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Travel Bug Dog Tag Bead-Van Horn Gold Black White Green Glass TB

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Owner:
shellbadger Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
Origin:
Texas, United States
Recently Spotted:
In the hands of jchapuis.

This is not collectible.

Use TB6CA5F to reference this item.

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Current Goal

Please drop this item in rural OR Premium Member Only caches.  Do not place it in an urban cache or abandon it at a caching event.  Transport the bug in the original plastic bag for as long as the bag lasts; the bag keeps the trackable clean and prevents tangling with other items.  Otherwise, take the travel bug anywhere you wish.  No permission is needed to leave the U.S.

Photos in the travel bug logs are appreciated.  I will be re-post them here, where they can be seen by other cachers.

About This Item

beadambergreenwhiteblackglassteardrop

Van Horn was named after a Union Officer, while Culberson County was named after a Confederate.  The history of Van Horn begins with the discovery of Van Horn Wells, south of town near the present ghost town of Lobo.  The credit of discovery goes to Jefferson Van Horne (with an "e"), an Army Major who later commanded Ft. Bliss.  The town of Van Horn Wells was a stage stop on the San Diego - San Antonio Mail Route.  During the Civil War, the wells were captured by Confederates.  The Union Officer in charge was James Judson Van Horn, who was no relation at all to Major Jefferson Van Horne, other than being brothers-in-arms.  

In 1881 when the railroad (the Texas and Pacific) came through, the town of Van Horn grew around the tracks and Van Horn Wells was left where it was, providing water and later irrigating cotton fields and vegetable crops.  The railroad put in wells of their own and 1886 saw the post office established as well as the town's first store.  By 1890 the population was almost 500.

The first person to die in Van Horn was an infant child of the Beach family, in 1881, whereupon the father Beach gave a plat of land west of town for use as a cemetery.   According to local legend, the first adult to die was rancher AS Goynes, and his passing was not without irony.  In tribute to Van Horn's climate, Goynes supposedly suggested the motto, "This Town Is So Healthy We Had to Shoot a Man to Start a Cemetery," which later hung in the lobby of the Clark Hotel.   Shortly thereafter Goynes was shot dead by his brother-in-law in a feud over a watering hole, thereby becoming the first man buried in the Van Horn cemetery.

The first school in Van Horn was established in 1887, when Mrs. C. M. Cox taught seven pupils in her home.  By 1890 an estimated 450 people were living in the area, and the town had twelve businesses, including a general store, a hotel, a real estate office, a blacksmith, and a lawyer.  Despite such signs of growth and sophistication, however, Van Horn could still be a wild place.  The new century was ushered in by the murder of the postmaster in 1900 by "Red" Sealy.   In 1914 John Marine was appointed the second sheriff of Culberson County, serving out the unexpired term of his predecessor, JH Feeley, who had been killed in a gunfight.    

Tourism became an important industry in the 1930s with the opening of nearby Carlsbad Caverns and later the opening of Guadalupe Mountains National Park.  The completion of Interstate 10 through the edge town has mightily boosted the economy.  Over 11,000 people pass through Van Horn daily.

Gallery Images related to Bead-Van Horn Gold Black White Green Glass TB

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Tracking History (6942.5mi) View Map

Dropped Off 8/23/2015 TheAlliance placed it in Pfeishütte Tirol, Austria - 5,539.02 miles  Visit Log

Dropped in Pfeishütte

Retrieve It from a Cache 6/22/2015 TheAlliance retrieved it from Bündel Box Texas   Visit Log

We are home visiting from Austria. On our trip from Midland back to Carrollton we picked up this TB and will find a special spot for it in Europe. :) Where people will learn about Van Horn, Texas.

Dropped Off 5/3/2015 kens3feathers placed it in Bündel Box Texas - 96.96 miles  Visit Log

Found a nice locked premium for this one.

Visited 5/2/2015 kens3feathers took it to "TIN ROOF............RUSTED!!" Texas - 37.1 miles  Visit Log

Visited "TIN ROOF............RUSTED!!" (GC1GNQ5)

Visited 5/1/2015 kens3feathers took it to 2004 - Shaun of the Dead Texas - .55 miles  Visit Log

Visited 2004 - Shaun of the Dead (GC2GG9Q)

Visited 5/1/2015 kens3feathers took it to 2001 - The Mummy Returns Texas - 34.89 miles  Visit Log

Visited 2001 - The Mummy Returns (GC2GG92)

Retrieve It from a Cache 4/26/2015 kens3feathers retrieved it from Wolcott Gin Texas   Visit Log

I accidentally said that I dropped this here. I did not.

Dropped Off 4/25/2015 kens3feathers placed it in Wolcott Gin Texas - 4.12 miles  Visit Log

Dropped in Wolcott Gin (GC11A5N)

Visited 4/25/2015 kens3feathers took it to TLien11's County Road 006 Texas - 13.84 miles  Visit Log

Visited TLien11's County Road 006 (GC1PFJ5)

Visited 4/25/2015 kens3feathers took it to The Forgotten Knott Cemetery Texas - 11.51 miles  Visit Log

Visited The Forgotten Knott Cemetery (GC11A6B)

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