Map of Bowie County, Texas

Bowie County (/ˈbuːi/ BOO-ee) is a county in the U.S. state of Texas. Its legal county seat is Boston, though its courthouse is located in New Boston. As of the 2020 census, the population was 92,893. Bowie County is part of the Texarkana metropolitan statistical area. The county is named for James Bowie, the legendary knife fighter who died at the Battle of the Alamo.

Bowie County overview:
Name:Bowie County
FIPS code:48-037
State:Texas
Founded:1840
Named for:James Bowie
Seat:Boston (legal);
New Boston (courthouse)
Largest city:Texarkana
Total Area:923 sq mi (2,390 km²)
Land Area:885 sq mi (2,290 km²)
Total Population:92,893
Population Density:100/sq mi (39/km²)
Time zone:UTC−6 (Central)
Summer Time Zone (DST):UTC−5 (CDT)
Website:www.co.bowie.tx.us

Bowie County location map. Where is Bowie County?

Bowie County location on the U.S. Map. Where is Bowie County.
Location of Bowie County in the the United States.
Bowie County location on the Texas map. Where is Bowie County.
Location of Bowie County in Texas.

History

Native Americans

The farming Caddoan Mississippian culture dates as early as the Late Archaic Period 1500 BCE in Bowie County. The Hernando de Soto expedition of 1541 resulted in violent encounters. Spanish and French missionaries brought smallpox, measles malaria, and influenza epidemics. Eventually, these issues and problems with the Osage, forced the Caddo to abandon their homelands. Settlers had peaceful relations with the 19th Century Shawnee, Delaware, and Kickapoo in the area.

Explorations and county established

French explorer Jean Baptiste Bénard de La Harpe founded the military fort Le Poste des Cadodaquious in 1719. The fort remained in continuous use until 1770. The Red River Expedition of 1806 which passed through Bowie County, headed by Thomas Freeman and Dr. Peter Custis, was of great diplomatic and economic importance to President Thomas Jefferson. Bowie County, named for James Bowie, was established in December 1840 and reduced to its present size in 1846. DeKalb was the temporary county seat, with Boston becoming the permanent county seat in 1841.

Bowie County, in the years leading up to the American Civil War, was settled mostly by Southerners who brought their slave labor to work the cotton fields. By 1860, slaves outnumbered whites 2,651 to 2,401. The county voted 208–15 in favor of secession from the Union. While Bowie was never a battlefield in that war, it was occupied during Reconstruction. Between 1860 and 1870, the population declined. The occupation, and the new legal equality of blacks, became a hostile situation that fostered Cullen Baker.

Cullen Montgomery Baker (b. circa 1835 – d. 1869) was a twice-widowed, mean-spirited drunk who killed his first man before he was 20. When Thomas Orr married Baker’s late wife’s sister, thereby denying Baker that opportunity, Baker attempted to hang Orr. Legends abound as to his activities in Bowie and Cass Counties, including a rumored tie to the Ku Klux Klan. His exploits turned him into a folk hero dubbed “The Swamp Fox of the Sulphur River”. He was a Confederate States Army veteran who joined two units, designated as a deserter from the first, and receiving a disability discharge from the second. Reconstruction allowed him to focus his anger toward what many at the time believed was a Union intrusion into their lives. Baker and his gang conducted a vicious rampage against citizens he perceived as being on the wrong side of the black labor issue, at William G. Kirkman and the Freedman’s Bureau in Bowie County, and at the soldiers of the Union occupation. Kirkman unsuccessfully pursued Baker, killing one of Baker’s men in the second attempt. Like Swamp Fox Francis Marion, Baker always managed to elude capture, often with the help of local citizens. Kirkland was murdered by “person or persons unknown”, but Baker boasted of having done the deed. In December 1869, Thomas Orr and a group of neighbors killed Baker. A local legend has it the deed was accomplished with strychnine-laced whiskey.

When the Texas and Pacific Railway was constructed through the county, a new town named Texarkana was founded.

Bowie was hit hard by the Great Depression. Measurable relief came late when the Lone Star Army Ammunition Plant was established in 1942. The base was active until 2009. The Red River Army Depot, opened in 1941, remains active. The two installations occupied almost 40,000 acres (160 km) and provided job opportunities for thousands.

Bowie County Road Map

Bowie CountyStreet Map.
Street map of Bowie County, Texas. Source: OpenStreetMap (OSM)
Bowie CountyMap
Bowie Countypolitical map.

Geography

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 923 square miles (2,390 km), of which 885 square miles (2,290 km) is land and 38 square miles (98 km) (4.1%) is covered by water.

Bowie County, Texas is one of only three counties in Texas to border two other U.S. states (the others being Dallam and Cass). Bowie County forms part of the tripoint of Texas-Oklahoma-Arkansas.

Communities

  • Bassett
  • Beaver Dam
  • Boston
  • Burns
  • Carbondale
  • College Hill
  • Corley
  • Dalby Springs
  • Hoot
  • Hubbard
  • Malta
  • Oak Grove
  • Old Boston
  • Old Salem
  • Old Union
  • Red Bank
  • Siloam
  • Simms
  • Spring Hill
  • South Texarkana
  • Victory City
  • Wamba
  • Ward Creek
  • Darden
  • Eylau
  • Hartman
  • Hodgson
  • Sulphur

Bowie County Topographic Map

Topographic Map of Bowie County, Texas
Bowie County Topo map.

Bowie County Satellite Map

Satellite Map of Bowie County, Texas
Bowie County satellite map.

Bowie County Outline Map

Outline Map of Bowie County, Texas
Bowie County outline map.

See also

Map of Texas State and its subdivision: Map of other states:
5/5 - (3 votes)