My father, Walter James “Jim” Stephenson talked of Espuela and that he used to go there when he was young. It had a school at one point. When I was young, my father would drive by the location sometimes and talk about the town. I was very young and don’t recall specifically what he said. History has been lost.
http://www.texasescapes.com/TexasTowns/Espuela-Texas.htm
ESPUELA, TEXAS Texas Ghost Town Book
Your Hotel Here & Save |
Espuela
Historical Marker |
History on a Pinhead |
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Espuela
Cemetery |
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Photo courtesy Barclay Gibson, July 2009 |
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Headstone |
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Espuela
Historical Marker text |
Espuela Historical Marker Text In 1870, J. H. Parrish built a dugout on the west
bank of Duck Creek a half-mile southeast of this site. He
farmed and established a small store serving travelers and,
later, cattlemen and buffalo hunters. As the last of the
Native American tribes left this area in 1876, commercial
buffalo hunters moved into the region. They left tens of
thousands of buffalo carcasses in their wake. From 1879 to
1884, this area was free range land for 30 cattle outfits. The
Espuela Land & Cattle Company purchased most of the free
lands and 20 sections of public domain territory from the
state, fencing 569,120 acres. The company purchased most of
the free range cattle, and located their headquarters about
two miles west of what became the Espuela townsite. |