| Wharton
County proper was created in 1846 from parts of Jackson and
Matagorda counties and named after James A. and William H. Wharton,
brothers who were active in the Texas Revolution. |
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El Campo is situated in the center of an area, which is now known
as the Coastal Plains of Texas. Because of the bountiful native
grasses, these plains were used as open range for cattle by Spanish
explorers, later by Mexican cattlemen and then settlers brought
in by Colonist Stephen F. Austin. After Texas won its independence
from Mexico, German, Irish and Swedish immigrants moved into the
area and cattle production remained the principal income of the
people.
Cattle were driven to Indianola and Port Lavaca, where they were
slaughtered - not for food, but only for hides and tallow, which
were easily shipped by boat to foreign countries and northwestern
ports of the United States.
Between
1850 and 1865, trail drivers were slated along the old Atascosita
and Opelousas Trail to New Orleans and Mobile to railroads where
beef could be shipped to the south and to the northeast. Because
so many rivers and forests hampered the driving of the cattle, as
soon as rail was available, herds were driven up the Chisholm and
other trail routes to Abilene and Kansas because of more suitable
open country.
| In
1882, a railroad camp (section No. 230) was situated where
El Campo now stands. The little camp was first called "Prairie
Switch" because it served as a switching point on the
Houston-Victoria Railroad and a shipping point on the New
York, Texas and Mexican Railroad. |
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In
fact, during the mid-1880s, El Campo was the largest prairie
hay shipping point in the entire United States. |
| "The
designation 'Pearl of the Prairie' was given to the site
by American cowboys, perhaps because the light in the section
house looked like a pearl across the prairie at night." |
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In the late 1880s, railroads were becoming much more extensive
in Texas. A continuation of a railroad by Count Telferner from Houston
to Victoria allowed easier shipment of cattle.
| Herds
to be shipped by rail were handled by predominantly Mexican
cowboys who would camp for some time holding the herds for
shipment at "Prairie Switch." In 1889, the settlement
took the Mexican name "The Camp" and named it "El
Campo." |
Since much land was originally under government ownership, railroads
were given large grants of land in exchange for building roads in
this county. In return, the railroads would sell this land to settlers
in addition to homestead grants already given to the settlers. More
and more fencing was done because farmers needed to protect their
crops from the large number of cattle herds.
Ranching
became the chief industry and thousands of cattle were shipped
yearly to San Antonio. Four large ranches - The Texas Land
and Cattle Company (K.O. Ranch) to the south, Pierce Ranch to the
east, Herder Ranch to the west, and Brown Ranch to the north, surrounded
the new settlement.
| It
didn't take farmers long to realize that the rich blackland
and mixed soils along
with an abundance of ground water, |
| could
be better utilized for other crops besides hay, although in
1901 over 1,000 cars
of hay were bought by El Campo merchants. Soon cotton, rice
and corn became the crops of choice. |
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Settlers from other regions and countries began moving into the
area and soon a cotton gin was built and the Farmers Warehouse established
for marketing land and purchasing farm products and supplies.
While
the town was still in its infancy, the organization of schools and
churches began. The first schoolhouse was a one-room shack, but
by 1895 an independent school was created.
Between 1890 and 1898, seven congregations organized their churches
- Swedish, Lutheran, Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, Catholic
and German Lutheran.
The real development of El Campo did not begin until the destructive
fire of 1896, in which the principal business section of the city
was destroyed. By 1900, there were 130 businesses in El Campo. However,
in 1901, just when the town had become prosperous again, another
fire destroyed a large part of the mostly wood framed buildings.
Brick buildings replaced the now charred long rows of wooden structures.
The El Campo Brick and Tile Company, established in 1909 by W.E.
Chandler, (located on west Monseratte at Palacios Street) provided
building materials and bricks for many of the permanent structures
at the turn of the century. The bricks can be found in some of the
downtown buildings today.
In 1901, a library was organized and in 1902, the
first bank was established. The City of El Campo became "officially" incorporated
in 1905. A municipal government was established and administered
by a council composed of five aldermen and a mayor, who served as
president of the council. The first ordinance was published in June
of 1905.
| The
El Campo Ice and Water Company (located in the 300 block of
W. Monseratte) was established in 1907, which was a |
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plant designed
to light businesses, streets and homes. The facility also
supplied ice for the entire city.
In
1908 a train load of more than 200 homesteaders arrived to
add even more people to the melting pot of immigrants, along
with the establishment of the El Campo Volunteer Fire Department. |
The
fire station was originally located on S. Mechanic in the
J.B. Morford plot and still stands today.
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In 1903, the El Campo Rice milling company was established and
by 1904 there were 70 rice farmers around El Campo with 126 pumping
stations and another rice mill - the Broussard Rice Mill.
1914 brought the consolidation of the two mills into El Campo Rice
Milling Company (now known as Elco). At one time dried rice hulls
were compressed and used as brick and experimental building materials.
Medicine came to El Campo in 1890, with the arrival of two physicians
and in 1912 the first hospital opened. The first newspaper issue
was published in 1894 and came to be succeeded by two others.
El Campo's birth into "civilized" wealth brought the
building of an opera house, built in the late 1880s to early 1890s
(located on
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S.
Washington); a movie house, built in 1908 and known as the "Nickelodeon"
located on N. Washington; and a gazebo for monthly wrestling
matches, located in the now Alamo Park. |
A second theater was built in the 1920s and was called the Normana
Theater.
The
Rice Hotel, located on E. Monseratte, was built in the 1880s and
once was a hot spot in El Campo.
1909
brought disaster to El Campo again as "The Great Storm"
hit. Many El Campo businesses suffered greatly, but the perseverance
and intestinal fortitude of the citizenry held true as they started
over again.
The mid 1930s brought the newly discovered commodity
of "liquid
gold" as oil and gas spawned the way of the petroleum and oil
field related industries. The petroleum industry also
| brought
new life and spurred on the development of new, more modern
technology, as
well as diversifying the local economic base. |
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