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Deaf Smith County, on the western edge of the Panhandle,qv is bounded on the west by New Mexico, on the north by Oldham County,
on the east by Randall County, and on the south by Parmer and
Castro counties. It was named for Erastus "Deaf" Smith,qv a famous scout of the Texas Revolution.qv The county's center point is at 102°30' west longitude and
35°00' north latitude. Deaf Smith County comprises approximately
1,497 square miles of level prairies and rolling plains on the
western edge of the Llano Estacado.qv Its loam soils, ranging from deep chocolate to sandy, support
abundant native grasses as well as numerous agricultural products.
Elevations range from 3,200 to 4,200 feet above sea level; the
minimum average temperature is 22° F in January, and the
average annual maximum is 93° in July. The average annual
rainfall is 17.37 inches, and the annual growing season averages
185 days. Tierra Blanca Creek flows intermittently across the
southern part of the county, and Palo Duro and North Palo Duro
creeks run across the northeastern portion of the county. These
streams enter the Red River basin in or near Palo Duro Canyon,
in Randall County.
The earliest prehistoric inhabitants of these prairies
gave way to Plains Apaches, who in turn were forced out by the
warlike Comanches and Kiowas. In 1787, and again in 1788, José
Maresqv followed Tierra Blanca Creek in his search for a route from Santa
Fe to San Antonio. The Indian wars of the 1870s, culminating in
the Red River Warqv of 1874-75, led to the nomadic red man's removal to the Indian
Territory. Shortly thereafter ranchers began to appear in the
area, and in 1876 the Texas legislature formed Deaf Smith County
from the Bexar District. The census counted thirty-eight people
in the county in 1880.
By the early 1880s the T Anchor Ranch,qv headquartered near the site of present Canyon, had spilled over
into the eastern part of the county, and the LS Ranchqv extended over into its northeastern portion. Beginning in 1882,
the western half of the county lay within the XIT Ranch,qv a real estate-cattle project of the Capitol Syndicate. One of
the eight XIT division headquarters was established at Las Escarbadas,
on Tierra Blanca Creek, in the southwestern corner of Deaf Smith
County. The large ranches dominated the county; only a few small
stock farms existed among them. By 1890 the county's population
had increased to 179, and the census found seventeen farms or
ranches in the area, seven of which were smaller than 500 acres.
More than 28,600 cattle were counted in the county, while crop
production occupied only a few acres: seventy-eight acres was
planted in corn and eighty in cotton.
As the cattle industry in the county developed, the
rising population created a need for local government. Accordingly,
after an election on December 1, 1890, the county was organized
with the new town of La Plata as county seat. Jerry R. Dean was
elected the first county judge, and the colorful Jim Cookqv became the first county sheriff. In 1898 the Pecos and Northern
Texas Railway, a subsidiary of the Santa Fe line, built tracks
from Amarillo to the Texas-New Mexico border at Farwell. This
railroad crossed the southeastern corner of Deaf Smith County
and brought easy and economical transportation to the local ranchers.
The coming of the railroad also brought forth a new town, Hereford,
which quickly outstripped the other local hamlets. As a result
Hereford became the county seat after an election on November
8, 1898, and La Plata soon faded into oblivion. By 1900 the county
had ninety-seven ranches and farms and a population of 843.
Between 1900 and 1910 the large ranchers began to
sell their lands, and land-company promotions brought a rush of
settlers to the area. With them came significant changes in the
local agricultural economy during the first half of the twentieth
century. The number of farms and ranches in the county increased
steadily during most of this period, rising to 361 in 1910, 382
in 1920, 605 in 1930, and 854 in 1940. The expansion of farming
was responsible for most of this growth. In 1900, for example,
little if any wheat was grown in the county; by 1920 more than
9,000 acres was planted in that grain, and by 1930 wheat acreage
exceeded 26,000 acres. Sorghum became another important crop,
and the production of corn also expanded. (See WHEAT CULTURE,
SORGHUM CULTURE, CORN CULTURE.) Meanwhile, local farmers diversified
into poultry production;qv in 1929 local chicken farms had more than 51,000 birds, and county
farmers sold 208,023 dozen eggs. As the county's economy developed,
its population grew to 3,942 in 1910, 3,747 in 1920, 5,979 in
1930, and 6,056 in 1940.
The county's transportation system evolved to meet
its growing economic demands. As early as 1920 U.S. Highway 60
(then known as U.S. 366) ran from Canyon via Hereford to Farwell
and Clovis. At the same time a roadway was graded from Hereford
west to the New Mexico line, thus facilitating movement of crops
from most of the county to the rail line; this road was later
paved and designated a state farm-to-market road. Beginning
in the late 1930s, U.S. 385 (originally State Highway 51) was
built from Brownfield to Dalhart via Dimmitt, Hereford, Vega,
and Channing. Throughout the 1940s and 1950s a full network of
paved farm-to-market roads emerged, linking all parts
of the county to either main highways or railroad lines. U.S.
66, which, with the Rock Island Railroad, cuts across the extreme
northwestern corner of the county, gave rise to the border community
of Glenrio, which declined after the completion of Interstate
40.
After World War IIqv businesses were started in Deaf Smith County to process and ship
local products. Vegetable production was introduced on a large
scale, and processing and packing plants for onions, potatoes,
and other perishable vegetables were also established. In 1964
the Holly Sugar Company opened its $20 million mill and refinery,
having contracted with local farmers for the production of sugar
beets (see SUGAR PRODUCTION).
Cattle feeding also began to flourish in the 1960s
with the opening of several feedlots that used much locally grown
grain. By the 1970s these lots were bringing 80 percent of the
county's $230 million annual average income. In the late 1980s
the county led the state in numbers of cattle fed; it often led
the nation in this category. The establishment of feedlots brought
commercial production of corn and the establishment of several
meat-packing plants in the county. In 1982 Deaf Smith County produced
more than 5.75 million bushels of sorghum, 4.75 million bushels
of wheat, nearly 4 million bushels of corn, and 251,942 tons of
sugar beets. Vegetable production occupied 2,153 acres, planted
with carrots, onions, potatoes, and sweet corn.
The population grew steadily from World War II until
the 1980s. The number of residents increased from 6,056 in 1940
to 9,111 in 1950, 13,187 in 1960, 18,999 in 1970, and 21,165 in
1980. Economic development brought other changes. The discovery
and use of copious underground water in the Ogallala Aquifer in
the 1930s led to large-scale irrigationqv in the 1950s, which further encouraged the expansion of farming.
The labor needs of the farming economy drew large numbers of migrant
laborers, mostly Hispanic, to the county's packing sheds. As this
labor force grew, it became less migratory, and increasing numbers
of Mexican Americansqv moved into the area permanently. By the 1980s, just over 40 percent
of the county's population was of Hispanic descent.
Politically, after 1952 Deaf Smith County became
more favorably disposed towards the Republican partyqv than formerly, in both state and national elections. Its citizens
voted Republican in eight of the nine presidential elections between
1956 and 1988; the county voted for Democrat Texan Lyndon B. Johnsonqv in 1964 in his race against Republican Barry Goldwater.
For several decades the diversified agricultural
economy of Deaf Smith County was a thriving, coordinated system.
By the early 1980s, however, though farmers produced more on their
land, they began realizing a smaller return than at any other
time in history. The county population began to drop between 1980
and 1982; by 1992 it was estimated at 19,153, almost 10 percent
less than only ten years earlier. Tight economic conditions, combined
with a diminishing supply of groundwater, presented new problems.
A search for innovations in farming methods intensified. Fearing
contamination of the valuable aquifer, residents opposed attempts
by the United States Department of Energy during the 1980s to
make the county a nuclear-waste dump site.
Communities in Deaf Smith County include Dawn, Glenrio,
and Westway. Hereford (1990 population 14,745) is the county's
seat of government and only urban center; in the late 1980s the
town had six public elementary schools, two junior highs, a large
high school, a county library, and two museums (the Deaf Smith
County Historical Museum, and the National Cowgirl Hall of Fame
and Western Heritage Centerqv).
Every August the town conducts a Miss Hereford contest and hosts
the Cowgirl Hall of Fame All-Girl Rodeo.
Clois Truman Brown, The History of Deaf Smith County,
Texas (M.A. thesis, West Texas State College, 1948). Deaf Smith
County: The Land and Its People (Hereford, Texas: Deaf Smith
County Historical Society, 1982). Sarah Ann Gilbert, The Origins
of Modern Agribusiness: Deaf Smith County, Texas, 1930-1940 (M.A.
thesis, Texas Tech University, 1981). J. Evetts Haley, The
XIT Ranch of Texas and the Early Days of the Llano Estacado
(Chicago: Lakeside, 1929; rpts., Norman: University of Oklahoma
Press, 1953, 1967). Bessie Patterson, A History of Deaf Smith
County (Hereford, Texas: Pioneer, 1964). Dulcie Sullivan,
The LS Brand (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1968).
H. Allen Anderson
This information comes from the Texas State Historical Association
Handbook of Texas Online.
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