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JACK COUNTY. Jack County (C-15), in north
central Texas, is bordered by Clay, Archer, and Montague
counties to the north, Young County to the west, Palo Pinto and
Parker counties to the south, and Wise County to the east.
Jacksboro, the county seat and the largest town in the county,
is sixty miles southeast of Wichita Falls and seventy miles
northwest of Fort Worth. The county's center is at 98°10' west
longitude and 33°12' north latitude. Other communities in the
county include Bryson, Jermyn, Perrin, Antelope, Wizard Wells,
Post Oak, Bartons Chapel, Cundiff, Gibtown, Joplin, Newport
(also in Clay County), Truce, and Vineyard. Jack County is
situated in the North Central Prairies region. The land is
undulating to hilly, with light-colored, loamy soils over very
deep reddish clayey subsoils, shale, and sandstone. The county's
920 square miles is forested mainly by mesquite, live oak,
blackjack oak, and post oak, with pecan, elm, walnut, and
cottonwood trees along the waterways. The altitude increases
from east to west and ranges from 800 feet to 1,350 feet. The
West Fork of the Trinity River cuts across Jack County
diagonally from northwest to southeast and provides the main
drainage for the county. Among other creeks are East Rock,
Howard, Lost, Crooked, the North Fork of Crooked, Little
Cleveland, the West Fork of Keechi, Two Bush, and Henderson.
Lake Bridgeport and Lake Jacksboro are in the county. Mineral
resources include petroleum, natural gas, and stone. The climate
is subtropical-subhumid, generally mild and dry. Temperatures in
January range from an average low of 31° F to an average high of
57° and in July from 73° to 97°. The average rainfall is about
thirty inches a year, and the growing season extends for 218
days.
Before white settlement Jack County was a
borderland between the Caddo Indians to the east and the
Comanches to the west. The first Europeans to visit the area may
have been Spaniards under Francisco Vásquez de Coronado in the
sixteenth century, but they made no permanent settlements. Jack
County was included in the Texan Emigration and Land Company,
more commonly known as the Peters colony. Settlers began
arriving in the future county by 1855, and by 1856 the first
settlement, Keechi, was established. Early settlers entering
Jack County came mainly from the middle South states, primarily
Alabama, North Carolina, Arkansas, Missouri, and Kentucky, many
by way of Smith County or other parts of Texas.
The Texas legislature approved the
establishment of the county on August 27, 1856, and named it for
William H. and Patrick C. Jack, participants in the Texas
Revolution. It is the only county with that name in the United
States. The Butterfield Overland Mail crossed the county. Fort
Richardson, on Lost Creek near the site of present-day
Jacksboro, was established by the United States Army in 1867 and
completed in 1869. It was the most northern of the Texas
frontier forts built to protect pioneers against Indian raids
and was abandoned in 1878. Mesquiteville was designated county
seat; the town was later renamed Jacksboro.
Because of the county's position on the
frontier and its relative isolation, a plantation economy never
developed; on the eve of the Civil War only thirty-seven slaves
lived in the county. Though the earliest newspaper in the
county, the Whiteman (1860), owned and operated by Harris A.
Hamner, advocated the Southern cause, county residents voted 76
to 14 against secession in February 1861. The Jack County area
was untouched by combat, but the removal of federal troops from
the frontier had dire consequences for the populace. Without an
army presence, Indian raids became frequent and numerous
residents were forced to flee eastward. The 1860 census counted
1,000 people in Jack County, but by 1870 the population had
dwindled to 694. Though federal forces returned to the area
after the end of the war, Indian raids on the new settlers
continued. After the most famous one, the Warren Wagontrain Raid
of May 18, 1871, in neighboring Young County, chiefs Satanta and
Big Tree were taken to Jacksboro for trial and sentenced to be
executed on September 1, 1871. The sentence was commuted to life
imprisonment for fear of further Indian uprising.
By the mid-1870s the threat of Indian
attack subsided, and during the later half of the decade the
county's population rapidly increased. By 1880 the number of
residents was 6,629, more than ten times what it had been only a
decade before, and by 1890 the population had grown to 9,740.
The Chicago, Rock Island and Texas Railway, which reached
Jacksboro on August 24, 1898, brought additional growth and
provided important access to markets outside the county.
Cattle ranching dominated the county's
economy during its early years. The first cattle drive north
from Jack County was made in 1866, and by 1890 there were 68,756
cattle in the county. After large-scale farming was introduced
in the late 1870s, the number of farms grew rapidly, increasing
from 945 in 1880 to 1,888 in 1910. The dominant crop in the
county's early years was corn, with 115,761 bushels harvested in
1880 and 663,490 bushels in 1900. During the late 1880s and
1890s oats and wheat were introduced, and by 1920 Jack County
was a leading producer of grains; in that year county farmers
grew 498,250 bushels of oats, 249,643 bushels of corn, and
351,819 bushels of wheat. Cotton was also grown in considerable
quantities after 1890, and by the early 1920s the annual yield
was 6,000 bales. Despite the growth of crop farming, livestock
raising continued to play an important role in the county's
economic life. Revenue from cattle remained an important source
of income for many farmers and ranchers, and receipts from
poultry and egg production grew throughout the early decades of
the twentieth century.
Oil, discovered near Bryson in 1923, set
off a small boom, as numerous oilfield workers and others
attracted by the prospects of easy money moved in. Nevertheless
the population of the county as a whole declined steadily after
1915, largely as the result of a series of agricultural busts.
The population, which reached a peak of 11,817 in 1910, fell to
9,863 in 1920 and 9,046 in 1930. Income from oil helped some
cash-poor farmers to settle debts and survive the lean years of
the Great Depression, but many others were forced to sell their
farms and equipment and try their hands at something else. The
economy began to recover during World War II, but subsequently
the population declined slowly. Between 1940 and 1990 the number
of residents fell from 10,206 to 6,981. In the latter year
Mexican Americans (3.3 percent) and African Americans (.7
percent) formed the largest minority groups. The largest
communities were Jacksboro (3,350) and Bryson (520). In the
early 1990s cow and calf operations provided the largest source
of agricultural receipts; the leading crop was wheat. The sale
of firewood also provided important income. Leading industries
included petroleum production and oil-well servicing. Oil
production steadily increased to 1,800,000 barrels annually in
the early 1990s. Between 1923 and 1990, 187,527,154 barrels were
produced.
Like most of the state, Jack County has
generally supported the Democratic party in presidential
elections. But after World War II Republicans made gains,
especially in presidential elections. Republican gubernatorial
and senatorial candidates also fared well in the latter
twentieth century, though Democrats continued to occupy many
local offices. Educational facilities in 1990 included a public
library in Jacksboro and three public school
districts-Jacksboro, Bryson, and Perrin. The educational level
of Jack County residents remained relatively constant from 1950
to 1990. In 1950, 29 percent of those attending high school or
college received a diploma; by 1960 this percentage had risen to
30 percent. In 1970, 38 percent of the residents of the county
had a high school diploma, but the figure had dropped to 30
percent by 1980 and remained stable afterward. Recreational
facilities in the county include Fort Richardson State
Historical Park, Lake Jacksboro, and Lake Bridgeport. Deer
hunting is an important seasonal attraction. Special events
include the Jack County Fair in February, the Snake Safari in
March, and the Summerfest Weekend in June.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Thomas F. Horton, History of
Jack County (Jacksboro, Texas: Gazette Print, 193-?). Ida
Lasater Huckabay, Ninety-Four Years in Jack County (Austin:
Steck, 1949; centennial ed., Waco: Texian Press, 1974). Jack
County Scrapbook, Barker Texas History Center, University of
Texas at Austin. Gilbert Webb, comp., Four Score Years in Jack
County, 1860-1940 (Jacksboro, Texas, 1940).
Handbook
of Texas Online,
sub verbo "JACK COUNTY,"
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/JJ/hcj1.html
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