Details for Knickerbocker

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5451002963

Data

Marker Number 2963
Atlas Number 5451002963
Marker Title Knickerbocker
Index Entry Knickerbocker
Address FM 2335
City Knickerbocker
County Tom Green
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 345527
UTM Northing 3460700
Subject Codes cities and towns; settlements
Marker Year 1983
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location In front of community church on FM 2335, Knickerbocker
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Attracted by irrigable land and the available water supply in Dove Creek, farmers, sheepmen, and cattlemen came to this area in the 1870s. First to arrive were the Baze brothers, who dug an irrigation ditch in 1875 to grow melons and hay for nearby Fort Concho. Others soon followed, including cattleman Joseph Schmidt, cotton farmer S. D. Arthur, and the Ryan, Martinez, Jaques, Villareal, Soto, Byler, Atkins, Beck, Duncan, Foster, and Etheridge families. In 1877 New Yorkers Morgan and Lawrence Grinnell, Joseph Tweedy, and J. B. Reynolds drove their sheep into the valley. They named their ranch headquarters after Washington Irving's character Diedrich Knickerbocker. The Knickerbocker Post Office was established in 1881. In 1889 the town was moved to a location just south of the original site in order to tap a new water supply. By 1890 the settlement had stores, hotels, saloons, blacksmith shops, two churches, and two schools. As was typical of many West Texas rural areas, Knickerbocker declined with the advent of the automobile and improved road systems. Farmers left to find work in San Angelo (18 mi. NE). The settlers of Knickerbocker, however, left a rich heritage. Many of their descendants still live in the area. (1983)

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