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Near Alto in Cherokee County, Texas — The American South (West South Central)
 

Site of Fastrill

 
 
Site of Fastrill Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Jeff Leichsenring, December 2, 2025
1. Site of Fastrill Marker
Inscription. The property of the Southern Pine Lumber Company, Fastrill took its name from three men connected with logging in the area: Frank Farrington, postmaster at Diboll, the company headquarters, in the early 1920s; and P. H. Strauss and William Hill, both lumbermen. Fastrill was a company town. All its residents were employees of Southern Pine, which purchased the site in March of 1922. A post office was established in July of that year.

Fastrill's residential sections were divided among Anglos, African Americans and Mexican Americans. The company provided a general store which began in a boxcar, a barber shop, cleaning and pressing shop, gas pump, electrical power at certain hours, structures in which to hold worship services, farming equipment and a cannery. The company also supplied extra funding for the public school to operate on a nine-month year. At the height of Fastrill's production, the town had a population of 600. The monthly payroll to employees was $30,000 divided among 200 loggers. They cut and shipped 50,000,000 feet of logs annually. During the Depression era, the company operated at least two days a week, keeping Fastrill's citizens from unemployment.

By 1941 most of the timber owned by Southern Pine in this area was exhausted. The post office was discontinued in September, and the company closed the
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town. When the men finished their final workday, they were instructed to take the train to Diboll, where they found their families had been relocated to new homes. Once the largest and longest-lived of the southern Pine Lumber Company's towns, Fastrill quickly disappeared. Two graves are all that remain of twenty-one years of settlement and human habitation on this site.
 
Erected 1999 by Texas Historical Commission. (Marker Number 11798.)
 
Topics. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: Horticulture & ForestrySettlements & Settlers. A significant historical month for this entry is March 1922.
 
Location. 31° 38.466′ N, 95° 16.487′ W. Marker is near Alto, Texas, in Cherokee County. It is on Farm to Market Road 23 half a mile north of State Highway 21, on the left when traveling north. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Alto TX 75925, United States of America. Touch for directions.

Regionally, this marker is in the American South, specifically in the Deep South, and in the Piney Woods. Globally, it is in North America, a Gulf of Mexico state, the Western Hemisphere, the Western World, and the Anglosphere. Historically, it finds itself in what was once New Spain, the Republic of Texas, one of the Confederate States of America, and the Antebellum South.

Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 8 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies: Box's Fort (approx. 2.4 miles away); Wilson Cemetery (approx. 2.7 miles away); Muse Cemetery (approx. 3.6 miles away); Landrum Community (approx. 5.7 miles away); Lynches Chapel United Methodist Church and Cemetery (approx. 5.7 miles away); Mission San Francisco de los Tejas
Site of Fastrill Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Jeff Leichsenring, December 2, 2025
2. Site of Fastrill Marker
(approx. 6.8 miles away); Community of Weches (approx. 7.1 miles away); The Joseph R. Rice Log Cabin (approx. 7.2 miles away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Alto.
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on December 4, 2025. It was originally submitted on December 3, 2025, by Jeff Leichsenring of Garland, Texas. This page has been viewed 96 times since then and 59 times this year. Photos:   1, 2. submitted on December 3, 2025, by Jeff Leichsenring of Garland, Texas. • James Hulse was the editor who published this page.
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Jun. 21, 2026