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Candelaria, Texas
Unincorporated community in Brewster County, Texas, United States
Unincorporated community in Brewster County, Texas, United States
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| official_name | Candelaria, Texas |
| settlement_type | Unincorporated community |
| nickname | Cadelaria, Texas |
| pushpin_map | Texas |
| pushpin_map_caption | Location within Texas |
| pushpin_relief | y |
| subdivision_type | Country |
| subdivision_name | United States |
| subdivision_type1 | State |
| subdivision_name1 | Texas |
| subdivision_type2 | County |
| subdivision_name2 | Presidio |
| unit_pref | Imperial |
| timezone | Central (CST) |
| utc_offset | -6 |
| timezone_DST | CDT |
| utc_offset_DST | -5 |
| elevation_footnotes | |
| elevation_ft | 2858 |
| coordinates | |
| postal_code_type | ZIP codes |
| postal_code | 79845 |
| area_code_type | Area code |
| area_code | 432 |
| blank_name | GNIS feature ID |
| blank_info | 1377164 |
Candelaria ( ) is an unincorporated community in Presidio County, Texas, United States, with approximately 75 inhabitants.
Description
The town stands in the Chihuahuan Desert on the north bank of the Rio Grande, just across from the small Mexican town of San Antonio Del Bravo. The two towns were linked by a bridge across the river that enabled the inhabitants of San Antonio to buy groceries and supplies from Candelaria; some sent their children to school there. However, in 2008 the bridge was controversially removed by the U.S. Border Patrol because of concerns that it had become, in the words of Border Patrol chief John Smietana, "a route for terrorists, drug traffickers and illegals." As of 2019, local United States citizens would still cross illegally due to lack of local service creating some informal reciprocal helps with local Border Patrol agents.
History
It is unclear when Candelaria was founded, but the area was occupied by Native Americans before farmers began to grow crops on the irrigated floodplain of the Rio Grande. It was known initially as Gallina ("chicken" in Spanish) before being renamed as Candelaria. In 1868, an entrepreneur named William Russell came to the area to establish a farm worked by the local people, selling the grain to the US Army at Fort Davis and Fort Stockton. Cotton was also grown locally. With the town's population increasing steadily, it became the seat of one of Presidio County's three school districts in 1893. By 1911 it had grown to two stores, a church and a school, with 307 pupils in the school district and a general population of 1,842, though only a minority of these actually lived in the town.
The remoteness of the area led to concerns about its security during the Mexican Revolution. The US Army responded in 1916 by establishing an army post, Camp Candelaria, that was garrisoned until late 1919. The town's fortunes waned thereafter; with its poor transport links along a 50-mile dirt road to Presidio, its small-scale agriculture could not compete with the industrial farms elsewhere along the Rio Grande. The population fell steadily, from 250 in 1925 to 75 by 1940. By the late 1980s the town had shrunk to a two-room elementary school, a store, a Catholic church, and a cluster of adobe houses.
Candelaria gained its first paved access as late as 1985 when Farm to Market Road 170 to Presidio was surfaced.
Climate
|Jan record high F=86 |Feb record high F=92 |Mar record high F=99 |Apr record high F=105 |May record high F=110 |Jun record high F=115 |Jul record high F=114 |Aug record high F=111 |Sep record high F=109 |Oct record high F=103 |Nov record high F=93 |Dec record high F=86 |year record high F=115 |Jan record low F=9 |Feb record low F=9 |Mar record low F=14 |Apr record low F=21 |May record low F=34 |Jun record low F=46 |Jul record low F=56 |Aug record low F=47 |Sep record low F=33 |Oct record low F=22 |Nov record low F=15 |Dec record low F=6 |year record low F=6
Education
Candelaria is zoned to schools in the Presidio Independent School District.
Popular culture
Was referenced in the movie The Highwaymen (2019).
References
References
- {{GNIS. 1377164
- MATALON, LORNE. (May 25, 2019). "In Rural West Texas, Illegal Border Crossings Are Routine For U.S. Citizens".
- McSwain, Ross. (2008-07-06). "OUT YONDER: Rio Grande foot bridge now a memory". San Antonio Standard-Times.
- Baker, T. Lindsay. (2005). "More Ghost Towns of Texas". University of Oklahoma Press.
- "[http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hnc06 Candelaria, Texas]." Handbook of Texas Online. (accessed April 30, 2010).
- "CANDELARIA, TEXAS (411416), Period of Record Monthly Climate Summary". Western Regional Climate Center, Desert Research Institute.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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