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2001 |
History of Winkler County
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WINKLER COUNTY.
Winkler County (F-7) is mostly in the Pecos Valley of West Texas; its
northeastern section is on the Llano Estacado.qv The county is
adjacent to the southeastern corner of
New Mexico. Kermit, the county seat, is forty miles west of Odessa.
Winkler County comprises 840 square miles of gently rolling to level terrain.
Stretching diagonally across the central section of the county is a belt of sand
dunes, which are active, windblown, and raised as much as thirty to forty feet
above the surrounding surface. Large annual yields of oil and gas
place the county among the leading petroleum producers in the state.
The
first people to live in the area of Winkler County were the Anasazi Indians, who
migrated there about 900 and left their discarded pottery as evidence of their
presence. These Native Americans were attracted to the area by its water,
which was readily available from the interdunal ponds or from digging to the
shallow water table. The first military expeditions entered the area of present
Winkler County in the last half of the nineteenth century. Capt. Randolph B.
Marcyqv brought his soldiers into the area on September 25, 1849, as
he searched for the best wagon route to California. Bvt. Capt. John Popeqv
surveyed the thirty-second parallel, which separates Winkler County from New
Mexico, for possible railroad construction in 1854. On June 29, 1875, Col.
William R. Shafterqv and eighty-one men and officers tracked
Comanches into county lands, when Col. Ranald S. Mackenzieqv
conducted a campaign to drive them from the area. By 1876 all threat of Comanche
attack was eliminated, and the area of Winkler County was opened for white
settlement. In 1881 the Texas and Pacific Railway was built across nearby Ward
County, giving easy assess to the area. With good transportation, with the land
outside the dunefields covered in tall grasses, and with a good water supply
available, the area was well equipped for open range ranching. A few ranchers
took advantage of free state land to carve out large ranches. Among those first
ranchers were John Avary, J. J. Draper, and the Cowden brothers-Doc, Tom, and
Walter.
On February 26,
1887, Winkler County was established from territory in Tom Green County. It was
named for Confederate Col. Clinton M. Winkler.qv By 1890 eleven men
and seven women, all white, lived in Winkler County. The state ended free use of
its land in 1900, and state agents were sent across West Texas to collect rents
from ranchers on public land. In the census of 1900 twelve ranches, totaling
67,537 acres and 11,982 cattle, were operated by four owners and eight nonowners,
and the county population was sixty. From 1901 through 1905 a state law allowed
the sale of school lands in West Texas. Since one could purchase four sections
of land on generous credit
terms, Winkler and other West Texas counties experienced a school-land rush as
new settlers arrived. In 1905 the law was changed to benefit the highest bidder,
but newcomers continued to come to Winkler County. To serve the new residents, a
post office was opened at Duval on April 3, 1908. It was located on the John
Howe ranch, 1½ miles west of the site of present Kermit. Lots in the townsite
of Duval were widely promoted, and the town competed with Kermit for the county
seat. When the promoters of Kermit townsite offered lots for free, county
residents chose that town as the seat. After losing the race with Kermit, Duval
faded, and the post office closed in 1910. A post office was established at
Joiel from 1908 through 1910 and at Theodore from 1909 until 1912. In 1910
Kermit and Hay Flat gained post offices. A school was built at Hay Flat in 1910
and operated until it was consolidated with the Kermit school in 1913; that year
the Hay Flat post office closed. On April 5, 1910, Winkler County was organized.
In the
presidential election of 1908 Winkler County supported William Jennings Bryan,
the Democratic candidate. The population census of 1910 reflected the effects of
the school-land rush after 1901. The county population increased to 442, of
which two were European-born and one black. The number of farms climbed to 128
and were operated mainly by owners. Although the number of farms had increased
by 1910, only small hay and corn crops were harvested on 230 acres of farmland.
With over 10,000 cattle and nearly 4,000 sheep, the farmers were herders rather
than tillers. A drought swept across Winkler County in 1916, and many families
who came during the school-land rush gave up their farms and moved. By 1920 only
eighty-one people lived in the county, and only twenty-seven farms remained.
.The number of range cattle increased to nearly 13,000, but all other livestock
decreased. Only seventy-six acres of hay and grains was harvested, providing
small yields. Because the drought lasted into 1926, the population continued to
decline. The public school and post office in Kermit were in the courthouse from
1924 through 1926 to serve the few residents who remained in the area.
On July 16, 1926, oil was discovered when Roy Westbrook and Company brought in the Hendrick No. 1 on ranchland owned by Thomas G. and Ada Hendrick in central Winkler County. The boom established the town of Wink in the southwestern part of the county, seven miles southwest of Kermit. The increased population caused a housing shortage and forced newcomers to live in tents and makeshift structures. The boom also produced several small and ephemeral towns. A post office opened at Tulsa in southern Winkler County on August 20, 1927, but it closed in 1929 when the town failed to boom as its namesake had. Brookfield, another town, was a mile and a half southwest of Wink. That town had a hotel, a few stores, and several dance halls. As Wink grew, Brookfield declined. Cheyenne was laid out nine miles north of Kermit. A post office operated there from 1929 to 1944, but the town dwindled long before the post office closed. Leck was founded five miles west of Cheyenne. For a short time, it had several businesses and residences, but it soon disappeared. By 1930 the oil boom brought an increase in population to 6,784. With the impact of oil and of the earlier drought, cultivation of crops continued to decline. Twenty-five farms were operated by fourteen owners and eleven tenants, but no crops were sown in 1930. The number and value of all livestock decreased, but the number of cattle continued strong at 11,000 head. By 1940 the population had declined to 6,141. Twenty-five farms, averaging 22,700 acres each, were operated by fourteen owners and eleven tenants.
The population sharply increased to 10,064 by 1950. During the 1950s livestock production dominated agriculture. In 1954 thirty-six farms of 620,000 acres operated, but less than 500 acres were devoted to cropland. Although the county harvested $60,000 in crops in 1959, it was the last year in which crops were reported. The value of livestock reached $1.25 million by 1969 but dropped to $1 million by 1982. The population in 1960 reached an all-time high of 13,652, including 439 non-white residents. By 1970 the oil industry had experienced a decline in West Texas, and the population in Winkler County dropped to 9,640. From 1912 through 1948 the county remained predominantly in the Democratic party,qv although Republican Dwight D. Eisenhowerqv took the county in the 1950s. Democratic presidential candidates won in 1960 and 1964, but from 1968 through 1992 the county voted Republican. By 1980 West Texas had experienced a dramatic oil boom with greatly increased drilling activity and an influx of new people in blue-collar jobs. The population of Winkler County reflected the boom with 9,944 residents. That number included 2.42 percent African Americansqv and 25.8 percent Mexican Americans.qv High school graduates continued to increase, and their number reached 52.9 percent of the population. During the early 1980s the oil industry began another decline, brought on by falling prices for crude. By 1990 population of the county dipped again to 8,626, of whom 3,172 were Hispanic. Most of the population lived in Kermit (6,875) or Wink (1,189). Winkler County in the early 1990s continued as an oil and ranching county.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: A History of Winkler County (Kermit, Texas: Winkler County Historical Commission, 1984). Roger M. and Diana Davids Olien, Easy Money: Oil Promoters and Investors in the Jazz Age (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1990). Julia Cauble Smith
History
of Winkler County Texas book in on line!
Published in 1942 by the Wink Wednesday Study Club, Wink, TX
Printed at the Wink Bulletin, Wink, Winkler Co. TX. index transcribed by Carolyn
Harrison Thanks Carolyn for transcribing an index!
Last Updated: Sunday, January 14, 2007