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Moving Destinations in Texas
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Moving - Shafter Lake, Texas
If you are looking for a local moving
company to relocate you in or out of Shafter Lake, 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 Shafter
Lake, TX. It’s interesting
A Brief History of Shafter Lake, Texas
The town of Shafter Lake was on the
shores of Shafter Lake, four miles west of U.S. Highway
385 in north central Andrews County. It developed as part
of a turn-of-the-century boom in West Texas. J. F. Bustin,
a local entrepreneur, persuaded the firm of Pierce and
Powers to establish a village on the north shore of a
shallow alkali lake lying fifty feet below the elevation
of the surrounding countryside. Originally the town was
named Salt Lake. Later the town and lake were named after
William R. Shafter,qv an
army officer who had discovered the lake in 1875.
The most active supporter of Shafter
Lake was James T. Cumley, editor of the Shafter Lake Herald.
His editorials sparkled with praise for the community. He
spoke highly of the area's rich soil, the recreation
potential of the lake, and the kind words that visitors
had for the village. He sent thousands of copies of the
Herald across the country, particularly to the
Midwest.
Shafter Lake was platted in August 1907
and was a busy town by early September. Wagon trains of
freight could be seen leaving for Lubbock, while others
hauling lumber for new homes were pulling in from Midland.
Still others, some comprising several wagons hitched
together and pulled by sixteen mules, rested a day or two
before heading south. Within another couple of months, over
fifty homes dotted the townsite, a city school was ready to
open, and newcomers scurried about trying to get settled. A
post office was also established in 1907, and in 1908 a
community cemetery was begun on the opposite side of the
lake. In 1907 there was talk of the Llano Estacado, Mexico,
and Gulf Railroad coming through town. Surveyors came to
Shafter Lake, and the line was scheduled for completion in
1909, but only one mile was ever graded.
Shafter Lake reached the peak of its
growth in 1910, when it had a population of 500, a bank,
three churches, a rock schoolhouse, a general store, a
blacksmith's shop, and two hotels. In 1910 a feud developed
between Shafter Lake and the nearby town of Andrews as both
vied to become the Andrews County seat. An election was held
in June, marked by controversy over the efforts of both
towns to acquire eligible voters, and Shafter Lake lost by a
narrow margin, after which it rapidly declined. Two years
later most of the townspeople had moved to Andrews. By the
1980s only a dilapidated cemetery of twelve known graves and
one original building indicated the existence of a once
booming community. The descendants of the first postmaster,
Bert M. Irwin, still had a ranching operation at the old
townsite.
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