Texas Gulf Coast

Coordinates: 28°23′05″N 96°23′02″W / 28.38477°N 96.38387°W / 28.38477; -96.38387 (Texas Coastline)
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Texas Gulf Coast
Beaches of Texas
Ocean Drive at Matagorda Bay
Corpus Christi Bay
Plants in bloom at Galveston Garden Club historic site
Gulf Intracoastal Waterway at Galveston Bay
Queen Isabella Causeway route to South Padre Island
Lower Rio Grande & Port Isabel, Texas
Galveston-Port Bolivar Ferry
Sand dunes at Padre Island National Seashore
Sunset at South Padre Island
The Elissa at Galveston Island
Texas Pictorials of Gulf of Mexico Coast
Texas Coast is located in Texas
Texas Coast
Texas Coast
Texas Marginal Seacoast
Coordinates: 28°23′05″N 96°23′02″W / 28.38477°N 96.38387°W / 28.38477; -96.38387 (Texas Coastline)
Offshore water bodiesGulf of Mexico
Area
 • Total2,149,760 acres (869,980 ha)
Dimensions
 • Length
  • CRS ~ 367 miles (591 km)
  • NOAA ~ 3,359 miles (5,406 km)
WebsiteTexas Gulf Coast

Texas Gulf Coast is an intertidal zone which borders the coastal region of South Texas, Southeast Texas, and the Texas Coastal Bend. The Texas coastal geography boundaries the Gulf of Mexico encompassing a geographical distance relative bearing at 367 miles (591 km) of coastline according to CRS[1] and 3,359 miles (5,406 km) of shoreline according to NOAA.[2]

Administrative divisions of Texas Gulf Coast

Counties of the Coastal Bend

There are 14 Texas counties encompassing the Gulf of Mexico coastal boundary;

Aransas Kenedy
Brazoria Kleberg
Calhoun Matagorda
Cameron Nueces
Chambers Refugio
Galveston San Patricio
Jefferson Willacy

Topography of Texas Gulf Coast

The Texas coastal bend sustains the Texas–Gulf water resource region as a hydrological cycle unifying a drainage basin of river deltas at the littoral zone of the Texas Gulf Coast.

Elevation on Texas Gulf Coast
Stilt house located on Galveston Island
Stilt house to safeguard and oppose hazardous tropical storm surges

Texas coastal management and impact resiliency

In accordance with the

sea-level rise, and tidal flooding.[3] The Texas beach observed the initial coastal bulkhead and construction of the Galveston Seawall subsequently to the 1900 hurricane and 1915 hurricane levying a direct catastrophic impact at Galveston Island.[4][5] The Texas surf exemplifies a coastal defence with a seawall at North Padre Island, retaining wall at South Padre Island, and a revetment at Sargent Beach
.

Imagery of Texas Early 20th Century Hurricanes

Media related to Galveston Hurricane of 1900 at Wikimedia Commons
Media related to Galveston Hurricane of 1915 at Wikimedia Commons

Texas Gulf Bays and Coastal Waterways

Beginning in December 1845 concurrent to Texas annexation, the United States Congress authorized federal articles creating coastal collective districts judiciously orchestrating ports of delivery for the Texas Gulf Coast. The United States statutes were enacted into law by the 11th President of the United States James Polk.[6]

U.S. Statutes for Texas Coastal Collection Districts
Date of Enactment Public Law No. Statute Citation U.S. Presidential Administration
December 31, 1845 P.L. 29-2 Stat. 2 James K. Polk
March 3, 1847 P.L. 29-57 Stat. 182 James K. Polk
March 3, 1849 P.L. 30-122 Stat. 409 James K. Polk

The Texas gulf coast has a geography of ten coastal bays while naturally bountiful with waterway inlets;

Aransas Bay Lavaca Bay
Baffin Bay Matagorda Bay
Copano Bay Redfish Bay
Corpus Christi Bay San Antonio Bay
Galveston Bay South Bay

Waterway inlets of Texas Barrier Islands

The Texas coastal bend has a geography of waterways fringed by the Texas barrier islands. The Texas seacoast is collectively multitudinal with navigable straits traversing watercraft access as a concourse to the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway and the Texas estuaries.[7][8]

Texas barrier islands illustration
Aransas Pass ☆ Freeport Harbor Channel 28°56′10″N 95°17′47″W / 28.93600°N 95.29645°W / 28.93600; -95.29645 (Freeport Harbor Channel)
Bolivar Roads Matagorda Ship Channel
☆ Brazos River Delta 28°52′43″N 95°22′49″W / 28.87855°N 95.38028°W / 28.87855; -95.38028 (Brazos River Pass) ☆ Packery Channel 27°36′52″N 97°12′03″W / 27.61440°N 97.20082°W / 27.61440; -97.20082 (Packery Channel)
Brazos Santiago Pass Port Mansfield Channel
☆ Caney Creek Pass 28°45′11″N 95°39′30″W / 28.75305°N 95.65828°W / 28.75305; -95.65828 (Caney Creek Pass) Rollover Pass
Cavallo Pass Sabine Pass
☆ Cedar Bayou Pass 28°03′50″N 96°51′03″W / 28.06381°N 96.85091°W / 28.06381; -96.85091 (Cedar Bayou Pass) ☆ San Bernard River Pass 28°51′07″N 95°26′27″W / 28.85207°N 95.44075°W / 28.85207; -95.44075 (San Bernard River Pass)
☆ Cedar Lakes Pass 28°49′08″N 95°31′18″W / 28.81875°N 95.52153°W / 28.81875; -95.52153 (Cedar Lakes Pass) San Luis Pass
☆ Colorado River Delta 28°35′31″N 95°59′00″W / 28.59187°N 95.98328°W / 28.59187; -95.98328 (Colorado River Pass) ☆ Spring Bayou Pass 28°36′45″N 95°56′24″W / 28.61242°N 95.94006°W / 28.61242; -95.94006 (Spring Bayou Pass)
☆ Fish Pass 27°40′37″N 97°09′57″W / 27.67695°N 97.16578°W / 27.67695; -97.16578 (Fish Pass) ☆ Sunday Beach Pass 28°21′36″N 96°23′58″W / 28.35992°N 96.39941°W / 28.35992; -96.39941 (Sunday Beach Pass)

National and state parks of Texas Gulf Shores

The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department oversees the Texas state parks located on the Gulf of Mexico shores with the exception of Padre Island seashore, which is maintained by the National Park Service.

Satellite image illustrating Gulf of Mexico and Texas gulf coast during nightfall
Galveston Island State Park Padre Island National Seashore
Goose Island State Park Resaca de la Palma State Park
Mustang Island State Park Sea Rim State Park

Nature sanctuaries of Texas Coastal Zones

The United States Fish and Wildlife Service governs the nature reserves as land parcels of the National Wildlife Refuge System bordering the Texas coastal zones.[9]

Anahuac Wildlife Refuge Lower Rio Grande Valley Wildlife Refuge
Aransas Wildlife Refuge McFaddin Wildlife Refuge
Big Boggy Wildlife Refuge Moody Wildlife Refuge
Brazoria Wildlife Refuge San Bernard Wildlife Refuge
Laguna Atascosa Wildlife Refuge Texas Point Wildlife Refuge

Antiquity of Texas Gulf Coast

European Colonization of Texas Coast

Exploration of Texas Coast
Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca vessel landing in Gulf of Mexico surf
Illustration of turbulent surf and tidal landing by Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca
La Salle's sailing ships at Matagorda Bay
La Salle at Gulf of Mexico and inlet of Matagorda Bay
1686 La Salle land settlement plan
La Salle's settlement in 1686
La Salle monument at Indianola, Texas
La Salle monument[10][11]

North American expeditions and exploratory endeavors emerged with the europeans engaging their efforts for transatlantic crossings during the late fifteenth century.[12]

Exploration of Spanish Conquistador

The Texas

marginal seacoast acknowledged the arrival or entradas of Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca during the first quarter century of the 1500s.[13] Cabeza de Vaca, a Spanish conquistador and a successor of Christopher Columbus, embarked on a calamitous coastal ship landing near the shore of Galveston Island on November 6, 1528.[14][15][16]

New Spain economic currency and perils of Spanish Sea

In 1554, a Spanish cargo ship known as the San Esteban was tacking from Veracruz due north along the Texas Gulf Coast with an eastern destination at Havana and the West Indies.[17][18] The New Spain galleon encountered a severe tropical cyclone in the Spanish Sea proximate the 27th parallel north and 97th meridian west decimating the Spanish treasure fleet known as Espiritu Santo, San Estaban, and Santa Maria de Yciar.[19] The shipwreck derelict is entitled as a National Register of Historic Places.[20][21] The underwater archaeology site was established as the Mansfield Cut Underwater Archeological District at Padre Island National Seashore in 1974.[22][23]

Expedition of France Monarchy

The Texas oceanic basin was colonized by the France monarchy or Louis XIV from 1684 to 1689. In 1684, Robert Cavelier de La Salle sailing under the French ensigns guided an expedition in the Spanish Sea of four ships known as L'Aimable, La Belle, Le Joly, and St. François.[24] La Salle and Henri de Tonti were pursuing the Mississippi River Delta seeking to discover the French colonial empire of New France. In 1685, La Salle navigated beyond the Atchafalaya Basin and lower Mississippi River basin inaccurately discovering Matagorda Bay where the French cargo vessels anchored near Indianola, Texas.[25][26] During 1685 to 1689, the La Salle colonists adventured north of Lavaca Bay establishing a land settlement known as Fort St. Louis near Garcitas Creek and Inez, Texas ratifying the French colonization of Texas.[27][28][29][30]

Spanish Empire and Transformation of North Americas

The Texas Gulf coast attested to a second wave of the European colonization of the Americas with the introduction of colonialism by the Spanish Empire in 1690.[31] The España cultural evolution substantiated a christianization or religious conquest by the transatlantic crossing of the Spanish Inquisition.[32][33] The España colonization established the Viceroyalty of New Spain administratively structuring an interior province known as Spanish Texas from 1690 to 1821.[34] Beginning in 1810, the Mexican War of Independence was settled with the Spanish Empire ennobling a discontinuation of the Mexican Inquisition while creating the First Mexican Empire in 1821.

19th Century of Texas Gulf Coast

French Corsairs of Gulf Waters and Texas Shores

The Texas Gulf coast served as a

non-fictional practitioners of the piracy occupation during the Age of Sail. Galveston Bay and Matagorda Bay were the Texas coast fertile crescent for anchorage and concealment of the barque, barquentine, and brigantine class sailing vessels.[35]

French Pirate of Spanish Sea Jean Lafitte

In the early nineteenth century, Jean Lafitte and Pierre Lafitte, kinship of french basque and sea-going privateers, managed a modest metal forging establishment known as the Lafitte's Blacksmith Shop in the New Orleans French Quarter.[36][37]

In 1807, the 10th United States Congress obtained a consensus on the Embargo Act of 1807.[38][39] America's international relations legislation and Orders in Council of 1807 coerced the displacement of the Dominique You, Vincenzo Gambi, and Lafitte's piracy venture to Barataria, Louisiana geographically south of New Orleans within the Mississippi River Delta region. By 1808, the Lafittes' discovered brigandage to be an invaluable endeavor smuggling pirate booty from Barataria Bay to New Orleans.[40][41]

In 1814, Jean Lafitte received a written appeal from Royal Marines officer Edward Nicolls beckoning loyalty for the Royal Navy breach at the Battle of New Orleans.[42][43] On September 16, 1814, Commodore Daniel Patterson received orders to launch a naval offensive on the Baratarian's prize of war enterprise debilitating the Lafitte's French corsair sailing fleet.[44][45]

Baratarians and Lafitte Piracy Haven
Map
Isle Grande Terre at Barataria Bay, Louisiana

After the remnants of the War of 1812, Jean Lafitte departed Grand Terre Island and the wetlands of Louisiana setting the sails for Galveston Island, Texas.[46] The French Corsair's Galveston Island arrival was an antecedent to the 1816 Galveston inhabitants of Francisco Xavier Mina and Louis-Michel Aury.[47] In early 1817, freebooter Jean Lafitte established a piracy colony at Galveston Island where the infamous Maison Rouge was built for his domicile.[48]

Frenchman Lafitte constructed the Maison Rouge structure perpendicular of the Galveston Channel and Pelican Island with the surroundings of a corsair's piracy settlement.[49] The Brethren of the Coast discovered the Galveston landscape to be conducive for passage to the gulf waters supporting sailing ship tactics to intercept merchant ships and Spanish Empire armadas accomplishing the nautical journey from the Old World.[50]

After the

cays of Campeche Bank.[51][52][17] By 1821, the Texas seacoast exodus was resolutely coerced by the authorization of the 15th United States Congress legislative article known as the Piracy Suppression Act of 1819 enacted into law by United States President James Monroe on March 3, 1819.[53][54]

In 1814, Lord Byron authored a poetic publication The Corsair which was conceivably an attribute to the life of Jean Lafitte.[55] In 1927, Galveston's William Moody Jr. erected the Jean Lafitte Hotel in the Galveston's Strand Historic District as an observance of privateer Lafitte's origins on the Galveston Island shores.[56][57]

Mexico Governance, Texas Revolution, and Republic of Texas

Texas revered the first glance of the Texas Revolution with the Fredonian Rebellion occurring from 1826 to 1827 in the East Texas vicinity of Nacogdoches, Texas.[58][59]

In 1825, the First Mexican Republic sanctioned Stephen F. Austin’s second empresario contract of 1825 validating the Galveston strand as a customs entry point and provisional maritime port.[60][61]

Guide to the Austin's Colony Records, 1823-1841

Coahuila y Tejas and Stephen F. Austin's Empresario Contract of 1825
Stephen F. Austin's Second Empresario Contract, 7/15/1825

☆ 1825 Second Empresario Contract Summary

Stephen F. Austin's 1825 colonization contract with the state of Coahuila and Texas, with copies of the following documents:

◇ Austin's petition to the supreme executive power requesting permission to settle 200-300 families in the area of his first colony and to establish a town on Galveston Island or at some other point on Galveston Bay suitable for a port (11/6/1824)
Port of Galveston Ca. 1845
Port of Galveston Ca. 1845
◇ A communication from Austin to the governor of Coahuila and Texas concerning settlers bound for his colony that had remained on the Trinity and Neches rivers and his proposal to locate settlers near the San Antonio Road to counter Indian incursions, and remitting a small map of Galveston Island and bay with the promise to send a more exact map at a later date (2/4/1825)
◇ Governor Rafael Gonzáles to Austin consenting to the settlement of 300 families and specifying the terms and conditions of the contract (4/27/1825)
◇ Austin's acceptance of the terms and conditions of the contract (6/4/1825)
◇ Austin's communication to the governor asking permission to settle 500 families (including on Galveston Island) and requesting the enactment of a law guaranteeing the settlers' ownership of their slaves (4/4/1825)
◇ The governor's consent to locate 500 families in the area designated in Austin's contract and notice that the matters pertaining to the establishment of a port at Galveston and to the introduction of slaves was the purview of the
Mexican Congress
(5/20/1825)
◇ This copy made by Juan Antonio Padilla on 7/15/1825.[62][63][64]


Resource:

Texas Archival Resources Online (TARO)
Texas General Land Office ~ Archives and Records Program - Austin, Texas
University of Texas Libraries ~ University of Texas at Austin

In 1830, First Mexican Republic introduces the initial Galveston Custom house preferably referred as the Old Galveston Customhouse.[65] The Mexican Republic customs were administered under the authority of Army of the Three Guarantees collecting custom duties at the Port of Galveston.[66] In 1831, Mexican Commander Manuel de Mier y Terán appointed Jorge Fisher as the customs agent for the Galveston maritime port of entry.[67]

The Galveston East End Historic District is a narrative of the original Greek Revival architecture of Galveston Island.[68] The Galveston historic district is a few city blocks from Classical Revival architecture of the Old Galveston Custom House.[69][70][71] The Galveston East End's emergence, occurring during the first half century of the long nineteenth century, was prized by the governance of Spanish America and occupancy of Spanish Texas.

After the conflict of cultural imperialism ceased between Mexico and Spain, the Law of April 6, 1830 and Treaty of Limits furthered the successive uniformity known as Mexican Texas from 1828 to 1836.[72][73][74]

In 1836, Texas independence was expeditiously declared from the imperialism of Mexico subsequently to the San Felipe de Austin and Texian Consultation events;

Conflict Events and Diplomatic Concords for Republic of Texas
☆ Cessation of the Battle of San Jacinto at Galveston Bay
Armistice of 1843 and peace negotiations with Mexico[77]
Texas annexation on December 29, 1845[78][79][80]
Mexican-American War of 1846 to 1848 devised by the United States to sequester the Republic of Mexico depredations within the Texas territory[81][82]
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo establishes the United States and Mexican Boundary Commission appointed to define the Mexico–United States border.[83][84] The Texas thirty-first parallel to twenty-sixth parallel north latitude boundary encompasses the Rio Grande river at approximately 850 miles (1,368 km) vitally diversified by the arid mountainous vista of the Texas Big Bend.[85]
The 1848 international law was substantiated in 1855 by the guardianship of William Emory who provision the International Boundary Marker No. 1, U.S. and Mexico.[86][87] In 1889, Mexico and United States organized the International Boundary and Water Commission governing the international boundary markers provided the meander of the Rio Grande geographical embankments and river channel.[88]

and the forthcoming establishment and separation of powers for the Republic of Texas.[89][90]

Mexican State Naval Operations and Texas Gulf Coast

The Texas Gulf Coast provided a naval supply lifeline for the Texian Army and Texian Militia during the Texas Revolution sustaining from 1835 to 1836. The Texian Navy sustained the Texian revolutionary infantry forces by providing a flotilla for the safe passage of munitions and supply provisions.[91] The Mobile and New Orleans harbors routing merchant ships defined a vast maritime area for the Texas Navy skirting the Texas seacoast while surveilling the Mexican state nautical hostilities and naval warfare on the Third Coast.[92]

The Mexican Navy enforced coastline patrols and naval blockades of the Texas Gulf Coast harbors during the strife for Texas independence. The Texas naval forces appropriated four man-of-war schooners as a naval offensive for the sailing ship tactics of the Mexican Navy. The Texas Navy engaged four warships from 1835 to 1838 known as Brutus, Independence, Invincible, and Liberty for the establishment of the Republic of Texas.[93]

Infectious Disease Epidemic and Texas Seacoast

During the

ports through merchant ships, nautical vessels, and seafaring watercraft along the Texas coastline.[96] The predatorial Aedes aegypti yield a mosquito-borne disease aggressively disseminating an infection known as yellow fever on the South Texas civil parishes from the nineteenth century to the early twentieth century.[97][98][99]

consecrated grounds are an epitome of the case fatality rates and communicable infection rates where the coastal populace was afflicted by the arbovirus epidemic at Galveston, Texas from 1839 to 1900.[102]

Texas Historic Preservation Sites by Texas Historical Commission
"Galveston Immigration Stations – Galveston County ~ Marker Number: 7469". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1993.
"Galveston Quarantine Stations – Galveston County ~ Marker Number: 7474". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1993.
"Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1862 – Matagorda County ~ Marker Number: 18121". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 2015.
"Huntsville Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1867 – Walker County ~ Marker Number: 18491". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 2016.
"Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1867 – Fayette County ~ Marker Number: 18523". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 2016.

United States National Security of Texas Gulf Coastline

The Texas Gulf coast had a vital necessity for

international relations of superiority cultivated during the late 19th century to the mid-20th century. The United States artillery installations were erected during the Spanish–American War frequently referred as Cuban War of Independence, and relatively to the world war
periods of the 1910s and 1940s.

The Texas coastal artillery command posts were established as casemates or pillboxes developed with reinforced concrete strategically situated at Bolivar Peninsula, Texas and Galveston Island, Texas. The United States Army Coast Artillery Corps commanded the operations of the coastal artillery emplacements which originated as Fort Crockett, Fort San Jacinto, Fort Travis, and inclusion of Sabine Pass.[103][104][105] The artillery fortifications achieved the purposes of economic warfare or embargo for Galveston Bay, vigilance of maritime security, and safeguarding the trade routes for Port of Galveston and the Port of Houston.[106]

Imagery of Texas Gulf Coast Fortress Installations

Media related to Fort Crockett at Galveston Island at Wikimedia Commons
Media related to Fort San Jacinto at Galveston Island East Point at Wikimedia Commons
Media related to Fort Travis at Bolivar Peninsula at Wikimedia Commons[107]
Media related to Sabine Pass at Gulf of Mexico & Sabine River at Wikimedia Commons[108]

20th century

Vietnamese refugees

At the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, came the first wave of refugees to flee but it was during the week of April 25th to the 1st of May.[109] A year later in 1976, there were Indochina refugees residing in all states and even American Samoa, District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico.[109] The leading state with the most refugees was California and the second was Texas with 11,000 refugees.[109] The American unemployment rate during this time was 9-percent, and the refugees were considered a threat to the American workforce.[109] In 1976 a poll was created to find the consensus on how Americans felt about refugees staying in America.[109] This poll is known as the, Gallup Poll, and if found that 54-percent of American felt that the refugees should not be allowed to remain in the United States.[109] For the Indochina refugees this made integrating more difficult as there were language barriers, their networks dwindled as they were separated by state lines and how they were portrayed in the media.[109] There were also refugee camps throughout the United States.[109] These both helped and hindered their integration into America.[109] Soon the narrative surrounding the arrivals of the refugees became one that painted them as immigrants rather than a refugee and even the media had picked up on the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan’s (KKKK) rhetoric of painting them as communists.[110] [109]

The first page of, Vietnamese Fishermen's Association V Knights of the Ku Klux Klan in 1982

After the Vietnam War, 100 Vietnamese refugees were placed in Seadrift, Texas.[110] At the time the city was composed of only 1,000 people and their local economy heavily relied on fishing for shrimp and crab.[110] Upon the arrival of the Vietnamese refugees, they used their skills of fishing to integrate into America and have an income.[110] The refugees did not know the English language, nor the fishing laws for the region.[110] The white fisherman in Seadrift became angry with the refugees as they were not following the legal guidelines to fish.[110] Louis Beam and the Texas Klansmen joined forces with the white fisherman to enforce laws that they felt the government was not enforcing and to address their goals of fighting communism on American soil.[110] In doing so, the Klansmen and white fishermen took to the ocean with military grade firearms and pointed them at the refugees both in water and on land.[110] This prompted the Vietnamese Fishermen’s Association to take legal action against Louis Beam and those involved in the violence and harassment of the Vietnamese refugees in the Gulf of Texas in 1982.[110] The judge, Gabrielle McDonald handled the case. She ruled in favor of the Vietnamese Fishermen’s Association.[110]

See also

Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary Rigs-to-Reefs
Great Texas Coastal Birding Trail SS Oaxaca (1942 Steamboat)
Hannah Elizabeth (ship)
S.V. Cynthia Woods (2008 Capsize)
Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies San Felipe incident (1835)
Laura (1835 steamboat) University of Texas Marine Science Institute

References

  1. ^ "U.S. International Borders: Brief Facts", Congressional Research Service, November 9, 2006
  2. ^ "Shoreline Mileage of the United States" (PDF). NOAA Office for Coastal Management. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
  3. ^ "Texas Coastal Management Program". The Texas General Land Office. State of Texas.
  4. ^ "1900 Storm". Galveston & Texas History Center. Rosenberg Library.
  5. ^ "1915 Storm". Galveston & Texas History Center. Rosenberg Library.
  6. ^ Polk, James K. (December 8, 1846). "Second Annual Message to Fellow-Citizens of the Senate and of the House of Representatives". The American Presidency Project ~ John Woolley and Gerhard Peters. University of California, Santa Barbara.
  7. ^ "Gulf Intracoastal Waterway – Brazoria County ~ Marker Number: 9564". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1967.
  8. ^ "Corpus Christi and the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway – Nueces County ~ Marker Number: 17184". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 2012.
  9. ^ "Texas Coastal Zone Boundaries" (PDF). The Texas General Land Office. State of Texas.
  10. ^ "La Salle Monument – Calhoun County ~ NRHP Number: 100002757". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. July 27, 2018.
  11. ^ "Rene Robert Cavelier Sieur de la Salle" [Indianola in Calhoun County, Texas - The American South (West South Central)]. HMDB.org. The Historical Marker Database.
  12. ^ "European Exploration and Development" [European Exploration of North America and What is Now Texas Began in the 15th Century]. Texas Almanac. Texas State Historical Association (TSHA).
  13. ^ Thoms, Alston V. "Learning From Cabeza De Vaca". Texas Beyond History. University of Texas at Austin.
  14. ^ "Karankawa Campsite – Galveston County ~ Marker Number: 7502". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1966.
  15. ^ "West Galveston Island – Galveston County ~ Marker Number: 11591". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1967.
  16. ^ "West Galveston Island" [Galveston in Galveston County, Texas - The American South (West South Central)]. HMDB.org. The Historical Marker Database.
  17. ^ .
  18. ^ Arnold III, J. Barto; Wickman, Melinda Arceneaux. "Padre Island Spanish Shipwrecks of 1554". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  19. ^ "Santa Maria de Yciar, San Esteban, Espiritu Santu". Raymondville in Willacy County, Texas – The American South (West South Central). The Historical Marker Database.
  20. ^ "Mansfield Cut Underwater Archeological District ~ NRHP 74002083". National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior. January 21, 1974.
  21. ^ "Mansfield Cut Underwater Archeological District ~ NRL 2074002083". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. January 21, 1974.
  22. ^ "Photograph of a Historic Property in Texas" [Artifacts from 1554 Shipwreck at Mansfield Cut Archeological District]. University of North Texas Libraries ~ The Portal to Texas History. Texas Historical Commission.
  23. ^ "Photograph of a Historic Property in Texas" [Diver Investigating 1554 Shipwreck at Mansfield Cut Archeological District]. University of North Texas Libraries ~ The Portal to Texas History. Texas Historical Commission.
  24. ^ Weddle, Robert S. "La Salle Expedition". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  25. ^ "Rene Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle – Calhoun County ~ Marker Number: 4243". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1936.
  26. ^ "Indianola – Calhoun County ~ Marker Number: 2642". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1963.
  27. ^ "Fort St. Louis – Victoria County ~ Marker Number: 2020". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1936.
  28. ^ "Fort St. Louis – Victoria County ~ NRHP Number: 71000969". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. March 31, 1971.
  29. ^ "Fort St. Louis". Texas Beyond History. University of Texas at Austin.
  30. ^ Weddle, Robert S. "La Salle's Texas Settlement". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  31. ^ Joseph, Harriett Denise; Chipman, Donald E. "Spanish Texas". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  32. ^ Faulk, Odie B. "Presidios". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  33. ^ Wright, O.M.I., Robert E. "Spanish Missions". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  34. ^ Weddle, Robert S. "Spanish Mapping of Texas". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  35. ^ "Barque At Galveston Wharf Pier". Rosenberg Library Museum. Galveston & Texas History Center.
  36. ^ Warren, Harris Gaylord. "Laffite, Jean". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  37. ^ Cartwright, Mark. "Jean Lafitte". World History Encyclopedia. World History Foundation ~ World History Publishing.
  38. ^ "Embargo of 1807". Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia. Thomas Jefferson's Monticello ~ Thomas Jefferson Foundation.
  39. ^ "War of 1812–1815" [Milestones in the History of U.S. Foreign Relations]. Office of the Historian ~ Foreign Service Institute. United States Department of State.
  40. ^ "Jean Lafitte: History & Mystery". National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior.
  41. ^ "Bronze statue of Jean Lafitte". Rosenberg Library Museum. Galveston & Texas History Center.
  42. JSTOR 4231887
    .
  43. .
  44. .
  45. .
  46. ^ "Lafitte's Grove – Galveston County ~ Number: 7509". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1936.
  47. ^ "Near Campsites of Louis-Michel Aury and Francisco Xavier Mina – Galveston County ~ Marker Number: 9925". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1968.
  48. ^ "Maison Rouge, Galveston". Rosenberg Library Museum. Galveston & Texas History Center.
  49. ^ "Jean Lafitte – Galveston County ~ Marker Number: 7508". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1965.
  50. ^ "Jean Lafitte's Headquarters". Rosenberg Library Museum. Galveston & Texas History Center.
  51. Field and Laboratory ~ SMU Scholar. Southern Methodist University
    . pp. 59, 64.
  52. ^ Dunn, Roy Sylvan. "Hurricanes". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  53. ^ Fifteenth Congress (February 24, 1819). "Anti-Piracy Act of 1819 ~ U.S. Senate Approval". Journal of the Senate of the United States of America, 1789–1873. VIII (Wednesday, February 24, 1819). U.S. Library of Congress: 303.
  54. ^ Fifteenth Congress (March 1, 1819). "Anti-Piracy Act of 1819 ~ U.S. House of Representatives Approval". Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States. XII (Monday, March 1, 1819). U.S. Library of Congress: 329.
  55. ^ Byron, George Gordon (1814). "The Corsair: A Tale". Internet Archive. London, United Kingdom: Thomas Davidson, Whitefriars.
  56. ^ "Jean Lafitte Hotel – Galveston County ~ NRHP Number: 84001705". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. August 14, 1984.
  57. ^ "Jean Lafitte Hotel". National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior.
  58. ^ McDonald, Archie P. "Fredonian Rebellion". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  59. ^ "Transcript of Letter from Stephen F. Austin to the Political Chief of Texas" [Copy of transcript for a letter from Stephen F. Austin to the Political Chief of Texas (Rafael Gonzáles), in which Austin shares excerpts of letters he has received from colonists living in Nacogdoches describing the rising tensions and subsequent effects of the Fredonian Rebellion on life in the area]. University of North Texas Libraries ~ The Portal to Texas History. Austin Papers: Series IV, 1825-1827. Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.
  60. ^ "Certified Copy of Stephen F. Austin's Second Empresario Contract of 1825". Legacy of Texas. Texas State Historical Association.
  61. ^ Barker, Eugene C. "Empresario". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  62. ^ De La Teja, Jesús "Frank". "Padilla, Juan Antonio". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  63. ^ "Transcript of a List of Archives, 1827" [Copy of transcript for a list, in 1827, of the archives given to the new city hall by Stephen F. Austin]. University of North Texas Libraries ~ The Portal to Texas History. Austin Papers: Series IV, 1825-1827 (in Spanish). Dolph Briscoe Center for American History. pp. 4–5.
  64. ^ "Land Grants and Political Divisions, 1821-1836". Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection ~ Historical Maps of Texas. University of Texas at Austin.
  65. ^ "Galveston Custom House" [Galveston Custom House (502 20th Street) Oblique View]. University of Texas Libraries Collections. The University of Texas at Austin.
  66. ^ Sealy, Edward Coyle. "Galveston Wharves". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  67. ^ "Manuel de Mier y Teran Maritime Report Concerning Port of Galveston" [Copy of transcript for a report made by Manuel de Mier y Terán, regarding the seizure of the schooner, The Canon, by Jorge Fisher]. The Portal to Texas History. University of North Texas Libraries. May 6, 1831.
  68. ^ "East End Historic District – Galveston County ~ NRHP 75001979". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1975.
  69. ^ "Civil and Diplomatic Expenses Appropriations, 1854 - P.L. 33-242" (PDF). USLaw.Link. 33rd Congress, Session I, Chapter CCXLII ~ 10 Stat. 571. United States Government Publishing Office. August 4, 1854.
  70. ^ "Custom-House at Galveston, 1859 - Public Resolution 35-7" (PDF). USLaw.Link. 35th Congress, Session II ~ 11 Stat. 441. United States Government Publishing Office. February 9, 1859.
  71. LCCN 96512646
    .
  72. ^ Bishop, Curtis. "Law of April 6, 1830". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  73. ^ Fagoaga, Francisco (December 1, 1832). "Treaty of Limits ~ January 12, 1828". University of North Texas Libraries ~ The Portal to Texas History (in Spanish). Star of the Republic Museum.
  74. ^ de León, Arnoldo; de la Teja, Jesús "Frank". "Mexican Texas". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  75. ^ Christian, Carole E. "Washington-on-the-Brazos, TX". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  76. ^ Weir, Merle. "Velasco, TX". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  77. ^ "Republic of Texas ~ Negotiating for Peace With Mexico". Republic of Texas Online Exhibit. Texas State Library and Archives Commission.
  78. ^ "State of Texas Admission to the Union of United States - Public Resolution 29-1" (PDF). USLaw.Link. 29th Congress, Session I ~ 9 Stat. 108. United States Government Publishing Office. December 29, 1845.
  79. ^ "United States Judicial District Act of 1845 ~ P.L. 29-1" (PDF). USLaw.Link. 29th Congress, Session I ~ 9 Stat. 1. United States Government Publishing Office. December 29, 1845.
  80. ^ "State of Congress Representation Act of 1870 - P.L. 41-39" (PDF). USLaw.Link. 41st Congress, Session II ~ 16 Stat. 80. United States Government Publishing Office. March 30, 1870.
  81. ^ Haynes, Sam W. "Mexican Invasions of 1842". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  82. ^ "State of War with Republic of Mexico, 1846 ~ P.L. 29-16" (PDF). USLaw.Link. 29th Congress, Session I ~ 9 Stat. 9. United States Government Publishing Office. May 13, 1846.
  83. ^ "Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo" [Treaty of Peace, Friendship, Limits, and Settlement with the Republic of Mexico]. Primary Documents in American History ~ National Expansion and Reform, 1815-1860. United States Library of Congress. February 2, 1848.
  84. ^ Hewitt, Harry. "Mexican-United States Boundary Commission". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  85. ^ Timm, Jacqueline E. "Rio Grande Boundary". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  86. ^ "International Boundary Marker No. 1, El Paso, Texas" [International Boundary Marker No. 1, U.S. and Mexico Sits in the Southern Hills of El Paso, Texas]. NPGallery Digital Asset Management System ~ U.S. National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior. 1855.
  87. ^ "International Boundary Marker No. 1, El Paso, Texas" [International Boundary Monument No. 1, U.S. and Mexico]. NPGallery Digital Asset Management System ~ U.S. National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior. 1855.
  88. ^ Anonymous. "International Boundary and Water Commission". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  89. ^ "Republic of Texas ~ The Archives War of 1842". Republic of Texas Online Exhibit. Texas State Library and Archives Commission.
  90. ^ "Texas State Law – Chapter 91 ~ Capitol for the State of Texas" [The Laws of Texas, 1822–1897 – Volume 3]. The Portal to Texas History. University of North Texas Libraries. February 14, 1852. pp. 978–982.
  91. ^ "Fortune Favors the Brave - The Story of the Texas Navy". Texas State Library ~ Exhibits. Texas State Library and Archives Commission.
  92. ^ "Galveston in the Republic of Texas – Galveston County ~ Number: 7457". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1965.
  93. ^ "First Navy of the Republic of Texas – Galveston County ~ Number: 7537". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1936.
  94. ^ Doleshal, PhD, Zachary. "The Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1867". East Texas History. Sam Houston State University.
  95. ^ Burns, Chester R.; Wooten, Heather Green. "Epidemic Diseases". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  96. ^ Anonymous. "Ocean Shipping". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  97. ^ "Livingston Lindsay to Texas Governor Elisha M. Pease, October 9, 1867" [Letter on the Devastating Yellow Fever Epidemic in La Grange]. Portraits of Texas Governors ~ War, Ruin, and Reconstruction Part II, 1866–1876. Texas State Library and Archives Commission.
  98. ^ Weaver, Briana. "Margaret Lea Houston". East Texas History. Sam Houston State University.
  99. ^ Bernstein, Robert. "Public Health". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  100. ^ "Broadway Cemetery Historic District - THSA 2014000340". Texas Historic Site Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. June 13, 2014.
  101. ^ "Broadway Cemetery Historic District - NRHP 14000340". NPGallery Digital Asset Management System ~ U.S. National Park Service. U.S. Department of the Interior. May 6, 2014.
  102. ^ "System of Quarantine on the Southern and Gulf Coasts, 1872 ~ Public Resolution No. 6" (PDF). USLaw.Link. 42nd Congress, Session II ~ 17 Stat. 396. United States Government Publishing Office. June 6, 1872.
  103. ^ Darst, Maury. "Fort Crockett". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  104. ^ Darst, Maury. "Fort San Jacinto". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  105. ^ Darst, Maury. "Fort Travis". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association.
  106. ^ "Galveston: Gateway to Texas – Galveston County ~ Marker Number: 7460". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1965.
  107. ^ "Fort Travis – Galveston County ~ Marker Number: 7452". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1993.
  108. ^ "Spanish-American War Fortifications ~ Jefferson County – Marker Number: 10568". Texas Historic Sites Atlas. Texas Historical Commission. 1983.
  109. ^
    JSTOR 2545179
    .
  110. ^ .

Bibliography

Weddle, Robert S. (1985). Spanish Sea: the Gulf of Mexico in North American Discovery, 1500–1685. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press.
OCLC 11468026
.
Weddle, Robert S. (1991). The French Thorn: Rival Explorers in the Spanish Sea, 1682-1762. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press.
OCLC 23286547
.
Weddle, Robert S. (1995). Changing Tides: Twilight and Dawn in the Spanish Sea, 1763-1803. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press.
OCLC 32202575
.
Francaviglia, Richard V. (1998). From Sail to Steam: Four Centuries of Texas Maritime History, 1500-1900. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press.
OCLC 36548957
.
Davis, William C. (2006). The Pirates Laffite: The Treacherous World of the Corsairs of the Gulf. Orlando, Florida: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
OCLC 68570266
.
Williams, C. Herndon (2010). Texas Gulf Coast Stories. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing.
OCLC 664519681
.
Winningham, Geoff (2010). Traveling the Shore of the Spanish Sea: the Gulf Coast of Texas and Mexico. College Station, Texas: Texas A & M University Press.
OCLC 613354738
.
McDougal, Steph (2014). Lighthouses of Texas ~ Images of America. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing.
OCLC 858731310
.
Blackburn, James B.; Galveston Bay Conservation & Preservation Assn. (2015). The Book of Texas Bays. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press.
OCLC 907399500
.
Lardas, Mark (2016). Texas Shipwrecks ~ Images of America. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing.
OCLC 930257191
.
Lardas, Mark (2021). The Vanished Texas Coast: Lost Port Towns, Mysterious Shipwrecks, and Other True Tales. Charleston, South Carolina: The History Press. .

Periodical Publications

Harrigan, Stephen (January 1979). "In Search of La Salle". Texas History. Texas Monthly.
Tyer, Brad (September 1996). "Dig This" [A salvage operation in Matagorda Bay unearths a bureaucratic feud]. Texas History. Texas Monthly.
Dingus, Anne (November 2002). "Lights Out". Texas History. Texas Monthly.
Gustavus, Sarah (November 2002). "Texas History 101" [Half Moon Reef Lighthouse served as a beacon for ships coming into Matagorda Bay]. Texas History. Texas Monthly.
Harrigan, Stephen (March 2017). "They Came From the Sky" [The first Spanish conquistadors arrive on our shores, starving, haggard, and in no mood for conquest]. Texas History. Texas Monthly.
Berwald, Juli (September 2021). "Behind the Fight to Save the Gulf's Spectacular Coral Reefs". Texas Travel & Outdoors. Texas Monthly.

Texas Coastal Science

External links