Details for The Ozark Trail at Tampico

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507013818

Data

Marker Number 13818
Atlas Number 5507013818
Marker Title The Ozark Trail at Tampico
Index Entry Ozark Trail, The, at Tampico
Address
City Turkey
County Hall
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 336687
UTM Northing 3816053
Subject Codes automobile topics; roads
Marker Year 2005
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 9.3 mi. NE off SH 86 near FM 657
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text In 1913, William Hope "Coin" Harvey, who operated a resort in the Ozark Mountains of Arkansas, founded the Ozark Trail Association as a private highway organization. Several Texas and New Mexico counties joined the effort, and the line went diagonally from St. Louis, Missouri to Santa Fe, New Mexico. As part of Harvey's plan, stops along the way featured white obelisks denoting, in the official Ozark Trail green lettering, town names, as well as directions and distances to other towns. The central Ozark route passed across Wellington, Texas, and a second southern route was built through the communities of Childress, Estelline, Tampico, Turkey, Quitaque, Silverton, Tulia, Nazareth and Dimmitt. J.E. Swepston of Tulia, elected Ozark Trail Association president in 1920, was instrumental in having the striking road markers placed in this area. At the time, Hall County had more than 1,000 farms and ranches, and ranchland continued to be divided into farms as more settlers arrived in the area. In 1924, however, with a government initiative to enact a national road-numbering system, the Ozark Trails and other private highways were abandoned or absorbed into the national road system. Adjacent to the Tampico marker was a service station and general store. In 1929, the Tampico oilfield started a short-lived boom in the community, which supported a school. After the oil supply proved minimal, the school consolidated into the Turkey school district. The obelisk, designated a State Archeological Landmark in 1999, remains as a tie to both the early efforts to increase automotive travel and to the community of Tampico. (2006)

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