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Home : Society and Culture : History : Scranton Texas

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 Scranton Texas

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The history of a small rural community in west central Texas, from its establishment in the 19th century to its decline after World War II.

Scranton Homecoming -- June 5, 2005 at the Scranton Community Center. Registration begins at 9 a.m. The "Blackwell Brothers" provide the entertainment, beginning at 9:30 a.m. Please bring a covered dish entree, salad and/or dessert for the potluck lunch. If you can't make Homecoming this year, the Scranton Exes would appreciate any donation you can make to help with expenses. Contributions go to:

Scranton Exes
% Diane Thompson Boland
303 Hill Country Lane
San Antonio, TX 78723

Don't forget the Scranton Musical on Saturday night, June 4, 2005. The menu will be BBQ brisket, beans, potato salad, slaw, French bread and a drink for only $7.00 per plate. There'll also be those famous Scranton pies and cakes on sale. This is the major fund-raising event of the year, so plan to make it a Homecoming weekend, starting with the musical Saturday night.

New -- Information on the Bailey family, the Gattis family and the Gattis stores added recently.

Scranton, Texas is a tiny community south of Interstate 20, 12 miles southeast of Cisco, in Callahan and Eastland Counties. The area is part of the Cross Timbers region of Texas, a stretch of land rich with post oak and mesquite trees and sandy soil. Scranton was once a small, yet thriving, center of agriculture, commerce and education.

All that is gone now. Most of the descendants of the original settlers moved away for better jobs, financial security and the promise of greater opportunities for their children.


Today, residents in the area include natives who left to work in the city and then returned after retirement to escape the stress of metropolitan life. There are people who remained -- despite drought, tornadoes, hailstorms, the decline of cotton, the elimination of the peanut allotment and numerous oil busts -- to hold on to a simpler life, the pleasures of seeing the stars at night and the independence of living off the land.

I am a native of Scranton and a graduate of Scranton High School. In these pages, I hope to tell you a little of what once was Scranton. I hope to preserve some of the facts and yes, maybe a tall tale or two, about the little community. My thanks to my cousin, Helen Ray Brashear, who shared a copy of her 1997 speech at the Scranton Homecoming, and to Evelyn Bailey, who has researched and written much about the history of our families and our community. I have relied heavily on their work and many other longtime residents who told stories about life in Scranton during its prime.

Other sources include Eastland County Cemeteries (Cawyer, 1974), Eastland County: Gateway to the West (1989), Eastland County Texas (Ghormley, 1969), the Handbook of Texas, I Remember Callahan (1986), History of Eastland County (Cox 1950), History of Eastland County, Texas (Langston, 1904), family records and my own recollections.

Photographs here are used with permission of family owners or are believed to be in the public domain. If you have photos of your family members who lived at Scranton you would like to see used on this site, please contact me. The logo at the top of the page incorporates graphic representations of the antelope, which was the Scranton High School mascot when I was in school. The green and gold used in the logo were the school colors.

Any opinions and errors here are my own. Please contact me with any correction. I hope this will be an ongoing project as I collect new documents and stories.



 
 
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Scranton Texas

 

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Date Added: Thu Aug 25 2005
Last Updated: Thu Aug 25 2005
 
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