[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 131 (Monday, September 15, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H7457-H7458]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
23 IN 1--FABENS, TEXAS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Gallego) for 5 minutes.
Mr. GALLEGO. Mr. Speaker, today as we continue our journey through
the 23rd District in which I take viewers and listeners on a 1-minute
journey through the district, through its towns, its cities, its
cultures, and its people, this morning I have the great privilege of
highlighting Fabens, Texas.
Fabens is located in the Mission Valley south of El Paso and, as of
the 2010 census, had a population of 8,257 people. It is about 30 miles
southeast of El Paso, located along the Rio Grande River and I-10.
Known as the home of the Wildcats, Fabens has long been a fierce
competitor and a rival of my own Alpine Bucks. In fact, I still
remember rather vividly when Alpine lost the district championship in
football to Fabens my senior year of high school in 1980. I don't think
anyone in either Alpine or Fabens has ever forgotten that football
game. Kids in Fabens are competitors, whether in sports or academic
competitions, and their prowess is known far and wide.
The history of the community itself dates from the late 19th century,
though in 1665 a mission branch known as San Francisco de los Sumas was
established just southeast of the future site of Fabens. A stagecoach
station called San Felipe was in operation about 3 miles northeast of
the site before 1870.
In the 1870s, Teodoro and Epitacia Alvarez owned a small farm on the
actual site of what is now Fabens. That farm was known as the
Mezquital. In 1887, the town site was sold to E.S. Newman, and the
first permanent settler in what is now Fabens became Eugenio Perez, who
came from San Elizario around 1900.
Mr. Perez himself owned a small farm, opened a small store; and
shortly thereafter, when the Galveston, Harrisburg, and San Antonio
Railway built through the area and established a water-pumping station,
the community began to grow. In 1906, this store became the very first
Fabens post office.
The town of Fabens itself, when you think about the name ``Fabens,''
where did that come from? It was named for George Fabens, an officer
with the Southern Pacific Railroad.
In 1910, Fabens had just a few section houses for the railroad
employees and two stores; and in 1914, the estimated population was
only about 100, but the next few years brought many to the area as
people began fleeing the Mexican Revolution.
The town site was laid out in 1911, but the development didn't really
happen until the Fabens Townsite and Improvement Company bought it in
1915. The completion in 1956 of the Franklin Canal and the subsequent
rise in cotton prices during World War I attracted a number of wealthy
visitors to the area.
The rolling fields of the area, nestled in the shadow of the
mountains to the west and immediately adjacent to the Rio Grande, were
and still are perfect for farming.
The estimated population rose from 50 in 1925 to 2,000 2 years later,
despite a major flood at that time. The price of cotton dropping and
going up has all impacted Fabens. During the Great Depression, the
estimated population of Fabens fell to 1,600. But in the early 1930s,
as the Depression took hold, it fell and fell; but at the end of the
1930s, by about 1939, it had started an upward trend again.
In April of 1972, Fabens served as the location for the filming of
the Sam Peckinpah film, ``The Getaway.'' The crime drama starred Steve
McQueen and Ali MacGraw. Movie scenes were shot in the area and
included explosions and car chases and shootouts. The film became a
success and earned a big sum for those days of $25 million at the box
office.
Today Fabens is also home to one of west Texas' most popular and
famous restaurants, the Cattleman's Steakhouse. The steakhouse serves
delicious food, and it too has played a role in several movies.
Fabens is also the home of jockey Bill Shoemaker.
As I indicated earlier, kids in Fabens are served by the Fabens
Independent School District and are known as the Wildcats. Many
teachers in the Fabens ISD got their degrees from my own alma mater, my
college alma mater, Sul Ross State University. Perhaps
[[Page H7458]]
that is part of the reason I always feel so at home in visiting Fabens.
The next time you are in the 23rd District of Texas, I invite you too
to visit Fabens, to enjoy the hospitality, to see the sights, and to
learn the history of Fabens and all of west Texas.
____________________