Barry & Loewy LLP has experience and a record of success in representing people injured or killed in truck accidents in Pecos County, TX. If you are involved in a crash with a tractor trailer or 18 wheeler in Pecos County, it is important that you obtain a lawyer that is experienced in handling Texas truck accidents to represent you.
Pecos County,
Texas covers 4,765 square miles of the western
Trans-Pecos Region, the only part of the
Lone Star State where mountain and desert habitats combine. The
Pecos River forms the northern boundary. Covered in short, sparse grass
with desert scrub and cacti, sheep ranching plays a large part of the Pecos
County economy, along with cattle, angora goats and hog ranching. While less
than 1% of the region is prime farmland, Pecos County, TX ranked 10 in pecan
production, (1997
Census of Agriculture). Also raised here are cantaloupe, carrots and onions.
The major economic force is gas and oil production.
Pecos County,
TX claimed almost 17,000 residents in the
2000 Census, with less than 4 people per square mile. The largest town and
county seat is
Fort Stockton, population 7,846, a major petroleum distribution center. The
town of
Iraan is Pecos County’s chief oil and gas producer, and also the birthplace
of the
Alley Oop comic strip. Other Pecos County, Texas communities include
Bakersfield,
Belding,
Coyanosa,
Imperiall and
Sheffield.
Pecos County,
Texas teems with abundant wildlife. Ring-tailed cats, deer, fox, sandhill
crane, ducks, and doves roam the sparsely-populated area. The
Big Bend National Parkk lures a steady stream of nature lovers to explore the
unique terrain of mountain and desert, adding tourism to the Pecos County, TX
economic factors.



