Panhandle History 
by Frederick W. Rathjen

The 25,610-square-mile Panhandle of
Texas was shaped by the Compromise of 1850, which resolved the
state's controverted territorial claims. It is bounded on the
east by the 100th meridian, on the north by parallel 36°30', and
on the west by the 103rd meridian. It comprises the northernmost
twenty-six counties of the state; the line forming the southern
boundary of Swisher County in the central Panhandle marks the
southern boundary. The elevation declines from about 4,700 feet
in the northwest (Dallam County) to about 2,000 feet in the
southeast (Childress County). The growing season increases from
178 days a year to 217 days over the same distance.
The average annual precipitation
ranges from about 21.5 inches in the eastern counties to about
seventeen inches in the western counties. Thus the dry Panhandle
climate ranges narrowly from subhumid to semiarid. The High
Plains cover all but the gently undulating southeastern third of
the Panhandle, where the Rolling Plains begin. The two are
separated by the scenic eastern High Plains escarpment commonly
called the Caprock. The upper tributaries of the Red River and
the Canadian River drain the region.
The Canadian cuts across the High
Plains to isolate the southern part, the Llano Estacado, which
has little drainage and a reputation as one of the world's
flattest areas of such size. Beneath the High Plains lies the
enormous store of relict water held by the Ogallala
Aquifer-unquestionably the region's most valuable resource. High
Plains soils are loamy, clayey, deep, and calcareous; those of
the Rolling Plains are loamy and sandy; and those of the
canyonlands and river valleys are loamy, clayey, shallow, and
calcareous and support woody species including juniper,
cottonwood, hackberry, mesquite, elm, willow, and plum. Scrub
oak, grape, and stretchberry grow on the escarpments. Grasses
found on the uplands include mainly the bluestems, gramas,
buffalo grass, and, around playas, western wheat grass.
Especially on the Llano Estacado short grasses have protected the
surface from erosion and, along with subhumidity and fire, have
inhibited tree growth.
In sum, Panhandle physiography
produced a primordial grassland that supported the southern
buffalo herd and a buffalo-hunting Indian culture, invited a
grazing economy introduced by Americans, and eventually gave rise
to a farming economy that displaced much of the grassland.
Human presence in the Panhandle dates from the time of
Paleo-Indian hunters of Pleistocene animals, whose presence is
verified by their exquisitely knapped Folsom and Clovis
projectile points found in situ with datable materials.
Thereafter, occupation ebbed and flowed with environmental
variations until the eve of historic times, when an elaborate
archeological complex, the Panhandle Aspect, occupied the
Canadian River and nearby streams. Panhandle Aspect culture
appears to have crested from roughly A.D. 1350 to 1450, but was
nowhere to be found when Indians of the Panhandle were first
observed by persons who left documentary evidence.
The entrada of Francisco Vázquez de
Coronado crossed the Llano Estacado in 1541 in a futile quest for
wealth, and found a culture of pedestrian, buffalo-hunting nomads
whom the Spaniards called "Querechos," identified by
modern scholars as Athabaskan ancestors of the Apaches. Apacheans
evidently controlled the Panhandle and surrounding territory
uncontested until after 1700, when Comanches, now mounted,
appeared, challenged the Apaches, and eventually dispossessed
them.
By 1800, along with their Kiowa and
Kiowa Apache allies, Comanches dominated the Great Plains south
of the Arkansas River and held Comanchería against all comers
for a century and a half. Besides providing the first documented
observations of the Llano Estacado, the Coronado expedition
established the orientation of the whole region toward the
Hispanic Southwest, an orientation reinforced by the expedition
of Juan de Oñate, who traveled along the Canadian River in 1601.
In subsequent years, Spaniards and
Pueblo Indians entered the region for a variety of purposes and
regarded it as a part of New Mexico. Commercial ties between the
Plains and the river valleys of New Mexico were probably the
strongest bonds between the two. In time, trade shifted from New
Mexico to prearranged sites in West Texas such as Palo Duro and
Tule canyons, Tecovas Springs, and Quitaque Creek, while
Comancheros emerged as the principal agents of commerce. Though
innocent enough in its early days, the Comanchero trade acquired
sinister characteristics in the nineteenth century, as it dealt
increasingly in stolen livestock and human traffic.
In any event, the southwestern orientation of the Panhandle stood
for 180 years after Coronado, until the pivotal year 1821 brought
forces reorienting the region toward the United States and
introducing a succession of more-or-less separate but overlapping
phases through which regional history evolved. In 1821 the
successful Mexican War of Independence opened Santa Fe to legal
trade with United States citizens and Maj. Stephen H. Long
explored the Canadian River valley, thus initiating the
Anglo-American exploratory phase of Panhandle history. Between
1821 and the 1853 the Pacific railroad survey of the thirty-fifth
parallel, led by Lt. Amiel Weeks Whipple, and expeditions led by
United States Army officers explored and described the Canadian
valley, the Rolling Plains, and the upper tributaries of the Red
River.
Only the interior of the Llano
Estacado lay beyond the ken of the Americans. Meanwhile, in 1840
Josiah Gregg found the south side of the Canadian an advantageous
trade route, and in 1849 Capt. Randolph B. Marcy, closely
following Gregg's tracks, specifically marked the Fort
Smith-Santa Fe Trail so that ties of commerce and travel, along
with exploration, pulled the Panhandle toward the American orbit.
Until after 1865 the southern Plains Indians remained essentially
undisturbed, mainly because of the sectional controversy and the
Civil War, but in the early 1870s professional buffalo-hide
hunters entered the Panhandle from western Kansas. Normal Indian
resentment toward this incursion was heightened by their
understanding that the Medicine Lodge Treaties of 1867 guaranteed
them exclusive hunting grounds south of the Arkansas River. In
retaliation, resentful warriors led by Quanah Parker and the
charismatic medicine man Isa-tai plotted an attack upon the
buffalo hunters' trading post at Adobe Walls in what is now
Hutchinson County.
The attack failed to overrun the post
and cost heavy losses, although it sent both hide men and
merchants scurrying for the safety of Dodge City and temporarily
interrupted the buffalo-hunting phase of Panhandle history. Most
importantly, Second Adobe Walls goaded the government into the
climactic campaign against the southern Plains Indians, the Red
River War of 1874-75. Earlier efforts to deal militarily with the
southern Plains tribes won some battles, but resolved very
little.
On November 26, 1864, a 500-man force
under Kit (Christopher) Carson had engaged several villages in
the vicinity of the Bent brothers' old adobe trading post on the
Canadian on November 25. Doubtlessly the Indians were hurt
considerably, but Carson achieved little of strategic
consequence. Rather more successful was the Winter War of 1868,
in which a strategy contrived by Maj. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan
directed four converging columns upon the Indians' haunts to
catch them unsuspecting in their winter camps.
No column came from the south,
however, and many camps simply dropped southward out of the
encirclement. The 1874 campaign added a column of the Fourth
United States Cavalry led northward by Col. Ranald S. Mackenzie
to complete the encirclement. The Red River War saw some dramatic
pitched battles, most famously Mackenzie's victory in the battle
of Palo Duro Canyon on September 28, but mainly it was a campaign
of harassment that gave the Indians no rest until, near
starvation, they accepted their inevitable move to reservations.
By early 1875 the military phase of Panhandle history was over.
The hide men quickly felled most of the remaining buffalo with
relatively minor interference from Indians, and the region lay
essentially empty awaiting its next phase. Fort Elliott, placed
in Wheeler County as a hedge against Indian outbreaks, supported
white settlement with numerous essential services. In 1876 the
Texas legislature marked off the twenty-six Panhandle counties
from the Bexar Land District, thereby essentially completing the
transformation of the region from a southwestern Hispanic
cultural domain to an Anglo-American one.
The empty grassland was attractive to
the pastores, led by Casimero Romero, who initiated the grazing
phase of Panhandle history by bringing their sheep to the western
Canadian basin, where Charles Goodnight found them when he moved
his cattle from Colorado in the spring of 1876. Leaving the
Canadian to the New Mexican sheepherders, Goodnight moved on to
Palo Duro Canyon where, in partnership with James Adair, he built
the JA Ranch. Almost simultaneously, Thomas Sherman Bugbee
arrived in Hutchinson County and established the Quarter Circle T
Ranch.
Other pioneers soon followed, and the
towns of Tascosa, Mobeetie, and Clarendon developed as the
centers from which settlement, commerce, and political
organization emanated. Their counties, Wheeler, Oldham, and
Donley, were organized in 1879, 1881, and 1882, respectively. The
federal census of 1880 counted 1,607 persons in the Panhandle,
including 1,198 Anglos concentrated in Wheeler, Hemphill, and
Donley counties; 358 Hispanics concentrated in Hartley, Oldham,
and Deaf Smith counties; and fifty-one African Americans,
thirty-six of whom lived near Fort Elliott. Of adults over age
fifteen, 365 were born in former Confederate states, while 364
were born in Union states or territories. The region's
foreign-born represented eleven nations.
Although sheep ranching initiated the grazing phase, its
dominance quickly gave way to cattle, which first came in herds
of as few as 100 head, owned by cattlemen who took the best grass
and water. Few followed Goodnight's lead when he purchased 12,000
acres of JA range. Individual enterprise soon gave way to
corporate enterprise because the attraction of low-cost stocker
cattle, low labor costs, the subsidy of free grass, and high
market prices infused large amounts of capital from both the east
and Europe.
The first corporate giant was the
Prairie Cattle Company of Edinburgh, Scotland. Another, the
Capitol Freehold Land and Investment Company, Limited, is the
best known as the XIT Ranch. Corporate financial resources
brought barbed wire fencing, deep-drilled wells, and windmills,
thus enabling more effective use of pasturage away from surface
water and the upgrading of herds through selective breeding.
Conversely, barbed wire enclosed much
state-owned land and the state's insistence on grazing fees bred
bitter controversy, which was eventually resolved peacefully.
Early corporate ranching contained the seeds of disaster,
however, because its very success attracted excessive investment,
overstocking, bad management, and depressed prices, thereby
making the industry vulnerable to any dislocation. The first
rather feeble attempts at farming, which came in the early
eighties, were equally vulnerable. Both were devastated by
unusually severe winters and summer droughts in the mid-eighties.
Farming had to wait another generation for a new start. Though
many ranches failed, well-managed ones survived, and a far
better-organized industry emerged. It became the foundation for a
ranching industry that remains integral to the economy and
culture of the Panhandle.
Every phase of regional development profited by completion of the
Fort Worth and Denver Railway in 1888. In time, the Rock Island
and Santa Fe joined the FW&D in providing a region-wide rail
network. Because the escarpments of the Staked Plains partly
dictated routes, the rails crossed in the central Panhandle at
the point where Amarillo was fortuitously located and made the
town the center of regional cultural, social, and commercial
life. Railroads determined the location of townsites, ranchers
got far easier access to supplies and markets, and promoters of
various sorts, especially railroad men, ardently boosted the
Panhandle as the new garden for farmers. Not until well into the
twentieth century, however, did improved dry-land farming
techniques and the first stirrings of modern irrigation, both
backed by emerging technology, assure permanence of an
agricultural foundation for the region.
By 1917 beef, wheat, and cotton
emerged as the basics of commercial production. Unusually
favorable weather, markets impelled by World War I, and
technological improvements blessed the efforts of producers who
expanded acreage and increased production. The artificial demand
and prices raised by the war, however, encouraged excessive
production and cultivation of marginal lands better left to
grazing, a fact that portended disaster in the 1930s. Fortunately
for the Panhandle, a new and unanticipated industry burst upon
the economic scene and permeated the whole fabric of regional
life.
Drawing upon the research of geologist Charles N. Gould, a group
of entrepreneurs led by grocer Millard C. Nobles organized the
Amarillo Oil Company, leased 70,000 acres of ranchland, and began
drilling. Their first wells produced only natural gas, but on May
2, 1921, Gulf-Burnet No. 2 produced the first Panhandle oil and
encouraged further exploration. In 1925 Dixon Creek Oil Company
hit a vast reserve in Hutchinson County that yielded 10,000
barrels a day. Oil spawned numerous collateral industries and
towns, of which Borger was surely the most chaotic.
The place eventually became so lawless
that only martial law brought it stability. Other communities
such as Lefors, Pampa, and Dumas profited from oil but avoided
such tumult. Amarillo became the corporate center of major oil
companies. Abundant natural gas brought plants for extraction of
carbon black, helium, and zinc smelting, while the marketing of
petroleum products required construction of refineries and
pipelines. The availability of moderately priced automobiles and
cheap fuel brought a demand for better roads, and in the 1920s
the Panhandle led Texas in the development of highways, including
the legendary Route 66. Farm-to-market transportation flourished
under the Rural Roads Act, and the combination of
gasoline-powered transportation and paved roads strengthened
Amarillo's position as the tri-state (Texas, Oklahoma, and New
Mexico) trade center.
The arrival of the complex of oil-related industries could
scarcely have been more timely, since they provided some economic
diversification and activity after the events of September 1929.
In fact, during the Great Depression they prospered and the oil
counties grew in population. Agriculture, by contrast, had to
contend with the economic dislocations of the time as well as an
ecological calamity induced by land abuse, unsuitable farming
methods, severe drought, and abnormally high winds: the Dust
Bowl. Many farmers, especially tenants, were driven from the
land. Between 1935 and 1940 both the number of farms and property
values declined sharply.
Six agricultural counties lost more
than 25 percent of their residents between 1930 and 1940; ten
others lost more than 10 percent. The stark reality of human
suffering found expression in poignant images recorded by Farm
Security Administration photographers, while the environmental
crisis was nowhere made more vivid than in the graphic paintings
of Alexandre Hogue. Immediate relief for depression victims
proved to exceed the resources of localities, despite valiant
efforts by such leaders as Mayor Ernest O. Thompson of Amarillo.
In the long term, two absolute necessities emerged: stabilization
of the agricultural economy and healing of the land.
In 1932 Panhandle voters turned to the
New Deal of Franklin D. Roosevelt, who carried all twenty-six
counties with 87 percent of the popular vote. Four years later,
Roosevelt gleaned 96 percent of the Panhandle vote. Through
various New Deal agencies, federal aid came in a variety of
projects ranging from multiple agricultural programs to
construction of Palo Duro Canyon State Scenic Park, to the
building of curbs, streets, and gutters in towns, to documenting
and recording regional history, to producing public art.
Of enormous advantage to the region
was its United States representative, Marvin Jones, who chaired
the House Agriculture Committee beginning in 1931 and heavily
influenced the New Deal's agricultural legislation. Doubtless
through Jones's influence, but also through dire need, the
Panhandle was among the first areas in the nation to receive New
Deal aid and became something of a proving ground for its
programs. Of all programs affecting the Panhandle, and especially
rural life, few, if any, could match the depth and permanence of
the Rural Electrification Act, which brought electric power first
to the rural Panhandle in Deaf Smith County in 1937.
As the "Dirty Thirties" waned and the effects of the
Great Depression subsided, Panhandle citizens' attention turned
outward toward Europe and Asia. Tangible portents of a new,
unpleasant world became evident on November 25, 1940, when units
of the Texas National Guard mobilized at Amarillo. Though guard
personnel served world-wide, the Second Battalion, formed from
the 131st Field Artillery under Col. Blutcher S. Tharp of
Amarillo, was immortalized as the Lost Battalion of Java. Two
Panhandle men, John C. "Red" Morgan and Charles H.
Roan, won the Medal of Honor, while former representative Jones
served throughout the war as war food administrator. Because of
the large number of days per year suitable for flying, the Army
Air Corps placed training fields at Dalhart, Pampa, and Amarillo.
Only the Amarillo installation
remained after the war. McLean and Hereford hosted German and
Italian prisoners of war. The Pantex Army Ordnance Plant,
established in 1942 in Carson County to produce bombs and
artillery shells, assumed a conspicuous role in the Cold War as
the assembly plant for nuclear warheads. The demands of global
war combined with ample rainfall sent Panhandle wheat and beef
production soaring; cotton culture production also significantly
increased, though less dramatically.
Largely because of the leadership of
Ernest O. Thompson in his position on the Railroad Commission,
the Panhandle oil and gas fields had been developed and were
poised to fuel and lubricate the machines of war. In March 1943
the Exell Helium Plant in Moore County began extracting helium
from natural gas to provide lifting power for the blimps that
escorted transoceanic convoys; also, completely without the
knowledge of Exell personnel, the plant provided helium for the
Manhattan Project. The number of peaceful applications of Helium
later increased, although it was Cold War demands for nuclear
weaponry that kept the Exell Plant in operation after the
armistice.
The post-World War II years sustained the prosperity stimulated
by the war, although it still rested mainly upon its traditional
foundations, agriculture and petroleum. The Korean War bolstered
the demand for both and introduced a pivotal decade in regional
history, the 1950s. In the five years following 1952, Amarillo
recorded less rainfall than in any comparable period of the
1930s, and emerging dust clouds evoked fears of another Dust
Bowl. The happy fact that the worst did not happen may be
attributed to expanding irrigation and the soil-conservation
practices and technologies learned twenty years earlier.
During the 1930s as the number of
farms decreased, the size of farms increased. The average of
almost 1,000 acres by 1940 reflected advanced mechanization and
especially widespread irrigation, the number of irrigation wells
having increased from a mere forty-one in 1930 to more than 700
in 1940. Recurring drought in the fifties encouraged irrigation
all over the High Plains, but especially north of the Canadian
River, where the Ogallala Aquifer had previously been considered
too deep for feasible irrigation. Technology changed that,
however, and over the High Plains the number of wells increased
from 14,000 in 1950 to 27,500 in 1954.
Irrigated acreage expanded from 1.86
million acres to 3.5 million in the same period. The irrigation
boom peaked in the middle 1970s, subsided, and stabilized about
1980. It assured a measure of agricultural prosperity and
stimulated a pervasive agribusiness that remains a dominant force
in the regional economy-especially in cattle feeding. An
explosion of feedlots in northwestern Texas came about through
the chance presence of Paul Engler, a Nebraska cattle buyer, in
Hereford in 1960. Engler noticed an abundance of components:
space, favorable climate, cattle, and massive irrigated hybrid
sorghum culture. Far-sighted bankers, especially Henry Sears of
Hereford, provided capital for the infant industry, which quickly
grew into a obstreperously youthful industry. The early 1970s
brought a sobering collapse and eventual reordering into a more
sound, scientifically managed enterprise.
As the hot war in Korea intensified the Cold War, Amarillo Army
Air Field reopened as Amarillo Air Force Base in 1951 to train
technicians and to base units of the Strategic Air Command. The
Atomic Energy Commission claimed the Pantex plant in 1950 and
added manufacture of nuclear warheads to the installation's
former functions. Operated by private contractors under the
Department of Energy, Pantex became the nation's sole assembly
plant for nuclear warheads in 1975.
As early as 1926, visionary
individuals considered harnessing Canadian River water for
domestic and industrial use. Austin A. Meredith made a virtual
life's work of promoting an impoundment, and his efforts and
those of many others led to the formation of the Canadian River
Municipal Water Authority in 1953. Eleven Panhandle and South
Plains cities joined the authority, secured federal financing,
and constructed Sanford Dam. The resulting Lake Meredith impounds
up to 821,300 acre-feet of water. Excessive salinization plagues
Lake Meredith waters, however, and requires remedial treatment.
The 1950s also featured a remarkably
rapid reversal in the traditional Democratic politics of
Panhandle voters who, after overwhelmingly supporting Franklin
Roosevelt through four elections, gave President Harry Truman a
decisive victory in 1948 and helped Democratic senator Lyndon B.
Johnson defeat his Republican opponent. Four years later
Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower won twenty-four Panhandle
counties, although he took only sixteen in 1956. In 1960 it
became evident that the 1950s had witnessed a political
transition-in-progress, for Richard M. Nixon won twenty-two
Panhandle counties and carried the region with 62 percent of the
popular vote. Except for Johnson's narrow regional victory in
1964, no Democratic presidential candidate has carried the
Panhandle since 1948. The shift has reflected a general
conservative trend, for local, state, and congressional
Republican candidates have become increasingly successful.
Deactivation of Amarillo Air Force Base in 1968 shook the entire
regional economy, but was turned to account when the base
facilities were purchased by the state of Texas and made the
campus of Texas State Technical Institute, which officially
opened on June 15, 1970, and has since supplied skilled labor to
the regional workforce. The runways built to accommodate B-52
strategic bombers opened the way for construction of a new air
terminal to accommodate an expanding economy. Accordingly on May
17, 1971, a new air terminal opened to serve the three-state
area. Because of its exceptionally long runway, Amarillo Air
Terminal was designated a port of entry to the United States.
At the end of the Cold War, Pantex turned aboutface and started
dismantling nuclear warheads. The plant is promoted as the center
of a research consortium for finding peaceful applications for
nuclear materials. The possibility implies great economic impact
for the region, but also raises concerns among residents who are
concerned about potential dangers of plutonium storage, as well
as possible contamination of the Ogallala Aquifer. Population
trends of the 1980s and 1990s suggest that the Texas Panhandle is
in a transitional, and somewhat confusing, phase.
Between 1970 and 1980 the regional
population grew by nearly 60,000, or about 18 percent. In the
1980s, although the overall population loss was slightly less
than 6 percent, only two counties had statistically significant
population gains: Moore County (including Dumas) and Randall
County, which grew by nearly 20 percent because of Amarillo's
southwestward expansion beyond the Potter county line, and the
emergence of Canyon as a virtual suburb of Amarillo. Of the
remaining counties, four lost more than 20 percent of their
population, and thirteen lost from 9 to 19 percent. All of these
are agricultural counties or oil and gas producers or both. The
decline of formerly reliable industries has compelled a search
for alternatives, among which tourism and prisons are promising.
The Ogallala Aquifer remains the Panhandle's most precious
resource, however, and although the threat of its depletion
appears to have subsided, its finitude necessitates earnest
consideration and planning if the economic well-being of the
region is to endure.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Stefan Kramar, Stefan Kramar's Panhandle Portrait
(Austin: Pemberton Press, 1974). Willie Newbury Lewis, Between
Sun and Sod (Clarendon, Texas: Clarendon Press, 1938; rev. ed.,
College Station: Texas A&M University Press, 1976). B. Byron
Price and Frederick W. Rathjen, The Golden Spread: An Illustrated
History of Amarillo and the Texas Panhandle (Northridge,
California: Windsor, 1986). Frederick W. Rathjen, The Texas
Panhandle Frontier (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1973).
Saga of the South Plains: Forty Years of "Settlin' up"
the Prairie, 1879-1919 (Lubbock: Texas Technological College
Museum, 1955?). F. Stanley, Story of the Texas Panhandle
Railroads (Borger, Texas: Hess, 1976). Union Pacific Railroad
Company, The Resources and Attractions of the Texas Panhandle
(St. Louis: Woodward and Tiernan, 1891).

(information from The
Handbook of Texas Online --
a multidisciplinary encyclopedia of Texas history, geography, and
culture.)

Back
This page was last updated August 16, 2000.