Thanks to Aggie Baseball for the 2026 campaign - can't wait for Opening Day 2027 on February 19th.
BTHO the 2027 season!
262 days and counting!
BTHO the 2027 season!
262 days and counting!



Quote:
Named for William F. Barnhart, an agent of the Kansas City, Mexico and Orient Railroad, this community was founded in 1910. During the 1920s and 1930s it was a major freighting center and considered by many the largest inland livestock shipping point. The Ozona-Barnhart Trap Co. set up cattle holding pens (traps) along the trails into town to protect area ranches. Barnhart declined with decreased rail traffic. It was once the site of a school, post office, newspaper, drugstore, theatre, bank, four cafes, two hotels, three groceries, and a variety of other businesses. (1981)
THC Database

That is very Disturbed…RED AG 98 said:
Hello, Darkness my old friend
I've come to talk with you again.
Because a vision softly creeping,
Left its seeds while I was sleeping.
And the vision,that was planted in my brain,
Still remains, within the sound of silence.
ensign_beedrill said:
Thanks to Aggie Baseball for the 2026 campaign - can't wait for Opening Day 2027 on February 19th.
BTHO the 2027 season!
262 days and counting!
Rec said:
Messerschmitt ME 262 over Pearl Harbor
aggiewilliford said:
Ok so its just 262 days, we have lived through longer. We have 262 days to discuss our favorite Aggie sport and how we will be back to watching it soon. At least that's what im telling myself. Im gonna countdown great songs from the 70s & 80s.
Today's song:
Rush's Tom Sawyer
1981 Moving Puctures Album
Charlie 31 said:aggiewilliford said:
Ok so its just 262 days, we have lived through longer. We have 262 days to discuss our favorite Aggie sport and how we will be back to watching it soon. At least that's what im telling myself. Im gonna countdown great songs from the 70s & 80s.
Today's song:
Rush's Tom Sawyer
1981 Moving Puctures Album
I LOVE this!
All is listen to is the amazing music I grew up listening to in the 1970s and 1980s.
Rock on!!!



Quote:
(1788-1870)
Provisional President of Texas (March 16, 1836 - Oct. 22, 1836).
A man of strong principle who carried a gun in one pocket and a Bible in the other, Burnet acted as a cohesive force in the chaotic days of early Texas independence, though his dour, quick-tempered disposition kept him from ever winning wide popularity.
As an idealistic youth, he took part in the Miranda Expeditions (1806 and 1808) to free Venezuela from Spain, almost losing his life to yellow fever.
He bought a trading post, 1817, in Louisiana, but had to sell it after developing tuberculosis. Though weak from the disease, he rode to west Texas, where he fell into the hands of unusually friendly Comanches. He lived with them for 18 months, thus becoming an expert on the pre-settlement days of these Indians.
Burnet began his statesman's career in 1833 when Texas was beginning her fight for independence from Mexico. In 1836, he ran as a compromise candidate for the presidency of the Republic of Texas and won by 6 votes. His interim government was mainly concerned with winning military victory and escaping, sometimes only by minutes, Mexican troops.
In later years, he held various offices under the Republic and State of Texas. He married Hannah Este in 1830 and they had four children. Recorded - 1967
THC Database



Quote:
Started in 1850s by rancher Raleigh Gentry, who built a 2-room log house and cleared a small farm, but in 1862 sold out to cattlemen Rance Moore. 1860s settlers included Wm. and Lane Gibson, Charlie Jones, John New, A. J. Nixon, Billie Waites.
Others came in 1870s after raids by Indians and outlaws were ended.
THC Database