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At the turn of the 20th century, the State of Texas promoted sale of public school lands to encourage settlement of rural areas. By 1901, a community developed in southeastern Ochiltree County between Ochiltree, then the county seat, and Glazier, the nearest railroad point. R.E. Wamble (1876-1957) and his wife, Emma Jane (Taylor) (1861-1949), were among the first to purchase land and settle here. The community was originally called Half-Way for its location on the Ochiltree-Glazier Road. Earlier cattle ranch and wagon freighter trails comprised the local transportation network. William F. Taylor (1860-1947) and his wife, Helen (Short) (1869-1956), came in 1906, and the following year donated one acre to Ochiltree County for the community's Ridge School. Other early settlers included the Gerhart, Good, Norris and Westerfield families. The D-C-D Highway, developed in the 1910s from Dallas to Canadian to Denver, incorporated the Half-Way section of the Ochiltree-Glazier Road. This section of road later became FM 281. Frank L. Hamilton (1866-1960) and his wife, Mary Lucy (1872-1966), moved onto Section 209 in 1919. The Hamiltons opened a general store with two gas pumps, as the automobile was quickly replacing the horse and buggy. On Dec. 21, 1920, they applied for a post office named Alton, but as that name was already in use, Notla (Alton spelled backwards) became the new name for the community. Mary was postmaster for 22 years. Notla School, built in 1924 on the south side of the D-C-D Highway, replaced Ridge School as the center of the community. Over the years, many social and group events, including nondenominational Sunday School and church services, were held in the school. The post office closed in 1944 and the school, which merged with Perryton in 1939, burned in 1966. Today, residents and descendants recall the spirit of many generations. (2020)