OLDEST -- Town in America, Presidio TX, US 67/90 E of Marfa TX (61 mi. N of Presidio TX)
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Benchmark Blasterz
N 30° 18.620 W 104° 00.329
13R E 595621 N 3353592
One of two historic markers about 1/2 mile east of Marfa on the US 67/90, this marker preserves some of the history of Presidio TX, the oldest town in the US
Waymark Code: WMTYE9
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 01/23/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member jhuoni
Views: 8

Blasterz have no idea what this marker is doing here in MARFA, when it should be in PRESIDIO 61 miles south of here. Maybe TexDOT or the sponsoring organizations who paid for it thought it would be seen more people in Marfa (which it would) even though all the history on it is about Presidio -- the CITY, not the COUNTY.

¯\_(:/)_/¯


This marker is located with the Presidio County marker (appropriately placed near the city limit of Marfa, the seat of Presidio County) along the US67/90 east of Marfa.

The marker reads as follows:

"PRESIDIO - OLDEST TOWN IN AMERICA

At confluence of Concho and
Rio Grande Rivers

A settlement for over 10,000 years

Site of
FIRST RECORDED WAGON TRAIN
CROSSING INTO TEXAS
December 10, 1582
headed by Antonio de Espejo.

Marker placed jointly by
Texas Society
Children of the American Revolution
Texas Society
Daughters of the American Colonists.
1961"

From the Handbook of Texas online: (visit link)

"PRESIDIO, TEXAS. Presidio is on the Rio Grande, Farm Road 170, and State Highway 67 eighteen miles south of Shafter in southern Presidio County. The surrounding area is the oldest continuously cultivated area in the United States. Farmers have lived at Presidio since 1500 B.C. By 1400 A.D. the area Indians lived in small, close-together settlements, which the Spaniards later called pueblos (see PUEBLO).

The first Spaniards came to Presidio in 1535, when Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca, and his three companions stopped at the Indian pueblo, placed a cross on the mountain side, and called the village La Junta de las Cruces. On December 10, 1582, Antonio de Espejo and his company arrived at the site and called the pueblo San Juan Evangelista. By 1681 the area of Presidio was known as La Junta de los Ríos, or the Junction of the Rivers, for the Río Conchos and the Rio Grande join at the site. In 1683 Juan Sabeata, a Jumano Indian, reported having seen a fiery cross on the mountain at Presidio. The settlement then became known as La Navidad en Las Cruces.

About 1760 a penal colony and a military garrison of sixty men were established near Presidio. In 1830 the name of the area around Presidio was changed from La Junta de los Rios to Presidio del Norte. Anglo settlers came to Presidio in 1848 after the Mexican War. Among them was John Spencer, who operated a horse ranch on the United States side of the Rio Grande near Presidio. Ben Leaton and Milton Faver built private forts in the area.

In 1849 a Comanche raid almost destroyed Presidio, and in 1850 Indians drove off most of the cattle in town. A post office was established at Presidio in 1868, and the first public school was opened in 1887. Presidio pioneer Richard Daly was an early postmaster as well as a school teacher. He also apparently operated a store and was a business associate of Milton Favor. In 1930 the Kansas City, Mexico and Orient Railway reached Presidio.

The town incorporated in 1981. The population grew from ninety-six in 1925 to 1,671 in 1988, but the number of businesses declined from seventy in 1933 to twenty-two in 1988. At the end of 1988 Presidio experienced a population boom due in part to previously undocumented immigrants enrolled in the amnesty program. The population in 1990 was 3,072. That number had increased to 4,167 in 2000 with a reported 84 businesses.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Howard G. Applegate and C. Wayne Hanselka, La Junta de los Ríos del Norte y Conchos (Southwestern Studies 41 [El Paso: Texas Western Press, 1974]). John Ernest Gregg, History of Presidio County (M.A. thesis, University of Texas, 1933). Vertical Files, Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin.

Julia Cauble Smith
Type of documentation of superlative status: historic marker

Location of coordinates: at the historic marker

Web Site: [Web Link]

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QuesterMark wrote comment for OLDEST -- Town in America, Presidio TX, US 67/90 E of Marfa TX (61 mi. N of Presidio TX) 10/05/2022 QuesterMark wrote comment for it
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