|
Gray County is located in the central part of the Panhandleqv and the eastern edge of the High Plains.qv Its center point is at 35°25' north latitude and 100°49'
west longitude. Lefors is located near the center of the county,
and Pampa, the county seat, is about twelve miles away in the
northwestern corner. Pampa is approximately sixty miles northeast
of Amarillo on U.S. Highway 60. The county occupies 934 square
miles of level prairie and rolling river breaks. The county's
sandy loam and black waxy soils support a variety of native grasses
as well as abundant wheat, corn, grain sorghum, and hay crops.
The timber in the riverbottoms includes cottonwoods, hackberries,
elms, and walnuts as well as the ever-present mesquite.qv The county has huge reservoirs of oil and natural gas. Gray County
is basically made up of two distinct parts: the flat plains in
the west and north, and the Red River breaks in the east, center,
and southeast. Gray County is at the head of the North Fork of
the Red River; numerous intermittent and flowing creeks can be
found in the eastern part of the county. McClellan Creek flows
northeastward across the southern part of the county toward the
North Fork, and the North Fork itself flows across the central
part. Cantonment Creek flows southward and empties into the North
Fork in the northeastern corner of the county. The elevation ranges
from 2,500 to 3,300 feet above sea level, the average annual rainfall
is 20.14 inches, and the growing season averages 195 days a year.
The average minimum temperature is 23° F in January, and
the average maximum is 94° in July.
Gray County, formed in 1876 out of the Bexar District,
was named for Peter W. Gray,qv a lawyer and politician of the Republic of Texas and Civil Warqqv eras. The county's prehistoric Plains Apache inhabitants gave
way to the Apaches, who in turn were displaced by the Comanches
and Kiowas. These peoples dominated the Panhandle until they were
crushed in the Red River Warqv of 1874 and removed to Indian Territory. With Gray County for
settlement, ranchers began to reach the region as early as 1877.
In 1878 a well-known local rancher, Perry LeFors, established
a small ranch on Cantonment Creek. Other small ranching operations
developed in the eastern part of the county. In 1882 the Francklyn
Land and Cattle Companyqv purchased a huge tract of land that included the western part
of Gray County. The company failed in 1886 and was reorganized
as the White Deer Lands (formally the White Deer Lands Trust of
British bondholders), which operated the huge Diamond F Ranch.
For the rest of the nineteenth century Gray County remained the
domain of cattle ranchers. The population, 56 in 1880, rose only
to 203 in 1890 and 480 by 1900. A ranching economy with little
need for manpower occupied the area. By the turn of the century
the county's stable stock-farming population felt a growing need
for self-government. As a result, in 1902 the county was organized
with Lefors as the county seat. Lefors, a tiny ranching town,
remained the county seat until 1928, when Pampa's oil-induced
growth led to its becoming the county seat.
Railroads entered Gray County from two different
points in two different eras. A Santa Fe subsidiary, the Southern
Kansas Railway Company, building from Kansas to Amarillo in 1887
and 1888, crossed the northwest corner of the county as it progressed
from Canadian to Panhandle. This line allowed settlers in Gray
County to ship cattle more easily and economically and allowed
for greater ease of travel, but did not bring an influx of settlers
with it. Fifteen years later, as farmers began to arrive in the
region, the Choctaw, Oklahoma and Texas Railroad,qv an affiliate of the Chicago and Rock Island, built a line westward
from Oklahoma to Amarillo. This line crossed far southern Gray
County, and the new settlements of McLean and Alanreed were founded
on the tracks as they moved westward during 1901 and 1902.
By the turn of the century, farmers began to appear
in the county. White Deer Lands began to sell its huge holdings
in 1902, and a land rush to the area of Carson and Gray counties
began. The county population grew to 3,405 by 1910 and 4,663 by
1920. The newly arriving farmers settled in the western and northern
parts of the county, planting wheat, corn, and grain sorghums
on fertile, newly broken lands. Farming and ranching dominated
the county's economy for a short time, and then major petroleum
discoveries greatly altered the county. Oil and gas exploration
began in the county during the early 1920s. A major discovery
well five miles south of Pampa, the H. F. Wilcox Oil and Gas Company's
Worley-Reynolds well, drilled in 1926, led to more developments
around Lefors. Between 1925 and 1928 increasing amounts of oil
came out of the county's three oilfields (the Lefors, Bowers,
and south Pampa fields). Production mushroomed in 1929, and the
county became and remained a substantial oil producer. As of 1990
it had produced 642,556,026 barrels of oil. A by-product of the
local oil economy is a substantial petrochemical industry that
produces carbon black and other synthetic materials. The population
of the county expanded as the oil industry grew. From 4,663 in
1920 the number of residents leaped to 22,090 by 1930, then leveled
off to 23,911 in 1940 and 24,728 in 1950. Growth in the petrochemical
industry in the 1950s led to a peak county population of 31,535
in 1960; the population then declined to 26,949 in 1970, 26,386
in 1980, and 23,967 in 1990. Pampa, the chief beneficiary of the
oil industry, emerged as a major oil town. It became county seat
in 1928.
The transportation network grew with the county.
State Highway 33 (now U.S. Highway 60) had been built between
Oklahoma and Amarillo before 1927. This road linked Canadian,
Miami, Pampa, and Panhandle to Amarillo and greatly facilitated
Pampa's development. A network of farm and oilfield roads emerged
during the 1940s and 1950s; in the 1960s Interstate Highway 40
was built across the far southern part of the county. A slight
increase in rail construction also occurred in the late 1920s.
During 1920 the Santa Fe extended a subsidiary line, chartered
as the Clinton-Oklahoma Western Railroad Company of Texas, from
Cheyenne, Oklahoma, to Pampa, where it linked up with the Santa
Fe mainline. By the 1980s the great bulk of the county's population
lived in urban areas served by this highway and rail system. Pampa
had 19,959 residents in 1980, and McLean had 849 and Lefors 656.
Other communities were Alanreed, Kings Mill, Laketon, and Hoover.
The modern economy of the county depends upon a healthy mix of
oil, petrochemicals, farming, and ranching. Agricultural income
averages about $55 to $60 million a year.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Gray County Bicentennial Observance,
1776-1976: Souvenir Program (Pampa, Texas: Gray County Bicentennial
Committee, 1976). Elleta Nolte, For the Reason We Climb Mountains-Gray
County, 1902-1982 (Pampa, Texas: Gray County Historical Commission,
1982). S. G. Reed, A History of the Texas Railroads (Houston:
St. Clair, 1941; rpt., New York: Arno, 1981).
Donald R. Abbe
This information comes from the Texas State Historical Association
Handbook of Texas Online.
|