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Moving Destinations in Texas
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Moving - Bee County, Texas
If you are planning to move into or out
of Bee County, TX, Continental Relocation USA is your
answer. Continental Relocation is a local full service
company which can handle every aspect of your move
smoothly and without stress. Just call them or
click her for a free estimate to begin your moving process.
In the meantime, enjoy the brief
history of Bee County, TX, included here.
A Brief History of Bee County, Texas
Bee County (Q-14) is in the Rio Grande
plain of south central Texas, fifty miles northwest of
Corpus Christi and 146 miles southeast of Austin. It is
bordered on the north by Karnes and Goliad counties, on
the east by Refugio County, on the south by San Patricio
County, and on the west by Live Oak County. Beeville is
the county's largest town and seat of government. The
center point of the county is 28°25' north latitude and
97°45' west longitude. Several important thoroughfares
cross the county, including U.S. highways 59 and 181 and
State highways 202 and 359. The county's transportation
needs are also served by the Southern Pacific Railroad. An
airport built in 1966 serves Beeville and the surrounding
region.
Bee County covers 866 square miles that
slope gently to the coast. The elevation ranges from 200 to
300 feet. Geologically northern Bee County is in the Rio
Grande embayment; the Lissie and Beaumont formations extend
into the southern part of the county to form a broad, flat,
and fertile plain. Blanco, Medio, and Aransas creeks and
their tributaries, which flow in a southeasterly direction,
drain the county. The southwest corner of the county has
cracking clayey soils or loamy surfaces with cracking clayey
subsoils. The northern two-thirds of the county has dark,
alkaline soils, with loamy surface layers and cracking
clayey subsoils, while the remainder of the county has
light-colored acidic soils, with loamy surface layers and
cracking clayey subsoils. Between 41 percent and 50 percent
of the land in the county is considered prime farmland.
Most of the area is in the South Texas
Plains vegetation region, characterized by open grasslands
and scattered shrubs and cacti. Buffalo, antelopes, deer,
bears, panthers, and wolves once roamed the region; early
records indicate that the area also supported wildcats,
coyotes, and jackrabbits. Many small mammals are currently
found in the county, including foxes, squirrels, opossums,
mice, rats, gophers, skunks, moles, and bats.
The climate is subtropical and humid,
with mild winters and warm summers. Temperatures range in
January from an average low of 42° F to an average high of
65°, and in July from 73° to 96°. The average annual
rainfall is thirty inches. There is no snowfall. The growing
season averages 275 days per year, with the last freeze in
late February and the first freeze in early December.
Hurricanesqv are likely to occur during the late summer.
Bee County has been the site of human
habitation for several thousand years. Artifacts recovered
in the region suggest that the earliest human inhabitants
arrived around 6,000 to 10,000 years ago and camped along
the creek valleys. At the time of the first contact with
Europeans, various Karankawa bands inhabited the eastern
part of the future county, while Lipan Apaches and Borrados
roamed the northwest and southwest sections. The Skidi
Pawnees left arrowheads in Sulphur Creek near the site of
present Pawnee.

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