Post Oak Prairie, Caldwell County, TX ~ The Plum Creek Almanac Project

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Post Oak Priarie  

Not all settlements in Caldwell County developed as towns with businesses and a post office. Nevertheless, clusters of houses, churches, schools, and a sense of community prevailed in small villages scattered between the larger towns. One such was Post Oak Prairie, settled by immigrants from Tennessee and located about 13 miles northeast of Lockhart near the line of Caldwell and Bastrop counties. Among the first settlers were Copelands, Lovells, Kilpatricks and Miears. The crops raised in the surrounding territory consisted chiefly of cotton, corn, cane and vegetables. Soon after the community was established, a congregation of the Church of Christ was organized, and it was still in existence in 1923.

Farmers all over the country, particularly in the southern states, sometimes joined organizations such as the Grange that sought to promote more economic stability for those who raised livestock and crops. One of these groups, called the Farmers’ Alliance, had enthusiastic members in Post Oak Prairie and Delhi. Less active chapters could also be found at Martindale, Prairie Lea, Mineral Springs, Luling, McNeal [sic], Hall, Sandy Fork (possibly in the area between Hall and Delhi), Elm Grove, Lone Star, Lytton Springs, Rest (near Mendoza), Glenvoir, Reglar Hill [sic – perhaps Koegler Hill near Maxwell], Lockhart, and Live Oak (Uhland). A meeting at Post Oak Prairie in the latter part of 1889 was described as having a large crowd of Alliance veterans who listened to a lecture and enjoyed an “excellent dinner for all on the ground”.

The first school in the Post Oak community was built in 1883. The school house was an old store building, 16 by 20 feet, which was bought for the sum of twenty dollars and was hauled in with a yoke of oxen. In 1904, the Post Oak School was consolidated with the Dale school, but because of the great travel distance, many of the children were able to attend only part of the time and some never attended. The school was moved back to Post Oak in 1912. Funds for a new building were obtained by donations from the people of the community, and the men of the community erected the building. A newspaper article in 1914 mentioned that the “rural schools at Union Grove, Tilman, Oakland and Post Oak Prairie have closed for the year after most successful terms. The rural schools are in a prosperous condition as most of them have consolidated districts which are proving beneficial in many ways.” The Post Oak Prairie building later had more rooms added and other improvements made; it was also used as a community center in later years.

Sources –
1. “Good Will Meeting At Post Oak Prairie”, Lockhart Post-Register, Lockhart, Texas, 25 June 1931
2. “History of the Schools of Caldwell County to 1900”, Master’s Thesis prepared by Carroll L. Mullins, August, 1929, pages 55-56 and 117
3. “Lockhart Schools to Close”, San Antonio Express, San Antonio, Texas, 08 May 1914
4. “Post Oak Prairie”, The Broadcaster, Caldwell County, Lockhart, Texas, 01 May 1923
5. “Texas Farmers’ Alliance Advocate”, The Southern Mercury, Dallas, Texas, 31 October 1889, 07 November 1889, 21 November 1889, 12 December 1889, 2 January 1890.

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