Carson County – History, Demography, Government and Others
History of Carson County
The Carson County was founded in 1876 the year that the area was divided in Bexar District. Bexar District. Ranchers were first seen within Carson County in the early 1880s. In the early 1880s, the JA Ranch of Charles Goodnight and John G. Adair and the Turkey Track Ranch both grazed vast areas of Carson County by 1880.
Demography
In in the Census at the time of 2000, 6,516 residents included 2,470 households as well as 1,884 families lived throughout the town. The density of the population was 7 people per sq mi (3/km 2). The housing units of 2,815 were averaging 3 sq mi (1/km 2). The ethnic makeup for the entire county is 93.82 white, 0.58% African American, 1.00% Native American, 0.14% Asian, 3.06 percentage of other races and 1.41 percent of at least two races. The county was home to 7.03 percent of the population was Latinos or Hispanics of any race. According to ancestry data, 25.0% were of German, 14.2% were of Irish, 8.1% were of English, 4.7% were of American, 3.2% were of Scottish and 3.1 percentage were Polish.
Of the 2470 household members, 35.8% had children younger than them. 65.3 percent are married couples who live together 8.1 percent had female housekeepers who had no husband present and 23.7 percent were not family-based. Around 22.3 percent of households were comprised of people, and 11.3 percent of households had a person living on their own who was or over. The median household size was 2.60 and the average household size of 3.04.
The county’s distribution of age was 27.9 percent under the age of 18 years old, 6.2 percent between 18 and 24, 26.3% from 25 to 44, 23.9% from 45 to 64 from 45 to 64, and 15.7 percent who were 65 and over. It was the average age 39. To every female it was 95.80 males. To every female 18 or over the number was 92.20 males.
The median income of a household within the County was $40,000, while for a family, it was $47,147. Males earned a median of $34,271 as opposed to the female gender’s $23,325. The per-capita earnings of the entire county is $19,368. The county had 5.40 percent of households and 7.30 percent of the people living there were under the poverty limit that includes 8.90 percent of people aged 18-29 and 9.40 percent of those aged 65 and over.
Population
Carson County Government
Carson County, Texas – Towns
- Groom
- Panhandle (county seat)
- Skellytown
- White Deer
Carson County, Texas – Unincorporated communities
- Conway
Adjacent Counties
- Hutchinson County (north)
- Roberts County (northeast)
- Gray County (east)
- Donley County (southeast)
- Armstrong County (south)
- Randall County (southwest)
- Potter County (west)
- Moore County (northwest)
Photos of Significant Location and Monuments
School Districts
- Grandview-Hopkins Independent School District
- Groom Independent School District
- Panhandle Independent School District
- Panhandle ISD
- White Deer Independent School District