Details for Comanche County

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5093000989

Data

Marker Number 989
Atlas Number 5093000989
Marker Title Comanche County
Index Entry Comanche County
Address SH 36
City Comanche
County Comanche
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 536489
UTM Northing 3529152
Subject Codes counties
Marker Year 1936
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location US 67 at SH 36 (West Central Avenue)
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 1936 Centennial - Highway Marker (pink granite)
Marker Text First settled in 1854 by five families, the county, created and organized 1856, was named for Comanche Indians, Lords of Texas frontier, who were losing hunting grounds to settlers. First county seat was Cora. Comanche has been county seat since July 18, 1859. Indians harassed settlers, stealing cattle and horses, and keeping farmers out of fields. Food from neighboring Bell County kept people here from starvation in 1861. By 1879 a stage line crossed county; the Texas Central Railroad came through in 1880; Fort Worth & Rio Grande Railroad in 1890. An oil boom occurred in 1918-1920. Agriculture has long been major industry (1966) 1936 Text: Created January 25, 1856. Organized May 17, 1856. Named for the Comanche Indians, nomads of the Plains; successful hunters, superb horsemen, and courageous warriors; the terror of Texas frontier settlers, who dispossessed them of their hunting grounds. County Seat Troy (changed to Cora), 1856; Comanche, since July 18, 1859.

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