Castell, Texas

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Castell is a small unincorporated riverside town in Llano County, Texas, United States. Located in the heart of the Texas Hill Country, its northern border is formed by the Llano River.

Castell began in 1847 as a land grant in Comanche territory settled by German Abolitionists and Free-Soilers.[1] The unsettled land had formerly been part of the Fisher-Miller land grant. It was part of a series of five immigrant settlements sponsored by a group of prominent Germans known as the Adelsverein, including Count Emil von Kriewitz,[2] John Meusebach, Prince Carl of Solms-Braunfels, H. Spies, and Count Carl of Castell. The other communities were Schoenburg, Meerholz, Leiningen, and Bettina. The first two were unsuccessful from the start. Leiningen and Bettina had brief lives, Bettina lasting only a year. Only Castell remains.[1]

Describing conditions in Castell in the mid-1800s, a tour guide has written

Life here was not easy. For the first couple of years, Castellites depended heavily on supplies and support from the people of Fredericksburg, who had problems enough of their own. A round trip to Fredericksburg—about 50 miles—took 4 days.[1]

Castell briefly experienced an influx of about twenty Mormon pioneer families under the leadership of Lyman Wight. They had settled in Zodiac, Texas in 1847, in Mormon Mills, Texas in 1851 (where Wight was eventually buried), and then settled in Castell briefly before moving south in 1854 to Bandera, Texas.[1] Due to the Mormon custom of sending out missionaries, it is possible that the Castellite congregations of nineteenth-century North Carolina took their name from the Mormons who lived briefly in Castell, Texas.

Castell had a population of 72 people in 1972 and again in 2000.[2] In 2007, a Castell promotional site claims a population of only 23.[3]

Castell is in the Central Time Zone and is assigned zip code 76831 and area code 325.

[edit] Modern attractions

Castell has several small businesses, mainly centering around camping and hospitality as a result of the flyfishing and kayaking opportunities there.[4]

Randy Leifeste operates the general store of Castell, which offers barbecue and Bloody Marys on weekend mornings.

And then there is Cock-A-Roo, Randy’s resident rooster, famous in song and story. People often travel to Castell just to see the bird, which has been on television and may be the most popular citizen of the town.[5]

Randy turns the rooster loose and puts a Billy Bass on the ground, the annoying fake mounted fish that sings the “Don’t Worry, Be Happy” song. The fish starts to sing and Cock-A-Roo attacks it, pecking and scratching. For some reason he hates that fish, and has ruined several of them, which Randy then hangs in the store. Cock-A-Roo is probably the most famous chicken since Fred Gipson’s Trail Driving Rooster.[6]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Lyman Wight's Mormon Colony in Texas excerpt from "Mormon Trails" chapter in Hill Country travel guide by Richard Zelade (2001). Accessed August 6, 2007.
  2. ^ a b Castell, Texas by James B. Heckert-Greene in the Handbook of Texas Online. Accessed August 7, 2007.
  3. ^ Castell, Texas — 76831, basic information about the town. Accessed August 7, 2007.
  4. ^ Castell, Texas
  5. ^ Cock-A-Roo on YouTube.
  6. ^ "Hunter Hangouts" October, 2006 Texas Parks and Wildlife Magazine.

[edit] External links

  • Castell, Texas Community Profile includes numerous links to various Castell maps, aerial photos, Census data, local government offices. Accessed August 7, 2007.
  • Castell, Texas — 76831, a reference to the area's zip code, with information about the town's business community and photo of plaque commemorating the founding of Castell, Bettina, and Leiningen. Accessed August 7, 2007.


Coordinates: 30°42′04″N 98°57′23″W / 30.70111, -98.95639