Details for Town of Pettus

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5025005536

Data

Marker Number 5536
Atlas Number 5025005536
Marker Title Town of Pettus
Index Entry Pettus, Town of
Address
City Pettus
County Bee
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 615885
UTM Northing 3168718
Subject Codes cities and towns; railroads; oil/petroleum topics; cattle, cattle industry topics
Marker Year 1968
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location From Pettus, take Hwy 181 about 2 mi. north to roadside park.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Oil capital of Bee County, Pettus was settled in the 1850's when John Freeman Pettus set up his sprawling ranch about 4 miles south of here. The son of one of Stephen F. Austin's first 300 colonists, Pettus was an extensive cattle and horse breeder. The town, previously called "Dry Medio" for a nearby creek, was named for him during the Civil War. The community was in the vicinity of two important Indian skirmishes in Bee County in 1859 and the 1870's; but the town slept until 1886, when the tracks of the San Antionio & Aransas Pass railroad reached this site. It then awoke to become the cattle shipping center for the area. In the same year, John S. Hodges, a pioneer citizen, laid out the townsite and donated land to be used for streets and S.A. & A.P. right-of-way. For years the railroad stockyards and depot were places of bustling activity as freight trains came for loading and wood-burning steam engines took on water. In 1909 the presidential train of Wm. H. Taft stopped at the Pettus water tank. The tank--a final monument to steam railroading here--was razed, 1965. In 1929 the Houston Oil Co. brought in its well "No. 1-Maggie Ray McKinney" and from that time Pettus has played a continuing useful role in Texas economy. (1968)

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