Details for Community of Comyn-Theney

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5093001007

Data

Marker Number 1007
Atlas Number 5093001007
Marker Title Community of Comyn-Theney
Index Entry Comyn-Theney, Community of
Address
City Comyn
County Comanche
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 550139
UTM Northing 3548749
Subject Codes cities and towns
Marker Year 1969
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location FM 1496, Comyn (in front of Comyn Post Office).
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text During the rapid settlement of this area following the removal of the Indian threat, about 1875, a rural community developed here. Besides a few homes and a school, it had a trading post-store, operated by W. F. Matheney. His name, shortened to "Theney" for business purposes also came to designate the town. Among the pioneer families was that of B. F. Barnes, at nearby Jones Crossing, 1876. His great-grandson Ben Barnes, Lt. Gov. of Texas, was reared in Comyn-Theney. During 1881 the Texas Central Railroad was built through here and a depot established. M. T. Comyn, a railroad official, succeeded in having the town and depot named for him, but the school remained Theney. Soon the settlement could boast several general stores, a post office, drug store, blacksmith shop, lumber yard, cotton gin, cafe, barber shop, and a hall for the Woodmen of the World. In 1918, when Humble Pipeline Company began building a tank farm here to store oil from new West Texas fields, a tent city of several hundred sprang up. But when construction ceased in 1919, the townspeople moved away. Theney Consolidated School, formed in 1924, soon built a new plant and became an outstanding high school. Declining attendance caused it to close, 1952. (1969)

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