Lenorah, Texas
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Lenorah is fourteen miles north of Stanton in central Martin County. Charlie
Tom and his family built a ranch house one mile north of the site in 1894, and Hiram Nunn
filed on land east of town in 1902; but J. F. Willingham and his
family, who arrived in 1906 or 1908, are considered the founders of the town. A one-room school called Plainview was built just south of
the Willingham home, and Mittie Walker served as teacher. Church services were also held
in the school.
A
post office was granted in 1925, and Willingham became postmaster, but postal officials
would not accept the name Plainview, since there was already a Plainview in West Texas.
Residents renamed the town Lenorah for Lenorah Epley, the county clerk. In 1950 the
Lenorah school was consolidated, and students began attending the Grady school. Oil
discoveries in Martin County in the 1950s led to the founding of the Lenorah Hot Oil
Company, which later moved to Andrews.
Oil production and farming remained the area's
major industries in 1990, when Lenorah had two cotton gins, a grocery and hardware store,
the T. S. T. Paraffin Service, a post office, and Baptist and Catholic churches.
In 1980
the community had a population of seventy and four businesses. In 1990 the population was
still recorded as seventy.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Martin County Historical Commission, Martin County, Texas (Dallas: Taylor,
1979). Kathleen E. and Clifton R. St. Clair, eds., Little Towns of Texas (Jacksonville,
Texas: Jayroe Graphic Arts, 1982).
-Noel
Wiggins
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