Country United States State Texas County King Area • Total 1.78 sq mi (4.61 km2) • Land 1.78 sq mi (4.61 km2) • Water 0 sq mi (0.0 km2) Elevation 1,739 ft (530 m) Population • Total 160 • Density 90/sq mi (34.7/km2) Time zone UTC-6 (Central (CST)) • Summer (DST) UTC-5 (CDT) ZIP code Area code(s) 806 FIPS code 48-31640 GNIS feature ID 1358533
Guthrie is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in, and the county seat of, King County in the U.S. state of Texas. It is in the northern part of the state, 93 miles (150 km) east of Lubbock. It serves as the principal headquarters of the Four Sixes Ranch. As of the 2010 census, its population was 160.
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Geography
Guthrie is located at 33°37′14″N 100°19′22″W / 33.62056°N 100.32278°W / 33.62056; -100.32278 (33.621341, -100.8322).
History
Guthrie’s history begins in 1883, when the Louisville Land and Cattle Company in Louisville, Kentucky purchased several hundred acres in what later became King County. Named after Louisville Land and Cattle stockholder W.H. Guthrie, the community’s townsite was platted in 1891 by A.C. Thackitt, who had built Guthrie’s first residence. When King County was organized that same year, Louisville Land and Cattle proposed the platting of a company townsite, to be named Ashville, to serve as the county’s seat. Thackitt strongly opposed this proposition and led a charge to bring the seat to Guthrie instead. Thackitt’s hotly contested campaign ultimately proved successful, and he not only succeeded in making Guthrie the county seat but was also elected to serve as King County’s first county judge. Late in 1891, the Guthrie post office opened to the public.
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The next year, Thackitt and a man by the name of Charlie Bradford brought in lumber from the neighboring community of Seymour and constructed Guthrie’s first school; a small, one-room building. A larger school followed in 1895, though the lone teacher continued to depend upon schools in Seymour and Benjamin for curriculum. Proprietor John Gibson began to keep a stock of school books at his Guthrie general store in 1897, decreasing the school’s dependence upon other districts.
In 1904, Guthrie claimed 101 residents and though hurt by the effects of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl, remained stable through to the mid-twentieth century, with the 1950 Census reporting the same number of 101 residents as 46 years before. In 1959, schools in nearby Dumont were consolidated with Guthrie’s schools and by 1963 the population had more than doubled to 210.
The mid to late 1960s brought an end to Guthrie’s growth, however; the population had fallen to 125 by 1970. It increased to 140 in 1980 and 160 in 1990, a figure it maintained through to the 2010 Census. Being a company town, very few homes in Guthrie are privately owned; most residents live in housing provided by the 6666 (Four Sixes) or Pitchfork ranches, or the school district.
In literature
Author Mitch Cullin graduated from Guthrie School in 1986, and while the setting of his early writings was often the town of Claude in Armstrong County, Cullin has admitted in interviews that his novels Whompyjawed and Branches are really based on Guthrie.
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Guthrie is also mentioned in passing in Jack Kerouac’s On the Road as one of the places through which he drove.
Climate
According to the Köppen Climate Classification system, Guthrie has a semi-arid climate, abbreviated “BSk” on climate maps.
Education
Guthrie is served by the Guthrie Common School District, which consistently ranks as a recognized school district by the Texas Education Agency.
See also
In Spanish: Guthrie (Texas) para niños
Source: https://t-tees.com
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