After that, a number of businesses continued to develop until 1865, when a railroad bypassed the town, causing the village to disappear.
In 1870, the railroad bypassed what was left of Jollification, which ultimately led to its dissolution.
After the railroad bypassed the town, its growth slowed and it was eventually abandoned in the 20th century.
When the railroad bypassed the town in subsequent years, growth subsided.
Its flow of travellers later dried up when the railroad bypassed it by ten miles.
By the 1880s, most railroads bypassed the town, taking trade with them.
The area never really prospered, though, since the railroad bypassed Lenora.
In 1855 the Texas-Mexican railroad bypassed the town by a few miles.
Much of the community's early population was drawn from nearby Perryville, which the railroad had bypassed.
The town moved and was renamed when the railroad bypassed Tabor in 1900.