Inscription
After serving as a teamster in the Civil War (1861-65), Thadium (Thomas) B. Cree worked for the Union Pacific Railroad. In 1888 he and his wife came to the High Plains. They acquired this land and, with no trees for lumber, they built a dugout home. Cree traveled 35 miles at his wife's request to find a sapling and planted it here.
He watered it from a nearby lake that he dug from a buffalo wallow. The tree never grew but lived many years despite blizzard, heat, and drought. Gov. John Connally dedicated an historical marker in 1963 to the first tree in the Panhandle. (1980)
Location
Sources
More markers in Carson
6666 Dixon Creek Ranch
Panhandle, TX
Takes name from creek where noted buffalo hunter and scout Billy Dixon established first dugout home on High Plains, 1874.
Finch-Lord-Nelson and the Founding of Panhandle City
Panhandle, TX
Cattle firm that had brought first Herefords to region-- Lue Finch, W. H. Lord, O. H. Nelson-- in 1887 promoted Panhandle City, as...
Oldest Bank in the Texas Panhandle
Panhandle, TX
Second commercial bank opened in the Panhandle of Texas.
Panhandle
Panhandle, TX
In 1880s, capital of Panhandle area.
The Square House
Panhandle, TX
The Niedringhaus brothers of St. Louis sent lumber by ox-cart from Dodge City and built this square house on their "N Bar N" Ranch here...
