Details for Old Mobeetie Trail

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5129003769

Data

Marker Number 3769
Atlas Number 5129003769
Marker Title Old Mobeetie Trail
Index Entry Old Mobeetie Trail
Address SH 273
City Hedley
County Donley
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 354919
UTM Northing 3879974
Subject Codes roads; cattle, cattle industry topics; Native Americans
Marker Year 1966
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location SH 273, NE side of the road, 10.1 mi. NE of FM 2471 (15.7 mi. NE of Hedley)
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text (to early town, about 40 mi. NE) A road older than recorded history; carved out in centuries of wintertime travel to the south, spring migration to the north, by millions of bison and by Indians who lived by hunting these large animals. Important in era of Texas Panhandle settlement. Used in 1873-1874, when first lifelong residents put dugout dwellings in the Panhandle and began to hunt buffalo to fill demand for hides and meat. Fort Elliott, established 1875 to regulate Indians resisting white settlement, soon had as a neighbor the town of Mobeetie, which for some years was the county seat for 28 counties and a place to go for medical aid, supplies, and access to stage travel. In 1876 Kansans came this way south for better hunting, calling this "Rath Trail," for their leader. Also, in 1876 cattlemen began to bring herds here. By 1880 this ancient path was a southern arm of Jones and Plummer Trail, over which cowboys moved longhorns to railroads and northern cattle markets. Beginning about 1887 the Mobeetie Trail was used by "nesters" taking up farm lands alongside the old great ranches. Those it served founded and expanded agricultural-commercial economy of the Panhandle. (1966)

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