Details for Site of Old Tascosa

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5359004861

Data

Marker Number 4861
Atlas Number 5359004861
Marker Title Site of Old Tascosa
Index Entry Old Tascosa, Site of
Address 105 S. Main St.
City Vega
County Oldham
UTM Zone 13
UTM Easting 733897
UTM Northing 3903392
Subject Codes cemetery; outlaws; settlements; ghost towns
Marker Year 1967
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Oldham County Courthouse grounds, NW corner
Private Property
Marker Condition
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text (23 miles N.E.) Contains one of the famous Boot Hill cemeteries of wild west days and was the gathering place for pleasure-seeking cowboys, gamblers and "bad men" of the Panhandle in the 1870s and '80s. Outlaws such as Billy the Kid and lawmen like Pat Garrett and Bat Masterson walked its streets. At first an Indian camping place at a crossing on the Canadian River, then Mexican trading point and pastoral settlement, Atascosa (Boggy Place) rapidly became an open-range trading center and capital of a cattle empire from 1876 to 1887. Romero Plaza and Howard and Rinehart store marked the boom in growth. Struggles between large ranch owners like Charles Goodnight and the "Little Men" of the plains were focused there. Became seat of Oldham County, 1880, and the legal capital of ten unorganized counties. Progress spelled doom for the town. The railroad in 1887 created other important towns and barbed wire fences ended the vital trading routes and great roundups. The open ranges and cattle trails like the famous Dodge City Trail were gone. When county seat was moved to Vega in 1915, few residents remained. Today "Old Tascosa" retains only the courthouse. (1967)

Location Map

View this record in full map (opens in new tab/window)