In 1859, the US military established Fort Stockton to gain control of
Comanche Springs, which formed an oasis in the midst of arid West Texas.
In the town that grew up beside the fort, a colorful mix of hardy
pioneers--Peter Gallagher, Cesario Torres, Frank Rooney, Father Jose
Ferra, Annie Frazier Johnson Riggs, and others--struggled (and sometimes
fought) to construct a viable farming and ranching community in the
vast, isolated terrain of Pecos County. Later, railroads, highways, air
bases, oil, natural gas, and wind farms joined water as forces shaping
the city's history. A century and a half after its founding, Fort
Stockton is an innovative city with high-tech dreams, yet the traces and
tales of its Old West heritage remain vividly alive along the banks of
Comanche Creek.