| Home |
| History |
| Business |
| Community |
| Events |
| Food And Lodging |
| Chamber of Commerce |
| Calendar |
|
Relocation Info |
| Maps |
| Houston County |
Houston County
Texas' Oldest County
HOUSTON
COUNTY.
Houston County, the first county established by the Republic of Texas,qv
is east of Waco in the East Texas Timberlands region. It is bordered on the
north by Anderson County, on the east by Cherokee, Angelina, and Trinity
counties, on the south by Walker and Madison counties, and on the west by
Leon County. Its center lies at 31°20' north latitude and 99°25' west
longitude. Crockett is the county seat and largest town. In addition to U.S.
Highway 287 the county's transportation needs are served by State highways
7, 19, and 21 and the Union Pacific Railroad. Houston County covers 1,234
square miles, with elevations ranging from 200 to 300 feet. The Neches River
forms the northeastern boundary of the county, and the Trinity River is the
western boundary. The terrain is gently rolling to hilly. Soils are
generally light colored and loamy, with very deep reddish clayey subsoils.
In the southwest and west the soils are sandy with clayey subsoils. The
predominant vegetation is mixed pine and hardwood forests. Between 21 and 30
percent of the land in the county is considered prime farmland. The climate
is subtropical and humid, with cool winters and hot summers. Temperatures
range in January from an average low of 36° F to an average high of 58°, and
in July from 71° to 94°. The average annual rainfall is 42 inches. The
average annual snowfall is less than one inch. The growing season averages
260 days a year, with the last freeze in early March and the first in late
November.
The area has been the site of human habitation for several thousand years.
Archeological artifacts recovered in the region suggest that the earliest
human inhabitants arrived during the Archaic Period, approximately 2,000 to
3,000 years ago. Evidence of the prehistoric Caddo culture that flourished
between A.D. 1000 and 1600 has also been found in the area; the earliest
Spanish explorers encountered the remnants of that culture during their
first forays into the region. The area now known as Houston County was also
a stronghold of the Alabama-Coushatta, Cherokee, and Tejas Indians. The
first recorded European exploration there was carried out by René Robert
Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle,qv
and it is believed that a remnant of the Moscoso expeditionqv
reached the vicinity. On Alonso De León'sqv second expedition in 1690 the first East Texas mission, San
Francisco de los Tejas, was founded in the neighborhood of the present
Weches, in the northeastern part of the county. The mission was abandoned in
1693 because of Indian hostility. The Old San Antonio Road,qv
the most important of several caminos reales in the future state of
Texas, crossed the county, and travel and trade were carried on over this
route for a hundred years before any permanent settlements were made. A
village on the right bank of the Trinity, established in 1774 and named
Bucareli,qv
reached the size of forty-two houses and a population of 348 before it broke
up and the residents moved to Nacogdoches under the leadership of Antonio
Gil Ibarvo.qv
The earliest permanent settlers in the future county were Daniel McLean, who
crossed the area with the Gutiérrez-Magee expedition,qv
and his brother-in-law John Sheridan; they settled near the site of
present-day Augusta around 1821. Land grants in the area were made by the
Mexican government as early as 1828 to members of Joseph Vehlein'sqv
colony. Among the first to receive them were Jacob Masters, who settled ten
miles northeast of the site of present Crockett in 1828. Other early
settlers included Masters's son Jacob Masters, Jr., Elijah Gossettqv
and his three sons, and Joseph Redmond Rice, who started a plantation on the
Old San Antonio Road about five miles northeast of Crockett.
In 1837 the boundaries of Houston County were laid out and its government
was organized. It was named for President Sam Houston,qv
who signed the order establishing the county on June 12, 1837. Upon its
formation from Nacogdoches County in 1837, Houston County included the
territory that later became Trinity and Anderson counties and part of
Henderson County. Land was donated for the county seat by Andrew E. Gossett,qv
who named it for his father's friend and former Tennessee neighbor, David
Crockett.qv
Collin Aldrichqv
was first chief justice; George Aldrich, county surveyor; James Madden,
sheriff; and Stephen White, clerk of the district court.
During the early years of the county's existence, there were frequent
hostile encounters between settlers and Indians. In October 1838 an Indian
band attacked the home of John Edens on San Pedro Creek, where a number of
women and children had taken refuge while the men of the area were away
combatting the Córdova Rebellion.qv
In what became known as the Edens-Madden massacre, more than a half dozen
people were killed and a number of others were wounded. Many early families
constructed forts or blockhouses for protection, but sporadic attacks
continued until the early 1850s.
During the early 1840s the population of the county grew rapidly. In 1847
the number of residents reached 1,929, and by 1850 it stood at 2,721. Many
of the early settlers were planters from the Old South who brought their
slaves with them, and the early tax rolls of the county show that the number
of bondsmen increased steadily during the decade, rising from 308 in 1840 to
545 in 1850. Much of the early settlement was along the Neches and Trinity
rivers. Linking the two rivers was the Old San Antonio Road, which provided
the main overland route to and through the county. Farming in Houston County
was originally conducted on a subsistence basis, but by the late 1840s a
thriving plantation economy, based primarily on cotton, had developed. In
1850, Houston County plantations produced 740 bales, and the figure grew
rapidly over the next decade. During the 1850s Alabama and Hall's Bluff,
both on the Trinity River, became important shipping sites for the county's
cotton crop. Planters hauled the heavy bales overland to the river and then
transported them by flatboat to Galveston for sale and export to New Orleans
and other sites.
In 1860, on the eve of the Civil War,qv Houston County had a population of 8,058, including 2,819 slaves.
Despite the rapid population growth of the previous decade and a half, the
area remained sparsely settled. Arable land amounted to less than 40,000
acres, and Crockett was the only sizable town. Alabama, Augusta, Randolph,
Hall's Bluff, and several other sites had post offices, but most of these
communities were little more than villages.
The Civil War and its aftermath brought profound changes to the county. Its
citizens voted overwhelmingly for secession,qv
552 for and only 38 against, and county men volunteered for the Confederate
Army in large numbers. Despite having a white population of little more than
5,000, the county provided nearly 1,000 men to the war effort. Many of these
spent long periods away from home during the war, and those who remained
behind were forced to deal with the lack of markets and wild fluctuations in
the value of Confederate currency, as well as concern for their relatives
and friends on the battlefield. The end of the war brought wrenching changes
in the county's economy. For many Houston County residents, the abolition of
slaveryqv
meant devastating economic loss. Before the war slaves had constituted
nearly half of all taxable property in the county, and their loss, coupled
with a sharp decline in property values, caused a profound disruption for
most planters. The value of farms in the county dropped from $1,154,435 in
1860 to $57,180 in 1870.
The black population fared no better. Many black farmers left the farms
owned by their former masters to seek better working and living conditions,
but for the vast majority the change brought only marginal improvement. Most
ended up working on the land on shares, receiving one-third or one-half of
the crop for their labors. Politically, however, Houston County blacks fared
somewhat better than freedmen in other counties; as late as 1873, largely as
a result of black voters, Republican gubernatorial candidate Edmund J. Davisqv
won a narrow majority of the county's votes. As was the case elsewhere in
the state, however, the introduction of the white primaryqv
and other discriminatory voting practices eventually served effectively to
disfranchise African Americansqv until the 1960s.
Although Houston County witnessed little of the violence that many other
counties experienced during Reconstruction,qv the effects of the war were felt for some time, and the economy
did not begin fully to recover until 1872, when the Houston and Great
Northern Railroad was built through the county. The new railroad provided
improved access to markets outside of Texas and brought in large numbers of
new settlers, who helped to reinvigorate the county. Between 1870 and 1880
the population grew from 8,147 to 16,702. Many of the new residents settled
along the tracks, where numerous new communities, among them Grapeland,
Latexo, and Lovelady, were built. The influx of new settlers had a dramatic
impact on the agricultural economy. Between 1870 and 1880 the number of
farms in the county increased from seventy-five to 1,698, and the number of
improved acres grew from 6,746 to 73,884. Corn, cotton, and cattle were the
leading products. In 1880 the county's farmers produced 283,402 bushels of
corn and 9,730 bales of cotton; the agricultural census counted 14,368
cattle. The construction of the railroad also stimulated interested in
lumbering the large virgin pine forests in the eastern part of the county,
and by the 1890s several sawmills were in operation. In 1902 the Eastern
Texas Railroad built from Lufkin to Kennard, in southeastern Houston County,
further stimulating the lumber industry.qv
The largest mill, the Four C Mill, was established in the Ratcliff area in
1901. It operated until the 1920s, by which time more than 120,000 acres of
timberland had been cut.
In 1904 commercial lignite mining was also introduced. But the mainstay of
the economy during the early decades of the twentieth century remained
agriculture, particularly cotton farming. Between 1900 and 1930 the amount
of land given to cotton cultureqv steadily increased, rising from some 40,000 acres to more than
130,000 acres. In 1926, one of the peak years of the cotton boom, Houston
County farmers produced 48,461 bales, placing the county among the leaders
in the state. In addition to cotton, farmers also produced significant
quantities of corn, butter, milk, eggs, and peaches.
The county population grew gradually from 25,452 in 1900 to 30,017 in 1930.
The number of farms increased during the same period from 4,181 to 5,656.
During the late 1920s and early 1930s cotton remained the leading cash crop,
but droughts, boll weevilqqv infestations, and falling prices combined to drive down production
in the 1930s. Although the amount of land planted in cotton continued to be
quite high, both yields and profits dropped significantly, especially after
1929. In 1930 Houston County farmers produced only 27,960 bales, down nearly
a third from the peak production figure of the mid-1920s, despite the fact
that the amount of land devoted to cotton continued to grow. By 1930 nearly
half of the cropland in the county—143,131 of 221,141 acres—was planted in
cotton.
Because of the growing population, land prices showed a marked increase, and
many new farmers found it impossible to buy land. Accordingly, the number of
tenants and sharecroppers grew rapidly, particularly in the 1920s, and by
1930 more than half of all farmers in the county—3,851 of 5,656—were working
someone else's land. As a result of the poor yields and the reluctance of
banks to extend credit to financially strained farmers, many of those who
made a living from the land, particularly tenants, found themselves in a
precarious position. Numerous farmers were forced to give up their
livelihood and seek work elsewhere. As a result the number of tenants
dropped sharply, from 3,851 in 1930 to 2,236 in 1940, and the number of
farms in the county fell from 5,656 to 4,103. Many of the small tenant
farmers were black, and they were particularly hard hit during the Great
Depressionqv of the 1930s. Public Works Administration funds helped some in
need; among the leading federal projects was the construction of a new
county courthouse, which is still in use. Oil, discovered in the county in
1934, enabled some cash-strapped farmers to settle long-standing debts. But
the economy did not begin to rebound until the early 1940s, when commodity
prices began to climb again.
Since World War IIqv Houston County has been a regional leader in agricultural
production. During the late 1940s and early 1950s the farming economy became
increasingly diversified. Truck and fruit farming were introduced and
greater emphasis was placed on the dairy industry and poultry production.qqv
Bruce plums were also grown in large quantities around Grapeland. In the
early postwar years cotton was still being grown in large amounts, with some
15,000 bales reported in 1951, but as the decade wore on, peanuts, corn,
sorghum, tomatoes, beans, and other crops gradually grew in importance.
During the 1960s stock farming gradually replaced crop farming as the
leading agricultural pursuit, and by the early 1980s, 86 percent of the
county's farm income was from livestock and livestock products. In 1982, 55
percent of the land in the county was in farms and ranches, with 14 percent
of the land under cultivation and 3 percent irrigated; that year Houston
County ranked ninety-first of the 254 Texas counties in agricultural
receipts. The primary crops were rye, hay, cotton, oats, wheat, sorghum, and
peanuts; watermelons, peaches, and pecans were also grown in sizable
quantities. The leading livestock products were cattle, milk, and hogs.
Businesses in the county in the early 1980s numbered 368. In 1980, 14
percent of workers were self-employed, 20 percent were employed in
professional or related services, 19 percent in manufacturing, 18 percent in
wholesale and retail trade, and 11 percent in agriculture, forestry,
fishing, and mining; 11 percent were employed in other counties, and 2,641
workers were retired. Nonfarm earnings in 1981 totaled $183,021,000. Logging
remained an important industry, and the county continued to produce lumber,
chiefly pine and ash, in commercial quantities, as well as pulpwood. Though
Houston County was once heavily deforested, the Civilian Conservation Corpsqv
replanted the area in the 1930s, and much of the eastern part of the county
is now in Davy Crockett National Forest,qv which was established in 1935. Lignite coal, fuller's earth, and
brick clay were also commercially extracted. Oil and natural gas continued
to be produced in sizable amounts; in 1990, 809,916 barrels of petroleum
were taken from land in the county. Tourism also became an increasingly
important industry in Houston County in the late twentieh century.
The earliest schools in the county were established in the late 1830s.
Trinity College, in Alabama, chartered in 1841, was the first college
established in the Republic of Texas. In the early 1980s Houston County had
five school districts, with six elementary, two middle, and five high
schools. The average daily attendance in 1981-82 was 3,428, with
expenditures per pupil of $2,681. Fifty percent of the 211 high school
graduates planned to attend college. In 1983, 55 percent of the school
graduates were white, 41 percent black, 1 percent Hispanic, 0.3 percent
Asian, and 0.1 percent American Indian. The first churches were established
shortly after the organization of the county. In the mid-1980s the county
had seventy churches, with an estimated combined membership of 10,833. The
largest denominations were Baptist and Methodist.
Democratic presidential candidates carried Houston County in every election
through 1968. In 1972, however, Republican Richard Nixon carried the area.
Though the Democrats carried almost every election in the county from 1976
to 1992, Nixon's win in 1972 and Ronald Reagan's in 1984 marked a shift away
from the area's traditional leanings. Nevertheless, Democrats continued to
dominate local politics for some time, and won majorities in the county in
1976, 1980, and 1988. In 1982, 98 percent of the county's electorate voted
in the Democratic primary, and Democratic officials maintained control of
county offices. This began to change in the 1990s, however, as the area
continued to trend more Republican; in 1995 there was a Republican county
judge for the first time in 100 years. Democrat Bill Clinton won only a
plurality of the county's votes in 1992, and in 1996 Republican Bob Dole won
a plurality. Republican George W. Bush won solid majorities in the 2000 and
2004 elections.
The population of Houston County fell steadily between 1940 and 1970, as
residents moved away to find jobs. There had been 31,137 people living in
the county in 1940 (the all-time high) but the population dropped to 22,825
by 1950, to 19,376 by 1960, and to 17,855 by 1970. Subsequently the number
of residents grew modestly, rising to 22,299 by 1980.
The census counted 21,375 people living in Houston County in 1990, and
23,185 in 2000. In that year about 64 percent of the population were Anglo,
28 percent were black, and 8 percent were Hispanic. Seventy percent of
residents age twenty-five and older had completed four years of high school,
and more than 12 percent had college degrees. In the early twenty-first
century livestock, timber, and tourism were some of the key elements of the
county's economy; local manufacturers produced steel and plastic products,
clothing, and other goods. Over 15,115,000 cubic feet of pinewood and over
3,530,000 cubic feet of hardwood were harvested in the county in 2003. In
2002 the county had 1,514 farms and ranches covering 464,706 acres, 45
percent of which were devoted to pasture, 35 percent to crops, and 17
percent to woodlands. In that year Houston County farmers and ranchers
earned $34,483,000; livestock sales accounted for $28,136,000 of the total.
Cattle, hay, watermelons, and cotton were the chief agricultural
products.Crockett (2000 population, 7,141) is the county's largest town and
seat of government. Other communities include Grapeland (1,451), Kennard
(317), Latexo (272), Lovelady (608), and Ratcliff (106). Some 200 Texas
Historical Commissionqv markers identify historical sites and events. Leading attractions
in the county include the site of the San Francisco de los Tejas Mission,
Davy Crockett National Forest, a visitor's center and museum in the 1909
Crockett Depot, Houston County Lake, and Lake Ratcliff. The area also offers
numerous venues for fishing, swimming, hiking, and other outdoor activities.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Armistead Albert Aldrich, The History of Houston County,
Texas (San Antonio: Naylor, 1943). Frontier Times, May 1929.
Houston County Historical Commission, History of Houston County, Texas,
1687-1979 (Tulsa, Oklahoma: Heritage, 1979). Thomas Nelms Mainer,
Houston County in the Civil War (Crockett, Texas: Houston County
Historical Commission, 1981). Gifford E. White, The First Settlers of
Houston County, Texas (Austin, 1983). Albert Woldert, "The Location of
the Tejas Indian Village (San Pedro) and the Spanish Missions in Houston
County," Southwestern Historical Quarterly 38 (January 1935).
Eliza H. Bishop
From the Handbook of Texas Online
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/HH/hch19.html
from www.wikipedia.org
Houston County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. As of 2000, the population was 23,185. Its county seat is Crockett6. Houston County is named for Samuel Houston, one of the most important figures in the history of Texas, president of the Republic of Texas and Governor of Texas. Houston County was one of 46 prohibition or entirely dry counties in the state of Texas, until a November 2007 vote was issued and residents voted for alcohol sells in the county.
Houston County has no relationship with the city of Houston, which is located approximately 150 miles (260 km) to the south, in Harris County.
Geography
According to the
U.S. Census Bureau,
the county has a total area of 1,237 square
miles (3,203 km²),
of which, 1,231 square miles (3,188 km²) of it is land and 6 square miles
(15 km²) of it (0.48%) is water.
Demographics
As of the
census²
of 2000, there were 23,185 people, 8,259 households, and 5,756 families
residing in the county. The
population density
was 19 people per square mile (7/km²). There were 10,730 housing units at an
average density of 9 per square mile (3/km²). The racial makeup of the
county was 68.57%
White, 27.93%
Black or
African American,
0.26%
Native American,
0.25%
Asian, 0.06%
Pacific Islander,
2.17% from
other races, and
0.76% from two or more races. 7.50% of the population were
Hispanic or
Latino of any race.
There were 8,259 households out of which 28.70% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 51.90% were married couples living together, 14.20% had a female householder with no husband present, and 30.30% were non-families. 27.90% of all households were made up of individuals and 15.10% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.44 and the average family size was 2.97.
In the county, the population was spread out with 23.20% under the age of 18, 6.80% from 18 to 24, 27.70% from 25 to 44, 24.30% from 45 to 64, and 18.00% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 40 years. For every 100 females there were 114.10 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 115.90 males.
The median income for a household in the county was $28,119, and the median income for a family was $35,033. Males had a median income of $29,143 versus $19,885 for females. The per capita income for the county was $14,525. About 15.60% of families and 21.00% of the population were below the poverty line, including 28.30% of those under age 18 and 18.20% of those age 65 or over