Commerce, TX - Population 8078
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member QuarrellaDeVil
N 33° 13.719 W 095° 52.465
15S E 232133 N 3680319
Commerce, TX, population 8078 as of this posting. This sign is located on the north side of TX 11, at the southeastern city limit.
Waymark Code: WMNM9W
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 04/02/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member monkeys4ever
Views: 1

The Handbook of Texas Online provides some background. Note that East Texas State University has been Texas A&M University – Commerce since 1996. (visit link)

Commerce is at the juncture of State Highways 50, 11, 24, and 224, fifteen miles from Greenville in northeastern Hunt County. It owes its origins to William Jernigin, a pioneer merchant in partnership with Josiah Hart Jackson in nearby Cow Hill, who in 1872 opened a mercantile store on the site of the northwest corner of the present town square to take advantage of a new trade route that developed with the building of a new bridge on the South Sulphur River. The community grew up around Jernigin's store and apparently received its name on one of Jernigin's business trips to Jefferson. Jernigin had his merchandise sent to "commerce," since his small community did not have a name. In 1885, the year of incorporation, Commerce had twelve businesses in addition to a hotel and livery stable, a wood shop and wagon factory, and a steam mill and gin, as well as a church and school. In 1887 the St. Louis Southwestern Railway (the Cotton Belt) connected Commerce with Texarkana, Sherman, and Fort Worth. During the 1890s Commerce gained additional rail outlets to Ennis and Paris with the arrival of the Texas Midland Railroad. Commerce has been a college town since 1894, when William L. Mayo moved his East Texas Normal College from Cooper to Commerce to benefit from the rail connections and to collect a $1,000 bonus offered by the community.

By 1910 the population of Commerce had risen to 2,818, and the town had a flour mill and cottonseed oil mill, four cotton gins, a roundhouse, rail yards and machine shops, and four banks; East Texas Normal College enrolled 900 students. The population continued to grow until the 1950s, even though growth was limited during and after 1930. In the early 1950s the roundhouse was abandoned, and the machine shops were moved to Tyler. In 1956 passenger service to Commerce was discontinued. Also during this period the many cotton gins of Commerce began to close; the last one shut down in 1978. The population fell from 5,889 in 1950 to 5,789 in 1960. The college became part of the state college system in 1917 and began to grow rapidly, as the "baby boom" generation entered college. East Texas State College, which became a university in 1965, began to replace cotton and the railroads as the basis of the economy. In addition, the Commerce Industrial Development Association, formed in 1956, began to attract manufacturers. The population of Commerce was 9,534 in 1970, 8,136 in 1980, 6,825 in 1990, and 7,669 in 2000. The decline in enrollment at East Texas State University, from nearly 10,000 students in 1975 to 7,135 in 1984, ended in the late 1980s. Manufacturers in Commerce include United States Brass and Montgomery Controls, Sherwood Medical, Manatee Homes, and American Wood. Commerce is the second largest town in Hunt County.
Address: TX 11, southeastern city limit

Visit Instructions:
At the discretion of the Waymarker.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Population Signs
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
There are no logs for this waymark yet.