
Atascosa County, Texas United States of America
This project is for those who were born, lived, and died in Atascosa County, Texas.
Atascosa County, Texas on Wikipedia
Atascosa County, Texas on texasalmanac.com website
Parent County: The county was formed on January 25,1856 from Bexar County and is named for the Spanish word Atascosa, meaning boggy ground that hindered travel.
- County Seat is Jourdanton, Texas and was made county seat in 1910 by the residents of the county. In 1912 a new mission-style courthouse was constructed, which is still in use.
- The first county seat was Navatasco, named in honor of Jose Antonio Navarro. Navarro gave land in 1857 for the first county seat. Because of Native American problems, it became necessary to move the county seat. In 1858, with a majority of 98 votes, a site was selected on John Bowen's place near the confluence of Bonita Creek and the Atascosa River.
- In 1858 Pleasanton, a newly founded community, became county seat, and a new courthouse was constructed.
Adjacent Counties
- Bexar County (north)
- Wilson County (northeast)
- Karnes County (east)
- Live Oak County (southeast)
- McMullen County (south)
- La Salle County (southwest)
- Frio County (west)
- Medina County (northwest)
Land Grants
- Jose Antonio Navarro, a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence, was granted land by the Mexican government in 1825. Navarro's grant was acknowledged by Texas in 1853.
- John Benjamin Kellogg Heirs were awarded 1501.83 acres and 3103 Acres in Atascosa county land bounty by the Republic of Texas.
History and Historical Timeline
- As early as 1722 El Camino Real (The King's Highway) passed near present-day Pleasanton.
- The first census taken in Atascosa County, Texas in 1860 recorded a population of 1,578, including eighty-four African slaves. Tax rolls show that there were thirty-three slaveholders, with most of them owning only one or two slaves.
- In 1881 an extension of the Great Northern Railway was built through the extreme northern corner of Atascosa, and the first railroad station in the county was located at Lytle.
- 1888 - The mining of lignite coal began and became a major industry as the price of fuel oil and natural gas rose. The first lignite in Atascosa County was burned as fuel in 1981 after a ten-year period of research and development by the Brazos Electric Power Cooperative of Waco and the South Texas Electric Cooperative of Victoria.
- 1927 - Humble Pipe Line Company established operations in Atascosa County, but the oil industry did not begin until the opening of Imogene and West Imogene fields in the 1940s, as well as those at Charlotte and Jourdanton. Diverse Humble operations in the Jourdanton area in the 1950s included gasoline, propane, butane, natural gasoline, and natural gas, all of which continued to be productive in the mid-1990s. In 1990 Atascosa County wells produced 1,236,387 barrels of oil. Almost 765,000 barrels of oil and 6,001,500 feet of gas-well gas were produced in the county in 2004; by the end of that year 149,778,538 barrels of oil had been taken from county lands since 1917.
Places
- Charlotte
- Jourdanton (county seat)
- Lytle (partial)
- Pleasanton
- Poteet (Strawberry Capital)
- Christine
- Leming (CDP)
- Amphion
- Campbellton
- Kyote
- La Parita
- McCoy
- Peggy
- Rossville
- South Savannah Heights
Atascosa County, Texas Notables
- John Bowen
- Marshall Burney
- William Guynes, built new courthouse in 1870 in Pleasanton
- George F. Hindes
- Eli Johnson
- Henry Mumme, first to effectively use irrigation in 1911
- Jose Antonio Navarro, a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence
- J. A. George (J. A. G.) Navarro, son of of Jose Antonio Navarro, founder of Atascosa County
- Maria Antonia Navarro, daughter of J. A. G. Navarro, married Scotsman John C. Ross and established Rossville.
- W. J. Pepham, first teacher in Pleasanton
- John Pleasant, early settler Pleasanton is his namesake
- Thomas Rodriguez, Indian fighter
- William F. M. Ross, a founder of Rossville, first postmaster, and brother of John C. Ross
- John C. Ross, a founder of Rossville and married to Navarro's granddaughter Maria Antonia Navarro
- E. B. Thomas, opened first general store in Pleasanton
- Peter Tumlinson Texas Ranger in the state in 1836.
Atascosa County, Texas Cemeteries
This list comes from Find A Grave Website
Please see the geni subportal Cemeteries of Texas
- Adolph Cumpian Family Cemetery, Charlotte
- Aguero Cemetery, Poteet
- Alvarado Cemetery
- Amphion Cemetery, Amphion
- Anchorage Methodist Church Cemetery, Anchorage
- Atascosa County Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Bautista Cemetery, Christine
- Bautista Family Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Benco Oaks Cemetery, Rossville
- Bender Family Cemetery
- Benton City Cemetery, Lytle
- Briones Ranch Cemetery, Poteet
- Brister Cemetery, Campbellton
- Brite Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Brown Cemetery, Poteet
- Calhoun Family Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Campbellton Cemetery , Campbellton
- Carlyon Family Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Casanova Ranch Cemetery, Poteet
- Casias Cemetery, Poteet
- San Jose Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Cementerio Leal, Leal
- Chain Family Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Chandler Farm Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Charlotte City Cemetery, Charlotte
- Community Cemetery of Charlotte, Charlotte
- Chilipitin Cemetery, Charlotte
- Christine City Cemetery, Charlotte
- Cowley Ranch Cemetery, Charlotte
- Cross Cemetery, Charlotte
- Crouch Family Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Cumpian Family Cemetery, Charlotte
- Davila Cemetery, Poteet
- Dawson Ranch Cemetery, Kyote
- Dos Osos, Pleasanton
- Douglas Ranch Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Escalante Ranch Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Esparza Cemetery (formerly known as Rodriguez Cemetery), Pleasanton
- Estrada Cemetery, Poteet
- Fashing Cemetery, Fashing
- Flores Cemetery
- Forrest Cemetery, Poteet
- Garcia Cemetery, Poteet
- Garcia Cemetery, Christine
- Grosco Cemetery
- Guadalupe Catholic Cemetery, Fashing
- H. R. Smith Cemetery, Peggy
- Harlan Family Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Hayden Family Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Herrera Cemetery
- Hilburn Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Imogene Cemetery
- Jacob's Chapel Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Jimenez Cemetery, Poteet
- Johnson Family Cemetery, Kyote
- Jorge Gonzalez Burial Site, Amphion
- Jourdanton City Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Kay Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Kosub Family Cemetery, Rossville
- Langston & Ross Memorial Cemetery, Poteet
- Layer Cemetery, Poteet
- Little Hill Cemetery, Christine
- Lott Cemetery, Poteet
- Lozano Cemetery, Poteet
- Luna Cemetery
- Lytle Community Cemetery, Lytle
- Lytle Masonic Cemetery, Lytle
- Madre Dolorosa Cemetery, Poteet
- Madre Dolorosa II, Poteet
- Mahoney Ranch Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Mendiola Cemetery, Poteet
- Ogden Cemetery, Anchorage
- Ogden Dawson Family Cemetery, Kyote
- Old Rock Cemetery (formerly known as Old Rock Baptist Cemetery), Somerset
- On The Farm Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Orisco Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Panteon San Lorenzo Cemetery, Lytle
- Pleasanton City Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Reyes Cemetery, Poteet
- Riley Family Cemetery, Campbellton
- River Oaks Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Rodriguez Cemetery
- Rossville Cemetery, Rossville
- Roy Martinez Family Cemetery, Poteet
- Rutledge Cemetery (formerly known as Poteet Cemetery) , Poteet
- Saint Andrews Cemetery No. 1 (formerly known as Richter Cemetery), Pleasanton
- Saint Andrews Cemetery No. 2, Pleasanton
- Saint Johns Lutheran Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Saint Joseph Cemetery, Leming
- Saint Matthews Catholic Cemetery, Jourdanton
- Saint Williams Cemetery
- Salazar Cemetery
- San Augustin Cemetery, Pleasanton
- San Pedro Cemetery, Poteet
- San Ysidro Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Sand Branch Cemetery, Kyote
- Shiloh Cemetery
- Simmons Family Cemetery
- Smith Cemetery, McCoy
- Sotello Family Cemetery, Pleasanton
- Starr/Miguel Cemetery
- Tumlinson Cemetery, Leming
- Vanness Cemetery
- Willborn Cemetery, Poteet
- Willborn Family Cemetery, Poteet
- Zavala Cemetery, Poteet
Atascosa County, Texas Genealogy External Links
- http://www.genealogytrails.com/tex/state/countynamedafter.html
- http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~txatasco/
Sources
- American FactFinder". United States Census Bureau.
- "Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Incorporated Places: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2014".
- Atascosa County, Texas website atascosacountytexas.net
- "Find a County". National Association of Counties.
- Texas State Handbook Online Atascosa County, Texas
- "State & County QuickFacts". United States Census Bureau.
- "Texas Almanac: Population History of Counties from 1850–2010" (PDF). Texas Almanac.
- "2010 Census Gazetteer Files". United States Census Bureau
- "U.S. Decennial Census". United States Census Bureau.