Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Martindale was established 1n 1855 by Nancy Martindale, who moved to Texas from Mississippi In 1851 and donated land for the townsite.

John Crayton, his son James Lasater Crayton and their slaves moved to the banks of the San Marcos River Ill what Is now downtown Martindale In 1839. On January 8, 1852, John Crayton sold the land to George Martindale that Nancy Martindale later donated for the town of Martindale. John Crayton moved to the Republic of Texas from Marion County Alabama but was born and married In Franklin County, Tennessee. He also donated the land for the Martindale City Cemetery. John Crayton lived in Martindale until his death In 1873.

A Baptist church was organized in 1858, and a post office was established In 1875, when the local population was less than fifty. In 1890 the town had four general stores and four gristmills and gins. By 1892 the population was 200. In 1905, Martindale had two schools with four teachers and 184 white students and one school with one teacher for 73 black students. Four churches, a
hotel, three cotton gins, three stores, a bank, and telephone service were In operation by 1914. Twenty Martindale businesses served residents In 1931.

From 191 0 to 1946, the population was 500. In 1949, cottonseed and hybrid seed corn companies near Martindale, Including the legendary Harper Seed Farm, supplied over 65 percent of the hybrid seed corn and a large percentage of the pedigreed cottonseed produced In Texas. The population of Martindale reached a high of 600 in 1957 but subsequently fell to 250 in 1969 and 210 in 1982, when only three businesses were active. In 1982, the town became the third in the county to incorporate. Immaculate Heart of Mary catholic Church, built in 1908, was renovated by the panshioners' own labor in the mid-1980s and then was burned by an arsonist in 1991. After 1984, the local population increased, reaching 1,068 in 1988, when eleven businesses were in operation.

Source: WikipedJa

1 comment:

  1. Hi Carlton,

    I didn't know you had this up as a Blogger page.
    Glad to have found it. I'm sending it to a friend.

    John

    ReplyDelete