Amarillo is the 15th-largest
city in the U.S. state of Texas
, the largest
in the Texas
Panhandle
, and the
seat of Potter County
. A portion of the city extends into Randall
County
. The population was 173,627 at the
2000 census. The
Amarillo metropolitan area has an
estimated population of 236,113 in four counties. By 2010 the
population of the city will near an estimated 200,000.
Amarillo
was originally named Oneida and it is situated in the Llano Estacado
region. The availability of the railroad and
freight service provided by the
Fort Worth and Denver City
Railroad contributed the city's growth as a cattle marketing
center in the late 19th century.
Amarillo is the regional economic center
for the Texas Panhandle, and is economically significant for
Eastern New Mexico
and the Oklahoma
Panhandle
.
The city was once the
self-proclaimed
"
Helium Capital of the World" for having one
of the country's most productive helium fields. The city is also
known as "The Yellow Rose of Texas" (as the city takes its name
from the Spanish word for yellow). Also crowned "Beef City" by
Amarillo group "Lockjaw" for the city's growth as a cattle
marketing center in the late 19th century.. and former beef
industry IBP now owned by Tyson Foods and most recently "Rotor
City, USA" for its
V-22 Osprey hybrid
aircraft assembly plant. Amarillo operates one of the largest
meat packing areas in the
United States.
Pantex
, the only
nuclear weapons assembly and
disassembly facility in the country, is also a major
employer. The attractions Cadillac Ranch and Big Texan
Steak Ranch
were located on the former U.S. Highway 66, which passes through the
city.
History
Large
ranches exist in the Amarillo area: among others, the defunct
XIT Ranch and the still functioning
JA
Ranch
founded in 1877 by Charles Goodnight and John George Adair. Goodnight
continued the partnership for a time after Adair's death with
Adair's widow,
Cornelia Wadsworth Ritchie
Adair, who was then the sole owner from 1887 until her death in
1921.
In April 1887, J. T.
Berry established a site for a town after he
chose a well-watered section along the way of the Fort Worth and
Denver City Railroad, which had begun building across the Texas Panhandle
. Berry and Colorado City, Texas
merchants wanted to make their new town site the
region's main trading center. On August 30, 1887, Berry's
town site won the
county seat election
and was established in Potter County. Availability of the
railroad and
freight service
after the county seat election made the town a fast growing
cattle marketing center.
The settlement originally was called Oneida; it would later change
its name to Amarillo. Amarillo's name probably derives from yellow
wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the
nearby Amarillo Lake and Amarillo Creek, named in turn for the
yellow soil along their banks and shores (
Amarillo is the
Spanish word for the color
yellow). Despite having a name
of Spanish origin, Amarillo's name is pronounced in English as
"Am-ah-RILL-oh" rather than "Ah-mah-REE-yoh". Early residents
pronounced it according to the Spanish pronunciation, but within a
year, the English pronunciation prevailed. Charles F. Rudolph,
editor of the
Tascosa Pioneer, predicted the pronunciation
change after blaming Fort Worth and Denver City Railroad employees
for ignoring the word's Spanish pronunciation.

An aerial view of the Amarillo
business district in 1912.
On June 19, 1888, Henry B. Sanborn, who is given credit as the
"Father of Amarillo," and his business partner
Joseph F. Glidden began buying land to the east to move
Amarillo after arguing that Berry's site was on low ground and
would flood during rainstorms. Sanborn also offered to trade lots
in the new location to businesses in the original city’s site and
help with the expense of moving to new buildings. His incentives
gradually won over people, who moved their businesses to Polk
Street in the new commercial district. Heavy rains almost flooded
Berry’s part of the town in 1889, prompting more people to move to
Sanborn's location. This eventually led to another county seat
election making Sanborn's town the new county seat in 1893.
By the late 1890s, Amarillo had emerged as one of the world's
busiest cattle shipping points, and its population grew
significantly. The city became an elevator, milling, and
feed-manufacturing center after an increase in production of wheat
and small grains during the early 1900s. Discovery of
gas in 1918 and
oil
three years later brought oil and gas companies to the Amarillo
area. The United States government bought the Cliffside Gas Field
with high helium content in 1927 and the Federal Bureau of Mines
began operating the Amarillo Helium Plant two years later. The
plant would be the sole producer of commercial helium in the world
for a number of years. The
U.S. National Helium Reserve is stored in
the Bush Dome Reservoir at the Cliffside facility.
Following the lead of the Fort Worth and Denver City Railroad, the
Atchison, Topeka
and Santa Fe Railway and
Chicago, Rock Island
and Pacific Railroad established services to and from Amarillo.
Each of these three carriers maintained substantial freight and
passenger depots and repair facilities in the city through most of
the 20th century and were major employers within the
community.
In 1929,
Ernest O. Thompson, a decorated
World War I general and a major
businessman in Amarillo, was elected mayor to
succeed
Lee Bivins. Thompson instituted a
major capital improvements project and worked to reduce utility
rates. He joined the
Texas Public Service
Commission by appointment in 1933 and was elected to full terms
in 1934, 1940, 1946, 1952, and 1958. He became an international
expert on national
petroleum and
natural gas production and conservation.
The first
Mrs. Thompson, May Peterson
Thompson, a former Metropolitan
Opera singer, was involved in the arts while in Amarillo and
later when the couple lived in Austin
.
Amarillo was hit by the
Dust Bowl and
entered an
economic depression.
U.S. Routes
60, 87, 287, and 66 merged at Amarillo, making it a major tourist
stop with numerous motels, restaurants, and
curio shops.
World War II
led the establishment of Amarillo Army Air Field in east Amarillo
and the nearby Pantex Army Ordnance Plant, which produced bombs and
ammunition. After the end of the war, both of the facilities were
closed. The Pantex Plant was reopened in 1950 and produced nuclear
weapons throughout the
Cold War.
The
following year, the army air base was reactivated as Amarillo Air
Force Base
and expanded to accommodate a Strategic Air Command B-52 Stratofortress wing. The
arrival of servicemen and their families ended the city's
depression. Between 1950 and 1960, Amarillo's population grew from
74,443 to 137,969. However, the closure of the Amarillo Air Force
Base on December 31, 1968, contributed to a decrease in population
to 127,010 by 1970. In the 1970s,
ASARCO,
Iowa Beef Processors (present day
Tyson
Foods),
Owens-Corning and
Weyerhaeuser built plants at Amarillo.
The
Eastridge neighborhood houses many immigrants from countries such
as Vietnam
, Laos
, and
Burma
; Many of them found employment at the nearby Iowa
Beef Processors plant. The following decade, Amarillo's city
limits encompassed 60 square miles (160 km
2) in
Potter and Randall counties.
Interstate
27 highway connecting Lubbock
to Amarillo was built mostly during the
1980s.
Geography and climate
Amarillo is located near the middle of the Texas Panhandle and is
part of the Llano Estacado or Staked Plains region which has a
surface that is relatively flat and has little drainage in the
soil. Due to the lack of developed drainage, much of the rainfall
either evaporates, infiltrates into the ground, or accumulates in
playa lakes. According to the
United States Census Bureau, the
city has a total area of 90.3 sq mi
(234 km
2). 89.9 sq mi
(233 km
2) of it is land and
(1.2 km
2) of it (0.50%) is water.
The
Amarillo metropolitan area is the
180th-largest in the United States with a population of 236,113
in four counties: Armstrong
, Carson
, Potter, and Randall.
About 40 mi (64 km) northeast of Amarillo is the
Canadian River, which divides the southern
part of the
High Plains
to form the Llano Estacado.
The river is dammed to
form Lake
Meredith
, a major
source of drinking water in the Texas Panhandle region.
The city
is situated near the Panhandle Field, in a productive gas and oil
area, covering 200,000 acres (800 km2) in
Hartley
, Potter, Moore
, Hutchinson
, Carson, Gray
, Wheeler
, and Collingsworth
counties. The Potter County portion had the
nation's largest natural gas reserve.
Approximately
25 mi (40 km) south of Amarillo is the canyon system,
Palo Duro
Canyon
.
The
underground structures known as Amarillo Mountains are an extension
of the Arbuckles of Oklahoma
and the Ouachita of
Arkansas
and Oklahoma
. They are some one thousand feet
underground. The range was discovered by pioneer oilmen. Some of
the peaks are believed to be in height.
Cityscape
Most of Amarillo’s population growth and commercial development are
occurring in the southern and northwestern parts of the city.
Similar to many towns in the Texas Panhandle, the city’s downtown
has suffered economic deterioration throughout the years. To help
revitalize it, the organization Center City of Amarillo was formed
to establish partnerships with groups who have a large presence in
the city. Since its conception in the 1990s, Center City has
sponsored public art projects and started block parties in the
downtown area.
The
31-story Chase
Tower
, was opened in Amarillo's downtown in 1971.
Completed in the same year as the Chase Tower, the Amarillo
National Bank Plaza One building houses the headquarters of
Amarillo National Bank, the
city's largest financial institution.
The Santa Fe
Building
, completed in 1930, was the regional offices of the
Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, but was vacant for several
years until Potter County bought the building for $426,000 in 1995
to gain new office spaces.

The Santa Fe Building in the downtown
area.
Amarillo's historic homes and buildings listed on the
National Register of
Historic Places reflect the economic growth from around 1900 to
the start of World War II. Polk Street contains many of the city's
historic downtown buildings and homes. The large historic homes on
this street were built close to downtown, and homes were located on
the west side of the street as a symbol of status because they
would be greeted with the sunrise every morning.
The City of Amarillo's Parks and Recreation Department operates
over 50 municipal parks, including a
skatepark west of the city. Amarillo's largest
parks are Medical Park, Thompson Memorial Park, and Memorial Park,
near Amarillo College's Washington Street Campus. From 1978 to
2002, the
Junior League of Amarillo
and the City of Amarillo's Parks and Recreation Department
co-sponsored Funfest, a family entertainment festival, benefiting
the city parks and the league's Community Chest Trust Fund. Funfest
was held in Thompson Memorial Park during
Memorial Day weekend.
Climate
Amarillo and the Texas Panhandle's climate is a
semi-arid temperate steppe climate (
Koppen climate classification
BSk). It is characterized by a rush of cold air from the
north or northwest into a warmer area and occasionally, by
blizzards during the winter season and a hot summer
with generally low to moderate humidity. The normal annual rainfall
for Amarillo is approximately 20 inches (508 mm). Most of
the region's precipitation occurs in the late spring and summer
months, and the least occurs from November through March. The
February's average high in the city is 49 °F (9 °C) and
average low is 22 °F (-6 °C); July's average high is
91 °F (33 °C) and average low is 64 °F (18 °C).
The highest temperature ever recorded in Amarillo was 108 °F
(42 °C); the lowest was -14 °F (-27 °C). Amarillo
and the Texas Panhandle are situated on the western portion of
"
Tornado Alley." Amarillo is also
recorded as the third windiest city in the U.S, behind Blue Hill
Observatory, Massachusetts and Dodge City, Kansas.
Demographics

This map shows the city's average
number of inhabitants per square mile of land in 2000.
Amarillo
Population by year
| Year |
Pop. |
| 1940 |
51,686 |
| 1950 |
74,246 |
| 1960 |
137,969 |
| 1970 |
127,010 |
| 1980 |
149,230 |
| 1990 |
157,615 |
| 2000 |
173,627 |
| 2005 (est.) |
183,021 |
As of the
census of 2000, there were 173,627
people, 67,699 households, and 45,764 families residing in the
city. The
population density was
1,932.1/sq mi (746.0/km
2). There were 72,408
housing units at an average density of 805.8/sq mi
(311.1/km
2). The racial makeup of the city was 77.50%
White, 5.97%
African American, 0.78%
Native American, 2.05%
Asian, 0.04%
Pacific Islander, 11.32% from
other races, and 2.34%
from two or more races.
Hispanic or
Latino of any race were 21.86% of the
population which had a significant increase of 63.35% compared to
the 1990 U.S. Census report.
There were 67,699 households out of which 33.9% had children under
the age of 18 living with them, 50.6% were
married couples living together, 12.8% had a female
householder with no husband present, and 32.4% were non-families.
Of 67,699 households, 2,981 were unmarried partner households:
2,713 heterosexual, 82 same-sex male, and 186 same-sex female.
27.7% of all households were made up of individuals and 9.9% had
someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The
average household size was 2.53 and the average family size was
3.10.
In the city the population was spread out with 27.9% under the age
of 18, 10.2% from 18 to 24, 28.8% from 25 to 44, 20.5% from 45 to
64, and 12.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median
age was 34 years. For every 100 females there are 92.4 males.
For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 88.5 males.
The median income for a household in the city was $34,940, and the
median income for a family was $42,536. Males had a median income
of $31,321 versus $22,562 for females. The
per capita income for the city was
$18,621. About 11.1% of families and 14.5% of the population were
below the
poverty line, including 19.6%
of those under age 18 and 9.3% of those age 65 or over.
Law and government
In 1913, Amarillo became the first Texas city and the fifth in
United States to use the
council-manager form of municipal
government, with all governmental powers resting in a
legislative body called a commission.
Amarillo's commission composed of five elected commissioners, one
of whom is the mayor of the city. The mayor and each commissioner
serves a two-year term. The role of the commission is to pass
ordinances and resolutions, adopt regulations, and appoint city
officials, including the
city manager.
While the mayor serves as a presiding officer of the commission,
the city manager is the administrative head of the municipal
government, and is responsible for the administration of all
departments. The city commission holds its regular meetings on
Tuesday of each week.
2007 Commission members
| Mayor |
Debra McCartt |
| Commissioner Place 1 |
Madison Scott |
| Commissioner Place 2 |
Brian Eades |
| Commissioner Place 3 |
Ron Boyd |
| Commissioner Place 4 |
Jim Simms |
City administration
| City manager |
Alan M. Taylor |
| Assistant city manager |
Jarrett Atkinson |
Amarillo is in the
U.S. House 13th
Congressional district, and is represented by Representative
Mac Thornberry. In the
Texas Legislature, the city is in the 31st
District in the Texas Senate, represented by
Republican Kel Seliger, a former Amarillo mayor. It is in
the 87th District in the Texas House of Representatives, having
been represented by Republican
David
A. Swinford since 1991. That part
of Amarillo within Randall County is represented by Swinford's
Republican colleague,
John T.
Smithee, who has served in the 86th
District since 1985.
As the seat of Potter County, the city is the location of the
county's trial, civil, and criminal courts. The Randall County
Amarillo Annex building is located within the city limits and
houses its Sheriff's Office and Justice of the Peace Court,
Precinct 4.
Economy
- See also: List of companies in
Amarillo, Texas

The Potter County Courthouse contains
the offices of the county judge and clerk.
Amarillo
is considered the regional economic center for the Texas Panhandle
as well as Eastern New Mexico
and the Oklahoma
Panhandle
. The meat packing industry is a major
employer in Amarillo; about one-quarter of the United States' beef
supply is processed in the area. The city is also the location of
headquarters for the Texas Cattle Feeders Association. Petroleum
extraction is also a major industry. The helium industry has
decreased in significance since the federal government privatized
local operations in the late 1990s.
Bell Helicopter Textron opened a
helicopter assembly plant near the city's
international airport in 1999.
The city's largest employer in 2005 is
Tyson
Foods, with 3,700 employees.
The Amarillo Independent School
District is next with 3,659 employees followed by BWXT Pantex,
Baptist St. Anthony’s Health Care System, City of Amarillo,
Northwest Texas Healthcare System, Amarillo College
, and United
Supermarkets. Other major employers include Bell
Helicopter Textron, Owens-Corning, and ASARCO.
Approximately 14 million acres (57,000 km
2) of
agricultural land surrounds the city with
corn,
wheat and
cotton as the primary crops. Other crops in the area
include
sorghum,
silage,
hay and
soybeans.
The Texas Panhandle, particularly in
Hereford,
Texas
, serves as a fast growing milk producing area as
several multi-million dollar state of the art dairies were built in
early 2000s.
The Amarillo Economic Development Corporation (AEDC) is funded by a
city sales tax, and it provides aggressive incentive packages to
existing and prospective employers. In the mid-to-late 1990s, the
AEDC gained notoriety by sending mock checks to businesses across
the country, placing full-page advertisements in
The Wall Street Journal, and
paying an annual $1 million subsidy to
American Airlines to retain jet service.
The AEDC is largely responsible for bringing Bell Helicopter
Textron's development of the V-22 Osprey hybrid aircraft and the
future site of
Marine One assembly in
Amarillo.
Education

The clock tower at the Amarillo
College's Washington Street Campus.
According to the 2000 United States Census, 20.5% of all adults
over the age of 25 in Amarillo have obtained a
bachelor's degree, as compared to a
national average of 24.4% of adults over 25, and 79.3% of Amarillo
residents over the age of 25 have earned a
high school diploma, as compared to the national
average of 80.4%.
The
higher education institutions in the city are Amarillo
College
, a two-year community
college with over 10,000 students; Wayland
Baptist University
, a private university based in Plainview
, has a branch campus in Amarillo; Texas Tech
University Health Sciences Center at
Amarillo School of Pharmacy, and Texas Tech University at
Amarillo, a branch campus of Texas Tech University
that offers selected master's degree programs.
West Texas
A&M University
, a regional university headquartered in nearby
Canyon
, has a
satellite campus in the Chase building in downtown
Amarillo.
The public
primary and
secondary education are mostly handled
by the
Amarillo
Independent School District (AISD) and
Canyon Independent School
District. (CISD) The AISD has approximately 29,000 students in
2004 while CISD has over 8,000 students in 2005. The AISD operates
4 high schools, 9
middle schools, 36
elementary schools, a specialty
high school, and an
alternative
school. While, the CISD has 1 high school, 2 junior
high/intermediate schools, and 4 elementary schools in Amarillo.
Other
school districts in the city
are
River
Road,
Highland Park, and
Bushland Independent School
Districts.
Nonreligious and Christian denomination
private schools in Amarillo include Arbor Christian Academy,
Ascension Academy, Holy Cross Catholic Academy
, San Jacinto Christian Academy, Amarillo Montessori
Academy, St. Andrew's Episcopal School, St. Joseph's Catholic
School and St. Mary's Catholic School.
From 1922-1938, the author
Laura
Vernon Hamner, who wrote a
novelized
biography of
Charles Goodnight, served as the Potter
County school superintendent. She was a ranch
historian and
radio
personality. In her later years, she lived in the Herring Hotel,
owned by Ernest Thompson, and was often known informally as "Miss
Amarillo".
Culture

Entrance to Texas Panhandle War
Memorial in Amarillo
Like many cities, Amarillo has an impressive memorial to all of its
military personnel lost in war. There are separate markers listing
the men and women who died in each conflict.
Amarillo has a number of natural attractions near the city.
The Palo
Duro Canyon State Park is the United States' second largest canyon
system, after the Grand
Canyon
and is located south of Amarillo. Palo Duro
has a distinct
hoodoo that
resembles a lighthouse.
Another natural landmark near the city, the
Alibates Flint Quarries National
Monument
is located 30 miles (50 km) north of
Amarillo. It is once known as the site for prehistoric
inhabitants to obtain
flint in order to make
tools and weapons.
About 100 miles (160 km) southeast
of Amarillo in Briscoe County
is Caprock
Canyons State Park and Trailway
, the state park is the home of the official Texas
State Bison Herd, who were captured and taken
care of by cattle rancher Charles
Goodnight.
From 1932-1977, the Paramount Theater, originally built for
$250,000, flourished in Amarillo.
It had plush red carpet, murals and a pipe organ, 1,433 seats, and was considered the
finest theater north of Dallas
. The
building is now an office and parking garage.
Local millionaire
Stanley Marsh 3
has funded many public art projects in the city including the
Cadillac Ranch, located west of
Amarillo on
Interstate 40, a
monument of painted
Cadillac
automobiles that were dug into the ground head first. Marsh
participates as well in an ongoing art project called the Dynamite
Museum, which consist of thousands of mock
traffic signs. These signs, bearing messages
such as "Road does not end" or displaying a random picture, are
scattered throughout the city of Amarillo. Besides these works, one
can find close to the city the final earthwork of
Robert Smithson (and another commission by
Marsh),
Amarillo Ramp.
The city has events and attractions honoring the
cowboy and Texas culture. During the third week of
September, the Tri-State Fair & Rodeo brings participants
mostly from Oklahoma, New Mexico and Texas to Amarillo since 1921.
On the
Tri-State Exposition grounds, the Amarillo
National Center
is a special events center for events ranging from
national equestrian competitions to
motor sports and rodeos. The World Championship Ranch Rodeo sponsored
by the Working Ranch
Cowboys Association is held every November in the Amarillo
Civic Center
. Amarillo hosts the annual World
Championship Chuckwagon Roundup the first weekend in June. Teams in
competition prepare a feast of breaded beef cutlets, mashed
potatoes, baked beans, and sourdough biscuits and attempt to
duplicate the food served on western cattle trails of the 1860s and
1870s. The Amarillo Livestock Auction holds a free-to-the-public
cattle auction on Tuesdays.
Now located on Interstate 40, The Big
Texan Steak Ranch
is famous by offering visitors a free
72 ounce (2 kg) beef steak if it
(and its accompanying dinner) is eaten in under an
hour.

The Globe-News Center for the
Performing Arts building is located near the Amarillo Civic
Center.
Globe-News
Center for the Performing Arts, opened in 2006, houses the
Amarillo Opera, Amarillo Symphony, and Lone Star Ballet concerts.
The facility, located just across the Amarillo Civic Center,
features a 1,300-seat auditorium. The Globe-News Center was built
in hope by city officials and others that it will revitalize the
downtown area. The nonprofit
community
theater group, Amarillo Little Theatre, has its season run from
September to May. The theater group's two facilities, the Mainstage
and the Adventure Space, are located west of Amarillo's downtown.
The
Pioneer Amphitheater, located in nearby
Palo Duro
Canyon
, is the setting for the outdoor musical drama
Texas, which plays nightly during the summer. The
musical depicts a story about the history of Texas Panhandle
settlers throughout the years. In 2002, the
producers changed its name to
Texas
Legacies after retiring the previous script that was used for
37 years for a more historically-accurate one, but attendance
declined over the next four seasons, so it was decided to revert
back to the original
Paul
Green script in 2006.
The Amarillo Public Library is affiliated with the Harrington
Library Consortium. The consortium consist of public, college, and
school libraries located in the Texas Panhandle that share
resources and cooperate with one another.
Other members include
the Amarillo's public schools, Amarillo College, Canyon Area
Library, Lovett Memorial Library in Pampa, Texas
, and Hutchinson County Library in Borger, Texas
. The Amarillo Public Library's main branch
is located in downtown and operates 4 neighborhood branches.
Wonderland
Amusement Park is located in northern Amarillo at Thompson
Park, named for Ernest Thompson. The park also houses the Amarillo
zoo and offers
picnicking.
Amarillo residents are known as
Amarilloans. Notable Amarilloans include
actress
Ann Doran (1911-2000), the
Dory Funk wrestling family, former
UFC Champions
Heath
Herring and
Evan Tanner, astronaut
Rick Husband, rockabilly
pioneer
Buddy Knox, actress
Carolyn Jones, actress and dancer
Cyd Charisse, politician
John Marvin Jones, businessman
T. Boone Pickens, Jr., famed gambler
Thomas "
Amarillo Slim" Preston and
music artist and composer
Terry
Stafford ("Amarillo by Morning"; "Suspicion").
Tom Blasingame, considered to have been the
oldest cowboy in the history of the American West, worked for seventy-three years,
primarily, on the JA
Ranch
south of Amarillo. Pulitzer-prize-winning
author
Mark E. Neely, Jr. was born in Amarillo on Nov.
10, 1944.
In nearby Clarendon
and Canyon,
Texas
, lived the Western
artist Harold Dow Bugbee, whose
early works were patronized by Ernest Thompson.
Museums and art collections
The
American Quarter
Horse Association (AQHA) is an international organization
dedicated to the preservation, improvement and record-keeping of
the
American Quarter Horse
breed. The organization is headquartered in Amarillo and has a
museum. There is also an
American Quarter Horse Hall
of Fame exhibited in the museum; among the inductees was
J. L. "Dusty" Rhoades of Odessa
, who served
as AQHA president in 1966 and 1974. In addition, the AQHA
and Center City of Amarillo co-sponsors the project, "Hoof Prints
of the American Quarter Horse" which consist of horse statues
located in front of several Amarillo businesses, such as the
downtown Amarillo National building, Nationwide Insurance, and
Edward Jones. An area business would purchase a horse statue and a
local artist paints on it.
Two of the Amarillo area's higher education institutions have at
least one museum in their campuses. The Amarillo Art Center
[23353], opened in
1972, is a building complex with an art museum and concert hall
located on the Washington Street Campus of Amarillo College. In
addition, Amarillo College's Washington Street Campus is the home
of the largest natural history museum of any two-year college in
the United States. Located on the campus of West Texas A&M
University, the
Panhandle-Plains Historical
Museum claims to be the largest historical museum in
Texas.

Pond and park adjacent to Amarillo
Botanical Gardens
Don Harrington Discovery
Center, located in the city's hospital district, is an
interactive science center and space theater with over 60 hands-on
exhibits. Outside of the building is a steel structure called the
Helium Monument which has time capsules and designates Amarillo the
"Helium Capital of the World." Near the proximity of the Discovery
Center, the Amarillo Botanical Gardens has gardens, indoor
exhibits, and a library for visitation throughout the year.
The Texas Pharmacy Museum claims to be the only Texas museum
specialized in the research, collection, preservation, and
exhibition of the history of pharmacy, is also located in the
city's hospital district.
Other notable museums in the area are the Kwahadi Kiva Indian
Museum and the English Field Air & Space Museum. The Kwahadi
Kiva Indian Museum features a collection of
Native American
artifacts and provides dance performances. Sadly, the English Field
Air & Space Museum, which had been operated by the Texas
Aviation Historical Society featuring aircraft and space exhibits,
is now closed. Visitors can peer through the chainlink fence and
see some of the aircraft still sitting there. The museum's facility
used to be city's main airport terminal.
Local media
The major local newspaper is the
Amarillo Globe-News, owned by
Morris Communications, was a
combination of three newspapers:
Amarillo Daily News,
Amarillo Globe, and
Amarillo Times. Other
publications include a local monthly
magazine dealing with city and regional issues in
the Amarillo area called,
Accent West. The American
Quarter Horse Association publishes two monthly publications,
The American Quarter Horse Journal and
The American
Quarter Horse Racing Journal.
Amarillo's major network television affiliates are KACV-TV
2 (PBS), KAMR
4
(NBC), KVII
7
(ABC), KFDA
10
(CBS), KCIT
14
(Fox), KCPN 33 (MyNet), and
KTMO-LP 36 (Telemundo). In the 2005-2006 television
season, Amarillo is the 131st largest television
market in the United States designated by
Nielsen Media Research.
Amarillo is the 195th largest United States radio market in autumn
2005 designated by the
radio audience
research company,
Arbitron. The top 5 rated
commercial radio stations in autumn 2005 according to Arbitron are
classic hits station
KXGL-FM 100.9; hip hop
station
KQIZ-FM 93.1; country station
KGNC-FM 97.9; news and talk station KGNC-AM
710; and KMXJ-FM 94.1, an adult contemporary station. The regional
public radio network, High Plains Public Radio, operates KJJP-FM
105.7.
Other notable radio stations around the area
include the college stations KACV-FM
89.9 (Amarillo College) Rock
108 (107.9), and KWTS-FM 91.1 (West
Texas A&M University) in nearby Canyon.
Outside media attention
The city gained national media attention in 1998 when television
talk show host
Oprah Winfrey was
unsuccessfully sued by local cattlemen for comments made on
her show connecting American
beef to
mad cow
disease, costing them and their industry millions of dollars.
In order to attend the trial in Amarillo, she temporarily relocated
her show to the Amarillo Little Theatre for nearly a year. During
the trial, Winfrey hired Dallas-based jury consultant
Phil McGraw to aid her attorneys on selecting
and analyzing the members of the jury. McGraw would later become a
regular guest on Winfrey's television show and subsequently started
his own talk show,
Dr.
Phil, in 2002.
Another notable trial in Amarillo includes
the Fort
Worth
-area murder case of T. Cullen
Davis, which involved one of the richest men in the United
States, his former wife, and her daughter and boyfriend. The trial
was moved from Fort Worth to Amarillo in 1977 on a change of venue.
The
murder of Brian Deneke also brought
attention outside of the Texas Panhandle
mainly due to the crime revolved around a conflict
between two different cultures. The small town of
Tulia,
Texas
, approximately 47 miles (76 km) south
from Amarillo, was the scene of a controversial drug sting in
1999. Local civil rights attorney Jeff Blackburn took up the
case of the Tulia defendants, which became a
cause célèbre and resulted in
the exoneration and pardon of the defendants. A federal lawsuit
directed at the officials responsible for the sting operation was
held in Amarillo. In the final settlement, the City of Amarillo
agreed to pay $5 million in damages to the former Tulia
defendants; disband the Panhandle Regional Narcotics Task Force
that it set up to oversee the sting operation; and require early
retirement for two Amarillo Police Department officers who were
responsible for supervising the sting's sole undercover
agent.

The American Quarter Horse Association
and Center City of Amarillo sponsors an on-going public art project
that consist of decorated horse statues located in front of several
Amarillo businesses.
Amarillo has been mentioned in popular music such "
Amarillo by Morning" by Paul
Fraser and Terry Stafford,
Nat King
Cole's "
on Route 66",
Bob Dylan's "
Brownsville Girl" (Amarillo was referred to
as the "land of the living dead"),
Rob
Zombie's "Two Lane Blacktop", and the song "
Amarillo?" written by
Neil Sedaka and
Howard Greenfield, recorded famously by
Yorkshireman
Tony Christie and Sedaka,
and revived by
Peter Kay through
performances in the comedy series
Peter Kay's Phoenix Nights
and in a charity performance for
Comic Relief. Christie's version,
which only managed to reach 18th place when originally released in
1971, made it to the number 1 spot in the
UK Singles Chart in 2005 for 7 weeks.
The Amarillo Film Commission is a division of the Amarillo
Convention and Visitor Council that was created to provide film
crews with locations and other assistance when filming in Amarillo.
Amarillo was the setting for many motion pictures, including
Indiana Jones and
the Last Crusade,
Switchback 1997, and
The
Plutonium Circus, the 1995
South
by Southwest Film Festival winner for best documentary
feature.
Sports
The
af2 indoor football team
Amarillo Dusters and the
CHL hockey team
Amarillo Gorillas both play in the
Amarillo Civic Center.
Amarillo's minor league baseball team,
Amarillo Dillas of the United League Baseball, plays its
home games in the Potter County Memorial
Stadium
. Before the founding of the Dillas, the city
was the home of the AA
Amarillo Gold
Sox. Amarillo had a minor league in-door soccer team called the
Amarillo Challengers that
competed in the
SISL and later the
USISL.
West Texas A&M University features a full slate of
NCAA Division II teams; however, Amarillo College is
one of the few community colleges in Texas without an athletic
program. From 1968 to 1996, Amarillo hosted the annual National
Women's Invitational Tournament (NWIT), a post season women's
college basketball tournament.
During
high school football season, the Amarillo Independent School
District schools' home games are in Dick Bivins Stadium
which had a $5.7 million renovation in
2005. Randall High School (part of the adjacent
Canyon Independent School District) plays its home games in
Kimbrough
Memorial Stadium
in Canyon. As well as the yearly clinton
invitational horseshoe tournament. River Road and Highland Park
High Schools, also play football, as well as other sports.
Amarillo is home to the Amarillo Gun Club. Long known as one of
America's leading trap shooting clubs, the Amarillo Gun Club
features a variety of clay target sports including trap, skeet, and
5-Stand. The Amarillo Gun Club has hosted numerous state
championship trap shoots and has been home to members of the
Trapshooting Hall of Fame.
Another part of Amarillo's sporting history was its roots in
professional wrestling.
Amarillo residents
Dory Funk, Stanley
Blackburn and
Doc Sarpolis promoted the
territory for several decades. Funk's sons,
Dory Funk, Jr., and
Terry Funk were both
National Wrestling Alliance
World Heavyweight Champions and represented Amarillo.
Infrastructure
Transportation
Rick Husband
Amarillo International Airport is located on the east side of
Amarillo, north of Interstate 40.
A portion of the former Amarillo Air
Force Base
was converted to civilian use and became part of
the airport. The airport was named after NASA
astronaut
Rick Husband, an Amarillo native and
commander of the final flight of Space Shuttle Columbia, STS-107, which disintigrated on re-entry, killing
Husband and his crewmates. The airport is served by several major
air carriers with non-stop service to Dallas
, Houston
, Albuquerque
, Denver
, and Las Vegas
.

Several streets around Amarillo's
downtown area are still paved in bricks.
Local transit services in the city have been available since 1925
and have been provided through the City of Amarillo's Amarillo City
Transit (ACT) department since 1966; before that time the system
was privately owned. ACT operates bus services that include fixed
route transit and demand response
paratransit which are designed for people with
disabilities. The ACT transports approximately 350,000 passengers
per year on the fixed route and 30,000 paratransit passengers, but
it is a declining ridership. ACT has no plans to scale back any of
their transit routes or services.
Amarillo has no passenger rail service but remains an important
part of the rail freight system. The
BNSF
Railway complex in Amarillo continues to serve a heavy daily
traffic load, approximately 100-110 trains per day. The
Union Pacific Railroad also sends
substantial shipments to or through Amarillo. In addition to
intermodal and general goods, a big portion of rail shipments
involve grains and coal. There have been various proposals over the
years to add passenger service.
One, the Caprock Chief, would have seen daily
service as part of a Fort Worth, Texas
—Denver,
Colorado
service, but it failed to gain
traction.
The streets in Amarillo's downtown area conform to a
grid pattern. The city's original street layout
was set up by William H. Bush, beginning at the west end of the
town moving to the east. Bush named the north to south streets for
past
United States
presidents, in chronological order except for
John Quincy Adams because the surname was
taken with the second president,
John
Adams. (The last president so honored was
Grover Cleveland; though the city has
expanded eastward the pattern was not continued.) While the streets
running north–south honor past presidents and are designated
'streets', east–west streets are numbered and are designated
'avenues'. North of the Fort Worth & Denver (now Burlington
Northern-Santa Fe) railyard, the numbers are "NW" (northwest) west
of Polk Street, and "NE" (northeast) east of Polk. South of the
railyard (including the downtown-city center area), numbers are
officially "SW" (southwest) west of Polk, and "SE" (southeast) east
of Polk. Colloquially, though, most tend to dub the SW/SE avenues
as W (west)/E (east), respectively. One example of the numbering
difference regards the former U.S. Highway 66 routing west of
downtown and into the San Jacinto neighborhood. Most call it 'West
Sixth Street' when it's actually SW Sixth Avenue.
In 1910, the Amarillo voters approved to pay for street paving and
the materials used to pave the streets were
bricks. As of 2003, the city still has 16.2 mi
(26.1 km) of brick streets in some parts of the downtown area.
The city spent $200,000 in 2002 to restore one block of brick
street on Ninth Avenue between Polk and Tyler streets.
Less than one mile (~1.6 km) of
Interstate 27 highway is located in
Potter County. The highway terminates at the city's main west-east
highway,
Interstate 40, just
north of the Potter-Randall County line. The roadway continues
northward into downtown Amarillo via U.S.
60,
87, and
287, via a series of four one-way
streets including Buchanan, Pierce, Fillmore and Taylor.
North of
downtown the highway becomes US 87 & 287 and continues
northward to Dumas,
Texas
.
Interstate 40, the city's major east–west thoroughfare was
completed entirely through Amarillo in November 1968 across the
center of the city. Previously,
U.S. Highway 66 was the major east–west
highway through the city, generally following Amarillo Blvd. to the
north of the downtown area and then curving southwest to leave the
city near the Veterans Hospital. A city route (which was an
original alignment of US 66 through central and west Amarillo)
followed Fillmore south into the downtown area and turned on West
6th through the San Jacinto Heights district which is now home to
many antique shops, restaurants and other businesses, passing the
Amarillo Country Club and veering onto West 9th Street and Bushland
Blvd. before tying into the through route at a traffic circle near
the Veterans Hospital.Loop 335 circles around Amarillo in all four
directions and consists of four-lane roadway on its northeast and
southwest quadrants and two-lane paving to the southeast and
northwest.
Amarillo is also mentioned in the song
Route 66.
Medical centers and hospitals

The Harrington Regional Medical Center
has two of the city's major hospitals.
Amarillo is home to medical facilities including Baptist St.
Anthony’s and Northwest Texas Hospitals, the Don & Sybil
Harrington Cancer Center, Bivins Memorial Nursing Home,
Texas
Tech University Health Sciences Center, Texas Tech School of
Pharmacy, and
Texas Panhandle
Mental Health Mental Retardation. All are located in the
Harrington Regional Medical Center, the first specifically
designated city hospital district in Texas.
Baptist St. Anthony's, known locally as BSA, had some of its
services listed on the
U.S. News & World Report's
"Top 50 Hospitals" from 2002 to 2005. BSA was a result of a merger
between the Texas Panhandle's first hospital, St Anthony's, with
High Plains Baptist Hospital in 1996. The BSA Hospice & Life
Enrichment Center provides important services to the Amarillo area.
The BSA facility, opened in 1985, was the first free-standing
hospice west of the
Mississippi
River that was built and opened without debt.

Texas Tech Health Sciences
Center
Northwest Texas Hospital is home to the area's only Level III
designated trauma center.
The
Thomas E. Creek Department of Veterans Affairs Medical
Center is located east of Harrington Regional Medical Center. The
facility opened in 1940 and was renamed in 2005, honoring the
18-year old Amarillo Marine who was posthumously awarded the
Medal of Honor. Construction began in
2006 for a new Texas State Veterans Home in northwest Amarillo. The
United States government, through the Veterans Affairs Medical
Center, provided the funding to build the facility, while the Texas
government will run it after construction is completed. The home is
scheduled to open in 2007.
Utilities
Drinking water is provided by the
City of Amarillo and its Utilities Division.
Amarillo's water
supply comes from Lake
Meredith
and the
Ogallala
Aquifer
. The city's drinking water is a blend of
both sources. Lake Meredith is located northeast of Amarillo
contains at least 114 billion
gallons (431 million m³) of water. The
city's daily water production averages between 40-50 million
gallons (151,000-189,000 m³).
Collection and disposal of city's trash or garbage are the
responsibility of City of Amarillo's Solid Waste Collection and
Solid Waste Disposal Departments. Amarillo's non-hazardous solid
waste are collected and disposed it through burial in the city's
landfill. The City of Amarillo also
operates recycling collection centers located one near the downtown
area and at 4 fire stations in the city. Other utilities are
primarily provided by private organizations. Natural gas is
distributed by
Atmos Energy. Electric
power service is distributed by
Xcel
Energy. Wired telephone service provider is primarily by
AT&T. Cable television is provided by
Suddenlink
Communications.
References
- Rathjen, Fredrick W. The Texas Panhandle Frontier
(1973). pg. 11. The University of Texas Press. ISBN
0-292-78007-9.
- . Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- Hammond, Clara T., comp. Amarillo (1974). pg. 6.
George Autry, Printer, Amarillo, Texas.
- . Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- . Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- . Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- Exhibit at Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum at Canyon
- Rathjen, pg. 17.
- . Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- Hammond, pg. 31.
- Handbook of Texas Online - HAMNER, LAURA
VERNON
- . Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- Personal observation confirmed by Texas Visitors Bureau in
Amarillo
- Nate Blakeslee. Tulia: Race, Cocaine, and Corruption in a Small
Texas Town. New York: PublicAffairs. ISBN 1-58648-454-0
- . Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
- . Retrieved on 2007-01-25.
External links