Tiny
North Texas town struggles to survive
24
January, 2014
MEGARGEL
— When Debbie Wells purchased the Megargel High School campus in
2009, she didn’t realize she was becoming the caretaker for so much
of the town’s history.
Still
inside the school that opened in 1927 are desks, yearbooks and old
photos of students. Near the front entrance, the Megargel school
board’s last agenda is still posted from June 2006; it includes the
item to consolidate with the Olney school district.
Next
door, the gymnasium that opened in 1950 still has its scoreboard and
a few basketballs strewn across the dusty hardwood court. Outside,
the goal posts to the old six-man football field are in still place,
surrounded by weeds.
“It
was like there was a fire drill and everybody left and never came
back,” said Wells who lives with her family in the former
agriculture building behind the school.
For
Megargel, population 203 — on Texas 114, about 110 miles northwest
of Fort Worth — the former high school campus may be the most
visible sign of a town fading away, but it’s far from the only one.
Downtown
is virtually empty, littered with crumbling and abandoned buildings
and outdated gas stations. Many houses are vacant and of the town’s
200 water meters, only 130 are active.
And
like many small Texas towns hit by the prolonged drought, Megargel is
struggling with its water supply.
Since
last March, Megargel has been in Stage 3 water restrictions, which
includes a ban on outdoor watering. The Texas Commission on
Environmental Quality considers it to have a 90-day supply of water
but city officials say the town lake, the sole of source of water,
has held steady in recent months.
Town
officials have had discussions with Baylor Water Supply Corp in
Seymour about building an emergency water line to supply the town in
case its lake runs dry.
Even
if the water situation improves, city leaders worry about the town’s
survival.
“Unless
something changes I can’t see any reason it won’t completely
disappear,” said Jerry Goodwin, who has been a city councilman
since 2009. “We’ve talked about it and most of the people are
like me, they just don’t see anything that could keep us going for
very much longer.”
‘They
are still there’
Despite
Goodwin’s fears of Megargel’s demise, it is rare for small Texas
towns to vanish, said Rice University professor Steve Murdock, a
former director of the U.S. Census Bureau and the former state
demographer for the state of Texas.
“Not
very many places totally disappear off the map but that part of Texas
has struggled with population growth for decades,” Murdock said
Despite
the booming population gains in Texas, 96 Texas counties lost
population from 2000 to 2012.
“It
is a concern but it is a concern they share with the Great Plains,
which has been experiencing these issues for 100 years,” Murdock
said. “Many have lost population. Many have struggled. They may be
a shadow of their former selves but they are still there.”
Murdock,
who is a rural sociologist, said residents are right to worry about
the loss of the school district. Any time a town loses its school
system, it can be a crippling blow.
“I
would be worried about viability,” Murdock said. “I think for
rural areas losing schools is a big thing. It’s where a community
often gets its identity. If you look at the history of the Great
Plains, the areas that lost schools had an even more difficult time.”
Megargel’s
identity was linked to high school basketball, which was treated as a
year-round sport. Its boys team advanced to the Class B final four
during the 1974-75 season before losing in the state semifinals.
Schools,
along with retail businesses and access to healthcare are essential
to having a viable rural town, said Billy Phillips, director of Texas
Tech’s F. Marie Hall Institute for Rural and Community Health,
which works with 108 West Texas counties, including Archer County.
“It
is very hard to attract businesses without some kind of healthcare
facilities,” Phillips said. “A lot of industries have insurance
requirements that won’t let them set up shop a certain number of
miles from a hospital or healthcare facility.”
Many
West Texas hospitals are surviving on “razor-thin margins” that
put other towns in peril if they close, Phillips said. In Megargel,
the closest hospital is in Olney, 11 miles away.
‘Hard
to attract families’
For
most of its existence, Megargel has been a small town.
It
began as a railroad town in 1910, named after Roy C. Megargel,
president of the Gulf and Western Railroad. By 1927, Megargel had
grown to a population of more than 1,200 and boasted that it had one
of the the first high school bands in Texas. Since then, the town’s
population has been on a steady decline.
The
railroad was abandoned in 1943. The population decreased to 347 by
1950. Forty years later, it was down to 244, according to the
Handbook of Texas. From to 2000 to 2010, its population dropped
further from 248 to 203, according to the U.S. Census.
Losing
40 residents in a decade may not seem like much, but it is a concern
to Megargel residents. Some believe the consolidation of the school
district had led to some of those losses.
“There’s
just not much here for people under the age of 20 anymore or for new
families,” said Mayor Kelly DeSautel. “When we lost the school,
there was nothing really here for the children. It’s kind of hard
to attract families when you’ve got to bus your kids 10 or 20 miles
for school. And it’s harder for parents to go to their kid’s
events if they’re all in another town.”
DeSautel
knows firsthand; he has a 16-year-old daughter who goes to Olney High
School. Most of her friends are in Olney and that’s where most of
her activities take place.
In
order to turn the town around, DeSautel said the city must find a way
to address its water problems and attract new businesses.
“We
need to start cleaning up the town but right now water is our biggest
issue,” DeSautel said.
There
is also the concern that the town’s other piece of identity, the
post office, will become a diminished presence. Sometime this year,
it is expected to have its hours reduced from eight to four hours a
day. When the reduced hours will take effect isn’t clear.
All
of these factors have led to sense of pessimism.
‘Really
better for the kids’
The
loss of the Megargel school still stings but city councilman Lawrence
Smith, who was former school board member, said consolidating was
best for the students.
“Here
you were going to get the basics — reading, writing and arithmetic
— and little else,” Smith said. “We just couldn’t compete
with what they could offer. It was really better for the kids.”
Though
its downtown has been bypassed Texas 114, Megargel still has a few
businesses. Team Pride, an aluminum manufacturing company, is located
on the edge of town. There’s still a feed store, McCarson Feed and
Grain, a convenience store and the Megargel Cafe.
“We’re
trying to pull traffic from surrounding towns,” said the cafe’s
manager, Tracey Knezek. “If we can do that, we’ll survive.”
But,
Knezek said, the number of customers during the week is often
dictated by events nearby, like hunters passing through town or
cowboys working on a nearby ranch. She was expecting to be busy one
day last week because a funeral was scheduled in town.
“You
would be surprised by what a funeral can do for business,” Knezek
said.
Law
enforcement issues
With
little to do in town, the mayor said petty crime has been a problem.
There are some who get involved in drugs and alcohol, and sometimes
it isn’t reported, DeSautel said.
“They
go to vacant spots knowing nobody is around,” DeSautel said. “It
just makes a bigger playground for kids who want to do that kind of
thing. The only remedy would be getting someone to take a constable
position or a city marshal to help the county patrol the area.”
County
officials say the position has been vacant for years and the city
doesn’t have enough money to hire a city marshal.
“It’s
very difficult to live in that area and be in law enforcement,”
said Simon Dwyer, chief deputy for the Archer County Sheriff’s
Office. “A constable’s position would pay very little. It would
have to be someone who was working part-time with another job or
retired.”
Dwyer
said the sheriff’s office has difficultly patrolling Megargel
because of limited resources and the distance from Archer City, the
county seat. With Megargel isolated in the southwestern corner of a
county that totals 936 square miles, the sheriff’s office cannot
patrol the area regularly.
“We
have what our budget can support,” Dwyer said. “It is very
difficult to justify placing a deputy in Megargel when we have such a
large geographic area. It’s very difficult to get to and from
Megargel in a hurry.”
Dwyer
said many Megargel residents prefer to be left alone.
“They
may call us to bring the hammer down on one of their neighbors, but
if we come down there and them driving around without their seat belt
on, they’ll ask: ‘Why are you coming down here and harassing
us?’” Dwyer said.
But
Megargel has strong pull on many that have moved away.
Wells,
a former Grapevine resident who owns the high school campus, saw how
much the old school meant to residents when the town had its
centennial celebration in 2010. By some estimates, 3,000 people
visited Megargel that day and many dropped by the school.
Former
students signed a banner and used shoe-polish to put their names as
well as their old uniform numbers in one of the windows.
Wells
said there are a number of possibilities for the school but she is
ready to move on. The property is for sale and is listed at $289,000.
“It
needs someone with new ideas,” Wells said. “It could work as a
flea market, a camp or some type of community center, anything that
can bring people to town. I really think it’s the best hope for
bringing the town back but it’s going to need to be someone other
than me.”
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