Bosque County – History, Demography, Government and Others
History of Bosque County
He called the river tributary Bosque, Spanish for “woods.” The county is named after its Bosque River. The settlement of the region started in the year the year 1825 in the year Sterling C. Robertson obtained an award by the Mexican government to settle the area near the Brazos River.
Demography
At the time of 2000, the 2000 census at the time of 2000, 17.204 residents were living in the county, including 6,726 households and 4,856 families lived within the County. The density of the population of 17 persons per sq mile (7/km 2). The 8,644 housing units had an average of 9 sq miles (3/km 2). The race composition in the County was 90.75 percent White, 1.92% African American, 0.55% Native American, 0.11% Asian, 5.2 percent of other races and 1.47 percent of multiple races. The county was home to 12.23 percent of the population comprised Hispanic or Latino from any race.
Of the households of 6,726, 29.5% had children younger than 18 living in them, 60.6% were married couples living together, 8.2% had a female householder who had no husband present as well as 27.8 percent of households were not families. The majority of households comprised 25.4 percent of households were comprised of people, and 14.1 percent had someone living in a home that was or over. The average size of a household was 2.48 and the average size of the family was 2.95.
An Williams Institute analysis of Census data from 2010 discovered approximately 2.5 same-sex couples for every 1,000 households within the county.
For the County, distribution of age was 24.4 percent of people under the age of 18 years old, 6.2 percentage between 18 and 24, 23.8% from 25 to 44, 25.0% from 45 to 64 from 45 to 64, and 20.5 percent who were 65 or over. The median age was 42 years old. In 100 women the number was 95.90 males. To every female 18 and above the number was 92.30 males.
The median earnings for households within the County was $34,181. The median for a family, it was $40,763. Males earned a median of $31,669 as opposed to $11,739 in females. The per-capita earnings in the County was $17,455. The county had a population of around 8.9 percent of households and 12.7 percent of the total population fell less than the poverty threshold which included 16.8 percent of those who were younger than 18 years old and 14.6 percent of those aged older than 65.
Population
Bosque County Government
Bosque County, Texas – Cities
- Clifton
- Cranfills Gap (small part in Hamilton County)
- Iredell
- Meridian (county seat)
- Morgan
- Valley Mills (small part in McLennan County)
- Walnut Springs
Bosque County, Texas – Unincorporated communities
- Brazos Point
- Cayote
- Kopperl
- Mosheim
- Smith Bend
- Womack
Adjacent Counties
- Somervell County (north)
- Johnson County (northeast)
- Hill County (east)
- McLennan County (southeast)
- Coryell County (south)
- Hamilton County (west)
- Erath County (northwest)
Photos of Significant Location and Monuments
School Districts
- Clifton Independent School District
- Cranfills Gap Independent School District
- Iredell Independent School District
- Kopperl Independent School District
- Meridian Independent School District
- Morgan Independent School District
- Valley Mills Independent School District
- Walnut Springs Independent School District