Mobeetie (formerly known as "Cantonment Sweetwater") was a trading post for hunters and trappers for nearby
United States Army outpost
Fort Elliott. It was first a
buffalo hunters' camp unofficially called "Hidetown". Connected to the major cattle-drive town of
Dodge City, Kansas, by the Jones-Plummer Trail, Mobeetie was a destination for stagecoach freight and buffalo skinners. As it grew, the town supported the development of cattle ranches within a hundred-mile radius by supplying the staple crops.1 The first formal name for the town was "Sweetwater". It was located on the
North Fork Red River, a tributary of the
Red River of the South. Nearby Fort Elliott, developed to protect the buffalo trade from Indian raiders, stimulated further growth of the town. On January 24, 1876, the "Sweetwater Shootout" occurred. Anthony Cook (Corporal "Sergeant" Melvin A. King; of the then-4th Cavalry Company H, stationed at Fort Elliot) shot and killed Mollie Brennan (a dancehall girl and former
prostitute). Sgt. King then wounded
Bat Masterson, who in turn killed him (King may have shot Masterson first and then killed Brennan; accounts vary). Texas cattleman
Charles Goodnight said about the town: "I think it was the hardest place I ever saw on the frontier except
Cheyenne,
Wyoming." When the town applied for a post office in 1879, the name "Sweetwater" was already in use. The town took the new name of "Mobeetie", believed to be a
Native American word for Sweetwater. It was allegedly later revealed that the word, in fact, meant "buffalo dung." Because of the presence of Fort Elliott and Mobeetie's importance as a commercial center, Wheeler County became the first politically organized county in the Texas Panhandle, in 1879, followed by
Oldham County at
Tascosa, now a
ghost town. Mobeetie became the first county seat for Wheeler County. From 1880 to 1883, the notorious
Robert Clay Allison ranched with his two brothers, John William and Jeremiah Monroe, 12 miles northeast of town, at the junction of the
Washita River and Gageby Creek. One day, Allison rode through Mobeetie drunk and naked. Allison married America Medora "Dora" McCulloch in Mobeetie on February 15, 1881. At its peak in 1890, the town had over 400 people, but Mobeetie's boom days ended when Fort Elliott closed that same year. Further decline came with the tornado of May 1, 1898, and then the loss of the county seat, in 1907, to
Wheeler. In 1929, Mobeetie moved two miles when the
Panhandle and Santa Fe Railway built nearby tracks. The town steadily grew again until the start of
World War II brought a peak around 500. Mobeetie is also known as the birthplace of a member of the
1919 World Series champion
Cincinnati Reds, infielder and catcher
Morrie Rath. Rath was born on Christmas Day 1886. ==Geography==