The Garza County Historical Museum is the property of Garza County. The goal of the Historical Museum is to interpret and preserve historical objects, data, and to create an interesting, friendly and educational place for the public to examine the past in order to prepare for the future. The last few years, the museum has been renovated with central heat/air, new carpeting, new roof, rewiring, new ceilings, and redecorated rooms. Second floor handicapped will be joined by exterior handicapped access and other exterior renovations this coming year.

HISTORICAL MUSEUM INFO:


119 North Ave. N
Post, Texas 79356

Open Tuesdays through Saturdays: 10 AM to 5 PM
806-495-2207


CURATOR:
Ms. Linda G. Puckett


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HISTORICAL BUILDING:

The Garza County Historical Museum was originally the Post Sanitarium. In 1964, it was declared a Texas Historical Landmark, in 1966, the Mason Memorial Building and in 1977 was put on the National Register of Historic Places.




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In 1911, plans for a Sanitarium, (the name today would be hospital, but in those days, you went to die in a hospital, and rested and recuperated at a sanitarium) were executed by Dr. A. R. Ponton and C. W. Post to care for the medical needs of Post's new citizens. Stone mason: "Scotty" Samson and James Napier, both Scotsmen were hired to build the structure along with many other buildings in the new town. The Colonial style was choses to represent a dominance within the community. The building, constructed of native stone had a second story veranda and a beautiful front porch adorned with four large white stone columns.

The Sanitarium opened for business in 1912, a model institution of its kind, noted as the "first hospital in this part of West Texas" (within a range of twenty-four counties) and the best equipped hospital this side of Fort Worth. Equipment included a laboratory, x-ray room, operating and sterilizing room. The 25 rooms each had its own private baths, central steam heat, electricity and electric call bells. There were two wards, male and female with adjoining baths plus private and professional consulting rooms.

Doctors on staff were: Drs. A. R. Ponton (Chief Surgeon) A. R. Surman, D. C. Williams, and G. G. Castleberry. The hospital also served as a nurses training school.

By 1917, WWI took its toll on the Post medical community as the doctors were called to serve their country. Inevitable with all the doctors in military service, the Post Sanitarium closed in 1918. Dr. Ponton, the only doctor left moved to Lubbock to start another hospital. Lubbock General - later to become Methodist, which is now the part of the Covenent Care.

When the doctors finally returned home, everything had changed so much, the facility had detoriated, staff had disappeared, the heating plant was out of date, plumming had gone wackey, other hospitals were in the area. Drs. Surman, Williams, and Castleberry formed a partnership and started their prartice in downtown Post. Castleberry moved to Lubbock eventually and Surman and Williams practiced medicine together for the balance of their careers. The former offices of the duo is now used by the Senior Citizens of Post.

Later the building, was purchased by Marshall Mason, who converted the building into the Colonial Apartments. The property was donated to Garza County in 1967 to be used as a museum by their children, Marshall Mason Jr. and Mrs. James Minor after their parents death.

 


PREHISTORIC FINDINGS:

There are 660 archeological sites in Garza County!

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Post, Texas


"New" Reptiles Are Found in Garza Clay

(From The Post Dispatch, Thursday, July 16, 1981)

Dr. Sankar Chatterjee, who has been digging up the fossils of "new" 180-million-year-old reptiles south of Post these last two summers, stopped in at The Dispatch office Tuesday morning to show a lot of pictures of his "Garza dig" which were made by Lil Conner.


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The Texas Tech paleontologist explains that the Postosuchus he found there (first remains of a new genus of this 20-foot-long reptile which walked on its hind legs to be found in the world) is a forerunner of the dinosaur.

Dr. Chatterjee said his research team found the fossils of three small Postosuchus last summer together with one adult Postosuchus.

He said they are finding fossils of complete skeletons of these reptiles along with fossils of many other lizards and reptiles.

Dr. Chatterjee said he believes he has found another new prehistoric creature, a much smaller lizard but will have a lot of laboratory work yet to do before determining exactly what he has found.

Dr. Chatterjee, who came to Texas Tech two years ago after 12 years with the Smithsonian Institute in

Washington, D.C., said the National Geographic Society has financed his Garza work for these past two summers and already has extended this funding for another two years.

wpeD.jpg (36060 bytes)The Dispatch understands that the site was first discovered some nine or ten years ago, but "the dig" was not undertaken until Texas Tech could get a qualified man to head the research effort.

Dr. Chatterjee is that man.The Dispatch first published a detailed story on the research effort August 21, 1980. It had been written by a Tech student and was given full coverage in this newspaper.

Dr. Chatterjee is assisted in his research effort by his wife, Sibani, and David Proctor, a Tech graduate student in geology, who accompanied him here Tuesday.

hey were on their way to the site for another day of digging. Dr. Chatterjee explained they start digging about 7 AM and dig until about 2, taking whatever they find back to the Texas Tech laboratory.

The paleontologist said that an estimated 180 million years ago, during the Triassic Age, there was a great river through this region and the prhistoric animals lived along the banks of the river.
Some 110 million years later, or 70,000 million years ago, this area was a sea, he added.
Dr. Chatterjee's dig is approximately 50 yards long and 10 yards wide.

According to the Dispatch's story last year, this large meat-eating reptile he has found has a rotary-joined ankle unlike the hinged ankle of dinosaurs, but this is their only basic difference.

The Postosuchus are a relatively new form of reptile discovered in Brazil, Argentina, East Africa, Switzerland and perhaps China. Fragments of this reptile were first reported in North America in 1979 in Wyoming, and the next year here in West Texas.

Unlike other rauisuchids found so far, however, these near Post were bipedal - they walked semi-erect on their hind legs not unlike the late Tyrannosaurus rex.

Where the team is digging - a formation known as the Dockum rocks - is one of only four late-Triassic paleontological sites in North America.

The other three formations are the Chinle rocks in Arizona, and New Mexico, the Newark group on the East Coast and the Chugwater rocks in Wyoming.

The Triassic was the crucial period of vertebrate evolution when reptiles past their evolutionary peak had evolved into various rather specialized lines, Dr. Chatterjee said.

Along these lines may have been the ancestors of crocodiles, dinosaurs, birds and mammals. A full understanding of West Texas' Dockum fauna will from a sounder basis for establishing this evolutionary succession, he said.


NATIVE AMERICANS IN GARZA COUNTY: (Click on the names below to expand information.)

EARLY EXPLORATION AND MISSIONARY EFFORTS:

Texas early exploration and missionary efforts dated from 1519 to 1690 and through 1793 was the mission settlements and Spanish dominion.

The Lipan Apache Indians held sway during the early mission period, before the mid-1700s the Lipans were driven South & Westward by the fierce Comanche, who at first occupied just the upper Panhandle of Texas. From then on, the Indians knew that (now) Garza County was "Comanche Country". It remained that way until Quanah Parker took the straggling remnants of his tribe to surrender at Fort Sill, Oklahoma Territory.

For a century and three quarters the Comanche harassed the Spaniards, their Pueblo neighbors in New Mexico, and terrorized the Texas frontier with numerous raids.

During the war Between the States and immediately following, the Comanches, now joined by their fierce kinsmen, the Kiowa, took captive many white women and children, killed large numbers of frontier people and drove the settlers back into Northern Texas.

Treaty followed treaty, between these Indians and the government, but there were constant uprisings by the Indians to break the truces until finally the US Army began a merciless campaign against all Indians found off their reservations. This campaign did not close until the resistance of the Comanche and allied tribes was broken in 1875.

The first white settlers came in the early 1870s when buffalo hunters were gradually replaced by cattlemen. The buffalo was one attraction that had made the region popular with the Indian. Their way of life was determined by abundance of horses and buffalo on the grass- covered plains. They subsided largely on vast herds of buffalo for meat, warm and heavy clothing, and covering for lodges.


GARZA ARROW POINTS:

The Garza point is a triangular light arrow point with a single basal notch. The edges of the blade are straight and sometimes serrated. The Garza shows beautiful flaking, but sometimes may only be chipped on one side.

Collectors have been finding Garza types for many years in West Texas. However, no name was known for these finely chipped arrow points until 1959 when the South Plains Archeological Society excavated a small site in Garza County, Texas. The Garza point got its name from thirteen triangular points, which had a centrally placed basal notch. They were excavated from a site about 16 miles south of Post, Texas. The actual naming of the Neo-American point is credited to Frank Runkles and Emmett Shedd who supervised the field work on this excavation.

The evidence from this site indicates that the Garza and triple-notched Harrell points are associated and found at the same levels, but it is very rare to find a Garza and a two-notch Harrell point from the same occupational stratum. It is believed the date for the Garza point is from 1000 to 1500 A.D.

A few collectors in this immediate area have found Garza points, but they must be considered very rare and unusual artifacts. These single-notched basal points have been found occasionally from El Paso to Clovis, New Mexico and back to Post, Texas. However, Garza County and the counties which are adjacent to it, produce the greatest abundance of these single-notched basal points.


TABA'NA YUAN'E:

A Traditional Indian Ritual: Held each year at Sunrise on March 22 to predict prospects for the year.

Indians used this ceremony to forecast food supply for the coming year. Pioneers in Garza county began the ceremony in 1906, recalling the Indian legend to predict the years success. Farmers apply the predictions to crops, ranchers to grass supply, business men to business success.

Records kept since that time show the predictions to be 92 percent accurate. Since 1973 "Chief" Frank Runkles, a longtime student of Indian lore, has conducted the sunrise ceremony.

Taba'na Yuan'e means "Sunrise Wind". An authentic dance used by Plains Indians in which the wind's direction at the exact moment of sunrise to determine the success of the coming year.

According to legend, the wind must be checked at sunrise on the day after the sun reaches the halfway point in its journey from south to north.

A east or northeast wind means: a "very good year". A north or northwest wind indicates an "average year". A west or southwest wind predicts a "poor year" and a south or southeast wind is "very bad year."

The predictions are determined by the direction of the smoke rising from a fire built in the center of the ceremonial circle. The "Chief" and his dancers perform a Four Winds Dance, with the singing of the tribal prayer honoring Mother Earth and to Wakantanka, the Great Spirit Above, seeking their blessings.


APACHE INDIANS:

The name Apache most likely came from the Zuni word apachu, meaning "enemy". The Apaches referred to themselves as Inde or Dine', meaning "the people" Generally, the Apaches are divided into Eastern and Western, with the Rio Grande serving as a dividing line. Two groups, the Lipans and the Mescaleros, lived partially or entirely within the confines of Texas. The Apaches went by numerous names. But only the names of Lipans and Mescaleros survived into the nineteenth century.

Apaches arrived in the Southwest between A.D. 1000 and 1400. They apparently migrated from the North along the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains, then spreading westward into New Mexico and Arizona. In time, pressure from the Comanches and other tribes pushed the Apaches farther south and west.

The Apaches were nomadic and lived almost completely off the buffalo. They dressed in buffalo skins and lived in tents made of tanned and greased hides, which they loaded onto dogs when they moved with the herds. They were among the first Indians to learn to ride horses, learning from the Pueblos. They turned their new equestrian skills to raiding for horses and supplies. The Spanish first contacted the Apaches in 1541.

From 1656 to 1675, Spanish settlers and Pueblo Indians of New Mexico suffered heavily from almost continuous Apache raids. Their aggressive behavior turned their neighbors into enemies, and a new, potentially powerful tribe, the Comanche, began pressuring the Apaches from the North. By 1700 the Apaches began migrating southwest as the Comanche, Wichita, and Tijas Indians began to occupy the dominant position on the South Plains. In addition, the Apaches had never adapted completely to a Plains culture. The attempt to improve their source of food was a major cause of their defeat by the Comanche.

During the Apache flight from the Comanche,, many groups moved westward. The Lipans and the Mescaleros, fled southward into Central Texas. There they collided with the Spanish. When the Spanish founded San Antonio in 1718, the Apache discovered a convenient accessible location at which to stage raids against their European enemies.

During the 1730s and 40s, the Apaches and Spaniards continued to wage war on each other. But on Aug. 19, 1749, four Apache chiefs with numerous followers buried a hatchet along with other instruments of war in a peace ceremony at San Antonio. The Apaches, decimated by Comanche raids, appeared willing to accept Christian conversion in exchange for protection by the Spaniards. The first formal mission for the Texas Apaches was established not at San Antonio, but in the jurisdiction of San Juan Bautista on the Rio Grande. Less that a year later, the neophytes became discontented, revolted, burned the mission buildings and deserted. The missionaries blamed the failure of that first Apache mission on the natural inconsistency of the tribe, as well as on their reluctance to live away from their homelands.

The Texans drew up their own treaty with the Lipan Apaches in 1838. It was an alliance that broke down in 1842, and more than half the Lipan joined the Mescalero.in Mexico.

In 1873, Col. Ronald S. Mackenzie led a force of 400 soldiers into Mexico to destroy the Lipan villages. His army killed or captured virtually the surviving Lipans. They were deported to the Mescalero Reservation in the Sacramento Mountains of New Mexico. In 1905 the rest of the Lipans in Mexico drifted onto the Mescalero Reservation. In 1970, about 1660 Indians were enrolled there.


COMANCHE INDIANS:

The Comanche, exceptional horsemen who dominated the Southern Plains, played a prominent role in Texas frontier history. Anthropological evidence indicates that they were originally a mountain tribe, a branch of the Northern Shoshones, who roamed the Great Basin region of the Western United States as crudely equipped hunters and gathers. Both cultural and linguistic similarities confirm the Comanche’s Shoshone origins. Some time during the late 17th century, the Comanche acquired horses, and that acquisition drastically altered their culture.

The life of the pedestrian tribe was revolutionized as they rapidly evolved into a mounted, well-equipped, and powerful people. Their new mobility allowed them to leave their mountain home. After they arrived on the Great Plains, the Comanches began a Southern migration that was encouraged by a combination of factors.

By moving south, they had greater access to mustangs. The warm climate and abundant buffalo were incentives for the Southern migration. Pressure from the Blackfoot and Crow Indians also encouraged their migration. A vast area of the South Plains, including much of the North, Central & West Texas, soon became Comanche country or Comancheria.

Only after their arrival on the Southern Plains did the tribe come to be known as Comanches, a name derived from the Ute word Komantcia, meaning "enemy" or, literally, "Anyone who wants to fight me all the time." Although the tribe came to be known historically as Comanches, they called themselves Nermernuk, or "The People".

The Comanche did not arrive on the Southern Plains as a unified body, but in numerous family groups or bands. The band structure of the Comanche society was not rigid, and bands joined together and broke apart, depending on the needs and goals of the members. As many as thirteen different Comanche bands were identified during this historical period, and most likely there were more. Five major bands played important roles in recorded Comanche history.

The southernmost band was called Peneteka, or "Honey Eaters". Their range extended from the Edwards Plateau to the headwaters of the central Texas rivers. Because of their location, the Penetekas played the most prominent role in Texas history.

North of Peneteka country was the habitat of the band called Nokoni, or "Those Who Turn Back". The Nokoni roamed from the Cross Timbers region of North Texas to the mountains of New Mexico.

Still farther North was the range of the Kotsotekas, or the "Buffalo Eaters". Their territory was what is now Western Oklahoma, where they often camped along the Canadian River.

The northernmost band was known as the Yamparikas, or "Yap Eaters", a name derived from that of an edible root. Their range extended north to the Arkansas River.

The fifth major band, known as Quahadis, or "Antelopes", roamed the high plains of the Llano Estacado.

The Comanches remained a nomadic people throughout their free existence. Their predominantly meat diet was supplemented with wild roots, fruit and nuts, or with produce obtained by trade with neighboring agricultural tribes.

Because of their trading skills, the Comanche controlled much of the commerce of the Southern Plains. They bartered buffalo products, horses, and captives for manufactured goods and foodstuffs.

The familiar plains-type tepees constructed of tanned buffalo hide, stretched over 16 to 18 lodge poles, provided portable shelter for the Comanches. Their clothing made of bison hide or buckskin, consisted of breech cloth, leggings and moccasins for men, and a fringed skirt, poncho-style blouse, leggings and moccasins for women, buffalo robes provided protection from the cold weather.

By the early 18th century, Comanche bands had migrated into what is now North Texas. As the Comanche moved south, they came into conflict with tribes already living on the South Plains, particularly the Apache. The Apaches, forced south by the Comanche became mortal enemies.

The first documented evidence of Comanche in Texas occurred in 1743, when a small band, a scouting party, appeared at the Spanish settlement of San Antonio seeking their enemies, the Lipan Apaches. No hostilities occurred, but it was obvious that the Comanche believed the Spanish and Apaches were allies. However, 15 years passed before the Spanish learned the true strength of the Comanche presence in Texas. In 1758 a force of some 2000 Comanche and allied tribes attacked a Spanish mission built for the Apaches on the San Saba River near present Menard. It was sacked and burned, and eight inhabitants, including two priests, were killed.

When Texans won their independence from Mexico in 1836, the Comanche and their allies were still in absolute control of the Texas Plains. In May 1836, they raided Fort Parker, killed several settlers and took five hostages, including 9 year old Cynthia Ann Parker. She lived with the Comanche for 24 years, Parker became the wife of Chief Peta Nocona and the mother of Quanah Parker, the last great Comanche chief.

Treaties did not greatly improve conditions, Comanches would not stay on the lands allotted them and continued to conduct destructive raids in Texas. The Comanche, who saw their way of life rapidly vanishing, turned to a young Quahadi medicine man for leadership.

White Eagle called his people together for a Sundance in the spring of 1874 and promised victory over the whites. Inspired by the visionary leader, an unsuccessful attack was launched. This not only destroyed the Indians’ faith in White Eagle, but it also brought retribution from the U.S. Government. In 1874 the Army began a relentless campaign that became known as the Red River War.

Once estimated to number in the thousands, the Comanche population, according to an 1875 reservation census, had been reduced to 1,597. The reservation period came to an end in 1901, when the Comanche reservation was broken up into allotments. Each man, woman and child would receive 160 acres of land, with additional acreage set aside for church, agency and school use. Lands not allotted to the Indians were thrown open to the public, and whites soon out numbered Indians on the former reservation. Many Comanche could not make it on their lands. Many left the site of the old reservation to seek employment.

In the 1960s the Comanche, began to work together to rebuild their society. They seceded from the Kiowa-Comanche-Apache intertribal business committee, which had served as their government since passage of the Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act of 1936. Although ties are maintained, the Comanche established their own tribal government. In 1995, the Comanche had an enrolled population of 9,722 scattered across the United States.


KIOWA INDIANS:

They were hunters living at the sources of the Yellowstone and Missouri rivers in present Montana. They hunted with bow and arrow, the dog was their only domesticated animal and drew a travois with poles attached to a harness.

According to legend a quarrel divided the tribe over hunting spoils. The winners moved southeastward with the Kiowa Apaches to live with friends, the Crow. Those left behind were never heard of again. The Crows taught them to ride horses and hunt buffalo - an animal they had never seen before.

The Kiowa had taken the first step to the acquisition of the Plains Culture by learning to ride and hunting the buffalo on horseback. Horses drew them southward. Gaining horses, slaves, and guns from the Spanish, the Kiowa evolved into completely nomadic lifestyle of predation, pillage, and warfare, until they became one of the most feared and hated of the Plains tribes. With the largest herds of horses, the Kioaws made a lasting peace with the Comanches in 1870 and traded horses and captives with them.

The Plains Indian culture area was the last to develop in North America, it was historic, beginning around 1620 with the introduction of the horse, the buffalo, the tepees, soldier societies, and the Sun Dance. there were some thirty or more tribes but only eleven were typical of the Plains Indian culture. Buffalo furnished almost everything they needed in material culture: food, clothing, tepees, tanned hides, fur robes, bedding, rawhide, leather for saddles, bridles, canteens, horn for spoons, and hooves for glue. The bow was shortened for use on horseback, and vessels had to be unbreakable. Thongs and ropes held things together and could be lashed to the saddle or the travois, which became larger to use with the horse, called the Sun Dog. Everything was adapted for hasty packing and quick movement, often a matter of life or death. A camp habitation could be moved in thirty minutes.

Jewelry used by both men and women were fashioned from Mexican silver coins. Men wore their hair in long braids wrapped in fur strips. Both men and women parted their hair in the middle. Women wore the hair braided or hanging loosely. Over the right ear, men wore a portion of the hair cut short, a tribal symbol. Also the men wore moccasins, of tribal cut with a flap that dragged the ground, usually heavily beaded. In warfare men wore a breast- plate of pipestone that protected the chest. Men wore breech clouts, and women wore a pull-on shift dress to below the knees.

The main weapons and implements used were the bow and arrow, spear, tomahawk (metal type with a pipe at one end became a trade item), shipped flint and obsidian knives, various flint saws, scraper punch or needle of flint or bone, hafted axes and a hafted wide scraper for cleaning hides, fist axes, and eyed bone needles often steel trade needles when available.

Social organization was simple. They had no clan system. The last great head chief was Little Bluff, who died in 1866. The women had no voice in tribal government.

The Kiowa were noted for their depredations in Old Mexico and Texas. One Kiowa attack in 1871 became known across the nation as the Warren Wagontrain Raid. There were greater depredations but the Wagontrain massacre was brought to the attention of President Ulysses S. Grant, the army and the country because Gen. William T. Sherman was inspecting the area at the time. It took a military conquest to place the Kiowa and their confederates on the reservations.

The Kiowa finally turned to assimilation and successfully made the transition to white culture, many in one generation. Independent but highly intelligent, the Kiowa wanted their children educated and taught the new language and new ways. Old Americans they were; not they are an important part of modern America. In 1989 United States census reported 4,800 Kiowa.




EARLY HISTORICAL TIMELINE: (Click on the dates below to expand information.)

1906:
July 31 C.W. Post purchased 47,749 acres from Slaughter Ranch
Sept. 4 C.W. Post purchased 27,175 acres from O.S. Ranch
1907:
March 23 Double U Co. chartered in Texas. Capital stock $50,000
May 19 Present site of Post City established
July 8 Garza County voters choose Post City for County Seat
Nov. 30 First meeting: Double U Co. Board of Acting Managers
Dec. 16 Town plat for Post City filed in Garza County
Dec. 50 houses were up, the Hotel under construction & a stone store building nearly completed.
1908
Jan. 8 Work begins on new Post-Gail road
Jan. 16 Nine stonemasons work on Cafe, Hotel & Company Store
Feb. 10 Town managers request cemetery land from C.W. Post
Feb. 28 C.W. Post gives cemetery land East of Post City
June 4 Post decides to erect stone gate at town's East entrance
July 7 Drought hurts crops on Experimental Farm East of Post City
Aug. 3 Twenty five Plains farms reported in cultivation
Sept. 1 Excavation begins on 1st new Reservoir
Sept. 28 First week of hack service between Post City and Snyder via Fluvanna
Oct. 16 Engineers stake out lines for city water system
Dec. 26 Grand Cowboy Ball draws 52 couples
1909:
Feb. 6 First 52 trees planted in Post City - landscape project
Feb. 11 Courthouse Square laid out by Engineering Dept.
March 28 First domino party held at Hotel
April 1 Town's women organize sewing circle and literary society
May 5 County voters approve $15,000 school bond to purchase site & construct building.
May First National Bank of Post City was established
July 27 Post City citizens organize two volunteer fire companies
Aug. 6 First annual Community BBQ
1910:
Jan. 19 First test bales run on new $12,000 Cotton Gin
Feb. 17 RR delivering freight to Denicon's Camp, 15 miles NW of Post City
March 10 Baptist Church building begun by church members
May First preliminary experiments in rainmaking
Aug. 12 Six masked men assaulted UU Co. official
Aug. 17 Work started on 2nd Reservoir
Sept. 5 First Post City POST sold
Oct. 1 RR lays track from edge of Caprock to Post City
Dec. 8 Post City receiving freight in carload lots at new rail siding
1911:
Jan. 4 First Saddle Shop opens
Jan. 14 First passenger train reached Post City
Feb. 22 UU agrees to passenger car line connecting rail lines @ Post & Fluvanna
June 3 C.W. issues first details on rainmaking using kites and dynamite
June 23 Day long rainmaking attempt ends with no rain
June 30 Rainmaking battle ends with precipitation in the area
Aug. 27 75 residences, 25 businesses interested in telephones
Sept. 27 C.W. Post purchases mechanical cotton picker for 1912 crop
Oct. 29 C.W. Post begins buying cattle for ranch operation
Nov. 10 C.W. Post, Dr. A.R. Ponton to construct Post Sanitarium
1912:
Feb. 9 UU Company moves into new office building
Oct. 20 C.W. Post seeks 100 Herefords to pasture on Llano Ranch
Oct. 21 Llano Ranch named headquarters: C.W. Post cattle operation
1913:
March 13 Work slows, all but 9 carpenters laid off
April 7 UU Company to farm 1,100 acres of land this year, 250 acres of cotton
May Postex Cotton Mill opened for operation
July 12 Local merchants organize monthly Trade Days
Aug. 5 Post city bypassed on "Post to Plains" Hwy. (US 87)
1914:
Feb. 19 UU Co. survey land for colonization into 1/4 sections
March 18 First "Missionaries" sent across Texas to sell Post City farms
May 9 Charles William Post dies suddenly after successful surgery
July 20 First farm purchasers arrive on the Plains
Aug. 2 Committee investigates whether to organize Post City government
Aug. 24 Fifty six farms sold to date
Oct. 28 Construction okayed for $10,000; First Nat'l Bank building
Nov. 11 Civic leaders postpone vote for City organization, census; 932