Online Encyclopedia

GAINESVILLE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 388 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GAINESVILLE  , a

city and the county-seat of Cooke county,
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Texas, U.S.A., about 6 m . S. of the Red
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river, and about 6o m . N. of Fort Worth . Pop . (189o) 6594; (1900) 7874 (1201 negroes and 269
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foreign-born); (191o) 7624 . The city is served by the Gulf,
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Colorado &
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Santa Fe, and the
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Missouri, Kansas & Texas
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railways, and by an interurban electric railway . Gainesville is a trading centre and market for the surrounding country, in which cotton, grains, garden
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truck, fruit and
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alfalfa are grown and live-stock is raised; and a wholesale distributing point for the neighbouring region in Texas and Oklahoma . The city has cotton-compresses and cotton-gins, and among its manufactures are cotton-seed oil,
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flour, cement blocks, pressed bricks, canned goods, foundry products, waggon-beds and creamery products . Gainesville was settled about 1851, was incorporated in 1873, and was chartered as a city in 1879; it was named in honour of General Edmund Pendleton Gaines (1777-1849), who served with distinction in the War of 1812, becoming a brigadier-general in March 1814 and receiving the brevet of major-general and the thanks of Congress' for his defence of Fort
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Erie in August 1814 . Gaines took a prominent
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part in the operations against the Seminoles in
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Florida in 1817 (when he was in command of the
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Southern Military
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District) and in 1836 and during the Mexican War commanded the department of the South-West, with headquarters at New Orleans .

End of Article: GAINESVILLE
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