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WHEN
SOUTHEAST
TEXAS MAIL HAD
4 FEET:
BEAUMONT'S
FRONTIER
POSTAL SYSTEM
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
ENTERPRISE-JOURNAL,
August 17,
1975
While
Texas was
still a
Mexican
province in
December,
1835, the lone
horseman who
reined
eastward into
Beaumont at
sunset was
most likely
the Liberty
post rider.
The 107-mile
mail route No.
6 from Liberty
to "Calcasieu,
U. S. A.,"
with its stops
at Beaumont,
Old Jefferson
(present-day
Bridge City),
and Ballew's
Ferry (near
Deweyville),
required three
days to cover
the entire
distance to
Lake Charles.
One can
readily
imagine the
harshness of
the saddle
journey in an
era when only
the rivers had
ferries, the
bayous and
creeks had to
be swum or
forded, and
the jungle
trails were
marked by
miles of
cattle tracks.
At
Old Jefferson,
where
Claiborne West
was the grocer
and
postmaster,
the Liberty
post rider
made
connection
with the mail
from Jasper,
contracted by
Stephen H.
Everett of
Jasper County.
In November,
1835, both
West and
Everett
neglected
their postal
duties long
enough to
attend the
Consultation
at San Felipe,
where each man
signed a list
of grievances
compiled
against
Mexico. Four
months later,
each attended
another
convention at
Washington-on-the-Brazos
and signed the
Texas
Declaration of
Independence.
In
conjunction
with Colonel
Henry Millard
of Beaumont
and other
delegates at
San Felipe,
the members of
the
Consultation
passed
legislation on
December 8,
1835, which
created the
Municipality
of Jefferson,
which had the
same identical
boundaries
with
present-day
Orange County.
As also the
first elected
delegation
from extreme
Southeast
Texas to the
First Texas
Congress in
December,
1836, West and
Everett (the
latter being
president pro
tempore of the
Texas Senate)
were soon
instrumental
in enlarging
Jefferson
Municipality
to Jefferson
County, to
include all of
present-day
Jefferson and
Orange
Counties and
half of Hardin
County.
William
F. Gray's
diary of
April, 1836,
reported
Beaumont as
containing
"only three or
four houses,"
whereas the
Old Jefferson
of 1840 was
only a
scattering of
about twenty
log cabins. In
1835, the
Mexican
customs
collector and
postmaster at
Beaumont had
been Capt.
Samuel
Rodgers. After
becoming the
county seat in
December,
1837, Beaumont
was destined
to grow and
prosper,
however, while
the Cow Bayou
community was
already in a
state of
retrogression.
Since Capt.
Benjamin
Harper
enlisted 28
men at
Beaumont on
March 4, 1836,
to fight at
the Battle of
San Jacinto,
it is obvious
that many farm
families
resided in the
immediate
vicinity.
As
a stop on the
1835 post
route, it
certainly
appears
logical that
Beaumont had
both a post
office and a
postmaster,
but additional
information is
lacking. Even
Col. Henry
Millard may
have been
Beaumont's
postmaster at
his store at
some point in
late 1835.
Both Millard
and Rodgers
are believed
to have owned
stores in
1835, and both
were certainly
connected with
the earliest
townite
promotion at
the crossroads
hamlet.
(Apparently
Rodgers died
in 1836.)
Beaumont's
first Texas
Republic
postmaster of
record,
however, was
Joseph P.
Pulsifer,
whose name
appeared on a
list of Texas
postmasters in
1840 (although
he was
probably
appointed in
1837). He was
also a
druggist;
Millard's
partner in the
old Millard
store and in
the original
Beaumont
townsite; as
well as the
Republic of
Texas' second
collector of
customs for
Sabine "Bay."
In May, 1846,
Pulsifer and
Millard's
brother, Dr.
D. J. Otho
Millard,
bought the
store, and the
firm's named
was changed to
J. P. Pulsifer
and Company.
Elsewhere
in the
Jefferson
County of
1840, Wyatt
McGaffey was
postmaster at
Sabine Pass,
and the
infamous
Thomas D.
Yocum, who was
lynched for
his murders in
1841, served
the postal
patrons of the
Pine Island
Post Office.
Where the Old
Spanish
(cattle) Trail
intersected
the Jasper
Road, 12 miles
east of
Beaumont,
George A.
Pattillo was
postmaster at
Pattillo's
Station on Cow
Bayou. R. E.
Booth ran the
post office at
Mount Holland
in north
Orange County
(exact
location
unknown but
near Ballew's
Ferry). In
Jasper County,
Seth Swift was
postmaster at
Salem (on
Sabine River);
N. H. Cochrane
at Cochrane's
Retreat; B.
Richardson was
postmaster at
Richardson's
Ferry (now
Evadale); and
Thomas B.
Huling at Old
Zavala (not
the present
town of that
name).
In
March, 1839,
in a letter
written at
Beaumont to
President
Mirabeau B.
Lamar, S. H.
Everett
reported that
no post office
existed at
Sabine Pass,
and no post
route
connected that
seaport with
the county
seat. As a
result, all
custom house
mail had to
carried by
boat for
posting at
Beaumont.
By
May, 1840,
mail route No.
29 linked
Sabine Pass
and Beaumont.
Post Route No.
12 ran from
Liberty, via
Pine Island,
Beaumont,
Pattillo's
Station, Old
Jefferson, and
Mount Holland,
to Lyons,
Louisiana, on
the Calcasieu
River. Route
No. 13
connected
Jefferson, via
Jasper,
Zavala, San
Augustine, and
Shelbyville,
with East
Hamilton on
the Sabine
River. Each
route was
designed to
complete one
round-trip
weekly.
By
1842, the
112-mile mail
route No. 3
linked Houston
with
Pattillo's
Station, with
stops at
Liberty,
Beaumont, and
Jefferson. By
1846,
Beaumont's
post office
had been moved
to Herring's
Store, on the
Neches River
at the foot of
Main Street,
where William
Perry Herring
was
postmaster.
In
April, 1846, a
new route
connected
Beaumont with
Galveston.
Between
1850-1852, a
Beaumont
patriarch,
Capt. George
W. O'Brien,
was employed
as the
Galveston mail
rider. Along
the route he
reported
seeing large
herds of deer,
one estimated
to number 500
heads. In his
memoirs,
entitled
"Early Days of
Beaumont,"
O'Brien
reported that
the Beaumont
of 1850 was
"nothing but a
hamlet,
although the
county seat,
with a much
larger
territory than
at present
(1905)."
"Nearly
all of the
little town
then was near
where the
present
courthouse
stands, but at
that time
there was no
courthouse. A
rented,
wooden,
one-story
building was
used as the
courthouse. It
was on the
southeast
corner of the
present
courthouse
square....At
that time
there were no
more than one
dozen
buildings in
the town, and
among them was
only one
two-story
house, it
being occupied
on the first
floor by the
old Millard
store. D. J.
Otho Millard
was the
proprietor of
the store."
Until
May, 1846,
when he moved
to Galveston,
Capt. O'Brien
father, who
was a
brother-in-law
of Henry
Millard, had
owned a
half-interest
in the Millard
store. In
1847, he began
the Galveston
and Sabine Bay
Stage Line,
carrying the
Sabine Pass
mail one
round-trip
weekly along
the beach.
One-way fare
was $6 for
those
passengers
"with no other
luggage than
saddle bags."
In
1848, the
United States
postal system
authorized
three new
routes in
Jefferson
County. One
connected
Beaumont, "via
Jonas
Cravey's,"
with Town
Bluff in Tyler
County.
Another route
linked Green's
Bluff
(Orange), "via
Lawhon's
Mills," and
Newton. Still
a third route
ran from
Lyons, La.,
via Green's
Bluff, to
Sabine Pass.
In
1852, new
routes were
established
between Sabine
Pass, Wiess
Bluff, and
Nacogdoches
and between
Sabine and New
Orleans, via
the Gulf of
Mexico. By
1854, other
post routes
connected
Beaumont with
Ballew's
Ferry,
Beaumont and
Woodville,
Sabine with
Jasper, and
Sabine and
Green's Bluff.
In 1850,
Beaumont,
Pattillo's
Station,
Sabine City,
and Green's
Bluff were the
only post
offices in
Jefferson
County (which
included all
of Orange
County until
1852).
In
1855, Duncan
Woods in
Orange County
became a post
office, and
was followed
in 1859 by two
others in
Jefferson,
including
Holmsville
(location
unknown) and
Grigsby's
Bluff (now
Port Neches),
where Samuel
Remley was the
first
postmaster.
By
1856,
steamboats
were domiciled
permanently in
Jefferson
County, and
mail service
from Sabine to
inland points
increased to
sometimes
three
round-trips
weekly. The
steamer
"Doctor
Massie," owned
by C. H.
Alexander and
Co. of Sabine
Pass,
connected that
seaport with
Beaumont,
Wiess Bluff,
Town Bluff,
and Bevilport
in Jasper
County. In
1857, the
steamboat "T.
J. Smith,"
owned by H. C.
Smith and
Henry B. Force
of Orange, was
built at Town
Bluff, Tyler
County,
expressly as a
mail packet to
connect
Beaumont,
Sabine and
Orange.
By
1858, the
packet "Mary
Falvey," owned
by C. H. Ruff
of Beaumont,
made scheduled
weekly voyages
between
Sabine,
Beaumont,
Concord on
Pine Island
Bayou, and
Wiess Bluff in
southwest
Jasper County.
At the latter
point, the
steamboat
connected with
Taylor's Stage
Line to San
Augustine,
Nacogdoches,
and other
points to the
north.
Between
1861, when the
first Texas
and New
Orleans rails
reached
Beaumont, and
1867, letters
from Beaumont
could reach
Houston in
eight hours.
That stretch
of railroad
had rotted
away by 1867
and lay
abandoned for
nine years. It
was 1876,
however,
before the
railroad to
Houston was
rebuilt and
became a
reliable
transportation
artery to
other points
in Texas, and
it was 1881
before the
first mail
train crossed
the Sabine
River en route
to New
Orleans. By
1861, the
telegraph line
provided a
quick
communications
link between
Beaumont,
Houston, and
Galveston, but
many more
years elapsed
before
telegraph
messages could
be transmitted
to points east
of Orange. As
of 1867,
Galveston was
still
complaining
because it had
no telegraph
links outside
the state of
Texas.
During
the antebellum
era, when
loneliness and
separation
from the
outside world
were every
rural Texan's
inheritance,
one can
readily fathom
the jubilation
which welcomed
the arrival of
each post
rider, mail
train, or
cotton
steamboat.
Two-thirds or
more of the
mail volume
reaching
Jefferson
County
consisted of
the Houston
and Galveston
newspapers, as
well as such
periodicals as
"Godey's
Ladies Book,"
"DeBow's
Review," and
"Harper's
Weekly."
However old,
each letter or
publication
was read and
reread many
times, was
passed along
to friends and
neighbors, and
provided a
momentary
diversion from
the harshness
and monotony
of frontier
living.
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