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YORKTOWN, TX in DeWitt, County
From
the Handbook of Texas Online:
YORKTOWN,
TEXAS. Yorktown is on State Highway 72 and Coleto Creek
seventy-five miles east of San Antonio and thirty-six miles northwest of
Victoria in southwestern DeWitt County. Settlement began in 1846 when Capt.
John York,qv Indian
fighter and landowner in South Texas, moved to Coleto Creek near the present
townsite. York and Charles Eckhardt, a prosperous merchant and land speculator
from Indianola, planned a trading post and a new, shorter route for teamsters
from Indianola to San Antonio. In February 1848 Eckhardt contracted with John
A. King to survey this road via York's property and King's home on the Coleto.
Many German immigrants traveled this route, the Old Indianola Trail, to settle
here. York conveyed half interest in the townsite property to Eckhart and
others, and the first ten settlers were promised a lot and ten acres of land
gratis. Eckhardt built Yorktown's first log house in May 1848 and established
the Charles Eckhardt and Sons store in 1850. Captain York was killed in October
1848 defending the settlement from marauding Indians. Yorktown was named in his
honor when it was chartered on August 2, 1854. It was incorporated in 1871 and
established its first post office that year. The first school opened in 1853
and the first church in 1857. In 1886 the Aransas Pass Railway was built
through a mile to the south of the community. The town slowly relocated to the
railway line, and for a time the old site of the community was called Upper
Yorktown. Yorktown grew slowly but steadily and by 1898 had 846 residents, a
newspaper, and more than fifty businesses, such as hotels, groceries,
blacksmith shops, cotton gins, and saloons. In 1902 the fire department was
organized and built a fire station. The chamber of commerce dates from 1918.
The Yorktown Fair Association, organized in 1920, sponsored the annual
"Little World's Fair" until 1949. The chamber of commerce sponsors an
annual Western Days celebration. In 1980 Yorktown had a population of 2,498 and
more than 150 businesses, including an oilfield-equipment factory. In 1985 the
1871 Charles Eckhardt store, fully restored, housed a museum and was listed in
the National Register of Historic Places. In 1990 Yorktown had a population of
2,207.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Brownson Malsch, Indianola-The Mother of Western Texas (Austin: Shoal
Creek, 1977). Nellie Murphree, A History of DeWitt County (Victoria,
Texas, 1962).
Mrs. Kurt Hartmann
YORKTOWN Pop. 2,896 Alt. 266
First
settled in 1846 by John York. Road from Indianola to San Antonio, surveyed
in 1848, went by way of the York home, and the surveyor, Charles Eckhardt,
built a home at site of Yorktown. York was killed by Native American Indians
and Eckhardt moved away, but German, Czech and Polish immigrants using the road
settled the area, and greetings are often given in those languages today. A
famous live oak tree, hundreds of years old, is in front of the Lutheran
church.
__Yorktown
is located just northwest of Victoria
along Highway 77 near the San
Antonio and Guadalupe rivers.
____________
http://yorktowntx.com/history.htm
In honor of Captain John York, in
whose breast burned the Spirit of Empires, the town was named Yorktown. Captain
York was born in Kentucky on July 4, 1800, and came to Austin County, with his
parents in 1821. He became a famous Indian fighter and was in command of a
company of citizens who, under Ben Milam, defeated General Cos and 1,500
Mexicans in 1835 at the battle of Bexar. For his military services, York
received many acres of land in the Coleto Creek area. Being interested in
colonizations, he felt he could enhance the value of his property by
establishing a settlement of his land. In 1846, two years previous to the
founding of the town, Captain York moved to Coleto Creek, a short distance from
where the present town is now located. Captain York lost his life in October,
1848, in a battle with Indians who had raided on the settlement of Yorktown. A
historical marker designates York's grave only seven miles from town.
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Uploaded/updated:
Tuesday,
August 06, 2002
Copyright
© 2000, 2001, 2002 - Rebecca York
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