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Moving Destinations in Texas
Home :: Moving :: Texas TX
Moving - Waco, Texas
Are you planning a move into or out of
Waco, TX, any time soon? Continental Relocation, a local
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Have you read the history of Waco, TX?
Well, here is a brief summary for your pleasure.
A Brief History of Waco, Texas
Millions of years ago, the earth
was fractured by the Balcones Fault. Running through what
is now central Texas, the escarpment was cut by the Brazos
River causing a lowering of the landscape and a natural
place for habitation. Mastodons from the east and mammoths
from the west traveled to the area. Skeletons of
28,000-year-old mammoths have been excavated as well as
skeletal remains of a 10,000-year-old man and child.
Waco is named after the Huaco
Indians, the first inhabitants of this area. The Huacos were
a branch of the Wichitas and were closely related to
the Tawakonis. The tribe lived in beehive shaped huts, 20-
to 25- feet high, made of poles, buffalo hides and rushes.
The Huacos had approximately 400 acres of land under
cultivation, planted in corn, beans, pumpkins, melons and
peach trees.
In 1837, the Texas Rangers arrived
intending to build a fort at Waco Village. Texas Secretary
of War William S. Fisher ordered them here to protect the
white frontier after a Comanche raid at Ft. Parker near
Groesbeck. The Rangers spent three weeks cutting a road
through the woods and building a bridge over Cow Bayou.
However, it was decided the outpost was too far from any
white settlement to offer any protection.
An Indian trading post was established
around 1844 on a bluff eight miles south of Waco village on
the east side of the Brazos River. A year later another
settlement was established further north by a rugged Scot
named Neil McLennan.
In 1848, two years after Texas statehood,
General Thomas J. Chambers sold his Mexican grant of land,
which surrounded the old Waco Village site, to a group of
businessmen from Galveston. In early 1849, surveyor George
B. Erath laid out the first streets of Waco. Lots were sold
for $5 each, with "farming lots" selling for $2 to $3 each.
Among the first buyers was a Texas Ranger, Shapley P. Ross.
Captain Ross opened a ferry across the river in 1849 and
built the first house in Waco with help from Armstead Ross,
who by all accounts, was the first African-American to
arrive in Waco. The City of Waco was incorporated on August
29, 1856.

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