|
Chapter
I: A History
of Jefferson
County, Texas
The
Geophysical
Description
by
W. T. Block
Jefferson
County, Texas
is located in
the extreme
southeastern
part of the
state. It is a
metropolitan
center with a
population in
1970
approaching
one-quarter
million
persons.
Beaumont, the
county seat,
has
115,919 residents
and ranks in
tenth place
among Texas
cities. Other
principal
cities and
their
populations in
1970 are Port
Arthur,
57,371;
Groves,
18,067;
Nederland,
16,810; and
Port Neches,
10,894.1
The smaller
communities in
Jefferson
County, some
of which are
incorporated,
include China,
Lakeview, Pear
Ridge,
Griffing Park,
Bevil Oaks,
Fannett,
Sabine Pass,
Nome, and
Hamshire.
The
county has an
area of 945
square miles,
ranging in
altitude from
sea level to
fifty feet.
Its mild
climate, with
monthly
temperature
averages
ranging from
forty-four
degrees in
winter to
ninety-one
degrees in
summer,
accounts for
the county’s
annual growing
season of 250
days.2
Jefferson
County is
bounded by
water except
on its western
border. Its
thirty-five
mile southern
boundary is
the Gulf of
Mexico. Its
forty-five
mile eastern
boundary lies
adjacent to
the Neches
River, Sabine
Lake, and the
Sabine Pass,
which in part,
constitutes
the common
boundary
between the
states of
Texas and
Louisiana. On
the north,
Pine Island
Bayou, a
navigable
stream one
hundred feet
wide and
seventy-five
miles long,
separates
Jefferson
County from
neighboring
Hardin County.
The western
boundary is
shared in
common with
Liberty and
Chambers
counties.3
Sabine
Lake, the
region’s
distinguishing
geo graphic
feature, is a
seven-by-fourteen-mile
tidal lagoon
of shallow
depth, which
connects with
the Gulf of
Mexico via the
five-mile-long
tidal inlet,
the Sabine
Pass. ‘The
eastern shore
of each is a
part of the
western
boundary of
Louisiana. As
the confluence
of three
rivers, the
Neches, Sabine
and Angelina,
Sabine Lake
drains
approximately
30,000 square
miles of Texas
and Louisiana.4
The Port
Arthur ship
canal,
excavated
along the
lake’s western
shore,
connects with
the Neches and
Sabine Rivers,
providing
deep-water
shipping
facilities at
Beaumont, Port
Arthur,
Nederland, and
Port Neches.
Deep water, as
well as the
first
significant
petroleum
discovery at
Spindletop oil
field near
Beaumont, has
contributed
immensely
toward
Jefferson
County’s
present urban
and industrial
status.5
Geologically,
Jefferson
County, Texas
is composed of
alluvium, a
part of the
Houston group,
deposited
during the
late Pliocene
and early
Pleistocene
epochs.6
Because
of its
relative
youth; the
county has no
outcrops of
rock. It is
one of 116
Texas
counties,
which comprise
the Coastal
Plains,
commonly
called the
Gulf Prairie.7
Jefferson
County’s soil
surface can be
divided into
three
categories.
The southern
one-third of
the county
lying adjacent
to the
seacoast
consists of
marshy, and
often
inundated,
salt grass
terrain where
cattle
flourish. The
middle
one-third of
Jefferson
County is
coastal
prairie
suitable for
grazing or
rice
production.
The northern
one-third is a
heavily
forested
region, where
hardwoods and
southern
yellow pine
grow in
abundance.
Beach sands
and ocean
sediments in
the marsh
sector, black
clay in the
prairie lands,
and sandy loam
in the wooded
areas
characterize
the county’s
soil texture.
Rainfall in
the county
averages fifty
inches
annually.8
Other
geological
characteristics
include a
formation
known as the
Beaumont Clay,
which outcrops
extensively in
Jefferson
County and
extends
southward to
Corpus
Christi. Its
thickness
varies between
four hundred
and nine
hundred feet,
and is
overlain
principally by
river silts
and wind-blown
beach
alluvium. The
clay’s texture
is very sticky
when wet, but
it usually
assumes a
brittle
hardness when
dry.9
The
protruding
salt domes are
another
characteristic
of Jefferson
County and its
adjacent
offshore
waters.
Sometimes
these are
visible, as at
Spindletop and
Big Hill, by
an abrupt
increase in
elevation. The
Gulf Prairie
salt domes
usually
contain
petroleum and
sulfur at
relatively
shallow
depths, and
were an
instrument in
the
establishment
of Jefferson
County’s
petrochemical
industries.10
Although
the county is
served by four
railroad
systems, the
principal
transportation
artery is
still the
Neches River.
A large
percentage of
the county’s
manufactured
products
valued in 1970
at
$988,700,000
are carried to
world markets
via the Neches
River. With a
channel depth
to Beaumont of
forty feet,
the Neches on
occasion has
accommodated
the
100,000-ton,
1,000-foot
American
tanker Manhattan.
The river
is 416 miles
long and
derives its
name from the
Neches Indian
tribe that
formerly lived
near its
banks.
Steinhagen and
Sam Rayburn
Dams on the
Neches and its
chief
tributary, the
Angelina, have
created
artificial
reservoirs in
Southeast
Texas, which
impound more
than 5,000,000
acre-feet of
water to feed
the growing
population and
heavy industry
of Jefferson
County.11
The
forty-five-mile
Taylor’s Bayou
watershed is
another of
Jefferson
County’s
economic
resources, for
it, along with
Pine Island
Bayou,
supplies the
irrigation
water for the
county’s
extensive rice
industry. In
1970, farm
income,
principally
from rice,
amounted to
$17,000,000,
while beef
cattle sales
added another
$2,400,000.
However, most
of Jefferson
County’s
70,000 wage
earners are
employed by
the
petrochemical,
shipbuilding,
and rubber
industries,
which provided
payrolls
totaling
$522,000,000
in 1970.12
The
subterranean
resources of
Jefferson
County include
fresh water,
natural gas,
and petroleum
in abundance,
but no metal
ores. There
are also
substantial
calcium
deposits (clam
and oyster
shell), which
could be
utilized in
the
manufacture of
lime and
cement. The
Frasch process
is used to
extract sulfur
from
Spindletop oil
field, where
9.5 billion
tons of salt
are said to
exist above
the 5,000-foot
level. Sand
and gravel
deposits are
excavated by
the
construction
industries,
and there is
an abundance
of ceramic
clays suitable
for
brick-making.13
An
account of the
geography,
geology, and
resources of
Jefferson
County is not
complete
without a
statement
concerning the
close inter
dependency
which has
always existed
between that
county and its
neighbor to
the east,
Orange County,
which was a
part of
Jefferson
County prior
to 1852.14
The resources
of each county
are identical,
and,
consequently,
the patterns
of agriculture
and industry
in each county
have evolved
in similar
fashion.
Orange
County is
wedged between
the lower
Neches and
Sabine Rivers,
where, for
half of the
nineteenth
century, logs
were floated
from the
timbered
counties to
the north for
milling at
Beaumont and
Orange, Texas.15
Despite
a combined
population of
less than
4,000 persons,
the two
communities
became the hub
of a timber
industry,
which, in
1880,
manufactured
82,000,000
wooden
shingles and
75,000,000
board feet of
lumber.16
In 1970,
the combined
petrochemical,
rubber, and
shipbuilding
manufactures
of both
counties were
valued at
$1.165
billion.17
A
century ago,
slow
transportation
by oxcart or
steamboat did
not lessen
this
relationship,
for the
products of
both counties
and the
commerce of
East Texas
were united at
the Jefferson
County seaport
of Sabine Pass
for
trans-shipment
abroad. In
1970, a modern
network of
highways and
bridges has
mushroomed
this
interdependency
to the point
that Vidor, an
Orange County
city, is
economically
linked to
Beaumont, and
hundreds of
south
Jefferson
County
residents
commute daily
to and from
the industries
of Orange
County. In
truth, this
triumvirate of
commercial
centers,
Beaumont,
Orange, and
Port Arthur,
Texas, conform
to the
publicity of
their
respective
Chambers of
Commerce, who
heralds the
trio of cities
as the “Golden
Triangle of
Texas.”
LATE
19th
CENTURY
COURTHOUSE-This
brick, 3-story
building,
built in 1892,
was the
county’s seat
of justice
until
demolished to
make room for
the present
structure.
FIRST
COUNTY
COURTHOUSE
The first
Jefferson
County
courthouse
built in 1854
became a
Confederate
hospital
during the
Civil War.
Only one
person in the
foreground,
John F.
Pipkin, is
identifiable.
PRESENT
JEFFERSON
COUNTY
COURTHOUSE-Despite
a mushrooming
of population,
county
agencies, the
volume of
archives, and
serious space
shortages, the
present
courthouse,
built in 1931
at a cost of
$1,000,000,
has proven to
be the best
bargain that
Jefferson
County ever
acquired. It
would entail
spending 15
times the
original cost
to replace the
structure
today.
Endnotes
1
Texas Almanac
and State
Industrial
Guide,
1972-1973 (Dallas:
A. H. Belo
Corporation,
1971), pp.
158, 293.
2
Ibid. p.
293.
3
William
Kennedy, Texas:
The Rise,
Progress, and
Prospects of
The Republic
of Texas (reprint;
Fort Worth:
The Molyneaux
Craftsmen,
Incorporated,
1925), p. 25;
W. Kennedy,
“The Geology
of Jefferson
County,
Texas,” The
American
Geologist, XIII
(April, 1894),
p. 268; Fred
W. Foster
(ed.), Illustrated
Atlas of Today
s World (12
volumes;
Chicago: Rand,
McNally and
Company,
1962), VIII,
p. 697.
4
Texas Almanac
and State
Industrial
Guide,
1961-1965 (Dallas:
A. H. Belo
Corporation,
1965), pp.
306-307.
5
William P.
Webb (ed.), The
Handbook of
Texas (2
volumes;
Austin: Texas
State
Historical
Association,
1952), II, pp.
266-267,
393-394,
524-525; H.
Hansen (ed.),
Texas: A
Guide to The
Lone Star
State (New
York: Hastings
House, 1969),
pp. 187-188.
6
E. H.
Sellards, W.
S. Adkins, and
F. B. Plummer,
The
University
of Texas
Bulletin No.
3232: The
Geology of
Texas,
Stratigraphy (Austin:
University of
Texas Ness,
1947), I, p. 780.
7
Joseph L.
Clark, The
Texas Gulf
Coast: Its
History and
Development (4
volumes; New
York: Lewis
Historical
Publishing
Company,
1955), p. 67.
8
Texas Almanac.
1972-1973, p.
293; Elton M.
Scott, Texas Geography
(Oklahoma
City: Harlow
Publishing
Company,
1952), pp.
11-15;
Kennedy, Texas:
The Rise,
Progress, and
Prospects, pp.
136-137; R. T.
Milner,
East Texas:
Its
Topography,
Soils, Timber,
Agricultural
Products,
People.
Rainfall,
Streams, and
Climate (Austin:
Von
Boeckmann-Jones
Company,
1914), p. 28.
9
Selisrds et
al, The
Geology of
Texas,
I, pt,. 787-79
1; Kennedy,
“The Geology
of Jefferson
County,
Texas,” American
Geologist, pp.
269-270; Nolan
G. Shaw (ed.),
Transactions,
Gulf Coast
Association of
Geological
Studies, XX
(22 Volumes;
Shreveport:
American
Association of
Petroleum
Geologists,
1970), pp.
318-320.
10
Edwm T.
Dumble, “The
Geology of The
Beaumont Oil
Field,”
Houston Post,
June 28,
1901; A. S.
Henley, “The
Big Hill Salt
Dome,” American
Association of
Petroleum
Geologists,
Bulletin No. 9
(Tulsa,
Oklahoma:
1925), pp.
590-593;
Kennedy, “The
Geology of
Jefferson
County,” American
Geologist, p.
271; Hansen, Texas:
A Guide to The
Lone Star
State, p. 188.
11
Texas Almanac,
1964-1965, pp.
306-307;
Texas
Almanac,
1972-1973, p.
293;
information
furnished to
the writer by
the Sabine Bar
Pilots
Association,
Port Arthur,
Texas.
12
Texas Almanac,
1972-1973, p.
293;
Kennedy, Texas:
The Rise,
Progress, and
Prospects, pp.
25-26.
13
Texas Almanac,
1972-1973,
p. 293;
Kennedy, “The
Geology of
Jefferson
County,
Texas,” American
Geologist, pp.
269-274; Shaw
(ed.), Transactions,
Gulf Coast
Association
of Geological
Studies, XX, p.
318; Hansen, Guide
to The Lone
Star State, p.
1-8.
14
H. P. N.
Gammel
(compiler), The
Laws of Texas,
1822-189 7
(10 volumes;
Austin:
Garnmel Book
Company,
1898), III, p.
926.
15
Frank W.
Johnson and
Eugene C.
Barker, A
History of
Texas and
Texans (5
volumes; New
York: American
Historical
Society,
1914), II, pp.
695-699.
16
Texas Almanac,
1972-1973, pp.
158-159;
Manuscript
Returns of
Jefferson
County and
Orange County,
Texas,
Schedule No.
V, Products of
Industry,
Tenth Census
of the United
States, 1880,
Microfilm Reel
No. 48, Texas
State
Archives,
Austin, Texas.
17
Texas Almanac,
1972-1973, pp.
293, 317.
|