Jacksonville, Texas
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Jacksonville is a city located in Cherokee County, Texas, United States. The population was 13,997 at the 2020 U.S. census.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It is the principal city of the Jacksonville micropolitan statistical area, which includes all of Cherokee County.
Jacksonville is located in East Texas, north of the county seat, Rusk, and south of Tyler, in Smith County.
Area production and shipping of tomatoes gained the town the title "Tomato Capital of the World". The impressive red iron ore rock Tomato Bowl, built by Works Progress Administration workers during the Great Depression, is home to the Jacksonville High School "Fightin' Indians" football and soccer teams. Annual events include the "Tops in Texas Rodeo" held in May and the "Tomato Fest" celebration in June.
History
[edit]Jacksonville began in 1847 as the town of Gum Creek. Jackson Smith built a home and blacksmith shop in the area, and became postmaster in 1848, when a post office was authorized. Shortly afterward, Dr. William Jackson established an office near Smith's shop. When the townsite was laid out in 1850, the name Jacksonville was chosen in honor of these two men. The name of the post office was changed from Gum Creek to Jacksonville in June 1850.
Despite never having organized unions in any Walmart stores before, meatcutters working at the Jacksonville Walmart voted in favor of organizing under the wing of the United Food and Commercial Workers union in February 2000. During a flurry of subsequent legal actions, Walmart discontinued store-level meatcutting and started shipping in pre-packaged/pre-frozen meat to their stores. When all the hearings and appeals were exhausted, it was decided that the local meatcutters didn't embody the characteristics of a group that could bargain since they weren't specialized. Even now, there is no one in the Jacksonville meat department to make special cuts of meat or any union presence there.<ref>Wal-Mart's "Meat Wars" With Union Sizzles On, HuffingtonPost.com, Al Norman--writer, March 16, 2008. Retrieved 2009-10-24.</ref><ref>UFCW Timeline Template:Webarchive, Retrieved 2009-10-24.</ref>
Geography
[edit]According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of Template:Convert, of which Template:Convert is land and 0.07% is water.
Lake Jacksonville
[edit]Lake Jacksonville is three miles (5 km) southwest of Jacksonville. It is the city's primary water source. It is a popular location for recreation and residences. It was created in 1957 and the city expected it to take years to fill with water from the surrounding creeks. But, with an unusually rainy season, the lake reached full capacity in a year.
- Lake characteristics
- Location: 3 miles southwest of Jacksonville off US 79
- Surface area: 1,320 acres
- Maximum depth: 62 feet
- Impounded: 1957
Climate
[edit]With records only dating to 1953, Jacksonville was one a few Texas locations to have its all time low occur during the 2021 Texas power crisis cold snap in February 2021. Template:Weather box
Demographics
[edit]Race | Number | Percentage |
---|---|---|
White (NH) | 4,915 | 35.11% |
Black or African American (NH) | 2,747 | 19.63% |
Native American or Alaska Native (NH) | 25 | 0.18% |
Asian (NH) | 105 | 0.75% |
Pacific Islander (NH) | 5 | 0.04% |
Some Other Race (NH) | 47 | 0.34% |
Mixed/Multi-Racial (NH) | 404 | 2.89% |
Hispanic or Latino | 5,749 | 41.07% |
Total | 13,997 |
As of the 2020 United States census, there were 13,997 people, 5,027 households, and 3,670 families residing in the city.
Government
[edit]Local government
[edit]Template:Update needed According to the city's most recent Adopted Budget, the city's various funds had $14.9 million in Revenues, $15.7 million in expenditures, and $4.4 million fund balance.<ref>2008-09 Adopted Budget Template:Webarchive Retrieved 2009-06-10</ref>
Management of the city and coordination of city services are provided by (as of 2009}:<ref>City of Jacksonville Template:Webarchive Retrieved 2009-06-03</ref>
Department | Director |
---|---|
City Mayor | Randy Gorham |
City Manager | James Hubbard |
Director of Finance | Roxanna Martin |
Fire Chief | Keith Fortner |
Police Chief | Joe Williams |
Director of Public Works | Randall Chandler |
Director of Water and Sewer | Randall Chandler |
Director of Development Services | Jody Watson |
Director of Streets | James Worley |
Library Director | Trina Stidham |
State government
[edit]Jacksonville is represented in the Texas Senate by Republican Robert Nichols, District 3, and in the Texas House of Representatives by Republican Travis Clardy, District 11.
Federal government
[edit]At the Federal level, the two U.S. Senators from Texas are Republicans John Cornyn and Ted Cruz; Jacksonville is part of the Fifth Congressional District, represented by Republican Lance Gooden.
Recreation
[edit]The Jacksonville Public Library<ref>Website, Jacksonville Public Library. Retrieved 2019-02-23.</ref> served the City of Jacksonville and Cherokee County for over 70 years. The Library was a member of the Texas Library Association, the Northeast Texas Library System and the Forest Trails Library Consortium. In September 2020, the lot it sat on was sold to Chick-fil-A, where construction promptly began on a restaurant location. The new Jacksonville Public Library opened in April 2021, in the Norman Activities Center.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Until the opening of the new location, Jacksonville residents were allowed to visit the Rusk Public Library with library card fines waived.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The Jacksonville Jax Minor League baseball team played at Ragsdale Park between 1934 and 1950.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Education
[edit]The city of Jacksonville is served by the Jacksonville Independent School District. Jacksonville High School, the district's only high school, has "Fightin' Indians"/"Maidens" as mascots for its team sports.
Colleges, universities
[edit]Jacksonville College and the Baptist Missionary Association Theological Seminary, both of which are owned by the Baptist Missionary Association of America, are located in Jacksonville.
Lon Morris College, a United Methodist Church operated private junior college, was located in Jacksonville until ceasing operations in 2012.
Transportation
[edit]Many highways pass through and intersect in Jacksonville: US 69, US 79, US 175, SH 135, SH 204, FM 347, FM 768, FM 2138, and Loop 456. However, no Interstate highways pass through the city limits
Where 3 railroads once served the Jacksonville area (Southern Pacific and Cotton Belt abandoned their tracks in the mid-1980s), only one, Union Pacific, remains.
Cherokee County Airport is the sole airport within Jacksonville, but solely serves general aviation. Commercial aviation can be accessed by traveling north to Tyler Pounds Regional Airport with an American Eagle flight to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (DFW), or simply driving 132 miles directly to either DFW or Dallas Love Field via U.S. Route 175.
Notable people
[edit]- Kevin Aldridge, former Tennessee Titans Defensive Lineman
- Ray Benge, baseball pitcher
- Bruce Channel, singer/songwriter<ref>Bruce Channel Biography, IMDb. Retrieved 2019-03-12.</ref>
- Travis Clardy, Texas House of Representatives member for District 11
- John Clark, state-championship-winning high school football coach and athletic director for Plano ISD in Plano
- Al Dexter, country music singer
- Sandy Duncan, actress, originally from Henderson, graduated from the former Lon Morris College
- Paul Gipson, running back
- Toby Gowin, former NFL punter
- Micah Hoffpauir, former Chicago Cubs first baseman
- Tommy Hollis, actor
- Craig James, former pro football player, former ESPN and Fox Sports commentator<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- John B. Kendrick, (1857–1933), Senator and ninth Governor of Wyoming, was born on a ranch near Jacksonville<ref>Template:Cite encyclopediaTemplate:Dead link</ref>
- Pete Lammons, former New York Jets tight end and defensive end
- Billy Martindale, former pro golfer, golf course designer
- Margo Martindale, award-winning actress, graduated from the former Lon Morris College
- Josh McCown, New York Jets quarterback
- Luke McCown, former NFL quarterback
- Neal McCoy, country music singer
- Robert Nichols, Texas State Senator (2007–present), former Jacksonville mayor and city councillor
- Grady Nutt, (1934–1982), Christian minister and humorist who resided in Jacksonville for several years
- V. O. Stamps, (1892–1940), was co-founder of the Stamps-Baxter Music Company.
- Alan Tudyk, actor, originally from El Paso, graduated from the former Lon Morris College
- Travis Ward, (1922–2015), independent Texas oil man
- Lee Ann Womack, country music singer
- Deborah Yates, Tony-nominated broadway actress and former member of The Rockettes
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]Template:Reflist Template:Commons category
External links
[edit]- City of Jacksonville
- Jacksonville Chamber of Commerce
- Jacksonville Economic Development
- Template:Handbook of Texas