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Wednesday, November 25, 2020

Historic River Crossing in West Texas is Filled With Death

As state historical sites go, few can rival this remote muddy ford on the Pecos River for rank obscurity.

Until recently, only a bullet-pocked, vandalized state historical marker, erected in 1936, miles off the paved road, gave any hint of the wrenching frontier dramas that once played out here, 30 miles northeast of Fort Stockton. 

As the marker inscription notes, the crossing got its odd name from the bleached animal skulls found hanging from bushes by a government surveyor in 1850.