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Site of Old Zulu Stockade

Morse, Hansford County

Marker Text

In 1875, a large, two-room pole building furnished with staple groceries and ammunition became the first trading post in Texas above the Canadian River. The stockade, located in Indian-infested country, was fittingly named for the fierce Zulu tribe of Africa. It began as a buffalo camp which crack hunters Jim and Bob Cator (from England) had made the first permanent Panhandle residence at Christmas, 1873. In 1876 Zulu became a major depot on the Ft. Dodge-Ft. Bascom military road, and it eventually received a post office contract. It was finally abandoned, 1912. (1968)

Marker Details

Address
Location Description 4 mi. N of Morse on SH 136, then 1 mi. W on FM 520
Marker # 4867
Dedicated 1967
Size, Type 18" x 28"
Code forts; roads; markets, merchantiles; Native Americans
Latitude, Longitude Exact Lat/Lon Unknown

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