Farmers, ranchers, the land and the falls: a history of the Pedernales Falls area, 1850-1970 Page: 5
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A HISTORY OF THE PEDERNALES FALLS AREA, 1850-1970
New Settlers in"The Land of 1,000 Springs":
Farmers and Ranchers in the
Pedernales Falls Area, 1870-1885
The settlement of the area that is now Pedernales State Park during the
1870s and 1880s mirrored the general development of Blanco County and the
Edwards Plateau during that period. Only 176 farms and ranches had been
established in Blanco County by 1870, and the U.S. Census counted only 1,187
people living there that year. By 1880, however, there were 519 ranches and
farms in the area, and the population had increased to 3,353; "improved" acres
in farms jumped from only 3,690 to over 35,000 during the same period. By
1890 there were 645 farms and ranches in Blanco County, over 42,400 acres of
improved land, and the population had increased to 4,644.13 Most of these new
residents came from old-stock southern roots, part of a huge wave of immigrants
from the Old South who moved into Texas in the years after the Civil War.
The landscape of Blanco County, including most of the Pedernales Falls
area, appeared much different to early settlers than it does to us now. During
the 1870s, before settlement brought overgrazing, erosion, and the proliferation
of ashe juniper ("cedar") trees, much of the area was a savannah covered by tall
native grasses, particularly bluestem and hairy grama, interspersed with clumps
of trees which tended to concentrate in the river valleys and creek beds.14 "Nearly
the whole county is prairie;' wrote Julius Herrman for the Texas Almanac in 1871,
"but there is plenty of wood for fuel and fences, the growth being cypress, post-
oak, hickory, pecan, etc. Stone is very fine and the best material for building:'
Though much of the area seemed wonderfully suited for grazing livestock, early
settlers also found good cropland. In 1877 a Blanco County resident reported
to the Austin Daily Statesman that Blanco"was mostly a stock county until 1866,
when farming began in good earnest....This year the acreage in cultivation has
increased, and the [cotton] crop yield, with favorable seasons from now on, will
be 1,200 to 1,500 bales....We have fine grass, fine stock, and fat sheep and plenty
of mast ...This county is fast settling up."'15 In 1885, a settler in the Cypress Mill
vicinity described the area for the San Marcos Press:
I am about two miles from the Perdinaless [sic] river, and one mile
from Cypress. The Pedronalles [sic] is rough, but the Cypress is
very different. It contains large bodies of the very best farming
lands. Hundreds of acres may be put into one solid farm, all of the
very best land-some black and some sandy. It is a high, healthy
country. Stock of all kinds does well, especially hogs.16
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Leffler, John J. Farmers, ranchers, the land and the falls: a history of the Pedernales Falls area, 1850-1970, book, August 2010; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth415095/m1/16/?q=american+indian: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Government Documents Department.