In continuation of our Texas towns with Western names, the following is:
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WINCHESTER
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One would think the Fayette County community of Winchester honors the weapon that won at least half the West, the lever-action repeating rifle generically known as a Winchester. But one would be wrong.
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Turns out Winchester is named for a town of like name in Tennessee. (Founded in 1809, that town was named for James Winchester, a Revolutionary soldier who served as a Brigadier General in the War of 1812).
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Located 20 miles northwest of LaGrange on a tract of land first settled in 1827, Winchester, Texas was laid out in 1857 by John Gromme. In 1866 the community was of sufficient caliber to merit the opening of a Post office. A farming town, Winchester boomed as much as it ever would when the San Antonio and Aransas Pass Railway came through on its way to Waco in the mid 1880’s.
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Cotton being king back then, the community had 18 businesses by the turn of the century. But as cotton became less dominant as a Central Texas crop and better roadways made it easier for folks to trade in larger towns, Winchester withered like so much long staple in a dry year. By 1950 the population had decreased to 220. Thirty years later it was down to 50, which was also the headcount in 2000.





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