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Off The Beaten Path - Falfurrias, TX

Posted: Tue Jul 16, 2019 9:42 am
by joe817
FALFURRIAS, TEXAS. Falfurrias, the county seat and principal trading center of Brooks County, is on State Highway 281 sixty miles southwest of Corpus Christi and ninety miles from Laredo in the northern part of the county. Its founding and development were largely the effort of Edward C. Lasater, pioneer Rio Grande valley rancher and land developer, who in 1895 started a cattle ranch in what was then northern Starr County; his spread came to be known as Falfurrias Ranch, after La Mota de Falfurrias, the grove of trees he chose as the site of his headquarters.

To increase settlement in the area Lasater encouraged the San Antonio and Aransas Pass Railway to extend a line to his ranch in 1904. At the railway terminus four miles east of his ranch house he founded Falfurrias; he also changed the name of his ranch to La Mota. His Falfurrias Immigration Company set about attracting settlers by offering subdivided ranchland near the railroad at low prices and advertising extensively in the East and Midwest.

The name Falfurrias antedates Anglo association with the area, and its derivation is uncertain. Lasater claimed that it was a Lipan Indian word meaning "the land of heart's delight"; others believed it was the Spanish name for a native desert flower known as the heart's delight. Less romantic is the theory that Falfurrias is a misspelling of one or another Spanish or French word.

The word filfarrias, for example, Mexican slang for a filthy, untidy person, was long associated with an old shepherd in the region whom the locals referred to as Don Filfarrias. According to local tradition the shepherd's land came to be known as La Mota de Don Filfarrias (la mota meaning "a grove of trees"), which eventually evolved into La Mota de Don Falfurrias and was finally shortened to Falfurrias.

A post office under that name began operation in 1898. The Falfurrias Facts began publication in 1906. In 1911 the state granted a petition by local residents to form a new county, with Falfurrias as the county seat. Lasater established a creamery operation in 1909; he imported purebred Jersey dairy cattle to his ranch and eventually built what was said to be the largest Jersey herd in the world. Falfurrias butter is renowned.

Irrigation, introduced during the late 1920s, brought in truck farming and the citrus fruit industry, with Falfurrias as the shipping center. The discovery of extensive oil and gas reserves around Falfurrias in the 1930s and 1940s added a new dimension to the town's growth and prosperity. Falfurrias had a population of 2,500 in 1925 and 7,500 by 1970. In the late 1980s the population was just over 6,500. Falfurrias continues to be a business center for the area's dairy, agricultural, and oil and gas industries. In 1990 the population was 5,788, and in 2000 it was 5,297.

Re: Off The Beaten Path - Falfurrias, TX

Posted: Tue Jul 16, 2019 4:11 pm
by surprise_i'm_armed
If you drive northbound on US 281, it is 75 miles from McAllen to Falfurias.

What you will have to stop for is one of those large federal facilities run by Border Patrol, ICE, or some such, in Falfurrias.

All traffic must pull over in what essentially is a giant carport, since it has to be high enough for 18 wheelers to enter.

When I have had to stop at these checkpoints, which are quite a ways from the border, the LEO peered into my car, asked "Are you all American citizens?", and after we answered yes, we were allowed to proceed. Sometimes a German Shepherd will take a sniff around the perimeter of my vehicle.

Another such site is well north of the border at Del Rio, Texas. At that one, there is a large number of surveillance cameras mounted on tripods, that apparently take still photos and/or video of each vehicle. When I asked the federal LEO what the cameras are for, he replied "I don't know, they belong to Texas DPS", which I found hard to believe the feds don't own some of those too.

The ranch areas around Falfurrias find dead illegal aliens on a regular basis. The coyotes don't want to take them through the checkpoint, and when the aliens try to hoof it cross county, they die of dehydration.

There are people who put up water stations in the area that try to stop the deaths. Some ranchers allow it, some forbid it. Sometimes the Good Samaritans will go to one of their sites, only to find that someone has destroyed all the water containers.

The counties where these dead people are found many times are unable to ID these people, so their relatives south of the border are not able to know whether their loved ones made it alive and got work, but haven't communicated, or whether they are buried in a potters field somewhere.

SIA