Match score 1.00
DOMAIN: Atlas Pulse Texas Place History | PLACE: Sunset, Texas | SLUG: sunset | REGION: Montague County | PHYSICAL_ANCHOR: Sunset townsite, southern Montague County | COORDINATES: 33.4504, -97.7709 | ATLAS_PULSE_BINDING: 72 | ATLAS_PULSE_STAGE: bound | BOUND_CARTRIDGES: texas_place_history.tah (Primary local history shard, 92%) | neighborhood_intel.tah (Regional neighborhood context, 38%) | market_velocity.tah (Nearby North Texas market behavior, 31%) | HEADLINE: A Small North Texas Town With A Long Memory | SUMMARY: Sunset sits in southern Montague County near State Highway 101 and Farm Road 1749. Its story runs through frontier settlement, a post office name change, railroad growth, and the farm economy that shaped much of North Texas. | DETAIL: A surveying error once placed Sunset in Wise County, but a 1900 lawsuit awarded the land, including the townsite, to Montague County. That mix of local identity, boundary history, and working-land heritage is part of the place Sunset Pulse calls home. | MILESTONES: 1870s: A Store Becomes A Townsite - Early settlers arrived from Denton County, and Sam Smith opened a grocery store that became one of the anchors of the growing community. | 1880: The Name Sunset Sticks - Smith applied for a post office under the name Smithville. Because that name was already taken, postal authorities suggested Sunset. | 1882-1884: Railroad Momentum - The Fort Worth and Denver Railway came through the community, drawing nearby residents toward the tracks. Sunset voted to incorporate on July 26, 1884. | 1900s: A Farm Market Center - By 1900, Sunset had grown past 600 residents and supported cotton gins, banks, a school, churches, a gristmill, a canning factory, and the Sunset Signal newspaper. | QUERY_SEED: Sunset Texas history Montague County railroad post office | SOURCES: Handbook of Texas: https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/sunset-tx | Portal to Texas History: https://texashistory.unt.edu/explore/locations/p02017/