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Moving Destinations in Texas
Home :: Moving :: Texas TX
Moving - Lufkin, Texas
If you are looking for a local moving
company to relocate you in or out of Lukfin TX, we can
help you. Continental Relocation’s moving services
include packing, crating, moving, and storage if you need
some time to search for your new home.
To help familiarize you with this fine
neighborhood, please read our brief history about Lufkin,
TX. It’s interesting.
A Brief History of Lufkin, Texas
Lufkin is named after Railroad Engineer
E.P. Lufkin and Angelina County is named after an Indian
girl who became an enthusiastic convert of the Franciscan
missionaries. A bronze statue across from the Museum of
East Texas honors her.
If you've ever been behind an 18 wheeler on the Interstate
and have seen the word LUFKIN on the back of the trailer,
it is from our featured town. In a convoluted evolution,
the carriages that ran logs through the saw, became
carriages that extracted logs from the forest. During
WWII, the same company manufactured carriages to support
howitzers, then school buses and finally they made the
trailers that we see today.
Lufkin Industries also builds the
pumping units you see all around oil fields. The
Lufkin Industries historical relics room has one of these
pumping units that was struck by a Japanese torpedo off
the coast of California in 1942. It was damaged, but was
not destroyed. How's that for proof of durability?
W.C. Trout, one of Lufkin Industries pioneers, bought the
town it's first horse-drawn fire engine shortly after his
gasoline stove exploded and burned his house to cinders.
The Trout name is also seen at the Zoo. Walter Trout (one
of W.C. Trout's sons) named the zoo after his mother
Ellen. The zoo started in 1965 when a friend sent Walter
Trout a 500 lb. baby hippopotamus as a combination gag
gift/ zoo starter kit.
Lufkin's influence on the timber and oil industries in
Texas cannot be overstated. Lufkin along with nearby
Nacogdoches provide excellent bases for further
exploration of East Texas.
The above information on Lufkin Industries and the Trout
family was taken from Lufkin: From Sawdust to Oil by
Elaine Jackson, Gulf Publishing, 1982
In the early teens, Lukin's water source was a standpipe
in Cotton Square. The standpipe was drained in 1913 in the
hope of finding the body of one Frank Parsons who
disappeared after a violent explosion that destroyed a
good portion of the railroad station. The blast must've
been stronger than they thought. Frank's body turned up in
California three years later, with Frank in it.

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