Sivells Bend, Texas

Sivells Bend is an unincorporated community on Farm to Market Road 1201 just four miles south of the Oklahoma border and 20 miles north of the county seat, Gainesville, in Cooke County, Texas, United States.

Sivells Bend, Texas
Sivells Bend
Location within the state of Texas
Sivells Bend
Sivells Bend (the United States)
Coordinates: 33°50′59″N 97°13′26″W[1]
CountryUnited States
StateTexas
CountyCooke
Time zoneUTC-6 (Central (CST))
  Summer (DST)UTC-5 (CDT)

History

Early settlers from Kentucky Town, Texas, arrived in 1850 and established a general store, but north-central Texas was still under constant threat from Native American attacks, so settlers abandoned the store. Around 1860, settlers returned to stay and established a farming community. During the Civil War, a company of Confederate soldiers was stationed at Sivells Bend to prevent aggression from across the Red River. As the Chisholm Trail came through north-central Texas in the early 1870s, a small branch of the trail went through the Sivells Bend area. The arrival of cowpunchers led to development, and by 1872, Sivells Bend had a post office. By 1900, the small community reported a population of 100 with various stores, physicians, cotton gins, and a small school, but its remote location, the growth of Gainesville, and the lack of a railroad or major highway hindered further development. Even the discovery of oil in the area could not abate the decline. The post office closed in 1973, but the small community retains two churches, several homes, and its independent school (though high school students are bused to nearby Muenster).

Education

Sivells Bend is served by the Sivells Bend Independent School District (grades K-8) and the Muenster Independent School District (grades 9-12).

gollark: Buy Western Digital and force them to invent and produce for you 20TB disks.
gollark: ASICs are where it's at for Bitcoin now.
gollark: No, immersion cool it with mineral oil.
gollark: Better get a UPS too, and run 100 gigabit fibre links to all your other devices.
gollark: I would do that, but use 100GbE and also some compute GPUs.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.