Page 186 - CityofHaltomFY23Budget
P. 186

CITY OF HALTOM CITY ANNUAL BUDGET, FY2023               Supplemental Information




          1853, when the troops were sent to Fort Belknap.
          Birdville  in  1849  had  an  estimated  fifty  people  in
          town surrounded  by scattered farms and  ranches.
          Roads radiated out to Johnson Station, Dunneville
          (now Grapevine), Dallas and new settlements
          springing  up on the prairie  around  Fort Worth.

          In  an  effort  to  obtain  self-government,  some
          one hundred area residents petitioned  the State
          Legislature for a new county and elected temporary
          county officials. On December 20, 1849, the Texas
          Legislature  created  the new  county, and  called  it
          Tarrant in honor of General E. H.  Tarrant.  Tarrant
          County  consisted  of parts of Navarro  County  and
          Peter's Colony. Birdville  area resident  Ed  Terrell
          offered  his  log  cabin  for  an  election  polling  site  to
          choose the new county seat and to elect officers who  The permanent courthouse was never  completed
          would succeed  the  temporary  persons appointed  because in November, 1856, in a highly contested
          the preceding December, 1849.  The election, on  special election, Fort  Worth  won the county seat
          August 5, 1850, was won by Birdville.  Tarrant  by  a  margin  of  three  to  thirteen  votes  (the  official
          County in 1850 had a population  of 599 whites  count varies). Jubilant  Fort Worth citizens took
          and 65 slaves,  and covered 877 square miles.  the county records, equipment, and furniture back
                                                               to Fort Worth for deposit in their own  temporary
                                                               courthouse. All early  Tarrant County records were
                                                               later  lost  in  a  courthouse  fire  on  March  29,  1876.

                                                               Birdville,  until 1856,  had  the Monday  county court
                                                               sessions  and  the  associated  commercial  benefits.
                                                               It also had two newspapers, the Birdville  Western
                                                               Express, with John  J. Courtney as its editor; and
                                                               The Birdville  Union,  with Colonel A. G. Walker  as
                                                               its  editor.  Walker killed Courtney in a shoot-out
                                                               stemming from  disagreements  concerning the
                                                               elections  and  states' rights regarding  slavery.

                                                               Haltom City's population  was reported at 107 in
                                                               1930  and at 40 with seven businesses  in 1936,
                                                               just four years after the business district moved
                                                               south to the new location. In 1950, the population
                                                               rose to  3,000  within an  incorporated area of
                                                               four-square  miles, and in 1960 to 23,000, the
                                                               result of  continuing growth and annexations.

          The First  Tarrant  County Courthouse  was a
          wood-frame structure  located  in the  vicinity of  the
          present-day W.G. Thomas Coliseum. An eighty-acre
          tract,  bounded  by Walker,  Carson and Broadway
          Streets, was donated by George Akers and William
          Norris in August, 1851, for the erection  of county
          buildings. A plat of the new town drawn the same year
          depicts 12 city blocks, including a public square. Bonds
          valued at $17,000 were issued to insure completion
          of the construction work by W. S. Suggs and others.
          Bricks were collected and a foundation excavated.
          The  first  annual  jury  list  drawn  up  at  Birdville's
          temporary courthouse in 1855 by  District Clerk
          William Quayle showed 280 men qualified to serve.
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