De Leon is a city in Comanche County in Northwestern Central Texas. The population was 2,433 at the 2000 census. The town was laid out in April 1881 by surveying crews of the Texas Central Railway as it constructed a line from Ross just north of Waco, Texas to an undecided destination in Eastland County, Texas with the ultimate goal of extending the line to Colorado. The first city lots were auctioned on July 7, 1881 by Robert Morris Elgin, the Texas Central's Land Agent and for whom the town of Elgin, Texas had been named. Initially incorporated by an election held on August 30, 1890, the town government appears to have dwindled over the years and the community was reincorporated in an election held August 29, 1899. The first mayor elected under the new incorporation was former Comanche County Judge John Lambert who took office in April 1900. The population of De Leon remained under 1,000 until 1910 when a branch line of the Texas Central, then leased by the MKT, was extended from De Leon to Rising Star and Cross Plains. De Leon then became the center point for the Texas Central between Waco and Albany, Texas, thereby relocating numerous railroad crew members and their families to the city. The census early that year showed 1,015 citizens. On Labor Day night 1918, oil was discovered north of De Leon just inside the Comanche County line near Desdemona. During the next two years nearly a thousand wells were drilled in the area and the population of De Leon rose to an estimated 5,000 plus people. But the boom was short-lived, and by the time of the actual cenus taken in 1920, the population was only 3,302. Since World War II De Leon's population has stabilized at around 2,500. Ranching dominated Comanche County until the coming of the Texas Central in 1881. Cotton soon became the primary crop as immigrants from the southern states and in particular the area around Oxford and Pontotoc, Mississippi came to the De Leon vicinity starting in 1890. When the boll weevil began to make inroads to the area after 1910, farmers just west of town began to plant the small Spanish peanut. That quickly became the dominate crop and in 1913, the De Leon Peanut Company was organized. Over time, De Leon and Comanche County became the leading peanut producing county in the U.S. Coupled with production around the neighboring community of Gorman in Eastland County most of the peanuts went into candy, particularly Curtis Candies' Baby Ruth and Butterfinger candy bars. Nabisco eventually purchased the De Leon Peanut Company. In the last two decades peanut production has dropped dramatically. De Leon boast one of the oldest festivals in Texas, the De Leon Peach and Melon Festival which had its beginnings in 1914. Celebrated during the first full week in August, it features a free melon slicing, dances, and the Melon Patch Bicycle Tour--"a peach of a ride"--that draws about a thousand riders that travel the backroads of the area. The current watermelon seed spitting distance record as recongnized by the Guinness Book of World Records of 78 feet 6 inches was set at the festival on August 12, 1995 by Jason Schaynot then of Georgetown, Texas. Schaynot is a descendent of two long time De Leon families. Among De Leon's unique events is the only paid appearance by Elvis Presley in which he sang only gospel music. It occurred at Hodges Park on July 4, 1955 when he followed his friends, the Blackwood Brothers at the Battle of Songs show. The Blackwoods had lost family members in a plane crash in Alabama the previous year just prior to a scheduled appearance in De Leon and had remembered them in a performance immediately preceding Elvis' performance. Elvis followed with more gospel music. It was one of three appearances Elvis made that day for promoter W.B. Nowlin, then Mayor of De Leon. The other two were in Stephenville and Brownwood, Texas. Included among De Leon's most distinguished citizens are former Texas Speaker of the House and later Lieutenant Governor Ben Barnes, a protege of John B. Connally and Lyndon B. Johnson, and the 1955 Pulitzer Prize winner William White, whose The Taft Story focuses upon Republican presidential contender Robert A. Taft. Winston Lee Moore, composer and singer of "Don't Let the Stars Get In Your Eyes" was reared just north of De Leon. He is better known under his stage name of Slim Willet. Buried in the De Leon Cemetery is Cyrus Campbell, an early resident who as a blacksmith made the leg irons placed on Mexican General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna following his capture at the battle of San Jacinto. Campbell's family tradition is that he and his three brothers were the men who actually captured Lopez de Santa Anna the day following the battle. The town motto of "Busiest Town, Friendliest People" is a reminder of the slower paced lifestyle still available in a few communities in this country.

Railroad Worker Injury Law Lawyers In De Leon Texas

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What is railroad worker injury law?

Railroad worker injuries are covered under the Federal Employees Liability Act which requires that a railroad maintains their fleet, ensuring that their trains are in good working order and free of defects. If a railroad does not comply with these standards, they may be liable for injuries to their workers. Damages railroad workers may receive include medical treatments, present and future lost wages and mental trauma. An injury on the railway can range from a minor sprain to a spinal injury so severe that it leads to death. Some of the most common injuries that affect railway workers are head trauma, knee injuries, back injuries, neck injuries, carpal tunnel syndrome, brain trauma or spinal cord injuries. The Federal Employees Liability Act protects railroad workers and others as diverse as clerical employees whose day-to-day functions do not directly involve trains or outdoor activity.

Answers to railroad worker injury law issues in Texas

In certain kinds of cases, lawyers charge what is called a contingency fee. Instead of billing by the hour, the...

Train accident injuries are not limited to catastrophic events such as train collisions. Trains are federally...