City of Strawn

City Of Strawn

  • <p>Downtown Strawn (Strawn Museum)</p> <p>Unpaved city street labeled Mian Street Looking South, Strawn Texas</p>
  • <p>Brick laying, Hwy. 16 South (Strawn Museum)</p> <p>Workers paving a road with bricks</p>
  • <p>The Strawn Hotel (Strawn Museum)</p> <p>ars parked in front of building labeled Hotel Strawn</p>
  • <p>Hurst and McCorkle Ford Dealership (Strawn Museum)</p> <p>Large room containing parked cars</p>
  • <p>Watson Bros. Store, 1930s (Strawn Museum)</p> <p>Corner building named Watson Brothers</p>

Strawn

Born in 1880 during the railroad era, Strawn never quite became the oil boom town that many of its Eastland County neighbors did. Surrounded by oil fields and the nearby Thurber coalmines and brick-making plant, Strawn benefited from both, but never boasted a high-rise hotel or a theater like Eastland, or even a population over 1,500. Routing of the Bankhead Highway through Strawn encouraged new businesses, like the Bankhead Hotel and Apartments, catering to travelers. The Bankhead also inspired Marche “Zim” Zimicki. A former mine worker, Zimicki built an all-in-stop for travelers along the Bankhead Highway. He and his father-in law began construction on the brick complex in the 1920s, that eventually included a gas station, restaurant, ice house, bottling plant, and tourist courts. Billboards advertising fuel, food, drinks, and ice beckoned weary travelers to Zim’s. The roadside stop, much like the rest of Strawn, benefitted from the Bankhead Highway traffic, but construction of Interstate 20 in the 1970s bypassed the community.

Strawn Chamber of Commerce

123 Central Ave.
254-595-0197
Visit Website