The railroad in Dunlay and Hondo
The Longhorn Chapter of the NRHS is grateful to the
Hondo County Museum which is located in the old depot.
DUNLAY

Temporary line during construction Of Medina lake dam
Dunlay, in Medina County, is a small town west 39 miles west San Antonio, 14 miles on from Lacoste. It was
created by the arrival of the railroad and is named after a G.H. & SA conductor, Jerry Dunlay.
The main line crosses under HWY 90 at Dunlay and runs along it on the north side. This was the
closest point on the line to where Medina lake would be built in 1911 and temporary tracks
were constructed to bring in men and materials to the construction site. Two switchers were
leased from the railroad to move the massive amounts of lumber and cement
required for the
project. An engineer named Pearson raised $6,000,000.00 from British investors to get
the dam built. Work began in the spring of 1911 and was completed by the fall of 1912. Around
1,500 men were employed at the peak of construction which was heavy on human effort and light
on machinery. Laborers were paid $2.00 a day, and 70 were killed before the dam was finished.
In 1912 it was the biggest dam in Texas. In 1941 only one train a day in each direction stopped
at Dunlay. Today Dunlay has a population of around 200.
HONDO

Hondo depot
Hondo is ten miles west of Dunlay, 49 miles west of San Antonio. It was named for Hondo Creek
which was named in 1689 by Alfonso DeLeon, the Governor of Coahuila who was passing through
the area. He also gave the Medina River its name. It became the county seat of Medina in
1892, after a failed attempt in 1886, which allowed Castroville, whose residents had declined
to pay the railroad a bonus to build through it in 1881, to retain the honor for a few more years.
Hondo is pretty close to being the geographical center of the county. The court house was
built on land donated by the railroad. By 1890 the population of the county had almost doubled
from 1880. The number of schools in the county jumped from 4 to 36. It is worth mentioning
that in 1850 Castroville was the westernmost settlement in Texas and, with a population of only
366, it was also the twelfth largest town in the state.

Following the completion of the Medina Lake dam, the area's agriculture was markedly improved. By
1920 corn production exceeded that of cotton. 45% of the county is considered
prime farm land.
Cattle, sheep, goats and poultry do well and the main crops are sorghum, corn, grasses, wheat, carrots,
watermelons, pecans and peanuts. There is also lumber production, oil, gas, clay and gravel. The depot
in Hondo was kept busy. There were any number of freights and two passenger trains a day in each
direction. In 1942 a navigation school was created by the army air corps. It was built by Zachry
of San Antonio in 90 days. 3,000 workers erected 600 buildings and a runway for a price tag
of $7.25 million. 14,158 navigators were trained here until the base closed in 1946. Today, as
well as a number of manufacturing companies, the site is occupied by a municipal airport. The last
passenger train stopped at the depot in Hondo in June of 1958. It was fully retired in 1970
and donated to the city. It has been moved about half a mile from its original location but is
still close to the tracks. It is operated as the county museum and is open most Saturdays and
Sundays. It is well worth a visit.
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