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Communities
Fate, Texas




from the Handbook of Texas Online
FATE, TEXAS. Fate is on State Highway 66 and the Missouri, Kansas and Texas line four miles northeast of 
Rockwall in northern Rockwall County. The community's name derives from the nickname, "Fate," given to 
Lafayette Brown, one of the area's early settlers, by his wife. A post office was established in the community in 
July 1880. By the mid-1880s Fate had a school, a cotton gin, two general stores, and a population of seventy-five. 
In 1886, in anticipation of the arrival of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas, Dr. Wylie T. Barnes platted a new 
community on his land about a half mile northeast of Fate, calling the new community Barnes City. The railroad 
built through later that year, and the residents and businesses of Fate moved to the new community. Seeking to 
avoid having to apply for a new post office, the residents of Barnes City changed their community's name to 
Fate in February 1887. By 1890 the community had fifteen businesses, a two-room school, two churches, and 
a population of 100. In 1899 the first rural mail route in Texas began operation from Fate. The population of the 
community continued to grow steadily through the 1890s and the first decades of the twentieth century, reaching 
299 by 1920. The business community witnessed a similar growth, and Fate's first bank opened in 1907. Fate 
was incorporated in 1908. The federal highway reached the town after World War I.qv 
During the 1920s and 1930s the small community began to decline. While agriculture remained the area's major 
occupation, better roads and automobiles took trade from local merchants to those in larger towns. Nonetheless, 
a bank, a drugstore, and a number of stores remained in business at Fate. Fate's school eventually dropped its 
high school grades, and the community's population declined to 194 by 1930 and 127 by 1940. During the 1940s 
and 1950s Fate lost businesses and residents to the growing cities of Dallas and Fort Worth. The number of 
businesses operating in Fate declined from fifteen to six during the 1940s. Since 1950, however, the population of 
Fate has increased, rising to 475 by 1990. In the 1990s many of the town's residents held jobs in the Dallas area, 
but Fate was still able to support four businesses. 
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Rockwall County Historical Foundation, Rockwall County History (Dallas: Taylor, 1984). O. 
L. Steger, Sr., History of Rockwall County (Wolfe City, Texas: Henington, 1969). 
Brian Hart 

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