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Browning, Texas

Coordinates: 32°23′02″N 95°05′03″W / 32.38389°N 95.08417°W / 32.38389; -95.08417
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Browning, Texas
Browning is located in Texas
Browning
Browning
Browning is located in the United States
Browning
Browning
Coordinates: 32°23′02″N 95°05′03″W / 32.38389°N 95.08417°W / 32.38389; -95.08417
CountryUnited States
StateTexas
CountySmith
Elevation453 ft (138 m)
Time zoneUTC-6 (Central (CST))
 • Summer (DST)UTC-5 (CDT)
Area code(s)430 & 903
GNIS feature ID1378055[1]

Browning is an unincorporated community in Smith County, [{Texas]], United States.[1]

History

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Browning is on Farm to Market Road 2767 (known locally as Old Kilgore Highway) and the eastern edge of the Chapel Hill oilfield nine miles southeast of Winona. The town was named for Isaiah Nicholas Browning (1827–1915), who, with his wife, Mary Ann Morrison (maiden; 1830–1904), was, beginning around 1850, among its earliest settlers. In the early 1870s, the Brownings built the first large house there, which, in 1990, was still standing. The first post office in Browning opened in 1879. William A. Owens was its first postmaster. Isaiah Browning, in 1884, owned a gin and gristmill; and, in partnership with Bradshaw, owned the general store.

In 1898 the post office moved to Starrville, but moved back to Browning in 1899, then in 1902, back to Starrville. During the 1890s the population plateaued at around fifty, and included a sawmill, a church, a district school, and a saloon. In 1903, Browning had two one-teacher schools, one with fifty-one white students and the other with forty-seven black students. By 1933 the town reported a population of twenty-five and one business. Records for 1936 show no school at the community, and by 1952 local students attended classes in the Holts Independent School District.[2][3][4][5][6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Browning
  2. ^ "Browning, TX," by Vista K. McCroskey, Handbook of Texas Online, (retrieved June 26, 2020)
  3. ^ "The Browning House," Chronicles of Smith County, Texas, Vol. 3, No. 1, Spring 1964; ISSN 0578-0462
  4. ^ "Post Offices and Postmasters of Smith County, Texas: 1847–1929," Chronicles of Smith County, Texas, Vol. 5, No. 1, Spring 1966; ISSN 0578-0462
  5. ^ "School Sights," Chronicles of Smith County, Texas, Vol. 8, No. 2, Fall 1969, pps. 45–58; ISSN 0578-0462
    Pictures of old school houses: Arp, Bascom, Carroll, Center, Cross Roads, Eureka, Flora, Harris Chapel, Hopewell, Lake Park, Liberty Hill, Mt. Carmel, Midway, Neals Chapel, Nebo, Providence 1909, Red Springs, Sabine, Saline, Sand Plat, Starrville, Stewart, Union Point 1912–13, Whitehouse, White's Chapel and Wood Springs
  6. ^ Chronological History of Smith County, compiled by Donald Wayne Whisenhunt, Sr., PhD (born 1938), edited by Vicki Sue Betts (maiden; born 1953), Smith County Historical Society (1983); OCLC 54181973