Helotes, of Bexar County,
Texas is considered part of the San Antonio
Metropolitan Statistical Area.
According to anthropologists,
the area was occupied seasonally from about
5,000 B.C. by small bands of migrant Indians
in search of food and game. The Lipan Apache
moved into the area in the late 17th century
and occupied it throughout the 18th century.
However, the Lipan were forced from the area
in the early 1820s by the Comanche Indians.
A small farming and ranching community began
to develop in the area shortly after the
Texas Revolution in the late 1830s. The
ranches suffered occasional attacks by the
Comanches until the late 1870s.
In 1858, a Scottish immigrant, Dr. George
Marnoch, purchased the land that would later
become the site of the town. Marnoch's home
at one time served as a stagecoach stop and
a post office for cowboys driving their
cattle from Bandera to auction in San
Antonio. His heirs sold a portion of their
property in 1880 to a Swiss immigrant,
Arnold Gugger, who built a home and
mercantile store around which the town of
Helotes sprang to life. In 1908, Gugger sold
his property to Bert Hileman, who opened the
town's first dance hall. He was also
instrumental in getting old Bandera Road
paved and opening the town's first filling
station. He sold his property in downtown
Helotes in 1919, when the town's population
declined.
In 1946, the manager of San Antonio's
Majestic Theatre, John T. Floore, opened the
landmark John T. Floore Country Store, which
is actually a dance hall (or honky tonk)
that draws top Country Western talent, such
as Willie Nelson, who still plays there on
occasion. Mr. Floore also financed the first
annual Helotes Cornyval festival in the
1960s, which was held to celebrate the
opening of a new post office.
Corn played an important role in the
heritage of Helotes. The local Indians
planted corn, actually maize, in the fertile
valleys of the area, and feed corn was a
major crop grown in the 19th and early 20th
centuries. The town name is derived from the
Spanish word helote, which means "green
maize," but exactly how the town came to be
called Helotes is still a subject of debate.
As the urban sprawl of San Antonio expanded
and approached the outskirts of Helotes in
the 1970s, residents determined to take
their fate into their own hands. After a
decade of planning and negotiation, Helotes
became an incorporated city in October 1981.
To this day, residents still struggle with
the dilemma of maintaining the city's rugged
country charm, while at the same time
allowing for the development of modern
suburban facilities and businesses.
Helotes was the hometown of the late Texas
state Senator Frank L. Madla, who perished
after his home on the south side of San
Antonio caught fire on November 24, 2006.
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For more information contact: Scott O'Neill 830-928-3926
Mitchel Moorehead 830-928-3927