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Before
There Was Port Arthur
Port Arthur has celebrated more than 100 years as a Gulf Coast city, but
its timeline is only a fraction of the greater history of the region's
inhabitants. The shores of Sabine
Lake have been occupied more than 1,500 years; American Indians,
primarily the Atakapas,
were the earliest known settlers. The late 1700s brought the first
visits from Europeans -- English, Spanish and French. Most were
explorers who did not stay, but in the 1800s the lake became an avenue
for trade. Among the traders was Jean
Laffite, and legends of hidden treasure have lingered in Southeast
Texas.
The earliest attempt at permanently settling the area was the community
of Aurora,
located in what is now historic Port Arthur. Some lots were sold around
1840, but the project failed to take off. The area was abandoned by the
time Port Arthur was established.
Port
Arthur's Founding and Early Years
The
inspiration for Port Arthur's founding was novel; railroad pioneer Arthur
E. Stilwell, who established the town, later wrote that the ideas
for his railways and the location of his namesake city came from
"brownies" who spoke to him.
Stilwell began settling the city in 1895 with financial assistance from
Dutch investors. The founder of what is now Kansas City Southern
Railroad envisioned Port
Arthur as the southern terminus for his new railway, a center for
trade and tourism. The city dates its official beginnings to its
incorporation in 1898.
By that time Stilwell had established the Port Arthur Channel and Dock
Co., which began cutting a canal along the western edge of the lake to
deep water at Sabine Pass. The port was opened for seagoing shipping
with the arrival of the British steamer Saint Oswald in August
1899.
Pioneers arrived by the hundreds and began building homes and opening
businesses. Stilwell's contributions included the Sabine Hotel on
Lakeshore Drive, a natatorium to serve all the residents and an Export
Pier into Lake Sabine. He also brought 300 Dutch colonists to begin a
new life as farmers in this rich coastal prairie. Though many of the
Dutch names have been lost to Port Arthur, their cultural contributions
are still found in nearby Nederland.
John
Gates Takes an Interest
In
1899 Stilwell invited his friend, John
W. Gates, to visit Port Arthur. Gates quickly decided that he, too,
wanted to have an interest in the development of this new and promising
town. Upon being denied a position on the board of the railroad, he
promptly, by questionable means, had Stilwell’s interests declared
bankrupt and Gates made himself president of Kansas City Southern.
With this inauspicious beginning, Gates became the moving force in the
development of Port Arthur. Aided by the effects of the Spindletop
Gusher in 1901, he built the Mary Gates Hospital in 1909 and founded the
Port Arthur Business College (now Lamar-Port Arthur) the same year.
Gates built a magnificent home on Lakeshore Drive at a cost of $50,000.
The
Oil Boom
The eruption of the Lucas Gusher at Spindletop
in 1901 changed the fate of Port Arthur. The port quickly began to serve
the needs of the new petrochemical industry, and companies such as Gulf
Oil Corp. in 1901 and Texaco
in 1902 set up refining facilities in the city. By 1957 Port Arthur was
known as the center of the world’s prosperous oil refining facilities.
A
Patchwork of Communities
What is now called Port Arthur encompasses what were originally a number
of different communities established at different times for various
purposes. Among those that have been incorporated by the city over the
years are Griffing
Park, Pear
Ridge and Lakeview.
The names remain in common use. Two others, Sabine
Pass and Port
Acres, are still often regarded as self-contained communities, and
Sabine Pass in fact has its own school district, water district, port
authority and zip code.
Port Arthur's nearest neighbors in Jefferson County are Nederland,
Port
Neches and Groves,
all of which have rich histories of their own.
Celebrities
from Port Arthur
A number of Port Arthurans have left their impact on the country in the
arts, sports, politics and business. Easily the best-recognized
internationally is rock legend Janis
Joplin, but other names of note include artist Robert Rauschhenberg,
Texas Gov. Allen Shivers, Olympic athlete Babe Zaharias, football coach
Jimmy Johnson, football player Joe Washington, Jr., "Gone With the
Wind" actress Evelyn Keyes and businessman Mack H. Hannah, Jr.
These and many others are honored in the Museum
of the Gulf Coast.
More
on Port Arthur's History
Southeast
Texas Scenes and Trivia
The
Handbook of Texas Online
Museum of the Gulf Coast
Spindletop-Gladys City
Boomtown Museum
Sabine Pass
Battleground State Historical Park
Memories and Trivia of Old Port
Arthur
Historical Articles by W.T.
Block
Dick Dowling and Sabine Pass
East
Texas Historical Articles
Jefferson County
Landmarks
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