Cross Plains was once named "Turkey Creek", after the stream that now crosses the town's Treadaway Park. In its early years, Cross Plains had the basic necessities like a store, a
cotton gin and
gristmill, but little else. Hugh Henry McDermett and J.C. McDermett, early settlers here, petitioned the federal government to establish a
post office in Cross Plains. In 1878, the government granted the post office, named "Cross Plains" for the crossings of
stagecoach and
military roads prior to the
Civil War. East and West Caddo Peaks, located west, were used as landmarks by early
Indians, soldiers, and government
surveying crews. The town had one newspaper in 1902 (
The Herald), but it soon went out of business. The second paper,
The Cross Plains Review, started in 1909 and continues to publish a weekly newspaper every Wednesday. The town moved from the west banks of Turkey Creek to its present site in January 1911, to be closer to the railroad. On January 12, 1911, a train full of prospective land buyers arrived in Cross Plains. Before the day was out, $75,000.00 worth of land had been purchased. Cross Plains was the last stop on the Texas Central
Katy Railroad spur from
De Leon and
Rising Star. The Katy abandoned the spur in the 1940s. An
oil boom in 1925 increased the population, and by 1940 it was over 1,200. It has remained hovering around the 1,000 mark for the last 50 years.
2005 wildfire On December 27, 2005, a grass/range
wildfire destroyed 116 homes in and around Cross Plains. On December 29, 2005, the
Texas Department of Public Safety listed 85 single family homes, 25 mobile homes and 6 apartment units as being destroyed. An additional 36 homes were damaged. The First United Methodist Church building of Cross Plains was also destroyed. Two people died after being trapped in their houses. The fire started west of the city along Highway 36, and westerly winds of up to spread the flames into town, burning a total of of land. The fire spared the nearly century-old house (now a
museum) of
Robert E. Howard, author of the
Conan the Barbarian books. ==Geography==