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City of Gruver

Gruver, Texas

Gruver, Texas, in Hansford county, is 76 miles N of Amarillo, Texas (center to center) and 224 miles W of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. The city is home to some 1,162 residents.

The People and Families of Gruver

In Gruver, about 71% of adults are married. A large portion of people in Gruver are married.

The people of the city are more likely male than female.

Wealth and Education

In 2000, Gruver had a median family income of $37,333. Impressively, having a college education is normal in Gruver.

Political Inclinations

George W. Bush was the top money-getter ($1,270) among 2004 Presidential candidates in Gruver. The Republican party stood out in its ability to raise compaign money in the city.

Crime and Safety

While crime is a worry everywhere, the people of Gruver can take comfort in the low amount of crime in the city.

Gruver Housing

According to the 2000 census, 74% of the housing in Gruver was owner-occupied. The city presents in interesting mix of housing units, including some used primarily seasonally or for vacations.

Commuting

In Gruver, 93% of commuters drive to work. Unlike a lot of places, in Gruver it is actually possible for many people to ride their bikes to work, or even walk. The relatively short commuting times in the city let you stay at the office later before starting your drive home (if that appeals to you).

High Points

Gruver strengths, compared to Peers (similar size places nationally) or State (other places in Texas):

CategoryTrophy
Low Property Crime
(vs. State)
Top 7% Gruver Low Property Crime
Short Commute Times
(vs. Peers)
Top 10% Gruver Short Commute Times
Walking and Biking to Work
(vs. State)
Top 11% Gruver Walking and Biking to Work
Low Violent Crime
(vs. State)
Top 13% Gruver Low Violent Crime

Profile of Gruver, TX

Comparing Gruver to similar size places nationwide (Peers) and to other places in Texas (State):

Ratings range from (lowest) to (highest).

The People

CharacteristicCompared
to Peers
Compared
to State
Male Share of the Population
Children Under 5 Years Old
Senior Citizens
Well-Paid Single Men
Age of the Population
Female Share of the Population
Racial Diversity

Families

CharacteristicCompared
to Peers
Compared
to State
Portion of People Married
Average Household Size

Wealth

CharacteristicCompared
to Peers
Compared
to State
College Educated Adults
Median Family Income
People in Middle Class or Better
People Above Poverty

Commute & Sprawl

CharacteristicCompared
to Peers
Compared
to State
Short Commute Times
Walking and Biking to Work
Working at Home
Public Transportation Use

Housing

CharacteristicCompared
to Peers
Compared
to State
Seasonal and Vacation Housing
Affordability of Property Taxes
Affordability of Rents
Housing Recently Built
People Living Alone
Studio & One-Bedroom Rentals

Crime

CharacteristicCompared
to Peers
Compared
to State
Low Property Crime
Low Violent Crime

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Of Note:

Political Contributions (2004)

Money donated by Gruver residents to parties and candidates for the 2004 elections.

by Political Party

PartyContributions
Republican $2,020

by Presidential Candidate

CandidateContributions
George W. Bush $1,270

Estimated Gruver Population Growth 2000-2005

CategoryValue
Est. 2005 Population 1,122
Growth -40
Growth % -3.39%

Gruver Population (2000)

CategoryCountPercent
Total Population 1,162 100%
Male 582 50.1%
Female 580 49.9%
Under 18 364 31.3%
18+ 798 68.7%
65+ 174 15%
Median Age 35.3  
Average Family Size 3.15  
White 931 80.1%
African-American 0 0%
Asian 0 0%
American Indian & Alaskan 8 0.7%
Other 200 17.2%
Mixed Race 23 2%
Hispanic (included in categories above) 329 28.3%
Median Family Income (1999) $37,333  
Population In Poverty 188 16.2%

Gruver Ancestry

(From 2000 Census, as reported by individuals)

Note: This is national, not racial, ancestry, so the Census doesn't have categories for Hispanic and African-American, e.g. CityTownInfo is currently gathering additional ancestry data for this site.

AncestryPercent
Other (often includes Hispanic and African American) 47.2%
US/American 16.4%
German 12.5%
English 8.4%
Irish 4.9%
Norwegian 2.3%
Dutch 2%
European 1.5%
Scottish 1.1%
French (except Basque) 1.1%
Scotch-Irish 0.8%
Portuguese 0.6%
Danish 0.4%
Dutch West Indian 0.3%
Italian 0.3%
Swedish 0.3%

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Gruver Almanac

CategoryValue
Near Medium City 76 miles N of Amarillo, Texas (center to center)
Nearest Large City 224 miles W of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
County Hansford
Standard Zip Codes 79040
Phone Area Codes 806
Time Zone Central (-6 hours from GMT)
Daylight Savings The city observes Daylight Saving Time.
Latitude 36.265
Longitude -101.405

Gruver Climate

Nearest Weather Stations
Notes:

  • Temp ranges are avg daily min and max for the month
  • Precipitation is rainfall (and rainfall equiv of snowfall)
StationGRUVER
Distance 1.1 miles
Jan Temp 18 to 46 F
Apr Temp 40 to 70 F
Jul Temp 64 to 92 F
Oct Temp 42 to 72 F
Annual Precip 19.9 inches
StationSTRATFORD
Distance 38.2 miles
Jan Temp 19 to 47 F
Apr Temp 37 to 69 F
Jul Temp 62 to 91 F
Oct Temp 40 to 71 F
Annual Precip 17.8 inches
StationDUMAS
Distance 41.7 miles
Jan Temp 21 to 47 F
Apr Temp 39 to 69 F
Jul Temp 65 to 92 F
Oct Temp 43 to 72 F
Annual Precip 17.7 inches

Gruver High Schools (2004)

GRUVER H S
601 GARRETT ST
806-733-2477
A Title I school.
Serves 136 students.
Student/teacher ratio: 8.8

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City Town Info
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Gruver, TX

1
On September 17, 2005 the City of Gruver officially recognized it’s 75th Anniversary.
The history of Gruver really starts a little earlier than the official beginning date (February, 1930) of the city. That is the date of the first minutes of the City Council.
The townsite of Gruver started with Mr. Ace P. Borger, the promoter who founded Borger and Stinnett, Texas,  purchasing the land for the townsite from Mrs. J.H. Cooper on February 26, 1927. Mrs. Cooper retained their home and a few blocks around it, as the Cooper Ranch Headquarters were located there.  The old Cooper home is still there, in good repair, at 314 Cator Street.
The town was to have been named Cooper, but there was already a town in Texas by that name. Instead, the name of Gruver was chosen in honor of Mr. Joseph Hezekiah Gruver, a prominent farmer-stockman of the area.
The first “new” building in the townsite was moved from Signal Hill in Hutchinson County in  late 1927. This large sheet-metal structure was partitioned off to allow for the housing of the post office, the townsite office, and small living quarters for the townsite manager and his family.  This building is still in Gruver and after several remodelings houses The Gruver Ford Company. (For many years it housed Universal Motors, which was owned and operated by the late Tillie Poston.)
The Gruver Post Office was opened November 15, 1927 with Miss Blanche Jones (later Mrs. E.H. Tabor) serving as postmistress until April 1929. A Mr. William T. McRee served for four years when Mrs. Tabor returned and assumed her duties serving until 1970. Doris Pinkerton served until 1993 followed by Mike Floyd who retired in 2002. Milana Reiswig is the current Postmaster.
The records are scanty for the years 1927 through early 1929. However, it is known that there were three lumber companies established during this time awaiting the housing boom.
Three grain elevators were also constructed: The J.H. Gruver and Son Elevator, Chapman Milling Co. and Borger Grain Company.
It seems everything was done in three’s because there were three filling stations, too. One was operated by Elmer Hayes, one by Norton Ogle and the last one operated by Howard Lee.
Then there were the three grocery, market and general merchandise stores. The William N. Fletcher Store was owned and operated by three generations of family. It was sold and later closed it’s doors in 1972. Another market was  the Fulton Grocery and General Merchandise which was sold to the Follis Grocery and stayed throughout the dust bowl era. The third grocery was the P. H. Westerfields. It served the community continuously until August 1977. It never changed ownership but a new generation came in after the death of Mickey Westerfield.
One of the larger employers of the late 20’s and a few years of the 30’s was Gruver Roller Bearing Factory. It was owned and operated by the Gruver’s and was located at 802 Front Street. The business employed in excess of twenty employees most of which stated at a small cottage motel in the south part of Gruver. Proprietors of the cottage were “Uncle Sam” and Aunt Nannie Gruver.
More new enterprises opened for business on March 1, 1929 than on any other day in Gruver’s history. The First State Bank, the Gruver Hardware and Furniture Store, the International Harvestor Company Agency, the Gruver Motor Company and The Gay Fletcher John Deere Agency all had their formal openings on this day (some had opened a few weeks before).
March1, 2005 was special in another way. It was the day that the Rock Island Railroad made its first regularly scheduled run from Amarillo through Gruver to as far as the Oklahoma State line. The train stopped for an hour so  the entire crew,  about fifty Amarillo boosters and several VIP’s of the railroad could walk up town where a welcoming committee waited. The band presented a program to the gathered crowd at Broadway and Main.
The Gruver Community Workers also made their debut that day as marvelous cooks and hostesses. They established a tradition that has been carried on by the Gruver women .  The ladies were a civic minded group  sparked by the leadership of Devonna McClellan, Bonnie Fleck and Sallie McGee. They served a delicious dinner in the little white church house. People came from all around but the food supply was ample.
On August 2, 1929 the Gruver Townsite conveyed a ten acre tract of un-platted land on the east part of the townsite property to the Gruver Rural High School District. The Gruver School system developed from a one-room one-teacher school in 1929 to its present day status.
Gruver’s quick progress, as well as that of other cities across the nation, was not to last. By the end of 1929 the stock market had crashed and a major depression had set in. Several years of drought, almost total crop failures, wheat prices as low as 25 cents per bushel and livestock prices so low that it cost more to raise a hog or a cow than it would bring at market and a few years with no cash income brought apparently prosperous farmers to a state of almost poverty.  However, the majority of the people of Gruver were a substantial breed with  a well-balanced set of values. They resorted to more conservative living and luckily owned their own cars, homes, farm equipment and some livestock. Fortunately for Gruver, there were a number of business men who were financially strong and generous enough to aid those less fortunate. No one was hungry, cold, without medicine nor suffered dire need in any form. However, their wants and needs were not supplied (as in the most recent times) for several years.
In addition to these hard times the building boom so looked forward to did not materialize. Even two of the  lumber yards closed up and left Gruver.
After surviving the depression next World War II came along with a different set of problems to face. All of the male faculty member of the school system and some of the more qualified women teachers left for better paying government service or actual military service. (The Superintendent was the only man left in the school system). Following the end of the war capable teachers began returning to the school system and it again began to progress especially with the annexation of outlying school districts forming the Gruver Independent School District. 
Over the years many businesses have come and gone while others steadily go along. All have enriched and enhanced Gruver making it a wonderful place to live, work and raise a family.
Some of the most notable changes that continue to influence the town are the Gruver Airport Facility which includes 168 acres of land two miles southwest of the town. Completed in 1978 it is owned by the City of Gruver and is equipped with low intensity landing lights and a non-directional beacon.
The Gruver Memorial Building was given to the veterans soon after the end of World War II by the citizens of Gruver. It was later converted to the Senior Citizens Center.
The Gruver Volunteer Fire Department was organized in 1947 with Buddy Gruver as the Fire Chief.
The Meals on Wheels program was begun in 1978 and now is co-ordinate through the municipal offices at City Hall.
With the incorporation of the town in February 0f 1930 came the establishment of the municipal government with J. C. Richey as the first mayor.
Kenneth Irwin has served the longest length of time as Mayor from 1965 to 1979, and Merle Delano held the position of City Clerk, Tax-Assessor-Collector from 1962-1978. During this time has probably come the most changes to the city in recent times.
Changes which occurred were the opening of the Etling addition; the building of the library; the beginning of the Gruver Ambulance Service; the sewage treatment plant; placement of street signs at intersections; organization of the weather watchers; construction of the tennis courts at the City Park; opening of the Fred Cooper addition; the Gruver Municipal Airport and the renovation of the American Legion Hall into the Senior Citizens Center.
In 1977, the City Commission passed an ordinance establishing the office of City Manager. A.J. Ratliff was Chief of Police and he was selected to hold both positions.
Other changes during this time span were the building of the two apartment complexes and the completion of the new post office.
On February 24, 1979 the City of Gruver celebrated it’s 50th Anniversary with huge golden cake made by Josephine Gruver. The celebration included an array of “old” pictures and interesting program.  It was enjoyed by several hundred well-wishers who crowded into a standing-room only Senior Citizens Center.
As Gruver is preparing to celebrate a “shining silver” 75th anniversary it is good to remember the words written by Mrs. Beulah Bort in the Hansford County 1876-1979 history book: “The Gruver citizenry owe a great debt of gratitude to the many un-named heroes who have given so liberally of their time, talent and money to serve others. This would include all who have served on the the City Commission, the City planning and zoning board, the volunteer fire department, the weather watchers, the ambulance service, the Board of Education of the school system, the Airport Board, the Library Board, Church groups, Federated Clubs, Hansford County Livestock Board, Lions Club, etc. A special thank you is in order for the Alpha Mu Psi Sorority which do so much for the benefit of all the worthy causes as they present themselves.”