Trenton Calaboose - Trenton, TX
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member QuarrellaDeVil
N 33° 25.843 W 096° 20.415
14S E 747284 N 3702202
The old Trenton Calaboose is now the centerpiece of Trenton Heritage Park, located across from city hall where Hamilton St becomes Holmes St at the end of downtown Trenton, TX. Its relocation here was part of a Eagle Scout Project.
Waymark Code: WM12V30
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 07/16/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member bluesnote
Views: 1

A medallion sign is affixed to the calaboose near its entrance, and it reads:

City of Trenton Calaboose
Built in The 1930's
by D.H. Glenn
To House Saturday Night Rebellers

Moved to Current Location
By Tyler Gray
With The
Trenton Fire Department
Eagle Scout Project

-----

After being vandalized, the Tiny Texas Jails website (see below) has returned to us, and the work upon which it's based is William E. Moore's "The Texas Calaboose and Other Forgotten Jails". It features nice color photographs and brief histories of many of Texas's surviving calabooses. Moore notes that while Trenton was quite active in 1875 -- there was actually settlement here in the 1850s -- its receiving a post office in 1881 contributed to its growth, as did the arrival of farm workers in the 1930s when cotton and onions contributed significantly to the local economy. He suggests that there was a jail in town at some point, but for whatever reason, this one was built in the 1930s. It was constructed of boards placed atop one another, with tin used for the walls and pyramidal roof. It occupies 120 square feet, with benches for prisoners to get some shut-eye, while the only ventilation is provided by two barred windows on each side elevation. Of course, it is locked, but it's not difficult to peek in through the windows and see that it's in pretty good condition. That may have something to do with the Eagle Project.

Moore relates that the calaboose fell victim to mischief early in its existence. Sometime during the 1930s or 1940s, pranksters attached the calaboose to a train box car at its original location by the railroad tracks at E Sanders and N Pearl Streets (and one can see a piece of its roof missing there). Of course, when the train pulled away, the calaboose was dragged and destroyed, but fortunately, it was rebuilt using as much of the original material as was possible. Its replacement was located elsewhere, of course, but it was returned to its original home during the Bicentennial celebrations of 1976.

Tyler Gray's LinkedIn profile indicates that he achieved the rank of Eagle Scout in July of 2017, so the calaboose was probably moved here sometime in 2016-2017, and maybe his Eagle Project involved some restoration work on the roof and interior. As of this posting, the nearest troop (42) is in Whitewright, seven miles away, but there's nothing to be found as to whether this was his troop.

As of this posting, the calaboose can be seen by the train tracks on both Google Maps and in Google Earth. When the camera trucks make their rounds again, you'll have to rewind on Google Maps.

Name of Eagle Scout: Tyler Gray

Project Completion Date: 01/01/2017

Troop Number: Unknown

Troop Location: Trenton or Whitewright, TX

Visit Instructions:
Provide a picture at the location of the Eagle Project and explain how the project has benefited you by it being placed here.
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