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About Moffat
Moffat is west of State Highway 36 and eight miles northwest of
Temple in northern Bell County. The community was founded by Amelia
Vancil and Chauncey Warren Moffet in February 1857. A store, built
by William Elisha Pruett in the late 1860s, served as main social
focus for area residents for several years. The community has been
referred to by several names-Moffattown, Moffatsville, Mount Green,
and Gandertown-but Moffat was chosen as the official name when a
post office opened there in 1872. By the mid-1880s Moffat had a
district school and three churches as well as a steam gristmill and
cotton gin and a variety of other businesses to serve its 200
residents. Cotton, cottonseed, and pecans were the area's principal
shipments. The Moffat community reached a peak population in 1890,
when it reported 350 residents. By 1900 its population had fallen to
147. The post office at Moffat was discontinued in 1918, and mail
for the community was sent to Bland; the office opened again from
February 1925 to December 1926, after which local mail was sent to
Belton. From the late 1940s through the mid-1980s the population of
Moffat was reported at seventy-five to 100 residents. The school at
Moffat closed in 1974, and local students began attending classes
within the Belton Independent School District. Moffat had 150
residents in 1990 and 2000. A Texas historical marker has been
placed on State Highway 36 ten miles west of Temple to commemorate
the community. |
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