PHARR, TEXAS.
Pharr is on the Missouri Pacific line and old U.S. Highway 83
(U.S. Spur 347), five miles west of McAllen in south central Hidalgo
County. Its site is within a Spanish land grant made in 1767 to
Juan José Hinojosa. The Hinojosa family and heirs sold
off portions of their land to various groups in the late nineteenth
century and occupied the area as late as 1882. In 1909 John Connally
Kelley, Sr., and Henry N. Pharr, a Louisiana sugarcane grower,
became co-owners of 16,000 acres, with two miles of frontage on
the river. Pharr founded the Louisiana and Rio Grande Canal Company
and constructed an irrigation system to establish a sugar plantation.
Kelley formed the Pharr Townsite Company, which platted the town
that he named Pharr in honor of his partner. By 1911 the community
was a stop on the St. Louis, Brownsville and Mexico Railway, and
4,000 acres had been sold for settlement. A hotel, a bank, and
various businesses were also in operation. Pharr's plantation
venture failed with the collapse of the Rio Grande valley sugarcane
industry. Kelley then took over the irrigation system and continued
to supply water to area vegetable and cotton farms. In 1915 the
town's population was estimated at 600, and by that year schools
had opened, with Mexican students attending classes at the six-grade
East Juárez school. When the site for the school was moved,
it became known as Pharr Grammar School for Mexican Children.
Separate facilities for junior and senior high school students
were not provided because Mexican children were not expected to
get beyond grammar school.