MELROSE, TX is located on State Highway 21 nine miles southeast of NACOGDOCHES in eastern NACOGDOCHES County. It was founded around 1840 by Dr. Thomas Jefferson Johnson, who is said to have named the town for Melrose Abbey in his native Scotland.
In December 1859, less than four months after Edwin Drake’s celebrated discovery of oil in Pennsylvania, a similarly determined wildcatter named Lyne Taliaferro “Tol” Barret (pictured) began searching in an East Texas area known at Oil Springs, near Woden. He owned land near Melrose area. He died in Melrose in 1913 and an historical marker has been erected near the cemetery where he is buried.
The settlement, located on the Old San Antonio Road, became a stopping point on the road between San Augustine and NACOGDOCHES. A post office was established there in 1841, and by 1854 two schools were operating. By 1885 the community had a public school, a sawmill, two blacksmiths, three churches, three cotton gins, four general stores, five gristmills, and a population of 160.
Melrose had 250 inhabitants by 1900. It began to decline after World War I; its post office closed in 1921, but in the mid-1930s the town still had seven businesses and 150 residents. After World War II the population level remained steady, though many of the businesses closed. In 1990 Melrose had two or three stores, several churches, a number of houses, and a population of 150. The population remained the same in 2000. In 2016 Melrose had an estimated population of 178.
Lyne Taliaferro “Tol” Barret |
Posted by Jim Miller January 1, 2022 in DOCHES MEMORIES (Nacogdoches County) Facebook Group.
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