Details for Los Ojuelos

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507016461

Data

Marker Number 16461
Atlas Number 5507016461
Marker Title Los Ojuelos
Index Entry Los Ojuelos
Address FM 649
City Mirando City vicinity
County Webb
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 500362
UTM Northing 3031068
Subject Codes water topics; cities and towns
Marker Year 2010
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Los Ojuelos community, 2 mi. S of Mirando City on FM 649, east side of the road.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text For thousands of years, Los Ojuelos (The Springs) were a source of the precious south Texas commodity of water. Eugenio Gutiérrez received a Spanish land grant in 1810 that included the springs, but attempts to settle here by Eugenio and his son, Isidro, were blocked by conflicts with Comanches. In 1850, a Texas Ranger outpost was set up under the leadership of John Salmon “Rip” Ford to regulate the trade road between Laredo and the port at Corpus Christi, and the Rangers’ presence enabled José María Guerra, a grandson of Eugenio Gutiérrez, to permanently settle at the site. During the 1860s, Guerra built several caliche structures, including a chapel and a small irrigation system, now among the best preserved Spanish-Mexican ranch architecture in the region. The springs drew travelers to the village from the 1870s until the 1940s. The indigenous peyote cactus, which had widespread ritualistic and medicinal use among American Indians, was the most lucrative crop for the settlers. In the 1920s, a Texas Ranger outpost near Los Ojuelos dealt with tequileros (liquor smugglers) crossing from Mexico. The discovery of oil greatly reduced the peyote trade due to overharvesting and clearing of peyote fields for drilling. Native Americans still purchase from licensed dealers every February peyote harvested from area ranches. The springs dried up following the development of Mirando City and oil and gas drilling, and the site was virtually abandoned in the 1930s. Oil and gas drilling continues to be an important economic activity in the Los Ojuelos area. (2010)

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