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The earliest settlement in this region, the fort and a subsequent town, consisted largely of jacales with stone chimneys. Established by the U.S. Army in 1851 and known as the Post on the Clear Fork of the Brazos, the post was abandoned in 1854 and used from 1858 until 1861 as Way Station Number 54 on the Butterfield Overland Mail route. After the Civil War, settlers used the site as a market for bison hides, a stopping place on the Goodnight-Loving cattle trail, and a subpost for Fort Griffin (FC1). The settlement was the temporary county seat of the new Jones County for five months in 1881, but the railroad bypassed the area, giving Anson the preference. The privately owned property was deeded in 1997 to the Fort Phantom Foundation to ensure its preservation. Only a stone magazine, guardhouse, and a haunting stand of megalith-like stone chimneys remain in the open landscape.