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A no-parking sign marks the road to President Bush's ranch at Crawford, Texas. Signs went up for security and to deter protesters.
A no-parking sign marks the road to President Bush’s ranch at Crawford, Texas. Signs went up for security and to deter protesters.
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CRAWFORD, Texas — For the first time in eight years, this one-stoplight town is getting back to normal.

The school is abuzz about its sports teams, not the next world leader President George W. Bush will bring to campus from his 1,600-acre ranch outside town.

Only one souvenir shop remains open full time on Main Street — still hawking coffee mugs and Christmas ornaments emblazoned with “The Western White House” logo — and there are no more war protesters clogging the streets or news reporters clamoring for interviews.

After the inauguration of Barack Obama, Bush’s ranch visits will be low- key, and residents of this town, 20 miles west of Waco, won’t see any more presidential motorcades dashing through town. He is moving from Washington to Dallas.

“It was fun to run to the end of the street just to watch the motorcade go across, and he would wave,” said LuAnn Smith, co-owner of Great Shapes, the town’s hair salon. “In a way, it will be a little sad. We will have to get used to it again, being a quiet little town.”

After Bush was elected in 2000, a few souvenir shops opened in vacant downtown buildings.

The town, with one eatery, two gas stations and no hotels, also opened a bank in 2002 — the first one there since the Depression — but that was because people had been moving into the area for years for its top-rated school system, leaders said.

“Nobody lives here because the president lives here, and nobody’s leaving because he’s leaving office,” said Marilyn Judy, president of the Crawford Chamber of Commerce. “Businesses that catered to tourists may be affected, but off of Main Street, regular people will not be affected by it.”

During Bush’s first term, thousands of tourists flocked to town. Tourism, however, seems to have been affected by Bush’s waning popularity and the economy.

Late last year, the operator of the town’s largest souvenir store opted to close it except when Bush is at his ranch. Bill Johnson, owner of the Yellow Rose of Texas, said he has not decided whether to close the shop permanently but would also consider selling it.

“In the last two years, it was good when he was there, and really bad when he wasn’t there,” Johnson said. “Crawford is a unique little town, and we were happy to be part of it, and we’ll continue if we can.”

Others are more optimistic. Jamie Burgess, manager of The Red Bull gift shop, said her store will remain open because she believes Bush will have more time to visit his ranch after he moves to Dallas.

“It sounds like he will be here quite a bit, and people will come hoping to see him,” Burgess said.

The Crawford Texas Peace House, which opened in 2003 as a gathering place for people who wanted to oppose Bush in his adopted hometown, is reorganizing and will work with other peace groups, said co-founder John Wolf. The group is becoming the Crawford Peace Community and may sell its house in a year or so, he said.

Bush met with several foreign leaders at the ranch and even brought some to the school to talk to students — including then-Russian President Vladimir Putin and then-British Prime Minister Tony Blair.

“It’s hard for me to see any negatives of him being here,” said Kenneth Judy, former school superintendent who is now vice president of Security Bank of Crawford. “You had world leaders coming to the school, and it was a great educational opportunity.”

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