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Amarillo City View in 1943

 

Amarillo, Texas in 1943

Jack Delano, Farm Security Administration, 1943

 

Amarillo is one of the few places where the Old West is literally only steps away as you move from the modern twenty-first century to the many surrounding working ranches that are essentially unchanged from the late 1800s in their day to day operations.

 

Francisco Coronado was the first European to see the vast open spaces of what would one day be the Texas Panhandle – nearly 80 years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock. The roving tribes of Indians had dominated the area for centuries and were one of the last strongholds against the invasion of the "White Man.” After the last hold out ended in the Red River War in 1875, the "staked plains” were opened to settlement.

 

The vast, empty territory was immediately sought out by buffalo hunters while the soldiers at Fort Elliott were tasked with keeping the Indians on Oklahoma reservations. In late 1876, Charles Goodnight drove a herd of longhorn cattle into Palo Duro Canyon to begin the first Panhandle ranch. Quickly following, more cattlemen and sheep herders headed to the area for fresh grazing grounds and a place to start a new life.

 

Today, the "Queen of the Panhandle" is a flourishing city with about 175,000 residents.

 

 

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Read about the Texas Mother Road

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EZ66 Guide for Travelers by Jerry McClanahan  Route 66 eight state map series  Route 66 Backroads  Route 66 Dining and Lodging Guide  Images of Route 66 by David Wickline  Images of Route 66 - Volume II by David Wickline

 

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