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What's in a Name? |
History
There are
three towns by the name of "Lone Star" in the Texas History books. The
largest remaining is on U.S. Highway 259 six miles south of Daingerfield in
southern Morris County. The site was probably settled around the time of the
Civil War, but a community did not develop until the 1930s, when
Dallas-based Lone Star Steel established a steel mill in the area. During
World War II the plant was expanded to cover 600 acres and employed as many
as 6,000 workers. Many of the workers settled in the area, and by the
mid-1950s Lone Star was an incorporated city with a reported population of
1,131. The town continued to prosper in the 1970s, and in 1980 it had a
population of 2,006 and eighty-six businesses. During the 1980s the steel
plant began having economic difficulties, mainly because of the slump in the
oil industry and competition from foreign steel suppliers. In 1986 company
officials laid off 2,000 of their 3,800 employees. Subsequently the town
declined, and by 1990 its population had fallen to 1,615. In 2000 the
community contained 1,631 people and eighty-two businesses.
Our Choice?
When we looked for a name for our "workhorse" banjo,
something simple was called for. Our workshop building has a large
Texas "lone star" in the leaded glass panel of the front door. And of course
the Texas flag has one lone star, and we are called the "Lone Star State".
So "Lone Star" seemed to fit. Most of the banjos in our “Lone Star” line have one
simple star inlaid at the fifth fret. At least one (number #70) has three,
to represent the three different towns of “Lone Star, Texas”.
This special feature (the three stars in memory of the three towns of "Lone
Star") will be used as a special feature occasionally.
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