Woodrow, Texas | |
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![]() One of four churches in Woodrow | |
Coordinates:33°26′48″N101°50′39″W / 33.44667°N 101.84417°W /33.44667; -101.84417[1] | |
Country | ![]() |
State | ![]() |
County | Lubbock |
Physiographic region | Llano Estacado |
Founded | 1910s |
Elevation | 3,182 ft (970 m) |
Time zone | UTC-6 (Central (CST)) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-5 (CDT) |
Area code | 806 |
Website | Handbook of Texas |
Woodrow is anunincorporated community in southernLubbock County,Texas, United States. According to theHandbook of Texas, the community had a population of 85 in 2000. It is part of theLubbockMetropolitan Statistical Area.
The community was named for presidentWoodrow Wilson.[2] There was a lot of debate at first over naming the town Wilson or Woodrow, but supporters of Woodrow prevailed. In the 1930s, the hamlet had a church, an industry, and a dispersed housing stock. Woodrow had 100 residents and four enterprises in 1948. There were no recorded companies in 1971, and the population was 80. Woodrow operated four churches, a gin, a general store, and a shop that repaired farm equipment in the late 1980s. A huge cemetery and a tiny business sector separated about twenty-five homes. The population was 85 in 1990. In 2000, the population did not change.[3] It might have been named Woodrow because there is already aWilson in neighboringLynn County.
The 1970Lubbock tornado caused athunderstorm to form near Woodrow.[4] Another F0 tornado struck Woodrow on April 30, 2013. The brief landspout tornado formed along an outflow boundary from a nearby microburst and remained over open fields, causing no damage.[5]
Woodrow is located onU.S. Route 87, 10 mi (16 km) south ofLubbock in southern Lubbock County.[2] State Highway Loop 493 also travels through the community.[6]
In 1917, the first school was constructed. As plans to upgrade Lubbock County's rural school system were being developed, Woodrow was assigned to District One to combine with a newly proposed school. Eventually, a consensus was reached on consolidation, and District One trustees were chosen. The $84,000 Cooper School became a hybrid elementary and high school when work on it started in 1936.[3] Today, Woodrow is served by theLubbock-Cooper Independent School District. Lubbock-Cooper South Elementary School is in the community.
WPCS (FM), aChristian radio station, operates the call sign "K218DI" in Woodrow.[7] In October 2003, 91.5 FM of theRejoice Broadcast Network began broadcasting in Woodrow.