Details for Kirk

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5293002960

Data

Marker Number 2960
Atlas Number 5293002960
Marker Title Kirk
Index Entry Kirk
Address FM 339, 6 mi. S of Prairie Hill
City Kirk
County Limestone
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 715484
UTM Northing 3496945
Subject Codes cemetery; cities and towns; educational topics; ghost towns
Marker Year 1997
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location FM 339, 6 miles south of Prairie Hill
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Settlement began in this area in the 1870s-1880s. A community here, originally called Elm Grove, became known as Kirk when a post office established in 1887 was named for local merchant Jepitha N. Kirk. The first postmaster was William Hume McKnight. In 1884 G. W. and M. J. Swafford donated land for a school and cemetery. William M. and Annie J. Jacobs sold adjoining land in 1887 for the graveyard, a school, and for churches in Kirk. At its peak, Kirk was a thriving community of several hundred people and included homes, businesses, churches, and a post office. It also contained cotton gins, fraternal organizations and a telephone exchange. A two-story school containing six classrooms was built in 1911 at this site. In 1927 the community, led by school board president W.C. Curry and school principals Vernon Evans and J. B. Brown, Jr., built a large gymnasium/community hall (known locally as the Community House) just north of the school. Kirk's decline began with the great depression of the 1930s. In 1942 the last class graduated from Kirk High School, and the Kirk School consolidated with schools in Mart in 1952. Only a few homes and the cemetery remain in the area. (1997)

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