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Moving - Corpus Christi, Texas
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Have you read the history of Corpus
Christi, TX? Well, here is a brief summary for your
pleasure.
A Brief History of Corpus Christi, Texas
Corpus Christi, a seaport at the mouth
of the Nueces River on the west end of Corpus Christi
Bay,qv is the county seat of Nueces County and the largest
city on the South Texas coast. It lies at the junction of
Interstate 37 and U. S. highways 77 and 181, 210 miles
southwest of Houston. The city's transportation needs are
also served by the Texas Mexican, Southern Pacific, and
Missouri Pacific railways and Corpus Christi International
Airport. In prehistoric times the area was inhabited by
various tribes of the Karankawa Indian group, which
migrated up and down the Coastal Bend region. Its not
known who the first Europeans were to visit the area, but
it seems most likely that Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vacaqv and
his band were the first Europeans who actually set foot on
the site. The Spanish, however, largely ignored the region
until the 1680s, when Frenchmen under René Robert Cavelier,
Sieur de La Salle,qv established a colony in Texas.
Spanish authorities dispatched an expedition to the area
in 1689 under Alonso De León,qv but the Corpus Christi Bay
area remained unknown and unexplored until 1747, when
Joaquín de Orobio y Basterra led an expedition down the
Nueces River, reaching the bay on February 26. After
Orobio's return, José de Escandón,qv governor and captain
general of Nuevo Santander,qv proposed founding a
settlement at the mouth of the Nueces called Villa de
Vedoya. In the summer of 1749, fifty families accompanied
by a squadron of soldiers and two priests set out to
colonize the area, but because of prolonged drought and a
lack of adequate provisions they gave up before reaching
their goal.
In 1787 Manuel de Escandón, son of José
de Escandón, proposed another settlement at the mouth of the
Nueces, but the project never advanced beyond the planning
stages. In the late 1780s and early 1790s Spanish
authorities considered moving Nuestra Señora del Refugio
Mission to the mouth of the Nueces, but abandoned the idea
because of continuing friction with the Lipan Apaches.
During the 1830s two further failed attempts were made to
establish colonies at the mouth of the Nueces. German
nobleman Baron Johann von Rachnitzqv tried to found a German
settlement there, but the ship carrying the colonists was
prevented from landing by the French during the Pastry War.
Around the same time, abolitionist Benjamin Lundyqv proposed
the establishment of a colony of former slaves at the site;
however, he dropped the plans after the outbreak of the
Texas Revolution. The area thus remained uninhabited until
September 1839, when Henry Lawrence Kinneyqv and his partner
William P. Aubrey established a trading post on the west
shore of Corpus Christi Bay, reportedly near what is now the
400 block of North Broadway. Kinney and Aubrey quickly
developed a brisk illegal trade with Mexico. In 1841 Capt.
Enrique Villarreal,qv a rancher from Matamoros who had been
granted the land by the Mexican government, led a force of
300 men to reclaim his property and seize the arms stored at
Kinney's stockade. Kinney, who at the time reportedly had
only eight men under his command, however, managed to
negotiate an agreement to purchase the land. Kinney and
Aubrey's post soon became the focus of trade in the area.
Attacks by Mexican bands forced the abandonment of the post
in 1842, but Kinney returned a short time later and
reestablished his business. A post office opened the same
year with Aubrey as postmaster. By the mid-1840s the
settlement—now known as Corpus Christi ("the Body of
Christ")—was a small village. An English visitor described
it as consisting of "Colonel Kinney's fortified house, about
a half dozen stores, and a grog shop or two"; another
visitor around the same time reported that the village had
some fifty families. In 1846 the town became county seat the
of newly formed Nueces County. It was incorporated on April
25, 1846, but because no public officials were elected, the
corporation was repealed, and the town was not
reincorporated until February 16, 1852.
In September 1845 Gen. Zachary Taylor'sqv
army encamped nearby, and in the late 1840s numerous
fortune-seekers passed through to join wagon trains headed
for California, but few settlers put down permanent roots.
In 1852 Kinney organized a state fair—reportedly the first
in Texas—in an attempt to put Corpus Christi on the map, but
it proved to be a failure and did little to spur the town's
growth. A yellow fever epidemic struck the town in 1854,
decimating the population, and difficulty in obtaining fresh
water plagued the city throughout the 1850s. The chief
impediment to growth, however, was the lack of a deepwater
port, a problem that occupied the town's leaders for the
next seventy years. Large ships, unable to enter Corpus
Christi Bay, were forced to anchor offshore where supplies
were offloaded onto lighters, shallow-draft vessels capable
of navigating the narrow, twisting channels of the bay.
Kinney, undismayed by the problems, continued to promote the
town, placing glowing advertisements in northern newspapers
and in Europe, which breathlessly described the natural
beauty and business opportunities of the area. Some
immigrants came and the population grew slowly, but the town
continued to reflect something of a frontier character
through the early 1850s. Public drunkenness and lawlessness
were common. For many years there was no effective city
government. By the middle of the decade, however, the
situation began to change. The first schools opened around
1854, and by the eve of the Civil Warqv the town had several
established churches and several fraternal lodges. During
the 1850s steamships of the Morgan Linesqv began making
regular stops, and the volume of trade through the city
gradually increased. By 1859 it was reported that some
forty-five vessels carried on trade between Corpus Christi
and Indianola alone. In 1860 the population reached 1,200
and the town reported four teachers, one music instructor,
three ministers, a priest, three doctors, and eight lawyers.
Men, however, outnumbered women, with seventy-three more men
than women, a reflection of the town's continuing frontier
character. Nearly one-third of all of all residents were
foreign born.

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