Caesar, Texas, Bee County ghost town. (original) (raw)

Caesar High School - 1913-14
Photo courtesy Bee County Historical Society
See Texas Schoolhouses
History in a Pecan Shell
A man named Peter Wolfe chose this part of Texas to settle in sometime before 1876. It was thereafter called Wolfe�s Neighborhood until a post office was applied for in the early 1900s.
Storekeeper R.L. Peevy submitted a list of names from his Bible and told the post office to pick one. They chose Caesar and the post office opened in 1903.
By 1914 Caesar had a population of just 15 with the store, post office and a church.
Area children attended the Caesar School. The town failed to develop � even after the discovery of gas and oil. Landowners preferred things to remain the way they were � and so has it been.
The post office closed sometime in the 1930s and all that�s left today are the images seen here.
The Pullin-Livingston Cemetery ›
The "Indian Scout Tree" ›
The Pullin-Livingston Cemetery
Photographer's Note:
�This is all that remains of Caesar. The Pullin-Livingston Cemetery sits in brush at the intersection of FM798 & FM 2985. It's taken over by the brush seen in one of the photos. I did not have snake Leggings or a Machete that day or I might have ventured in to find it. It was still visible from the road in the 1970's, as I recall." - Will Beauchamp

The "Indian Scout Tree"
Photographer's Note:
"About 1-2 miles ESE of the former town site sits a big oak just off FM 798 on the north side of the road.��This tree, called the "Indian Scout Tree", witnessed the last Indian Battle in Bee County.�
My dad ran cattle for several years on the place with the Fox family.�Mr. Fox described the battle occurring to the SE of the tree in open terrain with scattered oaks.�The scout who had been in the tree was one of the survivors of the battle.� -






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