Details for Bethel Strawn

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5363000393

Data

Marker Number 393
Atlas Number 5363000393
Marker Title Bethel Strawn
Index Entry Strawn, Bethel
Address
City Strawn
County Palo Pinto
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 547210
UTM Northing 3601774
Subject Codes geology; Civil War; military topics
Marker Year 1965
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location In front of City Hall; 118 East Housley Street, Strawn
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text An 1858 settler and leading citizen of Palo Pinto County. Enlisted 1864 in Co. B. 1st Frontier District, Texas State Troops, in Maj. Wm. Quayle's command. Saw service mainly in keeping down Indian depredations and protecting settlements that were furnishing food, salt, hides, leather and other goods to aid the Confederate cause during the Civil War. In 1880, when Texas and Pacific Railroad built through western Palo Pinto County, a stop was named for Bethel Strawn, who owned land at that point. By 1885, Strawn settlement had grown into a town drawing off people from old Palo Pinto. During 20th century oil developments, the name Strawn is used for petroleum bearing formations of rock that underlie this county and other areas. Strawn minerals include coal, once mined locally. 36 Texas counties were named for men prominent in the Confederacy during the Civil War. One county, Val Verde, was named for a Civil War battlefield on which Texas troops were victorious during the New Mexico-Arizona campaign of 1861-1862. 41 Texas towns were named for men who figured in the Civil War. Strawn, however, is the one geological name commemorating a Texan in the Civil War. (1965)