Details for The Founding of Bailey County

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5017005337

Data

Marker Number 5337
Atlas Number 5017005337
Marker Title The Founding of Bailey County
Index Entry Founding of Bailey County
Address 300 S. 1st St.
City Muleshoe
County Bailey
UTM Zone 13
UTM Easting 709473
UTM Northing 3789362
Subject Codes counties
Marker Year 1968
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Bailey County Courthouse grounds, SE side facing S. 1st St. Marker reported faded Dec. 2013.
Private Property
Marker Condition
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Bailey County was created Aug. 21, 1876, and named for Peter James Bailey, a Kentucky lawyer killed at the Alamo during the Texas War for Independence. This was thinly settled cattle country; Bailey was attached for judicial purposes to Baylor County in 1876-1891, and to Castro County, 1892-1918. In Nov. 1918, Bailey County was finally organized. Its first officials were W. M. Wilterding, judge; H. A. Douglass, sheriff and tax assessor-collector; C. C. Mardis, clerk; G. P. Kuykendall, treasurer; E. G. Hoskins, inspector of hides and animals; J. B. Diggs, T. L. Snyder, C. E. Dotson and John S. McMurtry, commissioners. At the first meeting of the commissioners court, in Blackwater Valley State Bank on Jan. 16, 1919, C. D. Gupton was appointed justice of the peace. Muleshoe was designated county seat in a special election, April 12, 1919. A jail cell was purchased in June 1919 from neighboring Parmer County. In July a building contract was let for first courthouse -- a frame structure soon erected at a cost of $2,450. Since institution of its government, this 832 sq. mi. county, with its good water resources, has developed an outstanding agricultural economy. Its progress is a tribute to the standards of its pioneer settlers. (1968)

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