TALCO - Pirati di Sankt Pauli (Questa è una tifoseria che merita tutto il mio rispetto.)
seen from Germany
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seen from United States

seen from United States
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seen from Netherlands

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye
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TALCO - Pirati di Sankt Pauli (Questa è una tifoseria che merita tutto il mio rispetto.)
Talco: nella danza dell'autunno rosa
Catalans:
Italians: who is this
Big and white
Leica R4 with Summilux-R 50 mm on Kodak Ektachrome 100, cross-processed.
Carte fuggono dal mazzo
di boriosi che confondon
il non saper mai crescere
col viver senza età.
In 1856 a US Post Office was opened up north of Mt. Pleasant, Texas, to serve a community called Gouldsboro. That Post office closed in 1860; but, another one was opened up nearby in 1878 to serve a town now being called Goolesboro. Goolesboro grew up to have the Post Office, a general store, a doctor’s office, and a blacksmith’s shop; and by 1884 its population was about 30 people.
In 1910, the postal officials asked that the name of the town be changed to avoid confusion since there were other towns in Texas with the same name. A town merchant came up with the idea of naming the place after the initials of the company that made a common candy bar back then. It was the Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana Candy Company; hence, the town became “Talco”. Nowadays, some locals dispute that this was how the town was named.
When the folks of the community heard that the railroad was going to be coming through the area, they actually moved the town over to where the railroad would be. When the store and Post Office was moved to the new town site in 1912, most of the other businesses moved too; which turned out really well for them. Within a couple of years there were about 300 people residing in Talco.
Suddenly, in 1936, oil was discovered in the “Talco Oilfield”, and the oil boom was on. People came running to Talco in droves looking for work and trying to scoop up oil leases; and by the late 1930′s the population was around 2,000.
The boom was short lived, though, and by 1940 the population had already dwindled to about 900. It’s been a steady decline since then. In 2014, the population of Talco was 523. While it’s certainly not a ghost town yet; the town’s many abandoned structures and the absence of activity in the old downtown area do testify to Talco’s departure from its former glory days.