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Moving - Bellville, Texas
If you are looking for a local moving company to relocate you in or out of
Bellville, TX, we can help you. Continental
Relocations moving services include packing, crating, moving, and storage if you need some time to search for your new home.
To help familiarize you with this fine neighborhood, please read our brief history about
Bellville, TX. It's interesting.
A Brief History of Bellville, Texas
Bellville, the county seat of Austin
County, is at the junction of State highways 36 and 159
and Farm roads 529, 1456, and 2429, in central Austin
County. The town was named for Thomas B. Bell,qv
one of Stephen F. Austin'sqv
Old Three Hundred,qv who
came to Texas in 1822 and built a residence in the
Bellville vicinity in 1838. In 1846 voters decided to
replace San Felipe as county seat with a new community
near the geographic center of the county. Bell offered to
donate 108 acres from the Nichols league for the new town.
His offer, plus 37˝ acres from his brother James Bell, was
officially accepted the following year, and the site was
surveyed and laid out in 1848. A post office was opened in
1849, and a temporary log courthouse was erected around
the same time. In 1850 this courthouse was replaced by a
larger structure in the central square. During the early
1850s several merchants, including Hermann Miller and a
man named Strother, opened stores around the square. A new
brick courthouse was begun in 1854, and other businesses
opened in the late 1850s.
The town grew slowly until the Gulf,
Colorado and Santa Fe Railroad reached it in the winter of
1879-80. In four months the population increased from 300
to 522. Brick structures replaced wooden ones, and opulent
Victorian homes were erected. Bellville became a
transporting point for the region's cotton crop. In 1898,
at the peak of the county's cotton boom, 8,626 bales of
cotton were shipped from the town. By 1884 Bellville had
two churches, two hotels, a bakery, a lumberyard, three
saloons, twelve general stores, a public school, and two
weekly newspapers, the Bellville Standard and the
Austin County Times. Other signs of the
town's rapidly growing prosperity included a library in
1886, the construction of a new courthouse in 1887, and
the opening of the first bank in the early 1890s.
The population, which reached 1,000 in
the mid-1880s, was heavily German, and the town's schools
provided instruction in both English and German. The local
Turnverein (see turnverein movement) opened an opera
house in 1889, and a decade later it built a large music
pavilion on the outskirts of town. Other German institutions
included a German singing society—the Concordia Gesangverein—the
Harloff Beer Hall, the Germania Hotel, and German Methodist
and Lutheran churches. In 1891 a German-language weekly, the
Bellville Wochenblatt, began publication. Another
newspaper was published by a black schoolteacher for several
years before 1900.

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