Details for Garwood

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5083002106

Data

Marker Number 2106
Atlas Number 5083002106
Marker Title Garwood
Index Entry Garwood
Address
City Garwood
County Colorado
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 752658
UTM Northing 3260557
Subject Codes cities and towns
Marker Year 1985
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Arthur St., Garwood (in front of the Garwood Memeorial Library)
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Founded in 1901, the town of Garwood is located on land once occupied by Preston Gilbert, one of Stephen F. Austin's "Old 300" colonists, who acquired the acreage in 1827. In 1896, Marcus Hervy Townsend, Thomas A. Hill, and William Thomas Burford bought part of Gilbert's original league of land as a farming and ranching investment. By 1901, they had begun rice production, developed a canal and irrigation system, and platted a townsite on their land. Towsend was a lawyer and Texas legislator. Hill was a prominent merchant and banker, while Burford was a druggist and planter who served as Colorado County sheriff from 1898-1902. They named their town for Judge Hiram Morgan Garwood, a friend of Townsend who never lived in Garwood or in Colorado County. Streets and avenues were named for early area settlers, other friends of the founders, and for the founders themselves. From the town's inception, its economy has been based on rice production. The gravel industry, oil and gas production, and duck and goose hunting are also important businesses here. Throughout its history, the small community has been an important part of Colorado County's heritage.
ATLAS_NUM=5083002106

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