It is 430 miles from each of these cities. When names were given to stations on the Texas and Pacific in 1881, the signboards for Eskota and Trent were interchanged by mistake: what is called Trent should have been named Eskota.
Trent was named for I. R. Trent, who lived in Eskota and who continued to live there though a neighboring town bore his name. The Trent post office began service in 1883 and was still in operation in 1990. In 1885 a tent school was opened at Trent, and later a one-room school was built on a site subsequently occupied by a Christian church. The tenth grade was added to the school in 1911, and at the close of that term the first diplomas were presented. The eleventh grade was added to the curriculum in 1915. A three-story brick school was finished in 1917, replacing the one-room school. In the 1980s the Trent school was unique among Texas schools for having the gorilla as its mascot.
The population of Trent was estimated as 1,200 in 1928, and from the 1930s through the early 1990s was reported at about 300. In the early 1990s Trent was an incorporated town with 320 residents and sixteen businesses. The population was 318 in 2000.
reprinted from Texas State Historial Association | Photo Bob Shrader