23.05.2018 Views

Amarillo: Faces, Places & Open Spaces

A full-color, photography book showcasing Amarillo, Texas, paired with the histories of companies, institutions, and organizations that have made the city great.

A full-color, photography book showcasing Amarillo, Texas, paired with the histories of companies, institutions, and organizations that have made the city great.

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sunrises, sunsets,<br />

and big skies<br />

Explorers, trailblazers, traders, cattlemen, Comancheros, and Native<br />

Americans traveled through what is now known as <strong>Amarillo</strong> long before<br />

it was settled. Explorer, Francisco Vazquez de Coronado described the<br />

area as plains so vast they couldn’t find their limit anywhere and having<br />

no more landmarks than if they had been swallowed by the sea. The<br />

breaks of the Llano Estacado give way to mesquite covered rolling plains,<br />

then a tableland expanse where <strong>Amarillo</strong> sprawls across an endless sky.<br />

Today, despite the cultivation of millions of acres of farmland, fields of oil<br />

and gas equipment, miles of roads, and the existence of rural towns and<br />

the city of <strong>Amarillo</strong>, open spaces still define the Texas Panhandle.<br />

Clockwise, starting from the top:<br />

Hot air balloons prepare to launch into the deep blue twilight near <strong>Amarillo</strong>.<br />

PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE AMARILLO CONVENTION AND VISITOR COUNCIL..<br />

A blazing ball of sunlight sinking into a hot western sky is a familiar sight to residents of the Texas Panhandle.<br />

It would be hard to find anything prettier than the <strong>Amarillo</strong> skyline splayed against a West Texas sky.<br />

Chapter 3<br />

169

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