Bowser is an unincorporated community in northwestern San Saba County in western Central Texas.
[2] The community was based around the farm of Mr. Sim Witted and the local ford of Colorado was called Whitted Crossing.
[2] They had a Farmer Alliance store, a schoolhouse, a church, a post office, and even a cotton gin, but as buildings were frequently destroyed by flooding, starting in the late 1880s when the schoolhouse burned, new buildings were erected on higher ground about a mile and a half south of Bowser Bend,[2] with the new elevation at 1312 ft. A new post office opened there in 1892 and operated until 1921,[3] when the mail came out of the Mercury post office,[2] some eight miles to the west.
[2] By the 1980s, Bowser was mostly a ghost town, with only two abandoned residences and the old schoolhouse still standing, but the Methodist church was still in use.
Today, Bowser lies near the intersection of Farm Roads 45 and 765, approximately nine miles north of Richland Springs.