Staples, Texas
Staples | |
city | |
Land | USA |
---|---|
Delstat | Texas |
County | Guadalupe County |
Höjdläge | 159 m ö.h. |
Koordinater | 29°46′53″N 97°50′10″V / 29.78139°N 97.83611°V |
Yta | 3,9 km² (2010) |
- land | 3,9 km² |
- vatten | 0,0 km² |
Folkmängd | 193 (2020)[1] |
Befolkningstäthet | 49 invånare/km² |
Tidszon | CST (UTC-6) |
- sommartid | CDT (UTC-5) |
ZIP-kod | 78670 |
FIPS | 4870052 |
Geonames | 4734082 |
Ortens läge i Texas | |
Texas läge i USA | |
Webbplats: https://www.cityofstaples.com/ | |
Staples är en ort i Guadalupe County i Texas.[2] Vid 2020 års folkräkning hade Staples 193 invånare.[1]
Källor
- ^ [a b] ”Staples city, Texas 2020 Decennial Census” (på engelska). United States Census Bureau. https://data.census.gov/profile/Staples_city,_Texas?g=160XX00US4870052. Läst 19 april 2023.
- ^ Staples, TX. Map Quest. Läst 15 mars 2020.
Media som används på denna webbplats
Shiny red button/marker widget. Used to mark the location of something such as a tourist attraction.
Författare/Upphovsman: Alexrk, Licens: CC BY 3.0
Den här Det karta skapades med GeoTools.
Författare/Upphovsman: Darrylpearson, Licens: CC BY-SA 4.0
Camp Clark, C.S.A.. Named for Edward Clark, first Confederate Governor of Texas, whose Executive Order June 8, 1861, created voluntary camps of instruction such as this. Food, camp facilities and guns were voluntary gifts by local people. Farmers, merchants, artisans, laborers gave goods and services. Men with military training and experience gave their time as drillmasters. This and 50 or 60 other camps of instruction mainly taught walking to Texans brought up with the habit of moving about on horseback. (6 out of 10 Texans joined the Cavalry. Governor Clark felt compelled to say in his Executive Order that infantry service was actually a matter of honor.) Operated despite scorn of 18 to 35 year old recruits who had fought Indians most of their lives and were impatient for battle-- not for training. Though neither Texas nor the Confederacy in 1861 had funds for camps of instruction, by 1862 privates were paid $11 a month, officers $50. This Guadalupe County camp of instruction was convenient to roads and to water. Area units that trained here included Co. D, 4th Texas Infantry, of Hood's famous Texas Brigade, and 4th Texas Cavalry (Partisan) under Captain William P. Hardeman. 1964 #654
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Base versions this one is derived from: originally created by en:User:Wapcaplet, Licens: CC BY 2.0
Map of USA with Texas highlighted