Cochran County – History, Demography, Government and Others
History of Cochran County
In 1876, Cochran County was formed by the Texas legislature from the land that was previously allocated in Bexar as well as Young counties. It was a land with grass mesquite, sand hills and coyotes. It also had jackrabbits, jackrabbit bison and pronghorn Antelope.
Demography
At the time of in the 2000 census of 2000 the population was 3,730 in the county, 1,309 households, and 1,017 families living within the county. The density of the population of 5 persons per sq mile (2/km 2). It was home to 1,587 households, with the average of 2 people per sq mile (1/km 2). The racial composition for the entire county is 64.48 percent White, 4.53% Black or African American, 0.83% Native American, 0.21% Asian, 0.05% Pacific Islander, 27.35% from other races and 2.55 percentage of at least two races. 44.13 percent of the residents comprised Hispanic and Latino or Latino of any race.
The census included 1,309 families among which 38.10 percent had children younger than 18 years of age who were living in the household, 63.80% were married couples living together, 9.90% had a female householder without a husband present or present, and 22.30 percent were not families. 20.90 percent of all households were comprised of only one person with no spouses, and 11.10 percent of households had a person living in a home that was 65 years old or older. The average size of a household is 2.79 while the median size of a family was 3.25.
The county’s population was distributed across the county, with 31.50 percent of the population younger than 18 years old, 8.00% from 18 to 24. 24.90 percent from 25 to 44 21.20 percentage from the age of 45 until 64 as well as 14.40 percent of people aged 65 years or older. the age of 65 or over. The median age was 35 . To every 100 women,, there was 92.10 males. To every female 18 or over the number was 93.30 males.
The median household income for households of the area was $27,525, while the median household income was $31,163. Males earned a median of $25,064 and $17,652 females. The per-capita earnings in the County was $3,125. The county had 21.40 percent of households and 27.00 percent of the population lived less than the poverty limit which included 37.20 percent of people who were younger than 18 years old and 11.70 percent of people 65 or older.
Population
Cochran County Government
Cochran County, Texas – Cities
- Morton (county seat)
Cochran County, Texas – Towns
- Whiteface
Cochran County, Texas – Unincorporated communities
- Bledsoe
Adjacent Counties
- Bailey County (north)
- Lamb County (northwest)
- Hockley County (east)
- Terry County (southeast)
- Yoakum County (south)
- Lea County, New Mexico (southwest/Mountain Time Zone)
- Roosevelt County, New Mexico (northwest/Mountain Time Zone)
Photos of Significant Location and Monuments
School Districts
- Morton Independent School District
- Whiteface Consolidated Independent School District