Old Tascosa
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
N 35° 32.067 W 102° 15.986
13S E 747840 N 3935751
Beautiful country, but no one else is out here, beside the Boys Ranch in Old Tascosa. This Marker sits in the entry parking lot to Boys Ranch, at the intersection of Texas State Hwy 385 and State Rd 233. About 20 miles north of Vega.
Waymark Code: WMAET4
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 01/06/2011
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member QuesterMark
Views: 16

Marker Erected by: Texas Highway Department
Date Marker Erected: 1963
County of Marker: Oldham County
Location of Marker: US-385, roadside park, ½ mile N. of Canadian River, ¼ mile S. of Boys Ranch, 13 miles S. of Channing, 22 miles N. of Vega
If you want to read more of Tascosa: Tascosa

Note: As reported by condor1, this marker, with two others, has been moved from the rest area .7 miles south of here, to the entrance to Tascosa and the school, and old courthouse.

Marker Number: 3822

Marker Text:
Old Tascosa, cowboy capital of the plains, lay one-half mile northeast. In its brief span it became the center of the open-range world. Stomping ground for some of the West's most notorious bad men and focal point for cattle thieves and ranchmen.

Because of the easy crossing of the Canadian River at the site, it early became a meeting place where Indians and Mexican traders (Comancheros) exchanged contraband goods, including women and children. With the passing of the buffalo came the first permanent settlement, made by Mexican sheepherders in 1876. Charles Goodnight and Thomas S. Bugbee brought the first cattle to the free-grass empire the same year. Smaller ranchmen and nesters followed and the boom was on.

Hundreds of miles from the general line of settlement, Tascosa lured the lawless and the lawmen: Billy the Kids and Pat Garretts. To accommodate those who died with their boots on in growing gunfights, a cemetery was set aside in 1879. It was named for the famed "Boot Hill" in Dodge City, Kansas, to which Tascosa was tied by cattle and freight trail. Heaviest toll in a single shoot out occurred March 21, 1886, when three cowboys and a restaurant owner died in a five-minute duel. All went to Boot Hill.

The cattle trails, Tascosa's lifeblood, began to be pinched off with the coming of barbed wire, first commercial use of which was on the nearby Frying Pan Ranch in 1882. The noose was drawn still tighter when the vast XIT spread fenced its 3 million acres. By 1887 Tascosa was completely closed in. When the railroad bypassed it the same year, its fate was sealed.

By the time the Oldham County seat was moved to Vega in 1915, only 15 residents remained. Sole remnants of the old town today are Boot Hill and the stone courthouse. The site, however, is occupied by Cal Farley's Boys Ranch.



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Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log  
mr.volkswagen visited Old Tascosa 10/17/2023 mr.volkswagen visited it
The Snowdog visited Old Tascosa 05/20/2020 The Snowdog visited it
WalksfarTX visited Old Tascosa 04/09/2015 WalksfarTX visited it
Sissyta visited Old Tascosa 04/11/2014 Sissyta visited it
condor1 visited Old Tascosa 11/24/2013 condor1 visited it
JoelMart visited Old Tascosa 04/24/2013 JoelMart visited it
WTT-B2 visited Old Tascosa 11/16/2012 WTT-B2 visited it

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