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Culberson County is located in the Trans-Pecos region of
West Texas. It is bordered by New Mexico to the north and by Hudspeth,
Reeves, and Jeff Davis counties in Texas. Van Horn, the county
seat, is approximately 120 miles east of El Paso in the southwestern
part of the county. The county's center lies about thirty-six
miles northeast of Van Horn at approximately 32°27' north
latitude and 104°29' west longitude. Interstate Highway 10
and U.S. Highway 80 cross southern Culberson County from east
to west; U.S. Highway 90 enters the county from the south and
terminates at Van Horn; and U.S. highways 62 and 180 cross the
county's northwestern corner. The Missouri Pacific Railroad crosses
southern Culberson County, paralleling Interstate 10; the Southern
Pacific crosses the county's southwestern corner; and a spur of
the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe enters northeastern Culberson
County from New Mexico and ends at Rustler Springs.
Culberson County comprises 3,815 square miles of
terrain that varies from mountainous to nearly level, with elevations
ranging from 8,751 feet on Guadalupe Peak, the highest spot in
the state, to 3,000 feet. The county is in the Rio Grande basin.
Soils in Culberson County are primarily shallow and stony, with
some clay and sandy loams and sand. Vegetation consists of scrub
brush, grasses, cacti, creosote bush, post oak, chaparral, oak,
juniper, mesquite, yucca, and agave, with Douglas fir, aspen,
Arizona cypress, maple, and madrone trees in the Guadalupe Mountains.
The Guadalupes are also the home of several endangered or locally
rare plant species, including bigtooth maple, ponderosa pine,
chinquapin oak, Rocky Mountain juniper, Texas madrone, and Mexican
buckeye, and of the only elk in Texas. Dolomite, gypsum, limestone,
salt, silver, copper, lead, zinc, barite, and molybdenum are among
the minerals found in Culberson County. The climate is mild and
dry, with an average minimum temperature of 30° F in January
and an average maximum of 94° in July. The growing season
averages 224 days a year, and the average annual precipitation
is ten inches. Less than 1 percent of the land in Culberson County
is considered prime farmland.
Today Culberson County is best known as the site
of Guadalupe Mountains National Park,qv which includes Guadalupe Peak and is a major tourist attraction.
The Guadalupes and the county's other mountains, such as the Delaware,
Beach, Wylie, Sierra Diablo, Van Horn, Apache, and Baylorqv ranges, made the area ideal for Indians seeking protection from
their enemies and a remote home base from which to launch attacks.
The earliest sign of human occupation in the area, found in the
Guadalupes, is a 12,000-year-old Folsom point. Later, hunter-gatherers
probably inhabited the mountains only during the summer; they
also left artifacts, as well as pictographs. The most famous indigenous
inhabitants of the mountains, the Apaches, arrived about 600 years
ago. They harvested agave, yucca, and sotol when meat was unavailable,
and their agave-roasting pits are still visible in the Guadalupes.
The area that was to become Culberson County was
largely untouched by Spanish exploration, due to its forbidding
topography. In 1583, however, Antonio de Espejoqv became the first European to see the Mescalero Apaches, on the
prairie just east of the Guadalupe Mountains. Beginning about
1630 the Mescaleros were raiding the more populous Plains Navajos
and Pueblos from the Guadalupes; fifty years later they had added
El Paso del Norteqv to their list of targets. By the beginning of the eighteenth century
Comanches from the Llano Estacadoqv had ended the Apache domination of western Texas, and the Mescaleros,
based in the Guadalupes, restricted their raids to a smaller geographical
area. Their ferocity, however, was unaffected, and the Mescaleros
became one of the most feared of all Indian groups in Texas. Their
presence, combined with the area's isolation, ensured that the
area would not become popular with white settlers.
By the middle of the nineteenth century, however,
emigrants were seeking new routes to connect central and eastern
Texas with El Paso and California. The 1849 gold rush increased
the demand for such roads, and exploration by the whites occurred
with breathtaking speed. In May 1849 John S. (Rip) Ford and Maj.
Robert S. Neighbors,qqv returning to Waco from El Paso, skirted the Guadalupe Mountains
and described Guadalupe Canyon. In July 1849 an expedition led
by Lt. Francis Theodore Bryanqv camped at Guadalupe Pass while retracing the Ford-Neighbors route
to confirm its suitability for a wagon road to the west. In September
1849 Capt. Randolph Barnes Marcyqv came in sight of the Guadalupes while returning from Santa Fe
to Fort Smith, Arkansas.
Also in 1849, the Van Horn Wells were supposedly
discovered by Maj. Jefferson Van Horne,qv en route to El Paso. The wells became known as one of the few
dependable water sources in the vast emptiness of West Texas;
ten years later the army considered them sufficiently important
to establish a cavalry outpost there under Lt. James Judson Van
Hornqv (no relation to Jefferson). Lieutenant Van Horn commanded the
station until 1861, when he was taken prisoner by Confederate
troops who seized the wells. The town of Van Horn, founded some
twenty years later, was named for him.
The signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgoqv also increased knowledge of the area. John Russell Bartlett,qv appointed a boundary commissioner by President Zachary Taylor,qv traveled through the area on his way to El Paso to negotiate the
United States-Mexico border. Bartlett reached what would become
Culberson County in early November 1850. He found the Guadalupes
"a dark, gloomy-looking range, with bold and forbidding sides."
Bartlett suggested that the proposed transcontinental railroad
be built along a route south of the Guadalupes, where "the
country is quite open and apparently level."
Thanks in part to Bartlett's favorable report, a
surveying party under Capt. John Popeqv passed through the area in 1853, seeking a potential railroad
route; Pope returned the following year to search in vain for
an artesian water supply. A prospector named Thomas Owen or Owens
reportedly discovered the Hazel Mine in 1856, but the Mescaleros
and the Civil Warqv forced him to abandon the area for twenty-five years.
Despite the efforts of Bartlett and Pope, the next
phase of exploration involved stagecoaches rather than steel rails.
In March 1857 John Butterfield received a contract to carry mail
twice a week from St. Louis and Memphis to San Francisco; three
months later John Birch received a contract to carry mail semimonthly
from San Antonio to San Diego, California. The Butterfield Overland
Mailqv route entered what would become Culberson County from the east,
crossed the Rustler Hills, more or less followed the Delaware
River west, and then went up and over Guadalupe Pass. The first
westbound Butterfield coach arrived at the Pinery, a station in
the Guadalupes, in late September 1858. Within a year, however,
the Butterfield route was shifted to the south to take advantage
of the protection afforded by forts Davis and Stockton. Birch's
San Antonio-San Diego Mail Route,qv nicknamed the Jackass Mail, began operation in July 1857. By 1860
it had been shortened to connect San Antonio and El Paso, and
was discontinued in 1861 because of the outbreak of the Civil
War.
After the war the demand for a transcontinental railroad
mounted. Before such a project could become a reality, however,
the government decided it needed to wipe out the Apaches, who,
led by their great chief Victorio,qv a Warm Springs Apache, and augmented by Mescaleros from the Fort
Stanton Reservation, carried out a brilliant raiding campaign
in the late 1860s and throughout the 1870s. Various military expeditions
were sent in pursuit of the Apaches, but most stopped short of
actually following them into the mountains. In December 1869,
however, Troop F of the Third Cavalry under Lt. Howard B. Cushing
left Fort Stanton, New Mexico, and entered the Guadalupes in pursuit
of the Indians. Cushing's men found two Apache camps and destroyed
the Indians' winter stores of food and clothing.
In May 1870 another detachment of troops left Fort
Quitman under Maj. Albert Morrow. At Pine Springs in the Guadalupes,
Morrow's men rendezvoused with reinforcements from Fort Davis,
pressed up McKittrick Canyon in search of the Indians, and got
lost. They did manage to discover and destroy one ranchería
of seventy-five lodges, which the Apaches had abandoned.
By this time a ranching boom had begun in the Trans-Pecos,
and the demand for rangeland for longhorn cattleqv sealed the fate of the Apaches. Thanks to Victorio's tactical
brilliance, they managed to elude the military for another ten
years, but the federal cavalry and the Texas Rangersqv had the advantage. Victorio himself was finally killed in Mexico
in 1880, and in January 1881 a company of rangers under George
W. Baylorqv ambushed the last surviving band of Apache raiders in Bass Canyon
in the Sierra Diablo Mountains; it was the last big Indian fight
in Texas.
In 1881 the long-awaited railroad link to the West
finally became a reality, although not without its share of controversy.
Under Jay Gould,qv who had bought the line a year before, the Texas and Pacific Railway
was building westward from Fort Worth to El Paso. Meanwhile Collis
P. Huntington's rival Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway
was building eastward from El Paso in order to complete its own
link to central and eastern Texas. For a time no one was sure
which road would prevail, but in November 1881 Gould and Huntington
reached an agreement by which the Texas and Pacific would stop
at Sierra Blanca, in Hudspeth County, and the two lines would
share the track from Sierra Blanca to El Paso.
With the completion of the Texas and Pacific, white
settlement of the area began in earnest. Among the pioneer settlers
in what would become Culberson County were Ed Hamm, George Bristow,
railroad agent Jack Veats, and the families of R. P. (Perry) Bean,
A. A. (Gus) Cox, Sebastian (Ben) De Anda, J. H. Beach, and Robert
K. Wylie.qv Local mountain ranges were eventually named after the last two.
The towns of Van Horn, Plateau, and Kent grew up along the railroad,
and ranchers pushed up into the Guadalupes themselves. The influx
of ranchers continued for the next three decades, and Van Horn
grew into a prosperous cattle-shipping center. In 1911 a new county,
named after David B. Culberson,qv was separated from El Paso County. When Culberson County was organized
in 1912, Van Horn was chosen as county seat. In 1920 the population
of the county was only 912, of whom 910 were white. Perhaps reflecting
the prevalence of ranching and the lack of urban centers, males
outnumbered females 539 to 373. Ten years later the population
had climbed to 1,228, 638 of whom were classified as white and
583 as Mexican. In subsequent years the population continued to
increase: to 1,653 in 1940, 1,825 in 1950, 2,794 in 1960, and
3,429 in 1970. Between 1970 and 1980 the population declined slightly,
to 3,315, but in 1982 had risen to 3,616. The 1982 population
was mostly of Hispanic (63 percent), English (16 percent), or
Irish (12 percent) descent.
Extraction of minerals has long been important in
Culberson County, although rumors of fabulously wealthy gold mines
in the Guadalupes seem to be mere wishful thinking. Around 1875
an old prospector named Ben Sublett strode into a saloon and casually
tossed a buckskin pouch full of gold nuggets onto the bar, hinting
broadly that he had discovered them in the Guadalupes. All efforts
to get him to reveal the exact location of his find were unsuccessful;
he took his secret to the grave in 1892, leaving his son to search
in vain for the mine. Gen. Lew Wallace, the author of Ben-Hur
and governor of New Mexico from 1878 to 1881, said he found references
in the Spanish archives in Santa Fe to rich gold deposits in the
Guadalupes, but the exact location had been lost. The Apache chief
Geronimo also claimed that the Spanish had mined the area, and
that the Guadalupes contained the richest mines in North America.
More recent opinion holds such claims unlikely.
Other minerals have been less elusive. Between the
late nineteenth century and the mid-twentieth century the Hazel
Mine yielded about a million pounds of copper and more than two
million ounces of silver. In the 1940s acidic sulfur earth was
produced at Rustler Springs for use as a fertilizer and soil conditioner,
and the Apache Mountains were the site of the largest barite deposit
in Texas, which was mined from open pits during the 1960s. A mica
quarry operated in the early 1980s in the Van Horn Mountains to
mine mica schist for oilfield use, but the sustained production
of sheet mica had not been achieved. Culberson County was also
producing copper, bedded gypsum from surface mines, brucitic marble,
molybdenum, crushed rhyolite, silver, Frasch sulfur, and talc
in the 1980s.
Oil was discovered in the county in 1953, but annual
production was only 320 barrels in 1956. In the late 1950s and
early 1960s, however, production soared, reaching 184,208 barrels
in 1958, 725,953 barrels in 1960, and 1,289,000 barrels in 1963.
Production declined in subsequent years, to 873,868 barrels in
1968, 653,830 barrels in 1976, and 284,525 barrels in 1980, before
rebounding to 1,102,644 in 1982. Two years later it had fallen
again, to 642,932 barrels, and in 1990 Culberson County produced
409,238 barrels.
Ranching has traditionally been more important than
farming in the local economy, although the cattle population in
Culberson County decreased between 1920 and the early 1980s. The
number of cattle dropped from 48,974 in 1920 to 40,563 in 1930,
27,144 in 1940, 18,883 in 1950, and 8,805 in 1960, then rose to
22,745 in 1969 and roughly 29,000 in 1982. The number of farms
increased from forty-seven in 1920 to fifty-two in 1930 and peaked
at eighty-one in 1940; in subsequent decades the number of farms
remained relatively stable, with seventy in 1950, seventy-six
in 1959, eighty in 1969, and seventy in 1982.
Shortage of water has always been a principal obstacle
to agriculture in Culberson County. In the late 1930s, when local
stockmen began using spreader dams and other techniques to conserve
more of the precious rainwater, the county agricultural agent
described Culberson County as "a strictly ranching area."
In September 1948, however, a well was brought in at Lobo, one
mile from the headquarters of William Cameron's ranch, and the
Cameron Company began selling plots of land to farmers. Other
wells were put down and fitted with more efficient pumps, but
they proved prohibitively expensive to operate; by the late 1960s
virtually all had been abandoned.
The story of the local cotton industry follows the
pattern of farming in general in the county. Culberson County
had been the only county in Texas never to produce a bale of cotton,
but in 1949 Darwin Brewster grew the first on a 500-acre farm
near Lobo. The bale was ginned at Tornillo, in El Paso County,
and proudly displayed at the main intersection in downtown Van
Horn; Brewster himself was honored by the chamber of commerce.
In 1950, 1,295 acres planted with cotton in the county produced
1,114 bales. The county's first cotton gin was built the next
year and ginned about 6,000 bales that fall; two more gins were
built in subsequent years. In 1959 cotton farmers planted 6,215
acres and produced 11,130 bales. But Culberson County's cotton
boom was short-lived, thanks largely to the water shortage. Ten
years later cotton was planted on only 3,585 acres that produced
3,415 bales, and by 1982 cotton land had fallen to 1,656 acres
that produced only 1,324 bales.
Culberson County has generally voted Democratic,
although Republicans won some presidential and statewide races
in the late twentieth century. Republican presidential candidates
won in the 1972 and 1984 elections, but Democrats Michael Dukakis
and Bill Clinton managed to garner a majority of the votes in
the 1988 and 1992 elections respectively. Democratic officials
have also continued to maintain control of most county offices.
In the 1982 primary 94 percent voted Democratic and 6 percent
Republican, with a total of 630 votes cast.
As early as 1899, when the first Old Settler's Reunion
was celebrated in Van Horn, the residents of Culberson County
realized the potential benefits of attracting outside visitors;
as one writer put it, Culberson County "is the kind of raw-mountain,
raw-grasslands country that breeds mystics and imaginative, lyrical
chambers of commerce." The Old Settler's Reunion became an
annual event and remained so until 1958, when Frontier Day took
its place. By the early 1980s Frontier Day had in turn been replaced
by the Big Country Celebration, held in Van Horn in June. With
the completion of U.S. Highway 62 in 1926, the increasing viability
of automobile travel, and the relative proximity of Carlsbad Caverns
in New Mexico, the Big Bend in Presidio County, and the Guadalupe
Mountains in northern Culberson County, tourism became increasingly
important in the local economy.
County employment statistics bear out the increasing
importance of tourism and the declining importance of agriculture.
In the 1930, 1940, 1950, and 1960 censuses more people were employed
in agriculture than in any other field. In 1970 agriculture had
slid all the way to third, behind the mining and service industries.
Ten years later, 23 percent of the labor force was employed in
agriculture and mining, 23 percent in wholesale and retail trade,
and 12 percent in other counties. In 1982, 828 Culberson County
residents were employed in the service and related industries,
while only seventy-three were employed in agriculture. By 1982,
when Culberson County ranked 237th among Texas counties in agricultural
cash receipts, tourists spent $17,432,000 there. In 1990 the county
population was 3,407; Van Horn was the largest community.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Don Kurtz and William D. Goran, Trails
of the Guadalupes: A Hiker's Guide to the Trails of Guadalupe
Mountains National Park (Champaign, Illinois: Environmental
Associates, 1978). Alan Tennant, The Guadalupe Mountains of
Texas (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1980). Rosa Lee
Wylie, History of Van Horn and Culberson County (Hereford,
Texas: Pioneer, 1973).
Martin Donell Kohout
This information comes from the Texas State Historical Association
Handbook of Texas Online.
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