Pinkston
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member QuarrellaDeVil
N 32° 05.724 W 096° 34.688
14S E 728550 N 3553577
Texas Historical Marker noting the now-vanished Pinkston community, which died after it was bypassed by the highway, and the railroad was abandoned. Located in a pullout on the south side of TX 22, about three miles from the Corsicana city limits.
Waymark Code: WMNA50
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 01/29/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
Views: 5

Marker Number: 15696

Marker Text:
The land on which the Pinkston community would be established was owned by Dr. Alexander Colvin Sloan, who was born in 1843 in Montgomery, Alabama. He served in the Civil War and around 1870 migrated to Navarro County. In 1887, he sold property to the St. Louis, Arkansas and Texas Railway Company, which intended to build a track from Corsicana to Hillsboro and completed a branch by 1888. By 1894, Dr. Sloan sold property to D.K. McCammon, who built a cotton gin, which further aided in developing the settlement then known as Sloan Spur. By 1895, the community had a post office. Soon, it was renamed for Lucian A. Pinkston, a locomotive engineer for the railroad and later a part owner of the settlement's cotton gin. At its peak, Pinkston had a blacksmith shop, a store and a population of approximately 75 residents. There were no educational institutions or churches on the townsite, but students attended nearby schools in the Little Briar, Fish Tank, Whites Chapel, Black Hills and Barry School Districts; the school buildings often also served as places of worship. Pinkston began to decline as some residents moved to the larger community of Corsicana. In 1932, a highway bypassed Pinkston, leading to business closures. In 1940, the rail line was abandoned, further weakening the community's economy. Depression, drought and low cotton prices also aided in the rural settlement's decline. By the 1980s, only three buildings were left in the area, all of which were being used as barns. Today, nothing remains of the historic Pinkston community. (2009) Marker is Property of the State of Texas


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Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log  
QuesterMark visited Pinkston 11/28/2015 QuesterMark visited it