Bethany, Louisiana
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Bethany, Texas and Louisiana is a community on the Louisiana and Texas state lines and U.S. Highway 79, twenty-two miles northeast of Carthage, Texas in northeastern Panola County and Northwestern Caddo Parish.
Bethany in divided between Louisiana and Texas. The site was first settled around 1840. The community, which grew up as a stopping point for settlers moving to Texas from the Old South, was originally known as Vernon, but the name was changed to Bethany around 1849 when a post office was established. In the 1840s the town had a log store, a tavern, a water-powered grain mill, and a tannery. In 1860 the post office was relocated to Caddo Parish, Louisiana. After the Civil War Bethany began to decline, and by the late 1890s the local school had only nine students. The development of the Bethany gas field, which opened in the 1920s, brought a resurgence of the economy, and by the mid-1930s the community had two churches, five stores, an elementary school, and a number of houses. After World War II Bethany began to decline again. In the mid-1960s it supported a church, a community center, and several businesses. In the early 1990s Bethany was a dispersed rural community with a church and a few stores. One of the stores, Lickskillet, bisected by the state line, was built in 1889 by a barkeeper who wanted to take advantage of the differences in state laws; in half of the store drinking was legal, in the other gambling was legal.
Bethany is an unincorporated village.