Dell City Texas. (original) (raw)

Texas state line

Thanks to Jason Penney, we have more photos of Dell City than the Handbook of Texas has text. According to the Handbook of Texas Online, the town was started "sometime before 1949 when a post office was established there."

Dell City Namesake - (See Forum below)

The population was a little less than 200 in the early 50s, and peaked just short of 1000 in the early 60s. An estimated 40,000 acres are irrigated and onions, tomatoes and cotton were the principal crops.

We called the Dell City Chamber of Commerce and spoke to Gene Lutrick, the President of the chamber and a man who holds numerous other positions vital to the city. Mr. Lutrick has been in Dell City since 1950 when he moved from Abernathy (Lubbock County). He was kind enough to fill in a few blanks for us

Dell City Texas billboard The Dell City Billboard, A Classic from the Golden Age of Community BillboardsPhoto Courtesy Jason Penney

"The Farmer in the Dell"

First of all, Mr. Lutrick is a little more accurate about the date. 1947 is the year that men came looking for oil and discovered the underground water. Developers from Austin and Midland immediately got busy promoting the town.

When we asked who Mr. Dell might have been, Mr. Lutrick asked if we were familiar with the nursery song "The Farmer in the Dell". There was no Mr. Dell - it's Dell as in "a small, secluded, usually forested valley." Just forget the part about the forest.

One would think that Michael Dell of Austin would open an office here, at the very least a small one to receive mail or to have outgoing items postmarked Dell City.

The pound in Dell City Texas The Dell City Animal Control Shelter Photo Courtesy Jason Penney

Early Days in Dell City

Eager to put the water to use, the developers planted 200 acres of cotton. This was great news for the local rabbits who ate all but 14 acres of it. The uneaten cotton produced 21/2 bales per acre, and farmers started planting alfalfa to keep the rabbits occupied. Today, in addition to the onions and tomatoes previously mentioned, chili peppers are also grown and a vineyard sends sweet grapes to Lubbock.

Reports on wildlife include abundant deer and antelope. We asked Mr. Lutrick about buffalo (roaming or otherwise) and he said that there were none in Dell City. He did say that he has, on occasion, heard a discouraging word. We didn't ask what it was. Local sheep ranchers reduce the coyote population by hunting them from helicopters and a recent hunt killed 40 in just two days. One entrance to the Guadalupe Mountain National Park has been closed due to numerous sightings of mountain lions.

Schooling:

The first school in Dell City was a trailer beside the First Baptist Church and there were only four or five children according to Mr. Lutrick. He said that at one time there were close to 400. Today there are around 200 students and some are bussed in from New Mexico. The state of New Mexico pays the school district, which you have to admit is a pretty sensible arrangement for all concerned.

west Texas ruin West Texas View from Orange, New Mexico Photo Courtesy Jason Penney

Orange, New Mexico is just across the state line and TxDoT hasn't given Dell City one of those fancy granite state silhouettes like they have when you enter Texas on major highways. Although Orange is a ghost town now, it used to be a stagecoach stop on the Butterfield Stage Line. We are sorry to report that the ruins of the actual stagecoach building have been bulldozed long ago.

Dell City Texas jail The Jail in Dell City dates from the 1940s Photo Courtesy Jason Penney

Small Town Newspaper

Dell City has its own weekly newspaper. It's the Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review. There are also 2 groceries, two cafes and two Hudspeth County Deputies who keep law and order.

We called the newspaper and Mary Louise Lynch, the editor returned our call and gave us a few more interesting facts on the town. She has been printing the newspaper for 35 years and the Review absorbed the Herald sometime in the 60s.

Ms. Lynch comes from California, but has been in Dell City from the very beginning. She remembers when the first residents lived in tents and (correctly) points out that Dell Citizens were Texas' last pioneers. The alfalfa that was meant to distract the rabbits from the cotton is now a major crop and cotton is long gone. Mary Louise thinks that the nearby Delaware Mountains may have had some bearing on the town's name.** **She reported that the El Capitan Theater closed in the 60s and that for some time it was used as a residence. A fire destroyed the town's major grocery and the proprietors retired rather than rebuild. Most Dell Citizens make grocery trips toEl Paso. She's seen one or two dogs in the pound in the last three or four years and can't remember the last time the jail had an inmate.

Dell City's crisis now is more threatening than rabbits. It's a familiar problem with small West Texas towns having their groundwater literally drilled out from under them and sold to overpopulated and always thirsty El Paso.

Dell City local and tourist information:
City Hall 915-964-2344
Chamber of Commerce: 915-964-2424

Dell City Area Hotels
El Paso Hotels | Van Horn Hotels | Pecos Hotels

Dell City Texas fire enging Vintage Fire Equipment in Dell CityPhoto Courtesy Jason Penney

Dell City Texas Forum


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