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Crockett County is located in southwestern Texas on the
western edge of the Edwards Plateau.qv It is bounded on the west by the Pecos River, which separates
it from Terrell and Pecos counties. Its northern border is formed
by Crane, Upton, Reagan, and Irion counties, while Schleicher
and Sutton counties border it on the east and Val Verde County
on the south. Ozona, the county seat and only town, is located
eighty-two miles southwest of San Angelo. The center point of
the county is at 30°41' north latitude and 101°21' west
longitude. Crockett County comprises 2,806 square miles. The terrain
consists of deep, narrow, steep-walled canyons and flat mesas
in the southern and western areas. Broad valleys and flat divides
characterize the northern part. The northeastern part is a large
flat divide separating the Colorado River and Rio Grande basins.
The surface geology is Cretaceous. The soils are dark, calcareous,
stony clays and clay loams. The western half of the county is
desert shrub savanna, and the eastern half is juniper, oak, and
mesquite savanna. Altitudes vary from 1,500 feet above sea level
in the southwest to 2,800 feet above sea level in the northwest.
Temperatures vary from an average low of 32° F in January
to an average high of 96° in July. The average rainfall is
eighteen inches per year. The growing season extends across 233
days. Numerous draws, dry most of the year, drain the county during
floods and empty into the Devils and Pecos rivers. Johnsons Run
and Howard Draw bisect the central area before reaching the Devils
and the Pecos, respectively, in Val Verde County. Live Oak Creek
runs to the south from the northwest and enters the Pecos at Lancaster
Hill. The dry bed of Spring Creek originates in the northeastern
corner of the county and extends northeast to the Middle Concho
River.
Early important sources of water for prehistoric
people and early travelers were Live Oak Spring and Cedar Springs,
which once provided strong flows in western Crockett County. Among
the first people to take water from the springs were the early
inhabitants of Gobbler Shelter, located on a small tributary canyon
of Live Oak Creek. Prehistoric people lived over long periods
of time in the shelter, where they left artifacts. Spaniards first
passed through the area of Crockett County in 1590, when Gaspar
Castaño de Sosaqv brought the first Europeans through the isolated canyonland. Castaño
led a mining expedition from Monclova, Chihuahua, to the northern
New Mexico pueblo of Santo Domingo. His party of 170 men, women,
and children is thought to have traveled up Johnsons Run and crossed
the western section of the future Crockett County to reach the
Pecos River. On May 22, 1684, Juan Domínguez de Mendozaqv and his expedition crossed the Pecos River and camped at a site
Domínguez called San Pantaleón now in Crockett County.
At that time several Indian tribes lived in the area, among them
Lipan Apaches and Tonkawas. Comanches drifted into the area during
the eighteenth century, displacing earlier inhabitants.
John Coffee Haysqv led an expedition through the county in 1849, charting waterholes
for a freighting and stagecoach route from San Antonio to El Paso.
In 1852 Col. Joseph Mansfield of the United States Army inspected
the road from El Paso to San Antonio. After determining that travelers
along the route needed more military protection against Indian
attacks, he recommended establishing a new post on Live Oak Creek
just above its juncture with the Pecos River. In response to Mansfield's
recommendation, Fort Lancaster was founded on the east bank of
Live Oak Creek August 20, 1855. When Texas seceded from the Union
less than six years later, the fort was abandoned. A small Confederate
unit held it for a short time, but soon left it. After the war
the former fort was used only as a subpost. After 1874 it fell
into complete decay. Following the Civil War,qv Anglo-Americans moved into the frontier region and took up the
unoccupied lands, but Indian depredations discouraged settlement
until the United States sent troops to the frontier posts. The
Texas legislature provided three battalions of rangers for protection
of the area in September 1866. Another subpost, Camp Melvin, was
established in 1868 at the river crossing where Domínguez
de Mendoza had camped. A post office opened on November 2, 1868,
under the name Pecos Station, but the designation was changed
to Camp Melvin in December 1868. Although the post office closed
in 1870, the subpost operated until 1871. Camp Melvin was important
as a stage crossing and mail station, rather than a military installation.
On January 12, 1875, Crockett County, named for David
Crockettqv of Alamoqv fame, was formed from Bexar County and attached to Kinney County
for judicial purposes. It included the future Sutton and Schleicher
counties and parts of the future Val Verde, Kinney, and Edwards
counties. From the earliest settlement the economy was dependent
on sheep and cattle ranching. In 1880 Crockett County reported
fifteen farms, valued together at more than $44,500. Livestock
consisted mostly of beef cattle, sheep, and hogs, which were in
the aggregate worth $14,500. The county that year had 127 white
residents, of whom eight were foreign-born. With the threat of
Indian attack past in the 1880s, sheep and cattle ranchers were
enticed to the new county by cheap grassland available for lease
from both the railroad and the state. Among the first settlers
was W. P. Hoover. The Hoovers located on the Pecos River near
Cedar Springs and above the mouth of Howard Canyon in 1881. There
they leased railroad land at five cents an acre. In 1885 Val Verde
County was organized and Crockett County became a subsidiary of
it. Two years later, on March 15, 1887, Crockett County was reduced
to its present size when Sutton and Schleicher counties were cut
away. Even with less territory in 1890, the county noted an increase
in the number of farms to twenty-three. The mostly owner-operated
ranches reported livestock valued at more than $222,000. Sheep
numbered more than 35,000 and cattle more than 22,000. By 1890
the population increased to 194, still all white. Thirty-two were
foreign-born.
Several short-lived communities formed in Crockett
County in the 1880s and 1890s. Mobile ran a post office during
1880 and 1881, while Wight managed one from 1880 through 1883.
Bullisford was a post office from February through September 1882.
A post office was established in Ellis in 1885, but it was later
moved to Edwards County. Emerald was located eight miles east
of Ozona, where a post office opened in 1890 and the first school
in the county was built in 1891. Hembrie, in northwestern Crockett
County, maintained a post office from 1890 to 1911 and a school
some of those years. Hinde, also in the northwestern part of the
county, had a post office from 1891 to 1906 and ran a school until
1902. Mozart had a post office for the first ten months of 1899.
Crockett County was organized on July 7, 1891, when
an election was held at Couch Well, or Eureka, to choose the county
seat from three contending communities. The election was inconclusive,
but Ozona, where E. M. Powell had already drilled a prolific water
well and donated land for public buildings, became the county
seat by the end of the year as the other communities failed to
develop. The new county seat grew slowly for the first decade.
In 1891 it received a post office and Mrs. J. W. Odom organized
a union Sunday school. The same year the first school opened.
A frame courthouse was built by the end of the year. A Baptist
church was organized in 1892 and a Church of Christ in 1895. In
1899 a hotel opened. In 1900 stagecoach service began.
In the presidential election of 1892 the newly organized
county gave 178 votes to the Democrat, Grover Cleveland, and 16
votes to the third party, but none to the incumbent Republican
president, Benjamin Harrison. In the 1896 and 1900 elections voters
turned to the Republican candidate, William McKinley. No results
are available for 1904, but from 1908 through 1920 the county
returned to the Democratic column. In 1924 and 1928 the Republican
candidates again won the county. Voters returned to the Democratic
fold in 1932 and supported Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry Truman
through the 1948 election. In 1952 and 1956, when the war hero
and Republican candidate Dwight D. Eisenhowerqv won the presidency by large margins, Crockett County voters also
gave him decided victories. They narrowly supported Republican
candidate Richard Nixon in 1960. Lyndon B. Johnsonqv won the county in 1964, as did Hubert Humphrey in 1968, when George
Wallace, the American Independent candidate, received 279 votes.
When the Democratic partyqv swayed too far to the left for Crockett County residents in 1972,
they gave their votes to Republican candidate Nixon. In 1976,
after the Watergate scandal, Democrat James E. Carter won the
county by two votes. From 1980 through 1988 the county voted Republican.
In the 1992 election Democratic candidate William J. Clinton barely
won the county with 653 votes to George Bush's 623 and H. Ross
Perot's 368.
In 1900 Crockett County reported seven manufacturing
establishments, which employed seven people and paid more than
$3,700 in wages for the manufacture of $15,300 worth of products.
By 1920 nine manufacturers employed twenty-one workers at a total
wage of $42,500 and produced more than $93,600 in goods. Throughout
the 1940s only one manufacturer was in business. In 1950 two producers
were reported, but throughout the 1960s and 1970s that number
was again reduced to one. In 1982 three manufacturers reported
production valued at $100,000. In 1987, 1 percent of the population
was employed in manufacturing, 26 percent in wholesale and retail
trade, and 13 percent in professional services.
In 1900 the population had grown to 1,591, of whom
eight were black and 90 were foreign-born. The eighty-five farms
comprised 1.7 million acres and declared a worth of almost $4.4
million. Most ranches were operated by owners, who worked almost
121,000 cattle and 91,000 sheep. By the 1910 census the number
of sheep climbed to almost 110,000 and the number of goats increased
to nearly 9,000, while the number of cattle slipped to just under
45,000. These figures marked the deterioration of the range through
overgrazing and the effects of droughts.qv In 1910 the number of farms had declined to seventy-nine and the
acreage to 1.3 million acres, but the value of ranches had increased
to $6.6 million. Foreign-born residents, mostly from Mexico, numbered
284 of the total population of 1,296. African Americansqv numbered 4, and the 550 females constituted less than one-half
the total. In 1920 the population was 1,500. Agriculture prospered
again by that year, when ninety-nine farms, worth more than $16.8
million, were in operation. Sheep, at almost 156,000, far outnumbered
all other livestock and illustrated a continued shift in livestock
production from cattle to sheep ranching.qv
On May 30, 1925, oil was discovered on L. P. Powell's
ranch in north central Crockett County. Though many ranchers sold
mineral leases to oil companies for large sums of cash, oil companies
exerted no other overt influence on the economy or politics of
the county in the 1920s; no oil boom occurred, and no oil companies
opened offices in the county, mainly because of the lack of railroads
and highways. Exploration in the 1930s and 1940s, however, brought
good oil and gas production in several fields, including the prolific
Todd Ellenburger field, opened in 1945. Over the decades oil companies
paid large royalties to Crockett County mineral owners, and that
wealth contributed to the independence and maverick spirit maintained
in the county into the 1990s. Oil brought a rise in county population
to 2,590 by 1930. Included in that number were 713 Hispanics and
40 blacks. Only 5 residents claimed to be foreign-born. Although
oil money eased the lives of ranchers, the raising of livestock
continued to dominate the economy. Ranches numbered 134, and most
ranchers now hired managers to supervise operations. The number
of cattle dropped by 1930 to fewer than 33,500, but sheep increased
by more than 300,000 to almost 460,000 head and continued to outnumber
all other livestock by far. In 1940 more than 18,000 cattle were
reported and sheep declined to slightly more than 390,000. The
value of ranches moved upward to $13.5 million, but most were
again managed by their owners. The population of the county in
1940 was 2,809, of whom 191 were foreign-born and 115 were black.
In 1950 county residents numbered 3,981. Approximately 10 percent
(380) were high school graduates and 3 percent (110) were college
graduates. During the 1950s sheep and goats exceeded 515,000,
more than three times the number of cattle. By 1954 livestock
in the county was valued at almost $3.2 million and the number
of ranches had grown to 147, mostly owner-operated. In 1959 the
number of farms had declined to 123 as livestock values had risen
to almost $3.6 million. A decade later the value of livestock
reached more than $6.2 million, and the number of farms reached
an all-time high of 169. Slightly more than 43 percent of the
owners lived on their farms. The 1960 population of 4,209 included
126 nonwhite residents and 2,045 women. By 1970 the population
of Crockett County had decreased slightly to 3,885, including
60 blacks. High school graduates made up 47.8 percent and college
graduates 7.3 percent of the population.
The 1980 population of 4,608 was 44.5 percent Hispanic
and less than 1.2 percent black. In 1982 the value of livestock
was almost $13 million, and the number of farms was 154. In 1985
nearly 93 percent of the land was taken up by ranches and farms;
less than 1 percent was cropland. Livestock, mostly sheep, Angora
goats, and beef cattle, made up 93 percent of the county's farm
and ranch economy. Also in the 1980s, the county reported 725
miles of public roads, more than 4,000 registered vehicles, a
branch line for rail freight, 38 registered aircraft, and a municipal
airport. The nine churches of the county served a membership of
about 4,300 people. The largest communions were Catholic, Southern
Baptist, and United Methodist. In the 1980s the county had one
school district with four schools and 1,000 students. By 1990
the population of Crockett County had declined slightly to 4,078,
of whom 2,021 were Hispanic and 39 were black. Ozona had 3,181
residents. In the early 1990s the ranching economy continued,
strongly supplemented by oil and gas. Hunting leases and tourism
also contributed to the economy. The county faced environmental
problems of overgrazing, undesirable brush and weeds, water shortages,
and water erosion on its range.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Crockett County Historical Society,
History of Crockett County (San Angelo: Anchor, 1976).
Julia Cauble Smith
This information comes from the Texas State Historical Association
Handbook of Texas Online.
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