FIRST -- Water Well in Sonora, Sonora TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 30° 34.329 W 100° 38.699
14R E 342252 N 3383338
A large Live Oak tree on the northwest corner of the Sutton County courthouse grounds marks the location of the first water well in Sonora
Waymark Code: WMPPN2
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 10/02/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Zork V
Views: 2

In the late 1880s, the ranchers who lived in Sutton County had to go 5 miles for water. All that changed in 1899 when Charlie Adams, founder of Sonoroa, drilled the first water well in town and gavce away town lots to anyone who would move. A windmill operated a pump that brought water from the Edwards aquifer into the cistern was easily accessible by Sonora's residents.

That natural gathering place seemed like a great idea for the location the courthouse, and so the windmill and waterworks gave the town. The location of its courthouse square. Although the windmill and associated infrastructure was now been removed ans relocated (to the top of the hill to the south), this Live Oak tree remains, a shade-giving landmark of the old waterworks.

The state Historic marker nearby reads as follows:

SONORA TOWN WELL

Pioneers seeking grazing land in arid Sutton County needed a reliable source of water. In 1887 Sonora's closest well, one of five in the county, was three miles away. Using a horse-driven drill, Charlie Adams sank the town's first well in 1889 at this site, which became the courthouse square. A windmill pumped the water to a storage tank on the surface. In 1893 another well was drilled nearby, and in 1895 T.D. Newell bought and removed the original waterworks. This large live oak tree stood at the southwest corner of the waterworks lot. (1977)"

More on the development of Sonora can be found here: (visit link)

"SONORA, TEXAS. Sonora, the county seat of Sutton County, is on Interstate Highway 10 sixty-five miles south of San Angelo and ninety miles north of Del Rio in the north central portion of the county. About 1885 Charles G. (Charlie) Adams, a rancher and merchant from Fort McKavett, settled on four sections of land two miles north of Winkler's Well (later Wentworth). He named the site Sonora, after a family servant from Sonora, Mexico, in 1887 and drilled a well in 1889, the year the community received a post office. Adams offered free lots in his town, which in 1890 was selected as the county seat. The community comprised eighteen houses, three stores, two livery stables, two hotels, a combined schoolhouse and Masonic lodge, and fourteen tents. The weekly Devil's River News, in 1990 Sutton County's oldest continuously operating business, began publication in 1890 under the direction of Mike Murphy. By 1892 Sonora had 700 inhabitants, two saloons, a grain and flour mill, a restaurant, three physicians, and at least one church; it was connected to San Antonio by a mail stage. R. W. Callahan, who owned much of the city property, donated land for the courthouse, which was completed in 1893. Most of the area residents were ranchers. In 1900 a number of merchants led by E. F. Vander Stucken formed the First National Bank of Sonora. On September 12, 1902, a fire wiped out nearly half the town's businesses. Proprietors who could afford to rebuild did so with native stone. A new school building was completed in 1904. In the early days supplies were freighted from San Angelo and Fort McKavett by wagons, a round trip that took from six to fifteen days. In 1908 the Kansas City, Mexico and Orient Railway was awarded a contract to lay track from San Angelo to Del Rio with a stop in Sonora. Work began in 1909, but financial problems retarded progress. Eventually, in 1928, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe acquired the Orient line and began construction on the San Angelo-to-Sonora portion of the original proposed route. On May 13, 1930, after a wait of some twenty-three years, the first train rolled into Sonora.

From a population of 738 in 1904, the town grew to 1,009 in 1925 and nearly 1,800 by the end of the decade. Between 1910 and 1920 several churches were constructed, including Baptist, Episcopal, and Methodist. In 1914 the First National Bank reported capital holdings of $100,000, and a second newspaper, C. R. Meyers's New Era, began publication. Sonora was incorporated in 1917. Above all else, prosperity continued to depend on livestock and livestock products. With the price of wool and mohair steadily rising throughout the teens, in 1916 Sonora moved to ensure the industry's continued health by using a $15,000 state grant to establish, in tandem with Texas A&M, a Texas Agricultural Experiment Station on five sections of land outside the city limit. This project is dedicated to researching livestock diseases and methods to improve production. When the Great Depression caused the price of wool to drop by more than half, local sheep and goat raisers organized the Wool and Mohair Cooperative Marketing Association, later known as the Sonora Wool and Mohair Company. The cooperative sold 2,738,600 pounds of wool in its first year, and as time went on it helped stabilize commodity prices. The Sonora Wool and Mohair Company continued to handle most of the region's production into 1990; in 1964 it marketed four million pounds of wool and mohair at a return of $3 million. It sponsors the annual Sonora Wool and Mohair show, where the National 4-H Wool Judging Contest has been held since 1938 (see WOOL AND MOHAIR INDUSTRY).

The population of Sonora remained steady in the 1920s at about 1,900, and the number of businesses, after declining from fifty-five to forty-three between 1931 and 1933, held firm for the rest of the decade. Federally sponsored programs, largely administered by the Work Projects Administration, enabled Sonora to construct a combination fire station and city hall (the first WPA project in that part of Texas), and to make improvements in the municipal waterworks and light plant. Residents voted to place water, waste disposal, and utilities under municipal control. This arrangement, one of the few of its type in Texas, was still maintained in 1990. In addition, the city was able to complete the L. W. Elliot School in 1936. The prosperity that followed World War II stimulated another wave of development. The first city hospital was constructed in 1955, largely with a gift from the estate of community leader Roy Hudspeth. The first adequate airport, Joe Berger Field, was completed in 1957. In 1959 the city council commissioned plans for a series of flood-control dams; thirteen were constructed on the Devil's River Draw and Lowrey Draw by March 1961. By that time Sonora had a population of 2,633. During the 1970s oil and gas exploration peaked in the area. In 1977 an estimated 5,000 to 6,000 people lived in Sonora. But that year the boom ended, and the Santa Fe Railroad received permission to close its Sonora terminal. In 1984 the population was 4,500; 52 percent were Mexican American. The schools were integrated in 1970. In 1990 the population had fallen to 2,751. In 2000 the community contained 2,924 inhabitants and 222 businesses.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Devil's River News, 75th Anniversary Ed., August 19, 1965. San Angelo Standard Times, January 27, 1974, May 14, 1978. Sutton County Historical Society, Sutton County (Sonora, Texas, 1979)."
FIRST - Classification Variable: Item or Event

Date of FIRST: 01/01/1889

More Information - Web URL: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:

As a suggestion for your visit log, please make every effort to supply a brief-to-detailed note about your experience at the Waymark. If possible also include an image that was taken when you visited the Waymark. Images can be of yourself, a personal Waymarking signature item or just one of general interest that would be of value to others. Sharing your experience helps promote Waymarking and provides a dynamic history of your adventures.

Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest First of its Kind
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
Benchmark Blasterz visited FIRST -- Water Well in Sonora, Sonora TX 07/23/2015 Benchmark Blasterz visited it