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Updated on Apr 13, 2021

 

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Powderly, TX

Relax and enjoy the peace and quiet at this spacious ranch house on 30 plus acres. 4 bedroom, 2 bath with 2 ponds, large trees, patio and fire pit to relax and enjoy. Located just North of Paris,TX...

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Powderly, TX

Unplug & unwind at this newly constructed unique and tranquil getaway. Enjoy the view from amongst the pines from the tiny house front porch. Quiet country area that is just 8 miles north of Paris...

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Powderly, TX

4 Bedroom 2 Bathroom fully furnished cabin. Beautiful scenery in a nice secluded area with fishing pond and deck. The Roost sleeps up to 12 guests comfortably! Equipped kitchen includes...

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Powderly, TX

This is a quaint two bedroom one bathroom cottage home with comfortable outdoor spacing including a huge front yard with pine trees. It is located in a secluded area with cattle and deer. It is...

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Powderly, TX

Welcome to our luxurious retreat, perfectly situated between the vibrant restaurants and shopping of Paris, Texas, and the excitement of Choctaw Casino and Resorts. Our property offers an array of...

Powderly is a census-designated place (CDP) and unincorporated community in Lamar County, Texas, United States. As of the 2010 census, the population was 1,178.

Geography

Powderly is located on U.S. Highway 271, north of Paris in north-central Lamar County. It is south of Highway 271's crossing of the Red River at the Oklahoma border.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the Powderly CDP has a total area of , of which are land and , or 2.49%, are water. The center of town is on a low ridge, draining west to Pat Mayse Lake and east to Pine Creek, a tributary of the Red River.

History

Powderly was settled around the time of the Civil War and was originally known as "Lenoir". When the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway was built through the area in the 1880s, the community was renamed "Powderly" in honor of Terence V. Powderly, a labor leader and later a commissioner of immigration in the McKinley administration.

A post office was established in 1888, and by 1890 the town had a general store, two cotton gins, a gristmill, a sawmill, a blacksmith, and an estimated population of thirty. In 1914 the town's population was 100. During the 1920s, however, the community declined in the early 1930s Powderly had a church, a school, six rated businesses, and a reported 63 residents. Since that time the population has increased, reaching 120 in 1950 and 150 in 1965. In 1990 Powderly had a church, a school, a number of houses, and an estimated population of 185. The population remained the same in 2000. In 2010 the Powderly Census-Designated Place included land east of the traditional townsite and reported a much larger population, at 1,178.

Camp Maxey

Camp Maxey Texas Army National Guard training facility, north of Paris, is located in north-central Lamar County, along the southwest side of Powderly. The installation serves as a training center for the Texas National Guard, and most of the original buildings were demolished or sold and removed in 1990 the camp's sewage treatment plant was used by the city of Paris.

Camp Maxey, originally a World War II infantry-training camp, was named in honor of Samuel Bell Maxey, a brigadier general in the Confederate States Army. It was activated on July 15, 1942, under the command of Col. C. H. Palmer. The first division to be trained at the camp, the 102d Infantry Division, was organized and activated on September 15, 1942, under Gen. John B. Anderson. Col. Robert C. Annin succeeded Palmer as commander on March 25, 1943. In addition to the army ground forces trained at Camp Maxey, army service forces and army air forces played a role in the development of camp activities. The varied terrain provided facilities for working out problems of infantry training to meet modern battle conditions. An artillery range, obstacle course, infiltration course, and "German Village" were included in training maneuvers. Troop capacity was 44,931. The camp was put on an inactive status on October 1, 1945.

Most of Camp Maxey is centered on the Pat Mayse Lake Project, a popular recreational facility with activities such as swimming, boating, fishing and camping. When Pat Mayse Lake was constructed, parts of the northern edge of the base were inundated. The damsite is on Sanders Creek (a tributary of the Red River) approximately one mile south of the town of Chicota, northwest of Powderly and north of Paris. Pat Mayse Lake is a reservoir built and maintained by the US Army Corps of Engineers. Surrounded by of wooded land, it offers campgrounds with 200 sites providing water and electricity. The Army Corps of Engineers operates four recreational areas at the lake. Facilities in these areas include boat ramps, campsites, restrooms, swimming beaches, and trailer dump stations. Shorebank access is also available in the reservoir's tailrace area. A large number of personnel frequent the lake yearly.

Pat Mayse Lake provides excellent opportunities for fishing and hunting. Sport fish species in the lake include largemouth bass, white crappie, sunfish, striped bass, channel and flathead catfish, and other common fish species. These lands are managed for upland game and whitetail deer and are open as a public hunting area. The game species present include deer, fox squirrel, gray squirrel, bobwhite quail, morning dove, cottontail rabbit, raccoon, turkey and fox.

During the ordnance and explosives removal activities at the former Camp Maxey, extreme measures were taken to inform the public of the

More about POWDERLY under "Town Info"

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