Details for Town of Fashing

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5013001576

Data

Marker Number 1576
Atlas Number 5013001576
Marker Title Town of Fashing
Index Entry Fashing, Town of
Address
City Fashing
County Atascosa
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 583917
UTM Northing 3185291
Subject Codes cities and towns; geology; roads; oil/petroleum topics
Marker Year 1968
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location intersection of FM 99 and FM 2924, in front of Fashing School
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Near the Old San Patricio Trail, leading from San Antonio to McMullen and McGloin colony, in area of Gulf of Mexico. In this vicinity were stage stops at Belle Branch, Rock Spring, Rountree's, and Tordilla. Land was part of the Butler, Hickok, Tom and Rountree ranches. Town was platted in 1915 as "Hickok." However, after the U.S. Post Office Department disapproved that name, the tag on a popular tobacco -- "Fashion" -- inspired adoption of the name "Fashing" for the town. First schoolhouse was built in 1917; a second, 1921. The Methodist church, organized 1922, erected first house of worship (building moved in from Bastrop) in 1925. In 1934, St. Elizabeth Catholic Church was built. The Martin Luther Lutheran Church was erected 1948. Present school building was completed in 1952. A center for mineral development. First local oil production was from Weigang Field, 1946. Tordilla Hill (5 mi. N) was site of first major uranium discovery in Texas in 1954. After further petroleum strikes in Fashing Edwards Limestone Field, 1958, gas and sulfur processing plants were built by the Elcor Chemical Co., Lone Star Producing Co., Sinclair Oil and Gas Co., and Warren Petroleum Corp. Currently, the only commercial uranium operation in Texas is near here. (1968)
ATLAS_NUM=5013001576

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