Ever Wonder Where The Town Of Falfurrias Got It’s Name

The name “Falfurrias” antedates Anglo association with the area, and its derivation is uncertain. Town founder Edward C. Lasater claimed that it was a Lipan word meaning “the land of heart’s delight”.

Others believed that it was the Spanish name for a native desert flower known as the heart’s delight.

Another theory is that Falfurrias is a misspelling of one or another Spanish or French word.

Still another theorizes that the name refers to a local shepherd named Don Filfarrias. The term filfarrias is Mexican slang for “dirty and untidy”.

Now For Little More Falfurrias History:

Falfurrias’ founding and development were largely due to the efforts of Edward Cunningham Lasater, a pioneer Rio Grande Valley rancher and developer. In 1895, he started a cattle ranch in what was then northern Starr County. At one point, it was one of the largest ranches in Texas.

With the extension of the San Antonio and Aransas Pass Railway south from Alice to his ranch in 1904, Lasater founded the town of Falfurrias and subdivided a sizable portion of his ranch land for sale to other farmers. In 1898, a post office opened in the community. A local newspaper began publication in 1906. Lasater brought in his Jersey cows and established a creamery in 1909.

Sweet cream butter and other products from Edward Lasater’s creamery company made the town a familiar name across the state.
But that butter is no longer made from milk produced in Falfurrias.

Don Pedro Jaramillo, a Mexican-born curandero known as “The Healer of Los Olmos”, was buried in Falfurrias in 1907 and is venerated at a shrine there.

(this from Wikipedia)

THE FIGHTIN’ JERSEYS

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