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| Dimmit County is named for Philip Dimmitt, a major figure in
the Texas Revolution. The reason the county name differs is due to the fact that the bill creating the county misspelled
Dimmitt's name. Dimmit County is not to be confused with the city of Dimmitt, located approximately 520 miles
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Between
the Texas Revolution and the Mexican Warq (1836-46), most of Dimmit County lay in the disputed area between the
Rio Grande and the Nueces River. Since neither the Republic of Texas nor the Mexican government could establish
control over this strip of contested land, known at the time as Wild Horse Desert or El Desierto Muerto (Dead Desert),
it became a haven for desperate characters. In 1858, Dimmit County was officially formed from parts of Bexar,
Webb, Maverick, and Uvalde Counties. Dangers posed by outlaws and unfriendly Indians, however, deterred settlement
in the county until after the Civil War. The first permanent settlement in Dimmit County, Carrizo Springs, was
founded in 1865 by a group of fifteen families from Atascosa County.
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The county was formally organized in 1880 with Carrizo Springs
as county seat. That same year, Levi English donated land for a county courthouse, schools, and churches in the
town. The Carrizo Springs Javelin, the county's only newspaper, was established in 1884. By 1885 the
county seat was described as a "flourishing town" with two churches, a grocery, a livery stable, and
a harness and boot shop.
Cities
Asherton
Big Wells
Carrizo Springs
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