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El Paso County
History
For millennia Indians traversed the El Paso area.
The first Europeans through the Pass of the North
came in 1581.
In 1598 the Juan de Oņate
expedition celebrated the first Thanksgiving on United
States' soil.
The Pueblo Revolt in New Mexico in 1680 forced Spanish settlers back south of
the Rio Grande. Many settled along the river at the Pass
of the North, primarily on the south side of the river.
For the next few centuries the Spanish settlements
along the border flourished. Missions were founded at
Ysleta, Socorro and San Elizario. The economy was
agriculture, mining and transportation. The El Paso area
was an important stop on the Camino Real that served the
Santa Fe Trail and the interior of Mexico. The Rio
Grande changed course a number of times.
El Paso officially became part of the United States
when Texas joined the Union in 1845.
The Mexican War of 1846 assured the settlements on the north
side of the Rio Grande to be part of the United States.
The first military post was established along the
American side of the river in 1849 in order to protect the route to the
gold fields farther west. Ft. Bliss had several
locations before expanding into its permanent location
and becoming a major training and missile defense
center.
Sides were taken during the Civil War, but the War
did not have major impact in the El Paso area. The
growing town recovered quickly.
El Paso was originally known as Franklin. It was
incorporated in 1873 and encompassed the small area
communities that had developed along the river
(Magoffinsville, Concordia, Hart's Mill).
In 1881 the railroad arrived.
Business expanded rapidly, and today's modern city
developed.
Control of the Rio Grande was begun with the
building of dams upstream and channelization.
In 1913 the College of Mines,
now The University of Texas at El Paso, was chartered by
the State of Texas.
The Chamizal Agreement that verified the boundary
and the exact course of the Rio Grande through the city
was signed in 1967.
The Franklin Mountain State Park was created in
1979. It is the largest
urban park in the United States and features exceptional
geologic history and the highest structural point in
Texas.
To read El Paso's history in detail, the following
books are recommended:
Dr. C. L. Sonnichsen, 1968 & 1980.
Pass of the North. 2 vols. El Paso: Texas Western
Press.
The Handbook of Texas, 1996. Ron Tyler, ed. 6 vols.
Austin: The Texas State Historical Association. On the
web at http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/
Dr. W. H. Timmons, 1990. El Paso: A Borderlands
History. El Paso: Texas Western Press.
Dr. W. H. Timmons, ed., 1980. Four Centuries at the
Pass. El Paso: 4 Centuries 81 Foundation.
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