About the USGenWeb Project

Roberts County Archives

TXGenWeb Archives

USGenWeb Archives

HELLO - WELCOME!

My name is LaRae Halsey-Brooks, and my daughter,
Eireann Brooks, and I are the County Co-Coordinators
for the Roberts County TXGenWeb Project.

***We are moving this website to a new location for the time being. 
Please note that the move will be done in stages
and some pages will be unavailable until it is completed.***

If you would like to contribute your information
to this page,
please let us know.

If you are interested in hosting another county
in Texas for the TXGenWeb Project,
please visit the
Orphan Counties page.

If you have questions regarding the TXGenWeb Project, 
please contact:

TXGenWeb State Coordinator -
Shirley Cullum
Asst State Coordinator - Jane Keppler
Asst State Coordinator - Carla Clifton

For more information, you may also visit 
the
Texas Counties page.

If you like what you've seen here, please cast your vote.
County of the Month

Thank you!

About Roberts County

Roberts County is in the northwestern Panhandle, bounded on the north by Ochiltree County, on the east by Hemphill County, on the south by Gray County, and on the west by Hutchinson County.

The county was named for two distinguished Texans with the surname Roberts, John S. Roberts and Oran Milo Roberts. Miami is the county seat. The county is crossed by U.S. Highway 60, State Highway 70, and the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway.

Roberts County covers 924 square miles of rolling plains with elevations that range from 2,467 to 3,219 feet above sea level. The county has a growing season of 192 days, the soils are black, sandy loam with clayey subsoils, and between 11 and 20 percent of the land is considered prime farmland.

Prehistoric cultures occupied this region, followed by Plains Apaches. In the early eighteenth century the Apaches were pushed out by the Comanches, who then dominated the area of the Texas Panhandle until the 1870s.

The nomadic Comanches hunted the immense herds of buffalo that ranged through the area that would become Roberts County. The actions of Ranald S. Mackenzie and federal troops in the Red River War of 1874-75 removed the Indian threat. At the same time buffalo hunters killed off the great herds of bison.

The first settler was Bill Anderson, who arrived in 1876. Henry Whiteside Cresswell established the first ranch on Home Ranch Creek in 1877. Cresswell included most of Roberts County in his Cresswell Ranch and ran 45,000 cattle on land spanning several counties.

By 1890 Roberts County had a population of 326 and thirty-four farms and ranches. The county population slowly grew to 620 in 1900, 950 in 1910, and a peak of 1,469 in 1920.

Roberts County's population was relatively static in the 1920s, with 1,457 inhabitants in 1930. Thereafter a long term decline set in, as the county population fell to 1,289 in 1940, 1,031 in 1950, and 967 in 1970 and then recovered slightly to 1,025 in 1990. Throughout its history Roberts County has remained one of the most sparsely populated counties in the state. In 1990 Miami, the county seat and the only incorporated community in the county, had 675 inhabitants, or two-thirds of the county's residents.

The Roberts County Museum, housed in the restored Santa Fe depot, contains, among other things, paleontological artifacts collected by Judge J. A. Mead in the 1930s. Miami holds a National Cow Calling Contest every June in the city park; the contest was begun in 1949 as part of the town's annual Old Settlers' Reunion.

Miami, living up to its name, has continued to advertise itself as the "Sweetheart of the Plains." In 1991 it was an incorporated town reporting a population of 661 and thirty-seven businesses.

Roberts County Mailing List

There is now a mailing list for Roberts County!
Topics relating to genealogical and historical significance
to Roberts County will be discussed, as well as queries
of local interest.

To subscribe to this mailing list,
send the command subscribe (and nothing else)
to
TXROBERT-L-REQUEST@rootsweb.com.

Please join us!!!

To post your Queries, Biographies, Bible Records, Deeds, Obituaries,
Pensions, and Wills, please visit the new Rootsweb Message Board
for Roberts County, Texas.


Roberts County Message Board

Roberts County Resources

Addresses
Bibliography
Biographies
Birth Records
Cemeteries
Census Records
Churches
County Landmarks
County Map
Historical Markers
History

Land Abstracts
Links
Lookups
Mailing List Surname Project
Notices, Reunions, Of Interest
Photographs
Rivers and Creeks
Rootsweb Resource Page
Towns
Gray County Information
Ochiltree County Information

Texas County Courthouses
Texas County Libraries

Postmasters & Post Offices of Roberts County (1890-1930)

Roberts County Rootsweb Resource Page
TXGenWeb County Pages
TXGenWeb Clickable County Map
World War I Civilian Draft Registration

Photo Galleries

Roberts County Museum - Miami, Texas

Roberts County Photos

Roberts County Military Records

Courthouse War Memorial Rolls:
World War I, World War II, Korean War

Draft Registration: Roberts County - 1917-18

NARA -- Access to Military Service and Pension Records

The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) is the official repository for records of military personnel who have been discharged from the U.S. Air Force, Army, Marine Corps, Navy and Coast Guard.

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Neighboring Counties

Roberts County

Roberts County Co-Coordinators:
LaRae Halsey-Brooks & Eireann Brooks





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This page was last updated June 10, 2018.

Bluebonnets - Texas State Flower

© 1997-2018 by the Roberts County Coordinator
for the TXGenWeb Project