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City of White Settlement 214 Meadow Park Drive White Settlement, TX 76108. Phone: 817-246-4971. Contact form
Plan Submittal: Plans can be submitted anytime via email to permits@wstx.us or in-person in the front lobby Mondays - Fridays from 8am - 5pm. Browse common and important permits, and access Permit Department contact information.
In modern times, the city of White Settlement is the gateway to national defense, bordered by Lockheed Martin and the Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base Fort Worth. As federal properties, the White Settlement Police Department has concurrent jurisdiction for calls for service and patrols at the military base and aircraft plant.
City of White Settlement, White Settlement. 8,252 likes · 422 talking about this · 2,981 were here. The official Facebook page of the City of White Settlement.
The City of White Settlement, under the leadership of Curby Mirike, formed a volunteer fire department and built a new city hall where Farmers Branch crosses Meadow Park Drive. The city purchased the private water company and provided an improved service to the customers.
Spurred by the World War II need for military aircraft, the White Settlement area grew rapidly from 500 people to a population of over 10,000. In 1941, the City of White Settlement was incorporated and was a neighbor to a new Consolidated Aircraft Corporation plant and a new Army airfield.
White Settlement is a community that holds true to small-town values while nurturing major growth and advancements in both residential and commercial development.
City of White Settlement 214 Meadow Park Drive White Settlement, TX 76108. Phone: 817-246-4971. Contact form
They settled to the west of Fort Worth in a community that came to be known as White Settlement. Many of the planters brought slaves with them. Many of them settled on land pre-empted from the State and grazed fine herds of cattle along the banks of a creek named Farmers Branch.
In the early 1850s the name White Settlement referred to the small number of isolated farms and one or two trading posts that were scattered west of Fort Worth, reaching to the Parker county line through hostile Indian territory.