Publications Education Events Southwestern Historical Quarterly The Handbook of Texas Online TSHA Home About Us News Site Search Contact Us Giving Opportunities Links FAQ Join the TSHA
skip to content
TSHA Online Home
Handbook of 
 Texas Online


The Source for All Things Texan Since 1857: Texas Almanac



Used Car Buying Guide
Listings, News, Tips,
Insurance Information,
Reviews and More

Denton Live Music
Listings, Venues, Maps
Updated Daily
DentonLiveMusic.com

format this article to print

WALTON, TEXAS. Walton is at the intersection of State Highway 19 and Farm Road 1861, thirteen miles south of Canton in extreme south central Van Zandt County. It is named for an early settler. The site was in Henderson County until 1848 and was settled as early as 1865. It had a post office from 1875 to 1905, a Grangeqv by 1876, and three churches, general stores, a blacksmith shop, cotton gins, flour and grist mills, a race track, and saloon at its zenith. During the last years of the nineteenth century it was a stop for cattle drovers and oxcart freighters between Shreveport and Porter's Bluff. A Walton school was built by 1890 and had an enrollment of eighteen in 1905. The town reached a population of forty-nine in the 1930s, but the town center shifted when the highway from Athens to Canton bypassed it a mile to the east and induced the founding of a new settlement. For a time locals referred to the old and new townsites as Old and New Walton. By 1987 the two businesses and scattered dwellings that existed in 1936 at Old Walton had disappeared, but the town hall and the house built by Dr. Theo Blanchard in 1860 survived. New Walton had a school, a church, and numerous dwellings in 1936 and four businesses, two churches, and a cemetery in 1987. The population was estimated at thirty-five in 1974, and Walton received mail delivery from Athens in Henderson County. Through 2000 the population was still estimated at thirty-five.

BIBLIOGRAPHY: Vertical Files, Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin.

Diana J. Kleiner

 

Support the Handbook of Texas by donating today!
To join the TSHA, visit our membership information page.

Copyright © Texas State Historical Association
Terms of Use  Comment/Contact  Policy Agreement  Last Updated: January 11, 2008
Published by the Texas State Historical Association and distributed
in partnership with Holt, Rinehart and Winston, a Harcourt Education Company