28 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
-
Kermit, TX
Kermit wasn't always here, you know. This land, out on the edge of the Permian Basin, felt pretty empty before the Roaring Twenties. Some folks even whispered about a curse, a sense that the land didn't want to be…
-
Winkler, Colonel C. M.
· 0.1 mi · Historical Marker
Native North Carolina. Start of Civil War, organized and took company 150 men to join Confederate army in Virginia. Unit made part 4th Texas Infantry of famed Hood's Brigade. Rose to command regiment as lt. colonel.…
-
Winkler County Courthouse
· 0.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Winkler County Courthouse in Kermit. Built between 1929 and 1930, this grand building replaced an earlier courthouse after oil was discovered in the county in 1926. Designed in a classical…
-
Kermit, TX
· 0.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Kermit, a town born from ranching, but truly defined by oil. It started as a supply point for ranches, officially becoming the county seat in 1910 and even named for Kermit Roosevelt, son of…
-
Moorhead Cable Tool Rig
· 0.8 mi · Historical Marker
Last wooden oil derrick in U.S. to retire from daily use. Drilled Moorhead No. 1 well on Chapman-McAlvane lease, Loving County. Has bull wheels and rig irons of type not made since 1920s. However, in its day it made…
-
Kermit
· 1.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Kermit, the county seat of Winkler County. It was organized back in 1910 and officially incorporated in 1938. The town was named for Kermit Roosevelt, son of President Theodore Roosevelt, who once…
-
Old Duval Townsite
· 2.3 mi · Historical Marker
First post office in Winkler (then part of Tom Green) County opened near here (1908) on John Howe ranch. Mail came in twice weekly to serve 300 persons. Duval townsite, promoted all over the United States by the Pueblo…
-
Hendrick Oilfield
· 2.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
Hendrick oilfield, in central Winkler County, was discovered by random drilling on July 16, 1926, when Hendrick No. 1, operated by Westbrook and Company, reached a depth of 3,006 feet in dolomitic limestone. The…
-
Winkler County
· 2.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
Winkler County is mostly in the Pecos Valley of West Texas; its northeastern section is on the Llano Estacado . The county is adjacent to the southeastern corner of New Mexico. Kermit, the county seat, is forty miles…
-
Cheyenne, TX
· 2.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Winkler County, and right here was once the hopeful oil town of Cheyenne. In 1928, newcomers built shacks, dreaming of a boom. They even planned a school, but the bonds were canceled. Cheyenne…
-
Hay Flat, TX
· 2.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Winkler County, and right here, you're passing through the former community of Hay Flat. It all started back in 1910, when settlers looking for land near the T-Bar Ranch needed a post office. They…
-
Rig Theater
· 7.7 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Hold on to your Stetson, partner, because this old movie house whispers tales of Wink's wild oil boom days. The Rig Theater was built in 1928. It was the only masonry building in town besides the school. During its…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Wink (Wink)
· 7.8 mi
Wink (Wink, TX) placed on the 2A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Cayson Cuellar (0.543 avg).
-
Wink, TX
· 8.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wink, Texas, a town born from the oil boom. It all started in 1926 with the discovery of oil in the Hendrick field. By 1927, people were rushing in, setting up tents and makeshift homes on the T.…
-
Eskridge, Charles Sanford, Jr.
· 8.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wink, Texas, the birthplace of Charles Sanford Eskridge, Jr., born here in 1937. Eskridge dedicated his life to advocating for the handicapped. From 1969 to 1979, he was instrumental in passing…
-
Wink, TX
· 8.1 mi
Wink, Texas. It's a little spot on the map, out in the Permian Basin, but it's surprising who's called this place home. Most folks know it for its two famous sinkholes, relics of the oil boom, that just seem to appear…
-
Wink
· 8.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Wink, a town that exploded into existence in 1926. A massive oil discovery just north of here brought between 10,000 and 20,000 people flooding into the area, transforming it almost overnight. The…
-
Winkler County
· 9.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Winkler County, formed back in 1887 from Tom Green County. It was officially organized in 1910 and named for C. M. Winkler, a statesman, soldier, and jurist who lived from 1821 to 1882. Today,…
-
Texas Territorial Compromise of 1850
· 10.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through a place that once marked a massive territorial compromise. Back in 1850, Texas agreed to give up a huge chunk of land – almost a third of its territory won in the Texas Revolution – to the United…
-
The Sand Hills
· 10.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through the Sand Hills, a massive 100-mile belt of sand stretching across Texas and New Mexico. Mapped by the U.S. Government back in 1849 for gold seekers, these dunes, some over 70 feet high, were a…
-
Sublett, William Caldwell
· 14.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through West Texas, and right here, you're in the land of a lost treasure. William Caldwell Sublett, a pioneer and buffalo hunter, discovered gold dust and nuggets somewhere in the Pecos River country…
-
Holman, Eugene
· 14.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through West Texas, and right here in Monahans, a young Eugene Holman grew up. He'd go on to become one of the most influential oilmen of the 20th century. After studying geology, he worked his way up…
-
Monahans, TX
· 14.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Monahans, a town that owes its very existence to a desperate need for water out here in West Texas. Back in 1881, long before I-20, Thomas John Monahan dug the first well between the Pecos River…
-
Blue Mountain
· 14.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Blue Mountain, though it's not really a mountain at all. It's the southern edge of the Llano Estacado, and for centuries, it's been a vital landmark. Indigenous peoples used it as a lookout and found…
-
Ward County
· 14.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Ward County, and right here, the landscape changed dramatically in the 1920s. Before then, it was mostly ranching and a few struggling farms, hit hard by floods and droughts. But in 1926, the…
-
Dunagan, John Conrad
· 14.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through West Texas, maybe near Monahans, where J. Conrad Dunagan spent much of his life. He wasn't just a businessman, running Coca-Cola bottling plants and banks, but a passionate historian and…
-
Texas-New Mexico Railway
· 14.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Ward County, and right here is the legacy of the Texas-New Mexico Railway. Chartered in 1927, this line was built to connect Monahans to Kermit, a crucial thirty-five miles across West Texas. It…
-
Trooper Kevin Ramirez Vasquez Memorial Highway
· 19.3 mi · Historical Marker
This stretch of State Highway 302 west of Odessa, near Notrees, is named for Trooper Kevin Ramirez Vasquez of the Texas Department of Public Safety. On September 17, 2024, Vasquez was investigating a crash on this road…