Details for Midkiff

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507013883

Data

Marker Number 13883
Atlas Number 5507013883
Marker Title Midkiff
Index Entry Midkiff
Address 1005 W FM 3095
City Midkiff
County Upton
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 230656
UTM Northing 3502983
Subject Codes cities and towns
Marker Year 2007
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location in front of Midkiff Post Office on FM 3095
Private Property
Marker Condition
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text The remote community of Midkiff is situated near the intersection of the Midland, Glasscock, Upton and Reagan county lines. Settlement dates from the 1880s, when railroad companies building tracks through the region offered inexpensive land to newcomers. John Rufus Midkiff was one of the first cattle and sheep ranchers to homestead, opening a general store in 1902 in his home in Midland County to serve local cowboys and ranchers. The store had a post office named Midkiff and the area's only telephone with wires strung 30 miles to Midland along a barbed wire fence. A school also operated briefly in nearby Dameron City, serving ranching families until about 1911. The Midkiff area remained sparsely settled until the discovery of oil here in 1950. An oil field camp developed into a town called Hadacol Corner with a motel, cafes and other businesses. Oil exploration in the nearby Spraberry Field continued, and in 1952 the town had hundreds of active wells. That year the town received a post office and revived the name of Midkiff, this time in Upton County. Since the 1950s, area children have ridden a bus 75 miles round trip to school in the county seat of Rankin. At its peak, the town had four churches, although St. Thomas Catholic Church is the only active congregation today. El Paso Natural Gas Company built a large processing plant with company housing east of Midkiff in the 1950s, but it later automated the plant amid safety concerns. In the 1960s, cotton growers built a gin later organized as a cooperative, and in the 1970s a Woman's Study Club began a public library. Today, the local economy relies on ranching, gas and oil, and farming. (2007)
ATLAS_NUM=5507013883

Location Map