Limestone County

Limestone County, Texas

Limestone County, Texas

The Limestone County Courthouse is located in Groesbeck, Texas, the county seat. Photograph by Larry D. Moore.
Limestone County, Texas

Limestone County, Texas

Map of Limestone County, Texas . Map Credit: Robert Plocheck.

Limestone County is in Central Texas about thirty miles due east of Waco. Mexia, its largest community, is approximately eighty miles south of Dallas. Groesbeck, the county seat, is near the county's center, at approximately 31°31' north latitude and 96°35' west longitude. The county comprises 931 square miles principally in the Blackland Prairies region. In the southeastern section loamy soils overlie mottled gray and red or yellow, cracking, clayey subsoils; in the central section the soils are slightly acidic and loamy at the surface, with cracking clayey subsoils; and surfaces in the northwestern section are dark, calcareous, mostly cracking, clayey soils. The nearly level to undulating terrain and light-colored, medium to slightly acid soils of the Claypan area and Cross Timbers are also found in the county. The vegetation includes mesquite, blackjack oak, pecan, bois d'arc, and elm trees as well as Indian grass and Texas winter grass in the northern area; the Post Oak Savannah vegetation of the southern area has tall grasses, Post oak, and blackjack oak. The natural resources of the county are clays, including kaolin and ceramic clays, limestone, industrial sand, glauconite, lignite coal, oil, and gas. The level to rolling prairie ranges from 375 to 665 feet above sea level. The land, on the divide between the Brazos and Trinity rivers, is drained by the Navasota River and its tributaries, which split the county in two. Bodies of water include Lake Mexia, Springfield Lake, and Lake Limestone. The average annual precipitation is almost thirty-eight inches, and the temperatures range from an average low of 37° F in January to an average high of 96° in July. The average growing season lasts 255 days.

The area that became Limestone County was home to the Tawakoni, or Tehuacana, and Waco Indians. These were primarily agrarian people friendly to the whites who settled there. Tehuacana, in northeastern Limestone County, is on an old Indian village site. The Tawakonis were expert hunters and noted traders as well. Their enemies were the Apaches and Comanches, who often raided the Tawakoni settlements. Limestone County was part of the Haden Edwards and Robert Leftwich empresario grants made by the Coahuila and Texas legislature in 1825. This legislation began settlement of the area and the struggle between the government of Mexico and the American settlers for dominance. The government tried to restrict colonization through legislation, but settlers continued to come to Texas. Numerous individuals, both Mexican and Anglo, claimed land grants in the area before 1836. Among these were Silas M. Parker, Moses Herrin, Elisha Anglin, Luther T. M. Plummer, David Faulkenberry, Joshua Hadley, and Samuel Frost, who came together as a group from Illinois in 1833 to establish a permanent settlement for their families. Fort Parker, near the Navasota River in what is now central Limestone County, was the earliest actual settlement in the vicinity. While most of the men were out in the fields early on May 19, 1836, a large band of Comanches and their Kiowa allies approached the fort. After a short conversation under a flag of truce, the Indians attacked and killed most of the inhabitants. Several prisoners were taken, including Mrs. Rachel Plummer, who later wrote an account of her captivity, and nine-year-old Cynthia Ann Parker, who spent the next twenty-four years with the Comanches and married Peta Nocona. Their son, Quanah Parker, was a chief of the tribe. The other eighteen survivors wandered for six days, hiding in the riverbottoms, until they reached Fort Houston, from where a rescue party was sent back to survey the scene. After this raid further settlement was delayed until a treaty with the Indians was signed in 1844 at the instigation of Sam Houston.

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Ellen Maschino | © TSHA

Handbook of Texas Logo

Adapted from the official Handbook of Texas, a state encyclopedia developed by Texas State Historical Association (TSHA). It is an authoritative source of trusted historical records.

Currently Exists

Yes

Place type

Limestone County is classified as a County

Altitude Range

363 ft – 690 ft

Size

Land area does not include water surface area, whereas total area does

  • Land Area: 905.3 mi²
  • Total Area: 933.2 mi²

Temperature

January mean minimum: 35.2°F
July mean maximum: 94.1°F

Rainfall, 2019

40.3 inches

Population Count, 2019

23,437

Civilian Labor Count, 2019

8,354

Unemployment, 2019

8.0%

Property Values, 2019

$3,041,561,950 USD

Per-Capita Income, 2019

$35,771 USD

Retail Sales, 2019

$247,823,162 USD

Wages, 2019

$92,540,850 USD

Limestone County

Highlighted:
  • Limestone County
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Place Type Population (Year/Source) Currently Exists
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Town 42 (2009) Yes
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Town 21 (2009) Yes
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Town 10 (2009) Yes
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Town 76 (2009) Yes
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Town 25 (2009) Yes
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Town 777 (2021) Yes
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Town 2 (2009) Yes
Town 17 (2009) Yes
Town 20 (2009) Yes
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Town 50 (2009) Yes
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Town 15 (2009) Yes
Town 100 (2009) Yes
Town 51 (2009) Yes
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Town 340 (2009) Yes
Town 2 (2009) Yes
Town 30 (2009) Yes
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Town 3,645 (2021) Yes
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Town 10 (2009) Yes
Town 454 (2021) Yes
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Lake Yes
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Town 30 (2009) Yes
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Town 2 (2009) Yes
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Town 6,876 (2021) Yes
Town 9 (2009) Yes
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Town 5 (2009) Yes
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Town 24 (2009) Yes
Town 25 (2009) Yes
Town 53 (2009) Yes
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Town 50 (2009) Yes
Town 20 (2009) Yes
Town 200 (2009) Yes
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Town 150 (2009) Yes
Town 20 (2009) Yes
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Town 5 (2009) Yes
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Town 250 (2009) Yes
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Town 224 (2021) Yes
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Town 20 (2009) Yes
Town 415 (2021) Yes
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Town 25 (2009) Yes
Town 25 (2009) Yes
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