Dexter, Texas. (original) (raw)

Dexter Community Church Texas

History in a Pecan Shell

From a flowing spring three miles east of its present location, the town would've been called Sugar Hill if early settler, Jesse Morris hadn't had his way and named it Dexter after a then-famous racehorse.

The town dates from around 1870 with the post office opening three years later. By the early 1880s the town had an estimated 300 residents � including an equal number (4) of both blacksmiths and doctors.

Dexter�s prosperity was threatening the dominance of Gainesville but when the Denison and Pacific Railroad bypassed the town in favor of Woodbine, residents were disheartened. Some even took the drastic step of moving to Ardmore, Indian Territory.

Residents that remained voted to incorporate, but having a city government did little to stop people from leaving. Population figures from the late 1960s through 1990 showed about 70 residents remaining. The Dexter Community Church is still in place as well as the town�s two cemeteries: one north and one south.

Dexter Texas Today

Dexter Tx Closed Church

Dexter Tx - inside Closed Church

Dexter Cemeteries

Dexter North Cemetery, Dexter TX

Dexter North Cemetery
Photo courtesy Mike Price, February 2008

Dexter North Cemetery tombstone,  Dexter TX

Dexter North Cemetery Woodmen of the World, Dexter TX

Dexter North Cemetery - Woodmen of the World
Photo courtesy Mike Price, February 2008

South Dexter Cemetery, Dexter Texas

South Dexter Cemetery

South Dexter Cemetery tombstone W.L. Butt and wives

South Dexter Cemetery 1877 tombstone

Cooke County Texas 1930s Map


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