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Val Verde County is a county located on the southern Edwards Plateau in the U.S. state of Texas. The 2020 population is 47,586. [1] Its county seat is Del Rio. [2] The Del Rio micropolitan statistical area includes all of Val Verde County. Val Verde, which means "green valley", [3] was named for a battle of the Civil War.
Location of Val Verde County in Texas. This is a list of the National Register Historic Places in Val Verde County, Texas. This is intended to be a complete list of properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Val Verde County, Texas. There are seven districts and four individual properties listed on the ...
Del Rio is the principal city of the Del Rio micropolitan statistical area, which includes all of Val Verde County; [13] the micropolitan area had an estimated population over 50,000 in 2007. [14] Located across from Del Rio, in the Mexican state of Coahuila , is the city of Ciudad Acuña, with a city population of 201,161.
Del Rio Division comprises the following counties: Edwards, Kinney, Maverick, Terrell, Uvalde, Val Verde and Zavala. El Paso Division comprises the following counties: El Paso and Hudspeth. Midland-Odessa Division comprises the following counties: Andrews, Crane, Ector, Martin, Midland and Upton.
Category: National Register of Historic Places in Val Verde County, Texas. 2 languages.
Val Verde may refer to: Val Verde, California, a community in Los Angeles County; Val Verde (Montecito, California), estate in Santa Barbara County, listed on National Register of Historic Places; Val Verde, Texas; Val Verde Park, Texas; Val Verde County, Texas; Val Verde, New Mexico. Battle of Valverde or Val Verde, an American Civil War ...
Seminole Canyon State Park and Historic Site is a 2,172.5-acre (879.2 ha) site operated by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.It is located off U.S. Route 90 in Val Verde County, and is accessible via Park Road 67. [4]
Valverde, Denver, a neighborhood in the City and County of Denver, Colorado Valverde, New Mexico , a former Spanish settlement that gave its name to the nearby site of the Battle of Valverde during the American Civil War