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THE TOWN OF TARRANT - FIRST COUNTY SEAT OF HOPKINS COUNTY
The first legislature of the State of Texas on March 25, 1846,
created the County of Hopkins from land formerly in Lamar and
Nacogdoches counties. The local commissioners were William Barker,
Robert Hargraves, James E. Hopkins, James Ward and Williams Wilkins.
Among other duties, they were commissioned to find the geographical
center of the country and there place the county seat, to be named
"Tarrant," in honor of General Edward H. Tarrant (1796-1858),
a hero of some of the wars of the United States and the Republic
of Texas and a resident of the nearby area. It was stipulated
in the act to establish the county that after choosing the site
for the courthouse, "
the Commissioners shall proceed
to lay off a town and sell the lots therein at public auction,
on a credit of 21 months; and all or other donation, shall be
applied to the erection of public buildings for the use of the
county."
Eldridge Hopkins, whose family had been honored in the naming
of the county, gave land for the town site of Tarrant. The earliest
public business was conducted in the open air because there was
no building for official use. A log cabin was soon erected for
temporary courthouse, which had to be used for the ensuing five
years, as financial arrangements could not be made for a permanent
building. It appears likely that the credit extended for town
improvements was slow to bring in revenue.
A post office was established in Tarrant in 1847, with R. R.
Cook as postmaster. At last, in 1851, a contract was let for the
construction of a permanent courthouse. The contractor was D.
Foster, whose bond was endorsed by Eldridge Hopkins, Hiram C.
Russell and James B. Simpson. Something evidently went wrong.
The bondsmen asked on March 15, 1852, to be released from their
responsibility and the contract of Foster was forfeited. Hezehiah
Hargrave, who may have been a subcontractor or workman, received
two subsequent payments for some work and William S. Houghton
became the next contractor employed to complete the building.
Even though the commissioners' court ordered the county treasurer
to fund Houghton's work by turning over to him all of the State
revenue received in 1852-53, the building operations floundered
for lack of funds.
When some early ecologist observed that cattle herds driven in
from Louisiana were exploiting the grasslands of Hopkins County,
which were free to all citizens, a remedy was found. The out-of-state
cattle were in violation of Texas law, for Texas grass was not
free to those cattle. Hopkins County brought action against the
owners of the visiting cattle, the owners were convicted and their
cattle were sold at public auction, bringing into the treasury
$1,772.46 - capital enough to continue the construction work.
In fact, with such advantages, a second story was added, with
Henry Doughty as contractor and G. H. Crowder as his associate.
There ultimately graced the public square a good farm courthouse
with chimneys at its two ends and a well of water in the yard.
The voters regarded the improvements with pardonable pride. The
completion was made in September 1853.
Meantime, a jury of review had met and let out contracts for
blazed trails from the county seat to Titus County on the east;
to Red River County on the northeast; to Lamar County on the north;
and to Jordon's Mill on the south. A Masonic Lodge was organized
in the town in1851 and soon opened a lodge-sponsored school where
boys and girls were taught in separate rooms.
Tarrant became a thriving town, with a tannery, a steam mill,
a blacksmith shop and a brick kiln. There were accommodations
for visitors at the Hopkins Hotel. During the rapid expansion
in the decade of the 1850's, the Texas Star, a newspaper, was
published in Tarrant and the Methodist denomination organized
a college and built a structure for its operation.
A reading of the Hopkins County returns in the Federal Census
for the year 1860 shows that there were 278 persons inhabiting
the town of Tarrant that year. There were 147 males and 131 females.
Many were minor children, of course. Vocationally speaking, there
were five attorneys, three blacksmiths, one cabinet maker, thirteen
carpenters, four store clerks (including grocer clerks), thirteen
day laborers and farm laborers, seven farmers, four grocery (saloon)
keepers, one mail carrier, seven merchants, four physicians, two
public officials (County Chief Justice Green H. Crowder, 40, a
native of Alabama and Deputy Sheriff D. Reynolds, 28, from Tennessee),
on saddler, two seamstresses, two students (one of these studying
law), one tailor, five teachers (common school, dancing and music),
one teamster, four toy makers, one trader, two wagoners and one
wheelwright.
Progress and prosperity characterized the town until the era
of the Civil War and Reconstruction. County business was conducted
in Tarrant until 1868, in fact. In that year, however, there existed
a counter authority that was able to override the will of the
people of Hopkins County. This was the Federal Army of the Occupation,
which was sent to Texas to supervise the attitudes and demeanor
of the people in order to enforce the political changes which
had been brought about by the Confederacy's downfall and the need
of the Southern States to be reformed before they came back into
the Union as full-fledged, sovereign states. Capt. Thomas M. Tolman
was the troop commander deployed to Hopkins County and appeared
to have been garrisoned in Sulphur Springs. This is understandable
because the population of Sulphur Springs, even in 1860, was considerably
larger than that of Tarrant. Interestingly enough, the post office
in which the people of Sulphur Springs received their mail was
Bright Star, but the common name of the population center had
been "Sulphur Springs", even before the Civil War. The
name of the community was probably applied to a rather large geographic
area, rather thickly populated for that time and place. Capt.
Tolman found that the road from Sulphur Springs to Tarrant was
practically impassable and a hindrance to him in his enforcement
of the military government. As early as 1857, when Masons in the
Sulphur Springs community petitioned for a lodge of their own,
separate from the one in Tarrant, they had given as a reason for
their petition a real difficulty in traveling to Tarrant and apparently
the war years had not allowed the county any leisure for improving
the roads.
The citizens understood the problem. A portion of the road from
Sulphur Springs to Tarrant, a distance of five miles, was not
only rough and unpleasant, but also actually dangerous to travel
even in good weather and in broad daylight. But when Capt. Tolman
ordered that the county records be moved from Tarrant to Sulphur
Springs to suit his convenience, the people of Tarrant were incensed.
This occurred in 1868 and the official business of the county
had to be conducted in Sulphur Springs, rather than Tarrant, until
the second week in May 1870, when civilian rule was restored to
the county and the records were returned to the courthouse in
Tarrant. However, the elation of the citizens was short lived,
because during the called session of the 12th Legislature during
the year 1870, the Governor E. J. Davis-dominated lawmakers passed
a special act to make Sulphur Springs the permanent county seat
of Hopkins County.
The courthouse in the town of Tarrant was closed permanently
at that time and Sheriff J. A. Weaver was ordered to place the
structure up for sale, whereupon the law partners, A. G. Matthews
and Judge J. A. Putman bought and dismantled it. Moved to Sulphur
Springs, the building materials were remodeled into a two-story
dwelling house situated on Connally Street, where the Williams
Hotel became a landmark.
Shorn of the original reason for its existence, the town of Tarrant
began to fade away. The dwellings and business buildings could
easily be removed and reconstructed elsewhere. The cemetery, doubtless,
could have been moved, with legal reinterments of the dead, but
this was not done. There continued to be a rural community in
the area. The cemetery was cared for and continued to be in use
on occasion. Long after the demise of the town, the local residents
formed a Church of Christ congregation and situated a building
of that faith in the vicinity of the cemetery. Old Tarrant Cemetery
and Old Tarrant Church of Christ are viable social entities even
in the late 1900's.
(This was taken from a paper collated in the office of the Texas
Historical Commission, Austin, Texas by Deolece Parmelee, Director
of Research, February 1975, from four separate papers from the
Hopkins County Historical Survey Committee. Kenneth and Sidney
Brice and Mattie Mae Long were some of the members at that time.)
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