F 394 .03 L7 Copy 1 LIBRARY OF COP>!GRESS. Shelf .i.D.3.L:i UNITED STATES OF AMEKICA. t <^ '\m. ~^m^ w. m-^^ ^m" Jh^- jM.. • c.^\. r?.BWS STBAM gl^INTirJG I7OUSE, DENISON, ©EXAb. C. H. A M. M. SCHOLL- COMTOS ITOR'.. mm^QYiMEX -»»>o««<- N the spring of 1872 a few unpretentious men appear- ©'" ed in Gravson County, Texas, looking- for small "t^IP farms. They all bought in the same neighborhood and the settlers all chuckled over the quality of land they were able to dispose of to some of them, but not until these purchases had aggregated over two thousand acres in a solid body, and a few deeds had been spread upon the records conveying the whole to R. S. Stevens, was it dis- covered that this land was intended as a site for a city to be built at the terminus of a great trunk railroad, the first to penetrate the Indian Territory. These purchases heralded the birth of Denison. At that time the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railroad had hardly reached Muskogee, one hundred and fifty miles away, but was making rapid strides toward Texas, and was known to be pointing in the direction of Grayson County. What were supposed to be the only available crossings of ^ j^. ML^ .^^^ ^ 2 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887. ked River had been gobbled up by native land-sharks in the belief that a fortune was in store for them in selling out to the coming railroad. Sherman, the county seat, and the prospective terminus of the Houston & Texas Central Railroad, had turned the cold shoulder to this yankee enterprise, refusing to gi\fQ any aid or to make any concessions of land. True, she wanted the road and ex- pected it to come, but it was to be as a favor to the road and not an obligation to the city. From the very first, this great enterprise, which was destined to do so much good for Texas, was characterized as a "yankee innovation" and was antagonized and ham- pered in every possible way, but it was in the hands of a man who knew his business, who had faith in his work and in himself, and who knew no such word as fail. Unwel- comely received by a city already established, he deter- termined to found one of his own. With a faith born of inspiration and in the face of opposition that would have discouraged ordinary men, he pushed on his work, laid out the best planned city in the South, and on the 23rd of Sep- tember, 1872, made a public sale of lots. A goodly num- ber of people werq in attendance and notwithstanding the fact that his railroad was yet a hundred miles away, that two hundred laborers were resting idly upon their shovels between this point and Red River, restrained from building 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 U- -^ Jj; a road bed across his own land by an injunction of the District Court of Grayson County. The bidding" was spirited and lots in an open prairie sold at an average of over $100 each or more than $1,500 per acre. The con- fidence of the man gave confidence to the people. In less than three hours after the close of the sale, building had commenced on Main street and to this day has never been discontinued. PUBLIC SCHOOLS. The city was incorporated in March, 1873, and before the new officers had become warm in their seats they be- gan agitating the subject of free schools. Within a year the foundation was laid for a public school building, whi^ch cost, when completed, forty-five thousand dollars and was at that time, by far, the best in the State. The public school fund was small in amount and precarious in collection but our people were enthusias- tic and what the public fund lacked was made up by pri- vate subscription. Business men contributed freely, old bachelors and men of family vieing with each other as to which should give the most, and in 1874 there was a pub- lic free school in Denison for ten months of the year, the first instance of the kind in the history of the State. It gave Denison at once a prominence in educational matters 4 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 ^^. — --^2^ - — -^- which she has never since forfeited. The noble almoners of the Peabody Fund, noticing the struggle, came to her aid in 1875, and again in 1876, but at the end of that year the people said : " We thank you for the assistance you have rendered us but will ask no more. Give now unto those who are more needy, for Denison is both able and willing to provide for her own children." And nobly has that promise been redeemed. Ten months of public school in every year, free to every child within the city's limit, extending through a period of four- teen years and still going on, is a record which no other city in Texas possesses and one of which Denison is justly proud. The single building which was erected at the start has been supplemented by another and another, until the city now owns three brick edifices for the education of white children, and one for colored, all filled to overflowing and half a dozen business houses temporarily occupied besides. The corps of teachers has been increased from three in 1874 to twenty-five in 1887. A thorough system of grading has been introduced and maintained and the cur- riculum has been gradually extended until it embraces all the branches of the ordinary city high school. Nor are facilities wanting for those who prefer private 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 5 to ])ublic instruction. The Academy of St. Francis Xavier furnishes accommodations for a hundred young ladies from home and abroad and is well worthy of the liberal patron- age it is receiving, while Professor Harshaw's Commercial College gives the finishing touches to the young men. Music and the Arts have not been neglected, and Denison boasts of as high an order of musical education as any city in the land, a fact which the prominence her young ladies have already attained in Chicago, Boston and New York will sufficiently attest. -»»>o««<- Rheunia'Eieg and Songump^iiseg. 1 '»»>0««<' •WjlsA'^^ its foundation, the people of Denison, who were C^)--.. ^-c. carrying Hfe insurance, had difficulty with their QjakS) ■ ... . . . , Jjk. respective companies m securing permission to let \ their policies continue in force. The reason for this lay in confusing the upper Red ■ River country with the deadly lowlands of the same river in Louisiana. The upper Red River country is so remarkably healthy that the insurance companies have not only withdrawn their opposition, but all have their agents there actively solicit- ing business. If the selection of a town site had been made with ref- erence to health alone, no other consideration influencing its location, a better could not have been made. The •<1-X% 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887. 7 '^^ ^^^ -"^^-^^ place chosen was on an undulatini^, upland, wooded, prairie, two miles south of Red River. The surface is suf- ficiently sloping to give the whole city a thorough drainage and near enough level to require the minimum amount of grading for streets, alleys or yards. Indeed the amount of ^radintj- in the entire citv in fifteen years would not equal one block in Kansas City. The elevation of the city at its lowest part is two hundred feet above the river, far above "The fog that rises when the sun goes down." The highest ground is over eighty feet additional, making the select resident portion of the city two hundred and eighty feet above the river and eight hundred feet above the sea. Its situation, on the south side of the river, in order to be appreciated, must be accompanied by the statement that in Texas the prevailing wind is from the South. Due care is not always taken in the origin of a town, to get it in a healthy locality. It is either built on low land, in the river bottom, or on the north side of a stream, where it catches all the malaria borne upon the wind. It is not un- common to find pneumonia, bilious fevers, ague and ma- larial diseases prevailing in a territory five or seven miles from the north bank of a river, or in the river bottom, when no cases can be found south of the river. Even the 8 1872— DExNISON, TEXAS.— 1887. ordinary prevailing diseases are mild in type and more easily managed on the south upland, while they take on violent characteristics in the river bottom or on the north bank. A residence on the north side of the river means not only anxiety, sorrow, lost time by sickness or untimely death to some member of the family, but it means, after a fortune is secured, its expenditure in seeking for a restora- tion of the health lost in accumulating it. Better not get riches if they have to be squandered on doctors. Better not labor for profit if all the gain must go to the drug store : it is poor consolation, after years of toil, to see the results swept up by the undertaker. Yet m'any a man. superior in business qualifications, makes the mistake of settling in the city built on the low lands, leaves his wife a widow, his children orphans, and has his estate divided between the grave-digger and the hearse owner. NO MUD. The soil on which Denison is built is mostly sandy, in .some places underlaid with a ledge of lime stone. Mud is almost unknown. Even a half hour after a violent rain you can walk out without getting the feet wet, throughout most of the town. This fact, coupled with the dryness of the climate, gives convalescents more days in the open air than can be secured in almost any other portion of the United States. Here can be found the greatest number of ^>,9>- r^^-^ '"-^^- 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 PERFECT DAYS. There are few extremely hot or cold days. The lowest thermometer observed in fifteen years was eight degrees, Fahr., while the highest was one hundred and eight degrees, Fahr. These are exceptional readings. Careful observa- tion shows an average of four degrees (throughout the summer) below the temperature of the Missouri Valley five hundred miles to the north, and during the summer of 1887 at no time was the temperature above ninety-six degrees. No matter how hot the day may be there is always a refreshing breeze at night, which re-invigorates the system. Hot sweltering nights are unknown. Through- out July, August and September there is no dew, every- body sleeps in the draft, with doors and windows all open and "catching cold" is unknown. The idea prevails so ex- tensively that the farther North the colder, and the farther South the warmer, that it is difficult to convince people of exceptions to this. Take any daily summer reading of the weather reports as furnished by the signal service, and almost invariably it will be found that Texas points are lower than Iowa or Kansas. Why.? The prevailing wind from the south is cool, off the gulf, takes up the heat of the earth as it travels north, and by the time it reaches Ne- braska is five degrees hotter than in North Texas. The winter temperature seldom reaches zero, never mi. lo 1872— DENISON, TEXAS. — 1887. does so in fact except when the wind turns into the North, cTind never continue so beyond two or three days. There is seldom ten days during" the winter season that a person cannot be out of doors without, or with a Hght wrap. Feb- ruary, the most abominable month in the North, is usually the most delightful in North Texas. Medical men understand too well the aggravation of all lung troubles by damp weather : first, through the de- bilitating influence of moisture, relaxing the system, pros- trating the vitality, lowering the tone ; second, the increase of the bronchial secretion, requiring more coughing and still farther debilitating an almost exhausted frame ; third, the liabilty to take fresh cold, rekindling the subsiding fever flame. Denison is in an essentially dry atmosphere. We have enough rain to mature crops, but no excess of moisture. Fog is almost unknown, and snow has not fallen for two years. This dry atmosphere is peculiarly- suitable for sick people. A hot moist day at seventy de- grees is more exhausting than a hot dry day at ninety de- grees, or a cold damp day at thirty degrees is more liable to produce sickness than a cold dry day at ten degrees. Moisture, if cold, causes a rapid extraction of bodily heat, followed by a shock to the system, the full force usually falling on the diseased tissue. An absence of such moist- ure means <^reater securitv from back-sets. 18/2— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 n THE WATER SUPPLY > is drawn from wells. Through the strata of sand sur- rounding and underlying the city is filtered an abundance of pure water that would be unexpected on top of a hill. The waterworks have a stand-pipe fifteen feet in diameter and one hundred and twentv-five feet his^h, two hoistino- engines with a capacity of over one million gallons daily, and draw^ their supply from several wells connected with each other by a tunnel. C. W. Clark, Master Mechanic of the Missouri Pacific Railroad, says this is the purest water found anywhere on their ten thousand miles of rail- way system. It is also the most expensive and extensive system of waterworks in the State of Texas. The diseases existing in this section are the same as elsewhere in the United States, though modified by the climate. Of typhoid fever there has never been but one authen- tic case since the city was started fifteen years ago. Measles are the same as elsewhere. Of hay fever about one-half the people afflicted with it are relieved by coming to Texas. The other half suff'er in a milder form. Scarlet fever, that terror of northern households, is hardly worth considering. There have not been to exceed three deaths from it since the founding of the city. In »?-.-!)♦ t.^:^ 12 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887. 'W' ^^>^ the majority of instances it is so mild that the patient never ^roes to bed. In the worst cases medical attendance is seldom required beyond a few days, and sequellae are almost unknown. From diphtheria there have been about seven deaths in a population of fifteen thousand during 1887 from this disease, and that equals the number dying from the dis- ease in all the fourteen years preceeding. Rheumatism exists but is a rare disease. All persons coming in afflicted with it recover their health by a few months' residence, without taking any medicine. Climatic influence alone banishes the disease. Consumption is the disease above ail others that is benefited by a residence here. The reason for this will become apparent with a moment's thought as to its nature* While classed by recent researches among^ the diseases caused by the implantation of a tubercular germ, yet all doctors know that the disease is virulent or held in abey ance according to the amount of fresh air a person receives Stinginess of fresh air in the bed-room means death from consumption. The more fresh air persons have the less }iable they are to take it; if there is any suspicion of inher- iting the tendency, fresh air diminishes its possible com- ing; if it is already in the system fresh air holds out more hope of cure than any other plan of treatment. .^^^A . 1872— DENISON , TEXAS.— 1887 13 Look at this first in the point of elevation. No per- son standing in certain depots in the Rocky Mountains can shut his eyes to the constant stream of coffins going Eastward, while the palace car daily delivers new victims. "Too late, too late; you put off coming too long," is the song the dying consumptive is greeted with, when in fact he has been killed by the change. The attenuated atmos- phere of a mountain region contains sensibly less oxygen to the cubic foot than that of a lower region, the lungs have to move more rapidly to extract it. and exhaustion follows as a matter of course. "Too late.-'" — to say that the patient went there too soon would strike the truth oftener. A moderate elevation from five hundred to one thousand feet above sea level is much better adapted to consumptives than extremes either above or below\ As to moisture, a residence on the sea coast, near great lakes, or in a damp climate, always aggravates con- sumption. At Denison is a climate essentially dry. For three or four months in the year there is no dew, frequently from sixty to ninety days between rains and sometimes six months without rain; no snow for two years, and con- sequently an absence of all these conditions hinging on moisture which tends to aggravate consumption, at the same time permitting more out door exercise, more fresh air, more- of the essentials, which strengthen the system to 14 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 resist the encroachments of the disease, at the same time that there is diminished chances of backsets. During the winter season the North, and especially along the sea coast, patients are housed up, unable to ven- ture out. If a few days of mild spring weather lures them from their retreat, it is at the risk of wet feet, new colds, and a fresh impulse to the disease. In Denison, during both winter and spring, the ground is generally dry, and the dust flying. There are not to exceed ten days in the winter that an invalid cannot live out of doors. Ah, but those horrid Northers ! Yes, they have throughout the southwest a keen, cold, penetrating wind coming down suddenly from the North, that chills every- thing. If prepared for it, as every sensible person ought to be, it is an invigorating change, giving sprightliness to the step, brightness to the countenance, and snap to the appetite. If not prepared for it you will suffer just as any other fool, who is caught in a shower without an um- brella. These Northers are no worse in Texas than in New York or Pennsylvania. The only difference between them there and here is that in New York thev are mixed up with so much abominable weather that a worse spell is not noticed, while in Texas they occur right in the pleasant weather. The temperature falls farther but no more suddenly in Texas than Pennsylvania. ^ /^— .=^ m^ -.-^^ 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 15 '-^' — -'^5^ -^^ — '^^ One more point, frequently overlooked by doctors in sending patients away for their health. All cough, from whatever disease, jars and debilitates the stomach. Nausea and vomiting are frequently present even from the violence of a whooping-cough. Under these circum- stances a patient should never be sent to a health resort, no matter how superior the climatic influences, if the food to be provided, or the style of cooking is "behind the age." Patients by hundreds have been sent to localities where pine land, sandy soil, genial skies, and pleasant sur- roundings existed, yet where "hog and hominy" was the unvarying diet, everything was fried in grease, and while the lungs drank in the grand atmosphere, the stomach was disgusted at the provender or method of preparation. North Texas is settled with a class of people abreast with the age, who know how to cook, how to live, and how to enjoy life. Denison, Texas, October 20th, 1887. This is to certify that the Mortuary Record of the City of Denison, Texas, show a mortality for the year ending October i, 1887, of one hundred and forty-three (143), of these ten died of Pulmonary Consumption, four of whom were born in Texas, three born out of Texas, and the birth-place of three unknown. T. E. Kennedy, Secretary of City of Denison. The average death rate of all England as given by Carpenter, is about twenty-two per thousand. The low- 6 1 872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1 887 est actual mortality quoted by him is eleven per thousand. The following report gives the .mortality of 1870 for the cities named. The death rate is per thousand inhabitants: St. Louis 21.3 San Francisco 21.4 Boston 24 Sacramento 25 Chicago 24.5 Philadelphia 25.5 Baltimore 27.1 New York 29.3 Denison's death rate for 1886-7 is only T2 per 1000. Consumption is credited usually with producing the death of one person out of every six. In some localities this rate is far exceeded. Including those who came to Den- ison with the disease, and died, the rate is only one in fourteen. Excluding known foreign born cases, the rate is only one in twenty. Still farther excluding the cases of doubtful nativity, and considering only those positively known to originate here, the rate is about one in thirty- six. To put it in different language six times as man\' people die elsewhere of consumption as in Denison. If that dreaded disease is lurking in your system your chances of reaching old age are six fold greater in Deni- son than at any average point in the country. .Jh:^ jM.^ '^^ r872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 17 .J|eni^on'^ Wat^i^ /^rPt/ ■»»>0<««- IPJie Beg'E in tte 8^ »»>o««< .lA^I'gKXAS is often referred to as a drouth-stricken state ^^T^ and persons not acquainted with the facts, have ^fc? been led by the reference mentioned to beheve that Y the entire state is subject to disastrous drouths. Neither Denison, nor the country tributary to her, He within the dry belt. Copious rains fall to bless the hus- bandnian, and his broad acres never fail to yield payin> J >^- J^ - 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 19 Christian, Baptist, North Methodist, South Methodist, Episcopal, Catholic and German Lutheran. Each has a strong nnembership, and each congregration, with the ex- ception of the German Lutheran, owns the church edifice in which it worships. St. Xavier's Academy, for young- ladies, is maintained by the Catholic Church, and is rec- ognized by the highest educational circles as one of the best institutions of its kind in the Southwest. Both the Presbyterian and Christian churches contemplate estab- lishing colleges in Denison at an early day. With these moral influences at hand, parents seeking a point at which they may educate their children without exposing them to the temptations of immoral surroundings can not do better than locate in Denison. 20 1872— DENISON, TP:XAS.— 1887 I -»»)g««<- -»)»3««<- /T^ESS than thirty days ago Denison passed the fif- ^"^'■-f^ teen anniversary of her existence. At that earlier period the ground upon which now stands the me- (?y \S 'h \: f tropolis of North Texas could have been bought for from fifty cents to one dolhir and fifty cents per acre. Shrewd, far-seeing men saw and appreciated the advan- tages that the surrounch'ng country offered anci taking ad- vantage of them planned and platted the city of Denison. Of course, older and better settled portions of the country scoffed the idea that a town, much less a city, could be built where Denison now stands, but the originators, firm in the faith of her. future, went manfully to work and to-day Denison stands a proud memorial of their enter- 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 21 prise and pluck. Situated, as it were, upon an unculti- xated track of land, her first hope was in railroads. One came, they were bound to come, come, for the then hamlet's geographical position commanded them. Prop- erty, of course, became enhanced in value, not from any worked up boom but from real intrinsic value. The attention of investors was attracted and capital began to flow in. Lots and blocks that were held at hundreds rapidly appreciated in value into the thousands and the tents and shanties that hitherto had marked the town site gave way to the brick storehouses and the handsome pri- vate residences that now adorn her business and residence streets. To cite a few examples of the rapid enhancement of real estate in the earliei days, and those days are not so far away but that they are vivid in the recollection of many ot the pioneer residents of the city — vivid because those who had nerve enough to catch on and hold on now have the substantial proofs of their judgment to their credit in the banks, and vivid to others because they daily pass lots and blocks which they might have owned to-day had they had faith. In a recent edition of the Denison Morning News there were cited a considerable number of instances where property sold at a song but a few years ago and quoted the reigning prices of to-day. "There were men c f little faith in these da\s as there 22 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 "^^^^^=^^5^ - — '^-^ are now and always will be. They laughed a few years ago at Mr. Schultz when he paid three hundred dollars for a block near the cemetery, yet he has been offered sixteen thousand for it. In 1880 a block on West Woodard street was offered for two thousand and three hundred dollars. The proprietor was offered fourteen hundred dollars for half of it, but the sale fell through because the parties disagreed as to how the block should be divided. To-day that same half cannot be bought for four thousand dollars. Six years ago the block on Woodard street, corner of Eddy avenue, was purchased for six hundred dollars. It is now worth eight thousand dollars. In 1876 William Hughes paid two hundred dollars for a block just beyond the Main street school house. He was laughed at for his investment. Inside of two years he sold it for thirty-two hundred dollars and to-day cannot buy it back for twenty thousand dollars. In 1872 three gentlemen bought two or three acres of land at one hundred dollars per acre, near the Main street school house. They weak- ened and sold it for one hundred and fifty dollars. It has recently changed hands at the rate of twenty-four hundred dollars per acre and in five years from to-day cannot be touched at the rate of forty thousand dollars." "These instances might be multiplied ad nauseam. They are not drawn from fancy but the official records of ^^ — m^ --^^ 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 23 --%■ ^5^- -^^ the transfer of title and the amounts paid are upon record upon the County's books. The instances cited are none of them upon the main business street of the city — Main .street. Property has not changed as frequently upon Main as elsewhere in the city, but it has advanced in perhaps a still greater ratio. In 1877 P. O'Donnell purchased the lot where the United States Clothing Store now stands for fourteen hundred dollars, although there was a house on it worth twelve hundred dollars. To-day the lot is covered with a fine brick store house and the land alone is valued at eight thousand dollars. Jack Gallagher's prop- erty, on the corner of Main and Burnett avenue, which cost him twelve hundred dollars a few years, ago is now worth fifteen thousand dollars without the improvements." With her assured future, Denison real estate is as cheap to-day as it ever was. Denison is now the main point in Texas of the entire Missouri Pacific Southwestern system. She is the terminus of the Houston & Texas Central. Lateral branches of the Missouri Pacific extend in every direction. The Denison, Bonham & New Or- leans, a line that owes its conception and building to Den- ison enterprise, will be in running order to Bonham by January i, 1887. The subsidy asked for to build the Den- ison & Washita to the coal fields of the Nation has been raised, the survey has been completed and this road will ^. ^.. , i^^4^ . ..-x^. 24 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 also be ironed to Red River by the first of January, 1887. If property so enhanced in value during the few years of Denison's transition state from a hamlet to a city of her now proportions who can dispute the fact that it will still keep pace with Denison's upward and onward march. The completion of the Denison & Washita road to the coal fields, which will be accomplished in less than one year, will not only supply her with cheap fuel but enable her to command the price of that article throughout the entire state of Texas. The extension of the Denison, Bonham & New Orleans, to the long-leaf pine forest, will furnish abundant lumber for all kinds of manufactures of furniture, etc., at prices that cannot be competed with. Added to this Denison is situated in one of the rich- est agricultural counties in the state, which cannot be surpassed in the production of cereals, fruits or vegetables. If ever a city had a brilliant prospect for her future Djuison is the place. Her property is as cheap to-day, comparatively, as it ever was. Investors who now place their money here cannot fail to realize largely upon their investments. Denison cordially invites everyone to come, look over the ground and judge for themselves. J>~^' ^^^ "t--G-^- ^'ii^ -^^ ^ 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 29 -»»>o««<- Denison claims, and not extravagantly either, that she is destined to become the great railroad center of North Texas. Already her railroad interests have as- sumed gigantic proportions, and the work in that direc- tion seems to have but fairly been begun. Being the Southern terminus of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas divis- ion of the great Missouri Pacific system, immense shops, giving employment to an army of men, have been located here, and it is from Denison that four branches of the Missouri Pacific, piercing territory Southeast and South- west, radiate. That the reader may have some concep- tion of the magnitude of the Missouri Pacific's operations at Denison, it is but necessary to cite the fact that Jh^.^=^^^ :M^. 30 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 -^%- -'^^^ -^^ $1,500,000 is disbursed annually to its employes at this point. This immense sum is divided into monthly pay- ments, and acts as a great stimulus to trade in Denison. The Missouri Pacific has lately made extensive ad- ditions to its yards at this point, by purchasing more ground and putting down twenty-five or thirty miles additional switching. This line alone now has forty-two miles of switching within the corporate limits of Denison, or more than all of the railroads at either Dcdlas or Fort Worth, combined. But the Missouri Pacific does not propose to draw the line at these great improvements. Ground has been purchased on which to erect shops greatly exceeding the capacity of the ones now in opera- ! tion here. The cost of these shops is estimated at $200.- 000, and when completed will give employment to two thousand men. So much for the Missouri Pacific's interests at Deni- son. Now let us speak of the Houston & Texas Central of which Denison is the Northern terminus. This line, like the Missouri Pacific, monthly makes large dis- bursements to its employes at Denison, amounting in the aggregate to $500,000 annually. Here are two railroads annually pouring into the lap of Denison $2,000,000. Is not this of itself strong evidence that Denison has already made a good start in the di- 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 31 rection of becoming- the great railroad center of North Texas? But Denison has much more to offer in support of her coming supremacy as a raih'oad center. THE DENISON, BONHAM & NEW ORLEANS is being r-pidly pushed to completion. The grading is already done, and not later than January i, 1888, trains will be running between Denison and Bonham. This road runs in a Southeastern direction from Denison, pass- ing through the richest grain and cotton-growing section of the State. Grayson, Fannin, Lamar and Delta Coun- ties are pierced almost through their centers. Next, the Counties of Camp, Marion and Upshur are reached These counties undoubtedly contain the richest deposits of iron ore to be found in the South. These deposits have been partially developed. The completion of the Deni- son and Washita, to the coal fields, will give Denison ab- solute control of the coal supply of the State, and the question as to when she will become the Birmingham of Texas is easily answered. On the line of this road arc magnificent forests of long-leaf pine, cedar, cypress and post oak. This road opens up an entirely new territory to the wholesale trade of Denison, one that is rich in agriculture, lumber and mining. 32 1 872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1 887 --%■ — --isr- — -^^ THE DENISON & WASHITA. For long, weary months Denison has been watching and praying- for the appearance of some railroad Moses, so to speak, who would take the Denison & Washita and lead it out of the wilderness of doubt and uncertainty which surrounded it. But this season of suspense and anxiety is ended. A few weeks since a proposition was made by a wealthy syndicate to the citizens of Denison, as follows : They to contribute a thirty thousand dollar subsidy, seven thousand, five hundred dollars payable when the Denison & Washita should be completed to the south bank of Red River, and the remainder at completion of the line to the coal fields in the Indian Territory. Liber- ality and enterprise are the chief characteristics of the average Denisonian, and in one week after the above proposition had been submitted the $30,000 subsidy was placed at the disposal of the syndicate. This secures to Denison the Denison & Washita, and the grading of the line from Denison to Red River is already under way. Contracts for iron, ties and bridge timbers '"have been awarded, and all that is possible for men and money to do to secure a rapid completion of the work will be done. What will the Denison & Washita secure to Denison.^ Well, being strictly a Denison enterprise, it makes Denison. mistress of the coal situation. It secures cheap fuel to Jh^^ •<^-^^ 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 33 Denison and makes her the only point in Texas at which factories of all kinds may be run cheaply and profitably. As the source of supply of cheap fuel, Denison becomes an attractive point for railroads. The latter must have cheap fuel, and at no other point in Texas can it be ob- tained so cheaply as at Denison. Already the Cotton Belt route has signified its intention of extending its line from Sherman to Denison, the magnet being Denison's cheap coal. Other roads will follow the example of the Cotton Belt, and prediction never yet has rested upon more stable foundation than the one to the effect that Denison is destined at no distant day to become the L^reat railroad center of North Texas. (f^\ J^^ j^ .^^^^ 34 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 Ifenicon'c J)anl^- ^ixa .^.^ _ 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 35 Maine— L. M. Whalen, O. B. Whalen, W. P. Bucknan, N. B. Nutt, jr., treasurer Eastport Savings Bank, George N. Hayes, Eastport; Franklin Nourse, manufacturer, Saco; Hon. Frederick Robie, ex-governor of Maine, Gorham; Hon. Percival Bonney, judge of the supreme court; Hon- W. H. Loony, Portland; Hon. Edwin Stone, Trustee Biddeford Savings Bank, Hon. J. M. Goodwin, president York County Savings Bank, Biddeford. Vermont — Hon. B. M. Smally, secretary National Democratic Committee, Gen. Wm. Wells, Burlington; ex-governor Gregory J. Smith, E. C. Smith, St. Albans; C. E. Bush, A. C. Burke, cashier First National Bank, Orwell; W. S. Dewey, manufacturer, John J. Dewey, man- ufacturer, J. W. Parker, manufacturer, Wm. Lindsa\', manufacturer, Quechee. Massachusetts — W. D. l^rackett, shoe manufacturer, S. B.King, Boston; W.W. Rice, Wollaston; Hon. W. B. Stevens, Stoneham; N. S. King, Newton; F. W. Johnson Stoneham. Rhode Island — O. A. Jilson, cashier Weybosset Na- tional Bank; J. V. Ousterhout, L. A. Pope, Warren. New^ Jersey — L. P. Smith, cashier First National Bank,' Dr. Geo. L. Romnie, B. H. Taylor, W. D. L. Rob- bins, M. B. Marshall. Mrs. Kate Crook, Lambertville. The State National, of \\hich Mr. J. N. Johnson is . J>^- .M^. —f-^^ 36 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 President, and N. S. Ernst, Cashier, was chartered Sep- tember 27, 1 88 1, and commenced business October 4, 1883. It has had a prosperous and popular career and now has $160,000 capital, surplus and profits in its business. The authorized capital is $500.- 000 with a paid up capital of $iOO.OOO. No bank- ing institution in the State enjoys the confidence of the public to a higher degree than the State National, and Denison may well feel proud of the fact that she numbers so stable an enterprise among her many other advantages. Jy--^ .A^ ,8;2— DENISON. TEXAS.— 1887 37 ^^^^—^ ^2^' yi\pX jD'^ni^on i^a^ b M^\ fe^r^. -»»>D««< An elevation of eight hundred feet above sea level. The finest climate in the West or Southwest. The finest vineyards in the Southwest. The richest cotton ""rowincf and a^jricultural country surrounding her. The finest fire, brick, cement and potter's clay in the West. Flag", lime and building stone that cannot be equalled. Railroads running in five directions and three more in course of construction. The natural distributing point for Texas and the In- dian Territor)\ A large jobbing trade to draw from. ^ j ^.,. Mi^ -^ ^<^.. 38 1872— DENISON, TEXAS.— 1887 ''^'%^=^'^^''^ '^>^"*' Churches, schools and everythini,^ to make you healthy, wealthy and happy. The stragetic point for factories. Perfect natural drainage. The finest system of water-works in the Southwest affording a never-failing supply of pure, soft water. ■ The only land in Texas which returns from one hun- dred and fifty dollars to six hundred dollars per acre net profit when cultivated in fruit or vegetables. . The Missouri Pacific Railroad shops, which disburse $150,000 monthly to employes residing in Denison. Inexhaustible beds of the finest coal in the world, only forty miles distant. The Northern terminus of the Houston & Texas Central Railway. Unbroken forests of pine, oak, walnut, poplar and hickory close at hand. A Natural Gas Company already organized, with a capital stock of thirty thousand dollars. This company has awarded the contract for drilling a Natural Gas well, and work on the same will be begun not later than No- vember 10, 1887. Experts pronounce the surface indica- tions at Denison very favorable, and predict that Natural Gas in abundance will be found at a depth not exceeding twelve hundred feet. ■ ni -I — i>ji;Nriso^r's chkap cevo^^i^h: xvr^iuo LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 014 648 880 8 > <5 . ,;■»?:• U> WmiB\-.