Details for Ozark Trails Association

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5437012570

Data

Marker Number 12570
Atlas Number 5437012570
Marker Title Ozark Trails Association
Index Entry Ozark Trails Association
Address
City Tulia
County Swisher
UTM Zone
UTM Easting
UTM Northing
Subject Codes roads
Marker Year 2001
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Maxwell and Broadway streets, Tulia
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Founded in 1913 to mark and promote an automobile route across several states, the Ozark Trails Association was the brainchild of William Hope Harvey of Arkansas, who wanted to improve roads to his Ozark mountain retreat. Thousands of members from Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas and Missouri attended annual meetings of the association, which also sought to promote tourism and educate the public to the need for better highways and roads. The southern route of the Ozark Trail extended across the Texas panhandle through Collingsworth, Childress, Hall, Briscoe, Swisher, Castro and Parmer counties. In 1920, members from these Texas counties and two New Mexico counties met and voted to follow the lead of the national group in placing reinforced concrete signposts along the route in their counties. James E. Swepston of Tulia led this effort and was elected president of the national association at its 1920 annual meeting. The concrete obelisk placed in Tulia (85 feet northwest) originally denoted the distance from Tulia to various towns on the trail. It retains its identity as a local landmark, and in 2000, the Texas Historical Commission designated the Ozark Trail marker as a State Archeological Landmark. The obelisk also is a reminder of the Ozark Trails Association (disbanded in 1924), one of many private highway associations to sponsor automobile routes before the federal government began numbering and marking such highways after World War I. (2001)

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