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The Mesquite Belt Railroad Town:
Granger, Texas
Amtrak southbound at speed passing the Badlands CO-OP Gin, April 9th, 2005.
Photo by Mike G. Ellis, Mesquite Belt Public Relations Department
Granger is on State Highway 95 twelve
miles north of Taylor in northeastern Williamson County.   It originated in 1882 when
the Houston and San Antonio branches of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad intersected
at the site.
The log Grange hall, lodge, and store were moved to the intersection from nearby Macedonia.  
The new community, first named Pollack, was later named for the Grange association or for
John R. Granger, a Civil War veteran.
Because Granger was in the middle of the fertile blackland area, the railroad network made it
an important cotton marketing and shipping point.   The town's first newspaper, the
Granger Banner, appeared sometime before November 1887.   A post office was established
in April 1884, and banks, churches, and schools were immediately begun.
The Georgetown and Granger Railroad Company chartered a link line on December 13, 1890, and
constructed more than fifteen miles of track between the two towns in 1892 and 1893.  
In 1890 Granger had three churches, a college, a hotel, and five gins.   The town was
incorporated in 1891.   By 1900 the population had risen to 841, and it doubled in the
next ten years.   By 1910 a combined cotton compress and cottonseed oil mill, an
electric light plant, an ice factory, and a waterworks were all built.   The Granger
gin was among the largest of its day in the United States.   Mark Jones opened the
town's first bank in 1894.   In 1912 Granger became the only town in Texas with a
population of less than 5,000 that had paved streets.   The Storrs Opera House, built
by A. W. Storrs in 1905, hosted traveling shows and even featured the Chicago Opera Company.
Czechs were attracted to the cheap, fertile land, and by the early twentieth century Czech
culture, both Catholic and Protestant, had become strong and influential in the community.  
A Czech Protestant church was first organized in Granger in 1880.   A Brethren
congregation, the most important Czech Protestant church in Texas, was established in 1892.  
In 1903 a convention of Brethren congregations in Texas was held in Granger and successfully
unified all the congregations into the Evangelical Unity of Bohemian and Moravian Brethren.  
A Brethren teacher-training summer school, called Hus Memorial School, was established in Granger
in 1914.   It was later moved to Temple.   The Granger National Bank, opened in
1937, advertised in Czech newspapers as "your Czech bank." Našinec, a Czech-language Catholic
weekly newspaper for Texas, began in 1914 and was still being published in 1989.
The Granger population peaked in the mid-1920s at over 2,000 and subsequently declined during
the general exodus from rural communities to cities.   In 1938 the first corn carnival
south of the Mason-Dixon Line attracted 20,000 attendants to Granger.   In 1981 Granger
Lake, formed by a dam the San Gabriel River, was opened to the public.   The population
of Granger in 1987 was 1,236. In 1990 it was 1,190.
Information
from The Handbook of Texas Online; a joint project of The General Libraries at
the University of Texas at Austin and the Texas State Historical Association.  
The Handbook of Texas Online
Map of Granger, with GRR railroad spur to Georgetown.
Map courtesy of Mapquest
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History of the towns on the Mesquite Belt
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