Delta County
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About this ebook
Judy Falls
Author Judy Falls is president of the Delta County Public Library and a teacher at Cooper High School. Along with author Sylvia Wood, a member of the Delta County Historical Society and retired library director, the authors offer readers a retrospective look at Delta County�s past through more than 200 rare and historic images.
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Delta County - Judy Falls
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INTRODUCTION
Early settlers crisscrossed the land now known as Delta County as early as the 1820s. They found prairies and thickets, and also buffaloes, turkeys, prairie chickens, raccoons, possums, wolves, bears, polecats, deer, squirrels, and cottontail rabbits. The area began to see large numbers of settlers by the 1840s, when extended families from the South established homes in the area.
The Civil War brought disagreements between different groups and families. When Sam Houston called for a statewide vote on secession, Hopkins County voted to leave the Union, while Lamar County voted to stay. As tensions grew during the Civil War, 15 men in Hunt, Lamar, and Hopkins Counties were hanged. The Sons of Washington, a pro-South vigilante group, hanged Henry, Thomas, and James Howard and Jonathan and James E. Hemby on the banks of the South Sulphur River near Charleston, Texas. Other people left Delta County to avoid persecution by the Sons of Washington.
During Reconstruction, many Texas counties petitioned for border realignment. As a result of this request, Delta County was created in 1870 from parts of Hopkins and Lamar Counties, bounded by the North and South Sulphur Rivers. The first commissioners, James Hamilton, John P. Boyd, Joel Blackwell, Thomas Lane, and J. W. Iglehart, were delegated the task of creating precincts. The area known as Yates Prairie was renamed for state senator L. W. Cooper and was designated the county seat with the final organization of the county on October 6, 1870. The first commissioner’s court met under a live oak tree around a wagon in February 1871. One of the first orders of business was the construction of the initial jail, a small one-room wooden structure frequently set on fire by prisoners.
Settlers to the area primarily came from the Old South Cotton Belt.
They found the dark, fertile, and easily cultivated Houston-Wilson soils of the region to be perfectly suited for cotton production. Along the northwest corner of the county, there is a ledge of limestone that appears along the surface of the land, and gray land lies on the north side of the South Sulphur. But the majority of the county has black, waxy, thick, and rich soil—the gumbo soil that a public-spirited newspaperman described as so fertile that when tickled with a hoe, it laughs back with a bounteous harvest.
Along with being productive, the land was reasonably priced. By the 1890s, advertised land prices were averaging $3 an acre. Cotton, grains, and livestock thrived for the yeoman farmers willing to work the land.
With an initially sparse population, early farmers united to take their crops to Jefferson, Texas. The Bonham-Jefferson Road passed near Pecan Gap, Lone Star, Antioch, Liberty Grove, and Granny’s Neck before crossing the South Sulphur River into Hopkins County. Roads and weather, which could lengthen the time for the trip, continued to be a concern and a factor for growth in Northeast Texas, especially in Delta County. Because of the roads, often all but impassable when the rains turned the gumbo soil to glue, families rarely did business, socialized, or sought medical attention farther than 3 miles from their homes.
By 1880, the county had its own newspaper, the Delta Courier, and the population had grown to almost 5,600, of whom approximately 600 were African American. Twenty years later, several communities had not only their own newspapers but also thriving businesses. Today the Cooper Review and J. F. Henslee Hardware are the two oldest surviving businesses in Delta County.
Records of various communities indicate that local doctors took care of neighbors and families. Dr. O. Y. Janes opened the original Janes Hospital in nearby Prattville but later moved to Cooper because the doctor said people did not want to be sick in the middle of a cotton patch—they wanted to be sick in town. Eventually the Janes Hospital was operated by three brothers—Drs. Olen, Gaza, and Osler Janes, the sons of Dr. O. Y. Janes. The brothers served the people of Delta County until the last and youngest, Gaza, retired. The clinic was sold to the Paris Regional Medical Center, which closed in 2008.
Fraternal organizations, such as Woodmen of the World, the Praetorians, the Masons, the Knights of Pythias, and others, were active in the county at the beginning of the 20th century. Two Masonic lodges have been located at Cooper, but only one remains in operation. Lake Creek, Ben Franklin, Yowell, and Charleston also had active lodges. The Masonic sister organization, the Order of the Eastern Star, begun in 1908, involved many local women, and the Rebekah Assembly, affiliated with the Odd Fellows, organized in 1913. The Independent Order of Odd Fellows (IOOF) gained their charter in 1874, and the group was instrumental in developing the first county cemetery, Oaklawn.
The Santa Fe Railroad arrived in the county in 1890 with stops in Pecan Gap and Ben Franklin. Cooper, the county seat, got its first railroad in 1896. The Southern Pacific Railroad later bought the Texas Midland, and trains ran until 1973, when serious flooding destroyed the railroad trestle on the North Sulphur River. With railroads, farm life and production shifted from a subsistence level to cash crops. Families purchased flour delivered by trains instead of raising wheat or corn, freeing acreage for the more lucrative cotton.
Financing to run the farms and homes became easier when the first bank began operation in Cooper in 1889. The First National Bank,