Thurber, Texas
{{Use American English|date=July 2025}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2023}}
{{Infobox NRHP
| name = Thurber Historic District
| nrhp_type = hd
| image = Thurber Historic District.JPG
| caption = Thurber Historic District
| nearest_city = Mingus, Texas
| coordinates = {{coord|32|30|26|N|98|25|2|W|type:city_region:US-TX|display=title}}
| locmapin = Texas#USA
| map_label = Thurber Historic District
| locmap_relief = yes
| built = {{Start date|1886}}
| builder = Texas Pacific Coal Mining Company
| added = August 17, 1979
| area = {{convert|1006|acre}}
| refnum = 79002936{{NRISref|version=2010a}}
}}
Thurber is an unincorporated community in Erath County, Texas, United States{{GNIS|1379160}} (near the Palo Pinto county line), located 75 miles west of Fort Worth. It was, between 1888 and 1921, one of the largest producers of bituminous coal in Texas and the largest company town in the state, with a population of over 10,000.{{Handbook of Texas|id=hnt21|name=Thurber, Texas}} The population of the community is 48 per the 2010 United States Census.{{cn|date=March 2024}}
History
Image:Thurber Texas coal mining.jpg
Coal-mining operations began in Thurber in 1886 and reached a peak around 1920, when the town had a population of approximately 8,000 to 10,000, from more than a dozen nationalities, though Italians, Poles, and Mexicans predominated. At the peak, Thurber was one of Texas's largest bituminous coal-mining towns. Established as a company town, the mining operations in Thurber were unionized in 1903, and Thurber became the first totally closed shop town in the country. The Texas and Pacific Coal Company was not owned by the Texas and Pacific Railway, but it lay near its line and provided the trains of that company with much fuel. The Texas and Pacific Coal Company created a subsidiary company, Texas Pacific Mercantile and Manufacturing Company, to operate its mercantile operation, with company-run retail outlets like the grocery, dry goods, hardware, and drug stores, as well as saloons and other establishments.{{cite book|last=Tucker|first=Gene Rhea|title=Oysters, Macaroni, and Beer: Thurber, Texas, and the Company Store|year=2012|publisher=Texas Tech University Press|location=Lubbock|isbn=978-0-89672-768-7}}
The company that owned the town, the Texas and Pacific Coal Company, also produced vitrified paving bricks that were used throughout Texas and the southern half of the United States.[https://www.tarleton.edu/library/crosstimbers/collections/thurbercollection/THN00004.html Tarleton website] By 1920, conversion of locomotives from coal to oil reduced demand and lowered prices and miners left the area through the 1920s. The Texas and Pacific Coal Company was instrumental in discovering oil in the Ranger, Texas, area as part of the Texas Oil Boom; the company re-branded itself the Texas Pacific Coal and Oil Company, and, eventually, the Texas Pacific Oil Company.{{rp|95–119}}[http://www.tarleton.edu/gordoncenter/thurberhistory.html W.K. Gordon Center for Industrial History of Texas].
Nationwide, there are several thousands of people whose roots go back to Thurber. There are several landmarks in Thurber, such as The Thurber Cemetery (which has over a thousand graves), the restored St. Barbara's Catholic Church, a restored and furnished coal miner's house, New York Hill, and much more. A historic Thurber smokestack can be seen from Interstate 20 near Thurber.[http://www.thurbertexas.com/ Thurber Historical Association] Also at Thurber is the W. K. Gordon Center for Industrial History of Texas, a museum containing information on historical Thurber (operated by nearby Tarleton State University), as well as the historic Smokestack Restaurant, and the New York Hill Restaurant built on what was once the site of the town's Episcopal Church at the top of New York Hill.
Notable people
- Johnny Lucadello, baseball player
- Tony Lucadello, baseball scout
- Rex Trailer, television cowboy star
- Tony Venzon, baseball umpire
Photo gallery
Image:Thurber tower and fire station.JPG|Thurber smokestack and fire station
Image:Thurber Tower.JPG|Thurber smokestack
Image:Miner's house in Thurber, Texas.JPG|Miner's house
Image:Thurberchurch1.jpg|Saint Barbara's Catholic Church
Image:New York Hill Restaurant.JPG|New York Hill Restaurant
Image:ThurberBuildings (1 of 1).jpg |Smokestack Restaurant
Image:Thurber Gazebo.JPG|Bandstand
Image:Gordon Center.JPG|W. K. Gordon Center for Industrial History of Texas
Image:Thurbercemetery7.jpg|Thurber Cemetery
Image:Rail car in Thurber,Texas.JPG|Rail car
Image:ThurberFireStation1 (1 of 1).jpg|Thurber fire station
See also
{{Portal|National Register of Historic Places|Texas}}
References
{{reflist|2}}
Further reading
- {{cite book|last=Bielinski|first=Leo S.|title=The Thurber Connection|year=2008|publisher=Joy Presswork Collection|location=Baird, TX|isbn=978-0-9638476-1-4}}
- {{cite book|last=Gentry|first=Mary Jane|editor=T. Lindsay Baker|title=Birth of a Texas Ghost Town: Thurber, 1886-1933|year=2008|publisher=Texas A&M University Press|location=College Station|isbn=978-1-60344-397-5}}
- {{cite book | last1 = Hardman | first1 = Weldon B. | title = Fire in a Hole! | publisher = Thurber Historical Association | year = 1975 | location = Gordon, TX | oclc = 5036685}}
- {{cite book|last=Rhinehart|first=Marilyn D.|title=A Way of Work and a Way of Life: Coal Mining in Thurber, Texas, 1888-1926|year=1992|publisher=Texas A&M University Press|location=College Station|isbn=978-0-89096-499-6}}
- {{cite book|last=Spratt, Sr.|first=John S.|editor=Harwood P. Hinton|title=Thurber, Texas: The Life and Death of a Company Coal Town|year=1986|publisher=University of Texas Press|location=Austin|isbn=978-0-292-78067-5}}
- {{cite book | last1 = Studdard | first1 = George B. | title = Life of the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co.: 1888-1963 | year = 1992 | location = Fort Worth, TX | oclc = 31344264 }}
- {{cite book|last=Tucker|first=Gene Rhea|title=Oysters, Macaroni, and Beer: Thurber, Texas, and the Company Store|year=2012|publisher=Texas Tech University Press|location=Lubbock|isbn=978-0-89672-768-7}}
- {{cite book|last=Woodard|first=Don|title=Black Diamonds! Black Gold! The Saga of Texas Pacific Coal and Oil Company|year=1998|publisher=Texas Tech University Press|location=Lubbock|isbn=978-0-89672-379-5}}
External links
{{Commons}}
- [http://www.tarleton.edu/gordoncenter/index.html W.K. Gordon Center for Industrial History of Texas]
- [http://www.thurbertexas.com/ Thurber Historical Association]
- [http://www.smokestack.net The SmokeStack Restaurant]
- {{Handbook of Texas|id=hnt21|name=Thurber, Texas}}
- {{TARO|utarl|00094|Thurber, Texas, Photograph Collection}}
{{NRHP in Texas}}
{{Erath County, Texas}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Unincorporated communities in Erath County, Texas
Category:Unincorporated communities in Texas