Cities Smore
By: Brandt Herron
Borger, TX
Cultural Site
Borger has a cultural site Called A.p methodist church almost everyone in borger goes there because it was the first church in borger.There is also a second structure of the church on the west corner this one developed language and religion that church made lives in borger.
Borger has allot of natural things but the bad part is they are mostly disasters.But borger has an industry called phillips 66 potroleum company.they get all there natural resources and they do make disaster sometime.
Historical Site
now the museum
museum
outside the jhonson park
Inside jhonson park
Weight/fitness room
Natural Site
Amarillo
Historical Site
Amarillo has a construction site that was a railroad in the 1900's that railroad is now a city called ragcity and it has a decent sized population.
amarillo has an art museum and it is filled with old and new art they have art that people would make during the adobe war and they new arts from people now.
Construction
Botanicles garden
Quarry stone park
Natural site
Cultural site
DAY 2
Historical site Laredo
Cultural site
In 1845, the annexation of Texas by the United States led to the declaration of war against Mexico. Shortly after the fall of Mexico, the Rio Grande was declared the boundary between the United States and Mexico. Under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, Laredo officially became part of Texas. Mexicans who wanted to retain their citizenship moved across the river. This area previously settled as part of Laredo was named Nuevo Laredo in 1848. An estimated 120 refugee families planted their roots and grew to a population of around 2,000 in the 1870s.
Spanish colony
Rio grande
Lake park
Natural site
Bay city
cultural site
Natural site
Festival
Bicentimal common parks
Saginaw river
historical site
El Paso Day 3
Historical site
Cultural site
History
Amigo airshow
Natural site
Natural site
Valentine
Natural site
cultural site
Valentines park
Saint valentines feast
Chicago
historical site
Day 4
Cultural site Abeerdan
Natural site
Park
art
History
History site
The first foreign settlers migrating into the area now known as Aberdeen were Scottish Highlanders, fleeing their parent country to the shores of North Carolina and eventually up the Cape Fear River and its tributaries inland to the Pine Barrens of Moore County. Early settlement was often discouraged by the lack of forage for animals and the poor soil conditions for farming, but the Scottish community of Blue's Crossing was settled in the mid 1850's in the area of land from the "Head of the Rockfish" to the "Devil's Gut", two bodies of water making up the flow to Aberdeen Creek. Although the land area was more than 10 square miles
Kerrville
History site
On April 14, 1689, Alonso De Leon (1639 — 1691), Spanish explorer and governor, began exploring westward in Texas and discovered a river or rare beauty lined with giant cypress trees, native walnut and pecan trees. De Leon named the river “Our Lady of Guadalupe.” He reported that the banks of the river were covered with good timber.