Places
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LOLITA, TEXAS. Lolita is
on the Lavaca River two miles north of the site of Philip
Dimitt's1830 trading post and four miles south of Lake Texana in
southern Jackson County. By 1840 the area was settled by Isaac
N. Mitchell, whose son later acquired the old George Ewing
league and part of the Stephen F. Austin grant. In 1880 the
Mitchell spread was fenced with the first barbed wire in Jackson
County. In 1909 a townsite was laid out and called Lolita after
Lolita Reese, a granddaughter of Texas Revolution veteran
Charles Keller Reese. The St. Louis, Brownsville and Mexico
Railway erected a switch in Lolita that year, and the community
received a post office, a store, and a gin. By 1910 the Red
Bluff and Lolita school districts had split, and most of the
residents and businesses of Red Bluff shifted to Lolita. By the
end of Word War II Lolita had five stores and a population of
200. The population crested at 462 in 1969, at which time seven
businesses served the community. By 1988, however, the number of
residents had dropped to 300, and business firms had dropped to
five. In 1990 the population was still recorded as 300.
History from the Handbook of Texas Online
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1936 Map of Cordell
from General Highway Map of Jackson County, 1936
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