,000 dozen eggs.
Thousands of fruit trees were also planted in the area during
this period. More than 7,500 fruit trees were growing in the county
by 1920, producing mainly peaches but also pears, plums, and apples.
This economic development of the county during the
early twentieth century was aided and encouraged by a growing
transportation network. Auto roads between Paducah, Childress,
and Matador were completed by 1910, making the movement of people
and products easier. Prospects for the county were enhanced in
1909, when the Quanah, Acme and Pacific Railroad reached the county.
The county's first hard-surfaced road was built in 1913 from Paducah
to Dunlap.
Cottle County grew considerably between 1900 and
1930, as the number of farms steadily increased. The census counted
506 farms in the county in 1910, 686 in 1920, 832 in 1925, and
1,047 in 1930. The population rose from 1,002 in 1900 to 4,396
in 1910, 6,901 in 1920, and 9,395 in 1930. This trend was reversed
during the 1930s by the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl.qqv Cotton production in the county plunged; by 1940, only about 59,000
acres was devoted to the crop. About one-third of the county's
farmers were forced out of business during this period, and by
1940 only 700 farms remained in Cottle County. Unfortunates sometimes
sought shelter in the county jail, and everyone deplored the dust
storms. Lyrical tributes to "The Beautiful Dust" appeared
in the Paducah Post: "The dust, the dust, the beautiful
dust; on the evil and on the just, From the North and from the
South; in the eyes, the nose, the mouth...Bear it calmly since
you must...Wear it bravely as a crown. Ope' your mouth and gulp
it down." Farmers and other residents received some help
from New Deal recovery measures; some women were paid for sewing
done at WPA Sewing Rooms, for example. Nevertheless the local
economy was battered, and more than 20 percent of the county's
residents left. By 1940, only 7,072 people remained.
After the 1940s the mechanization of agriculture
combined with other factors, such as the severe droughts of the
1950s, to continue depopulating the area. The cotton crop produced
only 3,227 bales of cotton in 1953, and by 1960 only 387 farms
were operating in the county. The county's population dropped
to 6,099 by 1950, to 4,207 by 1960, to 3,204 by 1970, and 2,947
by 1980; in 1990 residents numbered 2,247. Despite this decline,
however, the county was moderately prosperous in the late 1980s.
Paducah, the county's only sizable town, is still the county seat.
In cooperation with King County, Cottle County holds a rodeo and
livestock show every April; in January a Cottle County calf and
pig show is held.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Carmen Taylor Bennett, Our Roots
Grow Deep: A History of Cottle County (Floydada, Texas: Blanco
Offset Printing, 1970).
John Leffler
This information comes from the Texas State Historical Association
Handbook of Texas Online.
|