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Paluxy is an unincorporated community in Hood County, Texas, United States. [1] The community is located on Farm to Market Road 51, 15 miles southwest of Granbury. It was part of Erath County until 1866, when Hood County was created. [2] Paluxy was named after the Paluxy River that runs through it. In 1887, the population of Paluxy was about 100.
Other major buildings include the 1885 Hood County Jailhouse, the 1885 First National Bank Building, the 1891 building which formerly housed the Hood County News, the 1893 Aston-Landers Saloon Building, [2] the 1893 Nutt Brothers Building, and the 1886 Granbury Opea House.
The restored Granbury Opera House was adorned with patriotic decorations during the 2014 Fourth of July festival. Hood County is part of the Dallas/Fort Worth television media market in North Central Texas. Local news media outlets are KDFW-TV, KXAS-TV, WFAA-TV, KTVT-TV, KERA-TV, KTXA-TV, KDFI-TV, KDAF-TV, KFWD-TV, and KDTX-TV.
Canyon Creek is in southeastern Hood County, on the south side of Lake Granbury, a reservoir on the Brazos River. It is 7 miles (11 km) southeast of Granbury , the county seat . According to the United States Census Bureau , the CDP has a total area of 2.5 square miles (6.6 km 2 ), of which 2.4 square miles (6.1 km 2 ) are land and 0.2 square ...
Granbury Town Square Granbury Railroad Depot. Granbury is a city in and the county seat of Hood County, Texas, United States. [2] As of the 2020 census, the city's population was 10,958, and it is the principal city of the Granbury micropolitan statistical area. Granbury is named after Confederate General Hiram B. Granbury.
Granger’s family and team have since confirmed that the 81-year-old rep is indeed at an independent living facility but denied reports that she is residing within the facility’s memory care ...
“Oh, here we are, right here,” Jim said, easing onto the corkscrew drive that led up a hill onto the Recovery Works property. “Comes up on you pretty fast.” To the left was a series of small brick cottages where the residents lived. The road ended at the main building, which housed the detox wing, communal rooms and administrative offices.
Granbury: 1866: Johnson County: John Bell Hood (1831–1879), a Confederate lieutenant general and the commander of Hood's Texas Brigade: 67,774: 422 sq mi (1,093 km 2) Hopkins County: 223: Sulphur Springs: 1846: Lamar County and Nacogdoches County: David Hopkins, an early settler in the future county 38,172: 785 sq mi (2,033 km 2) Houston ...