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Moving Destinations in Texas
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Moving - Washburn, Texas
If you are looking for a local moving
company to relocate you in or out of Washburn, TX, we can
help you. Movers USA’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
Washburn, TX. It’s interesting
A Brief History of Washburn, Texas
Washburn, on U.S. Highway 287 in the
northwest corner of Armstrong County, was part of the JA
Ranchqv holdings from
1876 until the ranch was divided in 1887. In August of
that year Robert E. Montgomery, who owned section
ninety-eight, promoted a townsite at what was then the
terminus of the Fort Worth and Denver City Railway. He
named it after D. W. Washburn, an official of the railroad
and an old friend of his father-in-law, Grenville Dodge,
then president of the Union Pacific line. The Denver Road
drilled two water wells and erected a double pump station,
a coal chute, a section house, a depot, and stock pens. In
1888 a line was built to Panhandle, in Carson County, to
connect with the Southern Kansas Railway. Washburn thus
boomed with tents, dugouts, and board shacks almost
overnight. It became a base of operations for settlers,
ranchers, and neighboring towns. A post office was
established in March 1888 with postmaster James Logue, who
also served as justice of the peace, as postmaster. In
1889 a combination school and church building was erected.
By 1890 the town had a newspaper, the Armstrong County
Record, three hotels, and a building supply house.
That year in a close, contested election, Washburn lost
its position as county seat to Claude. Businesses failed,
and people left. The failure to complete other railroad
projects, the abandonment of the tap line, and the
emergence of Amarillo caused a further decline.
Nevertheless, Washburn's community spirit enabled it to
survive as a rural town. Telephone service was extended
from Amarillo in 1896. A Methodist church was built in
1907, and the following year James Logue established a
bank, which in 1911 merged with the one at Claude.
Sometime before 1920 a community club was organized for
the purpose of modernizing the school facilities,
improving education, and sponsoring cultural events. A
Baptist mission was established in Washburn in 1963.
Throughout the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, Washburn had a
population estimated at twenty-five. It rose to an
estimated 100 in 1964. From 1974 to the 1980s the
population was estimated at seventy. In 1984 the town had
a hotel, a grain elevator, and one business. Its post
office closed in 1956. Some of its residents commute to
Amarillo, twenty miles west. In 1990 the population of
Washburn was 104.
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