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About Killeen

Business is booming in Killeen (population 112,000), which has prospered for more than a hundred years since its founding in 1882 by the Santa Fe Railroad to serve as a shipping station for cotton and cattle. Killeen is located in one of the fastest-growing economic corridors in the nation - an hour’s drive from Austin, three hours from San Antonio, four hours from Houston and three from Dallas. Airlines providing service to and from Killeen (40 flights daily) are American Eagle and Continental. Killeen is the home of Fort Hood, the Army’s premiere military installation.

Higher education is offered locally through Central Texas College, Tarleton State University-Central Texas and University of Mary Hardin-Baylor. Approximately 100 churches in Killeen represent 20+ denominations.

Recreation here is plentiful with 31 parks, two swimming pools, 32 lighted tennis courts and a municipal golf course. Stillhouse Hollow Lake and Belton Lake are less than a 20-minute drive away.

History

William "Wild Bill" Scoggins brought something extra to the May 15, 1882, birth of the city of Killeen, Texas. He brought his lariat.

When the steam engine of the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railroad chugged into town, Wild Bill was spotted on the cowcatcher. As the train screeched to a stop, Wild Bill jumped to the ground, uncoiled his lariat and proceeded to lasso the smokestack of the Santa Fe engine. All this occurred while a crowd of onlookers cheered, tossed their hats in the air and generally celebrated the birth of another railroad town.

This began the first phase of Killeen's existence. The second phase was to come in 1942 with the opening of Camp Hood, giving credence to the catchphrase that the history of Killeen is really "a tale of two cities."

Killeen's namesake, Frank P. Killeen, was an official of the railroad, serving as assistant general manager in Galveston. Some believe that Killeen may have been among the railroad dignitaries who were on the train that arrived to mark the beginning of the town. However, this has never been verified and as far as is known, Frank P. Killeen never set foot in the town named in his honor unless he was here on that day in 1882.

He was born in Clare Morris, Mayo County, Ireland, and came to the United States after the death of his parents. He died in Galveston in 1924 at the age of 86.

Although the railroad had platted the townsite several months before, few lots had been sold. But by 1886, the town boasted a population of 300 and by the end of the 1880's, that figure had climbed to 800.

It did not take Killeen long to establish itself as a shipping point for agricultural products grown in about a 20-mile radius. Cotton became king and remained so until the establishment of Camp Hood in 1942. Grain, wool and other farming and ranching products also figured prominently in the economy of the town's first 60 years.

Although the population of the town itself settled into the 1,000-1,200 range, Killeen prospered, establishing all of the necessary services to serve a large rural area along with its own citizens.

Merchants, doctors, lawyers and other professionals came to the town. Schools were established, a government was put in place, a chamber of commerce was organized and undertook the task of building an infrastructure for the busy agricultural center.

In 1930, Killeen's population was 1,200, and in the next 10 years, it climbed to 1,265. Then, two years later, the boom hit with the establishment of Camp Hood, a military post which opened on September 18, 1942, as a tank destroyer center. By 1950, the population had jumped to 7,045. The 2000 U.S. Census lists the city's population at 86,911.

When Pearl Harbor was bombed on December 7, 1941, it not only had a decided effect on the United States and the world at large, but it also directly affected Killeen and its future. After the United States became involved in World War II, there developed a need for a military post to train soldiers in tank destroyer tactics. The area west and north of Killeen was selected as the site for Camp Hood, named for the Confederate general, John Bell Hood. The initial Army installation covered 160,000 acres, with many families having to leave their homesteads and find new homes. It also cut out almost all of the best farming country that Killeen catered to and the economic base quickly changed from agricultural to military.

Following the end of World War II, Camp Hood personnel strength dwindled down to below 4,000, and there was a big question as to what would happen to the camp. In 1950, the Department of the Army declared the Killeen military installation as a permanent post and it automatically became Fort Hood. Things started to boom for the area.

From that day forward, the desire was to make Killeen the best town in the nation for military families to live. This was done by developing the infrastructure of the community while encompassing the military as a part of the Killeen family. Immediate needs which were quickly met were the construction of Belton Lake, and later, Stillhouse Hollow Reservoir, which gave the area an abundant water supply; the construction of better highways to meet military transportation needs; major construction projects to provide homes for the community and especially the military; and an accompanying growth
in retail business.

In the ensuing years, the city secured facilities such as libraries, hotels, shopping centers, a new highway built to near interstate standards and amenities such as a major airport, excellent golf course, top-notch movie theaters, a community theater and excellent restaurants.

With tremendous growth in retail trade and in dining facilities in the decade of the 90's, Killeen has spread its trade area to cover a 100-mile stretch of Central Texas, and, as it did as an agricultural center, pulling people in to take advantage of the special services the city offers.

But all along, from the time of Camp Hood, Killeen's first and foremost concern has been its military neighbor, now Fort Hood, and the many friends that the diverse military population brings, making Killeen a truly cosmopolitan city.

Government

The adoption of the City Charter in 1949 established the Council-Manager form of government that the City of Killeen still operates under today. The mayor is the city's chief elected officer, but has no administrative power. The mayor, however, presides over the city's seven-member City Council, which sets all policy and serves as the city's official representative at various functions. The operations of the city are overseen by a city manager.

The city elects its council members at large, meaning that every registered voter within the city limits may vote for all seven council members. Four council members, however, represent specific geographical areas or wards of the city, while the other three represent the city as a whole.

Terms for the mayor and all council members are two years, with a three-consecutive-term limitation for each office. The city holds nonpartisan elections each May with the terms staggered so about half the council is elected each year. The mayor and the at-large council members are elected in even-numbered years, while the four ward council members are elected in odd-numbered years.

Killeen offers many services of a metropolitan city. With nearly 700 regular full-time employees, the city is one of the largest employers in the Killeen area. In addition to police and fire forces, which were expanded this year, the city owns and operates its own emergency medical services, owns and operates its own water, sewer, and garbage utilities, and operates a commercial airport, an 18-hole golf course, a public library system with two locations, and numerous parks and recreation facilities, including two public swimming pools.

The powers of city government range from enforcing building standards to regulating noise on city streets. The complete code of ordinances is available at City Hall at 101 North College Street and is constantly updated as the City Council adds, amends, and repeals ordinances.

For more information on the services offered by the City of Killeen, you may call City Hall at 254-501-7600 or visit the city website.