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Big Spring, Texas

City in Howard County, Texas

Big Spring, Texas

City in Howard County, Texas

FieldValue
official_nameBig Spring, Texas
settlement_typeCity
nickname"The Spring City"
image_skylineBigSpringTX-Aerial (35967724513).jpg
imagesize275px
image_captionAerial view of Big Spring
mapframeyes
mapframe-pointnone
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameUnited States
subdivision_type1State
subdivision_name1Texas
subdivision_type2County
subdivision_name2Howard
government_footnotes
government_typeCouncil-Manager
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameRobert Moore
leader_title1City manager
leader_name1Todd Darden
leader_title2Assistant City Manager
leader_name2Lesa Gamble
leader_title3Councilmember
leader_name3
established_titleFounded
established_date1882
established_title1Incorporated
established_date11907
unit_prefImperial
area_footnotes
area_total_km249.795
area_land_km249.566
area_water_km20.229
area_total_sq_mi19.226
area_land_sq_mi19.138
area_water_sq_mi0.088
population_as_of2020
population_est22373
pop_est_as_of2023
pop_est_footnotes
population_footnotes
population_total26144
population_density_km2451.4
population_density_sq_mi1169
population_rankTX: 140th
timezoneCentral (CST)
utc_offset–6
timezone_DSTCDT
utc_offset_DST–5
elevation_footnotes
elevation_m744
elevation_ft2441
coordinates
postal_code_typeZIP Codes
postal_code79720, 79721
area_code432
blank_nameFIPS code
blank_info48-08236
blank1_nameGNIS feature ID
blank1_info1330654
blank2_nameSales tax
blank2_info8.25%
website

| mapframe-point = none

The Municipal Auditorium in Big Spring

Big Spring is a city in and the county seat of Howard County, Texas, United States, at the crossroads of U.S. Highway 87 and Interstate 20. Its population was 26,144 at the 2020 census. Big Spring was established as the county seat of Howard County in 1882; it is the largest community in the county.

The city took its name from the single, large spring that issued into a small gorge between the base of Scenic Mountain and a neighboring hill in the southwestern part of the city limits. Although the name is sometimes still mistakenly pluralized, it is officially singular. "To the native or established residents who may wince at the plural in Big Spring, it should be explained that until about 1916, when for some unexplained reason the name dropped the final 's', the official name of the town was indeed Big Springs."

History

Big Spring decorative sign
Big Spring City Hall
Newly refurbished [[Settles Hotel
Big Spring Veterans Hospital

The area had long been a popular watering hole for Native American residents and nomads, including members of the more recently established Jumano, Apache, and Comanche tribes. The first European to view the site was probably a member of a Spanish expedition exploring the Great Plains from New Mexico. During the 1840s and 1850s, Big Spring was often where Comanches assembled and organized themselves before departing on large-scale raids into northern Mexico during the Comanche-Mexico Wars.

Captain Randolph B. Marcy's expedition in 1849 was the first United States expedition to explore and map the area. Marcy marked the spring as a campsite on the Overland Trail to California. The site began to collect inhabitants, and by the late 1870s, a settlement had sprung up to support buffalo hunters who frequented the area. The original settlement consisted largely of hide huts and saloons. Ranching quickly became a major industry in the area; early ranchers included F.G. Oxsheer, C.C. Slaughter, and B.F. Wolcott.

One notable early rancher was Briton Joseph Heneage Finch, the seventh Earl of Aylesford. Finch purchased 37000 acre of ranchland in the area in 1883, and is credited with building Big Spring's first permanent structure, a butcher shop.

The completion of the Texas and Pacific Railroad led to the founding in the early 1880s of Abilene, Colorado City, and Big Spring, three railroading and ranching cities where saloons and gambling dens flourished.

More important in the city's history was the discovery of oil in the region during the 1920s. The early discoveries in the area marked the beginning of the oil industry in the Permian Basin area of West Texas, and the oil industry has continued to be a dominant part of the area's economy. The oil industry in Big Spring reached its peak during the oil boom of the 1950s.

Another major part of Big Spring's economy and life during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s was Webb Air Force Base. It initially opened during World War II as the Big Spring Bombardier School. Following the war, it was converted to a US Air Force training base and was named for James Webb, a Big Spring native who died in action during World War II. Webb Air Force Base was active until 1977, when the base facilities were deeded to the city.

Big Spring was featured in the 1969 film Midnight Cowboy, which starred Dustin Hoffman and Jon Voight, and received the Academy Award for Best Picture of 1969. The opening scenes featuring Voight, then a relatively unknown actor, playing the character Joe Buck, were filmed in Big Spring and the neighboring city of Stanton.

In 1980, Hollywood returned to Big Spring with the filming of Hangar 18, a low-budget science-fiction movie about a space shuttle's collision with an alien spacecraft and the ensuing government cover-up. Several local residents were used as on-screen extras.

In 1999, a New York energy company erected the first 80 m tower for one of North America's largest wind turbines for that time at Big Spring.

The FAI The World Hang Gliding Championship was hosted by Big Spring in August 2007.

Origin of the name "Big Spring"

The area's "big spring", long dry but recently modified to draw water from Comanche Trail Lake, was of major importance to all life in the surrounding area. In the early 1840s, it was the center of a territorial dispute between Comanche and Pawnee tribes, and has been a major watering hole for wildlife and prehistoric people in this semiarid area. Early military scouting reports and pioneer accounts describe the water as cold, clear, and dependable; the spring pool was about 15 ft deep, with the overflow going only a short distance down the draw before it sank beneath the surface. The spring has mistakenly been described in other writings as being located in Sulphur Draw. It is actually located to the south, near the top of a small, rugged, unnamed draw running eastwards from the spring, and is itself a tributary to Beal's Creek, the name given to Sulphur Draw as it flows into, through, and past the city of Big Spring.

Long used by regional inhabitants, both permanent and nomadic, with a large number of locally collected artifacts testifying to its heavy occupation, the spring sat astride the several branches of the later-developed Comanche War Trail as they converged on this important water hole from beyond Texas, coming south across the Northern Plains and the Llano Estacado. From the Big Spring, the war trail continued south via three branches, one to the southeast through the western part of the Concho country; one going almost due south, heading for Castle Gap and Horsehead Crossing on the Pecos River; and one heading west to Willow Springs in the sand country southwest of present Midland, before turning south down the Pecos, all headed ultimately for Mexico. As whites began to settle the western territories, the spring continued to serve as a major watering place on the southern route of the Gold Rush Trail of the early 1850s and continued in use well beyond that time, as the cross-continental trail turned into a major road for later pioneers coming into the area.

The spring was sourced from a relatively small aquifer situated on the northern end of the Edwards Plateau and the southern end of the High Plains, being, structurally, a collecting sink of lower Cretaceous (Fredericksburg) limestones and sands. The spring aquifer held a large quantity of water due to the great number of fractures, solution channels, and interstices in the rocks and underlying sands, although the areal extent of the Big Spring sink is estimated to be only 1 mi in diameter, with the main area only 3000 ft wide and almost circular, with some ellipticity trending towards the west. The Cretaceous beds subsided about 280 ft below their normal position, centered on the southeast quarter of Section 12, Block 33 T1S; T&P RR Co survey, and the entire stratum appears to be preserved within the sink, the surface topography roughly following the subsurface subsidence. This writing identifies the sink as one of a number of similar subsurface geologic features in the surrounding area, differing from the Big Spring sink only in the fact that the surface topography above the others, while showing some decline, does not dip low enough to intersect the top of the water tables; hence, no springs could form from the other aquifers. In a passing comment, enigmatic in its content and disappointing in its brevity, the report states no other comparable deep sinks formed elsewhere on the Edwards Plateau.

The same publication suggests the spring's discharge volume was in excess of 100000 gal per day at the time of the railroad's arrival in the area in the late 1880s. The water was heavily mined by wells built by both the railroad and the early town of Big Spring, greatly in excess of its modest recharge rate, until the water table first dropped below the level of the spring outlet, and finally, was completely depleted by the mid-1920s. The city now artificially fills the spring from its current source of water as a means of allowing residents and visitors to maintain some idea of how it appeared in times past.

Geography

Big Spring is located slightly south of the center of Howard County in the valley of Beals Creek, an eastward-flowing tributary of the Colorado River. Interstate 20 runs through the northern side of the city, with access from exits 174 through 182. I-20 leads east 108 mi to Abilene and west 40 mi to Midland. U.S. Route 87 (Gregg Street) until recently ran through the center of Big Spring, leading north 106 mi to Lubbock and southeast 86 mi to San Angelo. A bypass to the west of the city now carries US 87, while the old route is now Business US 87.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 19.226 sqmi, of which 0.088 sqmi, or about 56 acres, is covered by water.

Climate

| Jan record high F = 85 | Feb record high F = 91 | Mar record high F = 97 | Apr record high F = 105 | May record high F = 109 | Jun record high F = 114 | Jul record high F = 110 | Aug record high F = 112 | Sep record high F = 108 | Oct record high F = 101 | Nov record high F = 92 | Dec record high F = 86 | year record high F = |Jan avg record high F = 78.0 |Feb avg record high F = 81.9 |Mar avg record high F = 88.5 |Apr avg record high F = 94.4 |May avg record high F = 100.7 |Jun avg record high F = 104.1 |Jul avg record high F = 103.5 |Aug avg record high F = 102.1 |Sep avg record high F = 97.8 |Oct avg record high F = 93.6 |Nov avg record high F = 83.5 |Dec avg record high F = 77.2 |year avg record high F = 106.4 |Jan avg record low F = 19.0 |Feb avg record low F = 21.5 |Mar avg record low F = 27.3 |Apr avg record low F = 36.2 |May avg record low F = 46.4 |Jun avg record low F = 59.0 |Jul avg record low F = 64.9 |Aug avg record low F = 64.0 |Sep avg record low F = 51.7 |Oct avg record low F = 36.8 |Nov avg record low F = 26.1 |Dec avg record low F = 20.1 |year avg record low F = 15.0 | Jan record low F = -2 | Feb record low F = -5 | Mar record low F = 9 | Apr record low F = 25 | May record low F = 31 | Jun record low F = 43 | Jul record low F = 51 | Aug record low F = 50 | Sep record low F = 39 | Oct record low F = 19 | Nov record low F = 15 | Dec record low F = 1 | year record low F =

Demographics

|align-fn=center Texas Almanac: 1850–2000 2020 Census

Racial and ethnic composition

Race / ethnicitytitle=P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO, AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE – 2010: DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171) – Big Spring city, Texasurl=https://data.census.gov/table/DECENNIALPL2010.P2?q=p2&g=160XX00US4808236&tid=DECENNIALPL2010.P2publisher=United States Census Bureau}}title=P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO, AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE – 2020: DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171) – Big Spring city, Texasurl=https://data.census.gov/table/DECENNIALDP2020.DP1?q=Big%20Spring%20city,%20Texas%20households%20familiespublisher=United States Census Bureau}}% 2010% 2020
White (NH)12,7429,753%37.30%
Black or African American (NH)2,0301,416%5.42%
Native American or Alaska Native (NH)173159%0.61%
Asian (NH)237328%1.25%
Pacific Islander (NH)990.03%0.03%
Some other race (NH)7649%0.19%
Multiracial (NH)264569%2.18%
Hispanic or Latino11,75113,86143.1%53.02%
Total27,28226,144100.0%100.00%

2020 census

As of the 2020 census, 26,144 people, 8,320 households, and 5,333 families were residing in the city. The population density was 1382.3 PD/sqmi.

The median age was 37.2 years. 22.1% of residents were under the age of 18 and 13.3% of residents were 65 years of age or older. For every 100 females there were 139.9 males, and for every 100 females age 18 and over there were 152.2 males age 18 and over.

98.8% of residents lived in urban areas, while 1.2% lived in rural areas.

Of the 8,320 households, 34.2% had children under the age of 18 living in them. Of all households, 40.2% were married-couple households, 22.1% were households with a male householder and no spouse or partner present, and 30.0% were households with a female householder and no spouse or partner present. About 30.4% of all households were made up of individuals and 12.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older.

There were 9,965 housing units, of which 16.5% were vacant. Among occupied housing units, 59.0% were owner-occupied and 41.0% were renter-occupied. The homeowner vacancy rate was 2.7% and the rental vacancy rate was 18.4%.

RacePercent
White64.6%
Black or African American6.1%
American Indian and Alaska Native1.2%
Asian1.3%
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander0.1%
Some other race11.9%
Two or more races14.9%
Hispanic or Latino (of any race)53.0%

2010 census

As of the 2010 census, 27,282 people, 8,267 households, and families resided in the city. The population density was 1428.4 PD/sqmi, with 9,640 housing units. The racial makeup of the city was 69.7% White, 7.8% African American, 0.9% Native American, 0.9% Asian, 18.4% from some other races, and 2.3% from two or more races. Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 43.1% of the population.

Arts and culture

Big Spring is the site of several major hang-gliding championship tournaments, including the U.S. Hang Gliding Nationals. The city was also the site for the filming of parts of Midnight Cowboy and Hangar 18.

Points of interest

  • Settles Hotel
  • Big Spring Municipal Auditorium (a 1,400-seat, city-owned facility, which is home to the Big Spring Symphony and center for local and traveling performances)
  • Howard County Courthouse
  • Heritage Museum of Big Spring (a 13,000-square-foot museum featuring exhibits of local history and interest)
  • Potton–Hayden House
  • Hangar 25 Air Museum (a museum, housed in a fully restored World War II-era hangar, which promotes education through the collection, preservation, and exhibition of the history of the Big Spring Army Air Force Bombardier School and Webb Air Force Base)
  • Big Spring Vietnam Memorial
  • Big Spring State Park
  • Comanche Trail Park (a 400-acre city park that features the historic "big spring", a 6,900-seat limestone amphitheater, an 18-hole golf course, tennis courts, baseball fields, playgrounds, and pavilions, as well as hike, bike and nature trails)
  • Moss Creek Lake (a 400-acre recreational area offering a beach swimming area, paintball course, dirt-bike course, and a playground, as well as an RV park with full hook-ups and 26 sheltered campsites)
  • Signal Peak (also called Signal Mountain, a landmark 10 miles southeast of Big Spring near Moss Creek Lake, used by Native Americans and early Anglo settlers)
  • George H. O'Brien, Jr. VA Medical Center (primary facility for the West Texas VA Health Care System, which serves veterans in 33 counties across 53,000 sq mi of West Texas and eastern New Mexico)
  • Dorothy Garrett Coliseum
  • Panther Creek Wind Farm
  • Delek US Refinery (formerly Alon USA)
  • McMahon-Wrinkle Industrial Airpark (formerly Webb Air Force Base)

Government

Following the 2011 redistricting, Howard County is represented in the Texas House of Representatives by the District 72 Republican Drew Darby of San Angelo.

Education

The majority of the municipality is in the Big Spring Independent School District. Some portions are in the Forsan Independent School District.

Tertiary:

  • Howard College
    • All of Howard County is in the service area of Howard County Junior College District.
    • SouthWest College for the Deaf (formerly Southwest Collegiate Institute for the Deaf) is attached to Howard College.

Media

  • Big Spring Herald
  • KBST/KBTS Radio
  • KBYG-AM Radio
  • KWDC (FM) Radio (and translators)
  • KBXJ (FM) Radio from neighboring Lamesa, Texas
  • KTPR (FM) Public Radio licensed nearby Stanton, Texas
  • KCWO-TV

Infrastructure

Scenic Mountain Medical Center serves the community.

Services and facilities

The Texas Department of Criminal Justice operates the Big Spring District Parole Office in the city.

The Texas Department of State Health Services operates a 200-bed psychiatric hospital, opened in 1939. The hospital has reduced its number of beds over the years, but remains one of the largest employers in Big Spring.

The United States Postal Service operates the Big Spring Post Office.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons operates the Federal Correctional Institution, Big Spring in Big Spring. The nearby Big Spring Correctional Center is privately operated (GEO Group) on behalf of the bureau.

The Colorado River Municipal Water District operates a reclaimed water treatment plant in Big Spring, the first of its kind in Texas, the product of which is then delivered to the potable water treatment plants of Big Spring, Stanton, Midland, and Odessa.

Organizations

  • Big Spring Economic Development Corporation
  • Big Spring Area Chamber of Commerce
  • Big Spring Convention and Visitors Bureau
  • Big Spring Symphony Orchestra and Chorus
  • Downtown Revitalization Association
  • Keep Big Spring Beautiful

Major roads and highways

  • [[File:I-20.svg|20px]] Interstate 20
  • [[File:US 87.svg|20px]] U.S. Highway 87
  • [[File:Texas 176.svg|20px]] State Highway 176
  • [[File:Texas 350.svg|20px]] State Highway 350
  • [[File:Texas FM 669.svg|20px]] Farm to Market Road 669
  • [[File:Texas FM 700.svg|20px]] Farm to Market Road 700

Notable people

  • Larry Arnhart, a writer and scholar, graduated from Big Spring High School in 1967.
  • Betty Buckley is a Tony Award-winning theater, film, and television actress and singer.
  • Carl Bunch was the drummer for Buddy Holly during the "Winter Dance Party" tour in 1959 in which Holly died (the Day the Music Died), and later for Hank Williams Jr. and Roy Orbison.
  • Putt Choate was a National Football League (NFL) player for the Green Bay Packers.
  • Mike Christie; was an NHL player for the California Seals, Cleveland Barons, Colorado Rockies and Vancouver Canucks
  • Ainslee Cox, conductor
  • Tim Dunn, billionaire businessman and conservative political activist
  • Sonny Dykes is the current head coach of the TCU Horned Frogs football team.
  • Bob Flowers was an American football center who won an NFL Championship with the Green Bay Packers.
  • Tony Franklin, professional football player
  • Bubba Franks, former NFL tight end for the Green Bay Packers, was born in California, but was raised and played high school football in Big Spring.
  • Lefty Frizzell, American country music singer-songwriter and honky-tonk singer who led the house band for a local nightclub "Ace of Clubs" in the early 1950s
  • Cynthia Fierro Harvey, United Methodist Church bishop
  • Jeane Porter Hester, oncologist and co-developer of IBM 2997, the computerized blood cell separator
  • Charley Johnson, NFL quarterback for the St. Louis Cardinals, Houston Oilers, and Denver Broncos
  • Dave O'Brien, Western actor
  • J. J. Pickle, Democratic United States Representative from the 10th congressional district of Texas from 1963 to 1995
  • Stephan Pyles, creator of New Texas cuisine and a founding father of haute Southwestern cuisine
  • J. T. Smith, professional football player
  • Tom Sorley, president/CEO of Rosendin Electric
  • Ryan Tannehill, quarterback for the Tennessee Titans
  • Jesse Whittenton, NFL player for the Los Angeles Rams and Green Bay Packers, was a member of the 1961 and 1962 NFL-champion Packers.
  • Ronna Reeves, an American country music singer, was nominated by the Academy of Country Music in 1992 for Top New Female Vocalist.

Sister cities

  • Hadera, Israel
  • San Miguel el Alto, Jalisco, Mexico (2010)

References

References

  1. "City Council". City of Big Spring, Texas.
  2. "2023 U.S. Gazetteer Files". United States Census Bureau.
  3. {{GNIS. 1330654
  4. "Big Spring (TX) sales tax rate".
  5. "Explore Census Data". [[United States Census Bureau]].
  6. Pickle, Joe. (1980). "Gettin' Started, Howard County's first 25 years". Heritage Museum.
  7. [[Robert T. Hill. Hill, R.T.]] 1890. "A brief description of the Cretaceous rocks of Texas and their economic value". In: Dumble, E.T. (ed.), ''First Annual Report of the Geological Survey of Texas'', 1889. Austin: State Printing Office, pp. 105–141.
  8. Smith, Ralph A. (1985–1986), "The Comanches' Foreign War: Fighting Head Hunters in the Tropics," ''Great Plains Journal,'' Vol. 24-25, p. 21
  9. Marcy, R.B. 1850. "Report of Captain R.B. Marcy's route from Fort Smith to Santa Fe." In: ''Reports of the Secretary of War'', Executive Document 64, Washington, D.C., pp. 169–233. (See p. 208)
  10. {{Handbook of Texas
  11. {{Handbook of Texas
  12. (November 27, 2005). "Cult Movie Blogging: Hangar 18 (1980)". John Kenneth Muir.
  13. (January 24, 2012). "The Secrets of HANGAR 18 (1980)". Space: 1970.
  14. "Turbine timeline: The History of AWEA and the U.S. Wind Industry: 1990s." American Wind Energy Association. Retrieved November 24, 2015. [http://www.awea.org/About/content.aspx?ItemNumber=771&navItemNumber=5238 AWEA website]
  15. "Same Big Spring Wind Farm, New Owners" (January 16, 2003). Retrieved November 24, 2015. [http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2003/01/same-big-spring-wind-farm-new-owners-7916.html Renewable Energy World.com website]
  16. Brune, G. 1981. ''Springs of Texas''. Vol. I, Fort Worth: Branch Smith, p. 235
  17. (1944). "Geology and ground-water resources of the Big Spring area, Texas". United States Geological Survey.
  18. "NOWData – NOAA Online Weather Data". [[National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration]].
  19. "Summary of Monthly Normals 1991–2020". National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
  20. (June 28, 2024). "City and Town Population Totals: 2020–2023". United States Census Bureau.
  21. "Census of Population and Housing". United States Census Bureau.
  22. "Texas Almanac: City Population History from 1850–2000".
  23. "Texas Almanac: Population History of Counties from 1850–2010".
  24. "P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO, AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE – 2010: DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171) – Big Spring city, Texas". [[United States Census Bureau]].
  25. "P2 HISPANIC OR LATINO, AND NOT HISPANIC OR LATINO BY RACE – 2020: DEC Redistricting Data (PL 94-171) – Big Spring city, Texas". [[United States Census Bureau]].
  26. (2021). "2020 Decennial Census Demographic Profile (DP1)".
  27. (2023). "2020 Decennial Census Demographic and Housing Characteristics (DHC)".
  28. (2021). "2020 Decennial Census Redistricting Data (Public Law 94-171)".
  29. "iMIS". Advanced Solutions International.
  30. (March 13, 1981). "Hangar 18".
  31. "Municipal Auditorium".
  32. "Heritage Museum of Big Spring | Home".
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  34. "Comanche Trail Park | Big Spring, TX CVB".
  35. "Moss Creek Lake | Big Spring, TX CVB".
  36. (June 15, 2010). "Signal Mountains".
  37. "West Texas VA Health Care System".
  38. Geography Division. (December 22, 2020). "2020 Census - School District Reference Map: Howard County, TX". [[U.S. Census Bureau]].
  39. "Sec. 130.183. HOWARD COUNTY JUNIOR COLLEGE DISTRICT SERVICE AREA.".
  40. "SouthWest College for the Deaf". [[Howard College]].
  41. "[http://www.tdcj.state.tx.us/parole/parole-directory/paroledir-rgnldisparoff5.htm Parole Division Region V] {{webarchive. link. (September 26, 2011 ." [[Texas Department of Criminal Justice]]. Retrieved on May 22, 2010.)
  42. "[http://usps.whitepages.com/service/post_office/big-spring-501-s-main-st-big-spring-tx-1354936 Post Office Location – BIG SPRING] {{webarchive. link. (June 12, 2012." [[United States Postal Service]]; retrieved May 22, 2010.)
  43. "[http://www.bop.gov/DataSource/execute/dsFacilityAddressLoc?start=y&facilityCode=big FCI Big Spring, Contact Information]." [[Federal Bureau of Prisons]]. Retrieved on May 22, 2010.
  44. "[http://www.bop.gov/DataSource/execute/dsFacilityAddressLoc?start=y&facilityCode=BSC CI Big Spring Contact Information]." [[Federal Bureau of Prisons]]. Retrieved on May 22, 2010.
  45. "Big Spring Correctional Center – the GEO Group Inc".
  46. "Water Treatment Plant". City of Big Spring.
  47. "Foundation Partners with Carollo Engineers on Innovative Research". [[WateReuse]].
  48. "Testing Water Quality in a Municipal Wastewater Effluent Treated to Drinking Water Standards". [[Texas Water Development Board]].
  49. [https://web.archive.org/web/20021223074045/http://www.packers.com/draft/2000/franks/ Daniel "Bubba" Franks bio (2000 NFL draft preview)] on [http://www.packers.com/ packers.com], the official website of the Green Bay Packers
  50. "Texas – Israel Cooperation".
  51. (January 20, 2010). "Big Spring, San Miguel El Alto announces sister city status".
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