HISTORY OF BROWNFIELD
Brownfield is at the junction of U.S. highways 62, 82, 380, and 385 and
State Highway 137, forty miles southwest of Lubbock in central Terry County.
In 1903 town promoters W. G. Hardin and A. F. Small arrived in Terry County
planning to turn Small’s few hundred dollars into thousands. The
two men bought the county’s center lot from A. M. (Dick) Brownfield
and began to plat the site, giving every voter in the county a lot in order
to enhance the town’s chances of becoming the county seat; they named
the town after a prominent ranching family.
The founders donated one block each for the courthouse, the school,
and churches. J. R. Hill, the first to arrive with his family, built
Hill’s Hotel, the first business establishment, on the north side
of the square. On April 1, 1903, Hill opened the first post office in
his hotel building and became the first postmaster. The settlers lived
in tents, covered wagons, or dugouts until construction materials for
houses could be hauled from Big Spring or Colorado City.
A school was built, and since there was no money for a teacher or equipment
it served as a dance hall, church, and general gathering place until
1905, when the first school term began. On June 28, 1904, Brownfield
was voted county seat by a slim margin over the larger and older town
of Gomez.
The Terry County Voice (later named Terry County Herald) moved to Brownfield
from Gomez a few weeks after the election. The Brownfield State Bank
was established on October 7, 1905, to serve Gaines, Terry, and Yoakum
counties, as well as parts of the eastern New Mexico, since the area
had no convenient banking services.
With the coming of the automobile in 1910 and the railroad in 1917,
the town and county experienced rapid growth. To encourage the building
of a railroad from Lubbock to Seagraves, the citizens donated the right-of-way
and station grounds to the South Plains and Santa Fe Railroad Company.
The town was incorporated in October 1920 with a population of 1,200.
During the Great Depression the William Randolph Hearst interests moved
into Brownfield, then in the best corn-producing area of West Texas,
and 10,000 cattle were finished for market that same year. For a number
of years cattle were shipped to Brownfield from Mexico to be fattened.
Agriculture development was the major source of population growth until
1937, at which time 3,100 people lived in the town. By 1940 Brownfield
was the leading grain center on the South Plains and an important part
of the economic development of the northern Permian Basin. By 1941 four
oil wells were in operation, and more were expected. In 1950 diversified
agriculture was still the main occupation, but oilfields had attracted
petroleum industries as well.
The town’s population increased from 6,160 in 1950 to 10,286 in
1960. It dropped to 9,647 during the next ten years, as agriculture production-mainly
in field crops-and income decreased 30 percent from 1964 to 1969. In
1986 the county remained one of the leading cotton-producing counties
in the state. In 1988 Brownfield had a population of 10,846. In 1990
it was 9,560.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Kyle Martin Buckner, “The History of Brownfield,
Texas” west Texas Historical Association Yearbook 19 (1943). Kathleen
E. and Clifton R. St. Clair, eds., Little Towns of Texas (Jacksonville,
Texas: Jayroe Graphic Arts, 1982) |
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