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Sink
The whole reason for our recent trip to the northern panhandle was so I could look around Mobeetie, the town where my dad grew up. Of course all of you Mobeetie historians know that it’s actually two towns, Old Mobeetie and Mobeetie. And you also surely know that the town’s original name was Sweetwater, but 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.”
Old Mobeetie has a few old buildings intended to depict the Olden Days, a large picnic grounds, a stage, the old jail, and a lot of trees. This is one of the old buildings, which has been tricked out to look like a barber shop.
Old Mobeetie, Texas
photographed 12.27.2019
Diamonds in the rough
Do yourself a favor if you’re ever in the northeastern part of the Texas panhandle and stop in at the town of Canadian. I was there recently, for just a short time, and now I think I’ve developed a bit of crush on the whole town. The topography is different from what I am used to in Lubbock – which is to say they HAVE topography. There’s a vibrant downtown, a sign on the edge of town that lists the local festivals and the list is too long to read when you drive by, a designated cultural district, and a world-class art museum. And the artist Doug Ricketts is nearby; I am fortunate to own several pieces of his fabulous furniture.
I am already trying to figure out when I can get back up there for a couple of days…
But all that aside, it was a foggy, drippy day when I visited, which meant that I got see the little diamond-like drops of mist hanging on the chain-link fence around the town’s swimming pool. And here’s the thing – I go to a lot of little towns around this part of Texas and most of the town swimming pools are permanently closed down. So, kudos to Canadian: their pool is still open in the summer!
Canadian, Texas
photographed 12.27.2019
Movie Quiz Day
Hello, and welcome the first ever Movie Quiz Day here on the blog.
Do you know which movie’s final scene was filmed right here, and this otherwise forgettable crossroads in the wilds of the northern Texas panhandle?
And here’s a bonus question: out of all the otherwise forgettable crossroads, why this one?
Answers:
Question One: Castaway
Question Two: Beats me.
Hemphill County, Texas
photographed 12.27.2019




