Brookhaven, Texas, under Lake Belton. (original) (raw)
History on a Pinhead
Once known as Post Oak Branch, the name was changed in 1882 with the construction of a school. The name came from Charlie and Ed Oswalt, two homesick Mississippians who named it after their hometown in that state..
Two years later a post office was granted. In the 1890s, the community had a Masonic lodge and three churches, as well as two general stores and two pharmacies to serve the town's 75 residents. The post office closed in 1913.
Brookhaven's history is hard to come by and by the 1940s the population had fallen to a mere 50. By the end of that decade, Brookhaven had joined the list of Bell County ghost towns.
See
Drowned Towns of Bell County by Mike Cox


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