Texas Country Reporter

Texas Country Reporter

Share

Local Texas Businesses We Miss the Most | TCR Collection 05/30/2026

Nothing makes us sad quite like hearing that one of our favorite old TCR business stories has closed up shop. Some of our favorite bakeries and restaurants where locals would gather just aren't around anymore, but thanks to our archives, we can still visit them any time we want.

On this collection of TCR classics, we've put together some of your favorites so we can step back in time and visit them once again.

Local Texas Businesses We Miss the Most | TCR Collection This week, we're sharing some old TCR stories from beloved businesses that are no longer in operation. Though their doors may be closed, the impact they left...

05/27/2026

I’ve been making a habit of stopping by old cemeteries I find as I travel across the state. I found this one in Alanreed, Texas; a town that was formerly along Route 66 in the Panhandle.

From the bit of searching I did, her name was Nancy Louisa Baker. She died in 1899 nearby, in a settlement that didn’t even have a real name yet. It hadn’t yet been named Alanreed, there was no railroad, no church and certainly no Route 66. According to the TSHA, some folks called this place “Prairie Dog Town” and others called it “Gouge Eye”, a name given to it after a nearby saloon fight. It sure sounded like a frontier town.

She’s the oldest marked grave in this cemetery according to the historical marker at the gate. It might make her the first person buried here, but I couldn’t confirm that.

The stone says Mrs. Rev. W.H. Baker, which was her husband’s title. Her actual name, Nancy Louisa, survived thanks to whoever thought to write it down in a county record years later.

She was born in 1841 when Texas was still a republic. She lived through the Civil War, through Reconstruction, and somehow ended up way out here in Gray County, which had fewer than 500 people total when she died. The Rock Island railroad that would put this town on the map was still four years away.

I don’t know what brought her or her husband out here. I assume his profession as a minister.

What I do know is she’s still here.

Rural Texas is full of people like Nancy. Folks who did hard things in hard places and didn’t get much credit for it. I think about that every time I find a stone like this one.

They’re the sorts of folks we love to feature on TCR. Ordinary Texans doing extraordinary things. “Back then” or on the back roads, they’re all interesting to me.

05/14/2026

On this TCR Classic from our archives, hop in and travel with us to a tiny Texas town with rich German roots and a hankering for nine-pin bowling. It’s a community hotspot that's stood the test of time... Enter a time capsule of laughter, gutter balls, and chalk dust.

Should we revisit this incredible 9-pin bowling alley for our upcoming season?

05/13/2026

I spent 6 days driving up and down Route 66 in the Texas panhandle with our crew last week and brought back a bunch of mementos. These are my favorite from the Sad Monkey Mercantile The U Drop Inn Café Milburn - Price Culture Museum Devil's Rope Barbwire Museum .

Our first two episodes this fall will be devoted to Texas’ stretch of Route 66, and all summer we will be road trippin’ to celebrate! Hop in and travel with us!

Want your business to be the top-listed Media Company in Dallas?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Category

Telephone

Address

Dallas, TX