Historical Markers of Texas logo

Historical Markers of Texas

Back to Childress County

On Old Shoenail Ranch Land, Community of Loco

Childress, Childress County

Marker Text

Named for weed found here in 1880s by early settlers--the families of Dick Brown, Walter Campbell, and Bobby Payne. The Browns survived the last Indian battle on Buck Creek in 1887. Soil-based local economy moved from mule-power to tractors with lugs, to rubber-tire tractors, to irrigation farming. The Loco Post Office was established in 1892. Town at its height had 4 churches, a high school, a garage, 2 cotton gins, 3 stores, barber shop, blacksmith shop, cafe, and a golf course. Little now remains except the school's storm cellar. The post office closed in 1964.

Marker Details

Address
Location Description From Childress, take US 82/83 about 20 miles north to junction of Highway 83/82 and Highway 1034.
Marker # 3860
Dedicated 1970
Size, Type 18" x 28"
Code
Latitude, Longitude Exact Lat/Lon Unknown

Map