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families.  Newspaper accounts indicate twenty-seven students were enrolled in 1877 and forty-eight
               students attended in 1879.  The building reportedly burned down in 1879.  The school was re-

               established near the corner of the present Mercedes Street and Winscott Road, and was called the
               Miranda (or Marinda) School (or Marinda Academy) named after one of the Wilburn children, Mrs.
               Marinda  Snyder,  who  donated  five  acres  of  land  to  the  Marinda  Seminary  School.    The  site
               reportedly  included  a  cemetery  which  probably  was  the  beginning  of  the  present  Benbrook
               Cemetery, officially established in 1885.  The building continued to serve as the Methodist church.
               The community was known by the name of the school during its early years.  A post office was
               established at Benbrook in 1880.


               Just three years later, the Marinda School and church was relocated to the intersection of Winscott
               Road  and  Old  Benbrook  Road  where  the  present-day  Weatherford  (previously  known  as
               Computalog) building is located.  Construction was on land donated by Mrs. Marinda Snyder.  The
               Benbrook  Common  School  District  No.  58  was  established  in  1884.    The  school  was  renamed
               Benbrook School in 1885 and residents became the first district in Tarrant County to vote for a school
               tax.  The school had sixty-four students by 1905.

               TRANSPORTATION - TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS


               A branch of the "Old Chisholm Trail" passed through the area, crossing Mary's Creek at Rawhide
               Crossing in the area of the present Z. Boaz Park, and served as a route to avoid the main trail route
               through  downtown  Fort  Worth.    A  branch  trail,  known  as  the  Long  Trail  or  Cleburne  Cut-Off,
               extended  from  Raw  Hide  Crossing  to  Cleburne  and  shortened  the  trip  by  thirteen  miles.    The
               Butterfield Stage Line followed the Old Chisholm Trail and was headquartered in Bowie, Texas.  An
               old water well used to water the horses was located on the Coder farm.  From 1876 to 1881 the Fort
               Worth-El Paso Mail Route Stage Line also ran along Mary's Creek on its way west.  The stage was

               reportedly robbed several times in the vicinity of Miranda.  A gang known as the "Bold Banditti"
               (including Sam Bass) was responsible for many of these crimes; the "Bold Banditti" gang often took
               refuge  in  "Hell's  Half  Acre"  on  what  is  now  the  site  of  the  Fort  Worth  Convention  Center  in
               downtown Fort Worth.  Sam Bass reportedly robbed the Cleburne-Fort Worth stage at Mary's Creek
               in November 1877 and the Weatherford-Fort Worth stage on January 26, 1878.  Fleming "Slim"
               Doggett robbed the Granbury stage near Benbrook; he was later slain by Texas Rangers on the H. C.
               Stephens farm.


               In 1876, local resident James M. Benbrook petitioned the Texas and Pacific Railroad to place a
               station along Mary's Creek near Miranda where the railroad ran west out of Fort Worth.  The line
               was completed to Benbrook in May 1880 and the railroad named the stop Benbrook Station after
               James M. Benbrook.  In May 1893, James M. Benbrook sold the Texas and Pacific Railroad a half-
               acre of land for use as a depot for $25.00.  During the 1890s, two trains stopped each day in
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