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What's in a Name? |
History
Chalk Mountain, on U.S. Highway 67 near the Somervell
county line in southeastern Erath County, was named for a nearby elevation
of white rock. Although the J. H. F. Skipper ranch, founded in the area in
1860, may have served as a prewar trading center, the community of Chalk
Mountain was not itself established until later. The Chalk Mountain post
office, established in 1876 with Elisha D. McCoy as postmaster, was
originally in Somervell County. It was moved to Erath County by 1892. By
1890 Chalk Mountain had a gin, a school, and two churches, and by 1900 its
population was eighty-one. A Masonic lodge was chartered there in 1904 and
occupied the upper floor of a frame commercial building. Chalk Mountain did
not prosper because local residents had good road access to Stephenville,
and by 1910 its population had fallen to fifty. Its post office closed in
1927. In 1940 the population of Chalk Mountain was sixty-nine, and the town
reported two businesses. Its population in 1980 was twenty-five, and
meetings were still being held at the Masonic lodge. In 1990 Chalk
Mountain's population was still listed as twenty-five.
Our Choice?
We chose “Chalk Mountain” to label our Lord of the
Rings inspired banjo because of it’s romantic name. Mountains conjure
up thoughts of mist and mystery, especially here in the mostly flat areas of
Texas. Although we love our home, it helps us pretend, sometimes, that
we live somewhere else! A "Green Man" version of this banjo model is
in the works.
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