Bowie County – History, Demography, Government and Others
History of Bowie County
Bowie County was demarked in the month of December 1840 and named after James Bowie. The original boundaries of Bowie County encompassed all or a portion of the areas of the present Cass, Titus, and Morris counties. In 1846 , the county was reorganized to its current size and borders with the creation in Cass and Titus counties.
Demography
According to 2000, the Census in 2000 there were 89,306 inhabitants were living in 33,058 households. 23,438 families lived in the county. The density of the population was 101 people per sq mile (39/km 2). In the 36,463 units of housing, there was an had an average of 41/square mile (16/km 2). The ethnic makeup for the entire county is 73.26 white, 23.42% Black or African American, 0.58% Native American, 0.43% Asian, 0.04% Pacific Islander, 1.12% from other races and 1.15 percentage of people from multiple races. Around 4.47 percent of the people living there were Hispanic or Latino from any race.
In the households of 33,058 33.00 percent had children under 18 years old who were living in the household, 52.00% were married couples living together, 15.00% had a female householder without a husband present and 29.10 percent were not families; 26.00% of all households were comprised of individuals. 11.10 percent of households had someone living in a home on their own and was aged 65 or older. The average size of the household of 2.50 was 2.50 while the median size of a family was 3.00.
The county’s distribution of the population was 24.80 percent of people younger than 18 years old, 9.40% from 18 to 24, 29.60% from 25 to 44, 22.40% from 45 to 64 as well as 13.80 percent of those aged 65 years or older. old or older. The average age was 36. To every female the number was 101.80 males. To every female 18 or over the number was 101.00 males.
The median income of households for the entire county of $33,001 while for the family, it was $41,108. Males earned a median of $31,883 and $21,439 females. The per-capita amount of income of the entire county is $17,357. Around 13.80 percent of households and 17.70 percent of the population lived less than the poverty limit which included 25.00 percent of people younger than 18 years old and 12.40 percent of people 65 or older.
Population
Bowie County Government
Bowie County, Texas – Cities
- De Kalb
- Hooks
- Leary
- Maud
- Nash
- New Boston (courthouse in city)
- Red Lick
- Redwater
- Texarkana (largest city)
- Wake Village
Bowie County, Texas – Unincorporated communities
- Beaver Dam
- Boston (county seat)
- Eylau
- Hartman
- Hoot
- Hubbard
- Malta
- Oak Grove
- Old Boston
- Simms
- Spring Hill
- Sulphur
- Wamba
Adjacent Counties
- McCurtain County, Oklahoma (northwest)
- Little River County, Arkansas (north)
- Miller County, Arkansas (east)
- Cass County (south)
- Morris County (southwest)
- Red River County (west)
Photos of Significant Location and Monuments
School Districts
- Dekalb Independent School District
- Hooks Independent School District
- Hubbard Independent School District
- Leary Independent School District
- Liberty-Eylau Independent School District
- Malta Independent School District
- Maud Independent School District
- New Boston Independent School District
- Pleasant Grove Independent School District
- Red Lick Independent School District
- Redwater Independent School District
- Simms Independent School District
- Texarkana Independent School District