Hurricanes
decimated
Nederland
‘city tree’
By W. T.
Block
Reprinted
from the
Beaumont Enterprise,
Saturday March
20, 1999.
NEDERLAND --
Whenever we
think of an
"official"
tree or
flower, one
usually
considers that
of a state
tree or
flower, such
as the Texas
bluebonnet or
pecan tree.
However,
Nederland once
had a "city
tree" long
before it had
a city; in
fact, several
months before
any Dutch
immigrants
arrived.
Being
offspring of
Kansas City
Southern
Railroad, even
the very
existence of
Nederland and
Port Arthur
was once very
"iffy." In
1894, while
riding
horseback
south of
Shreveport,
Jacques
Nolthenius,
the railroad’s
Dutch
right-of-way
agent, had no
problem buying
land until he
reached the
Cameron Parish
boundary,
south of Lake
Charles.
The cattlemen
of that parish
refused to
sell him any
land since
they did not
want the
railroad’s
"iron horses"
scaring their
cattle.
Although the
railroad
probably could
have won a
lawsuit, it
chose instead
to build west
into Texas.
The railroad
did much of
its planning
for Nederland
at one of its
subsidiaries,
Port Arthur
Experimental
Farm, where
horticulturists
tested many
varieties of
rice, as well
as other plant
life and
domestic
animals. They
also chose the
umbrella china
tree for the
front lawns of
the Dutch
immigrants,
who were soon
to arrive. One
source of
March 18, 1897
noted:
"...That
Arthur
Stilwell
overlooked no
possibility is
evident in the
farm’s
adoption of
the umbrella
china as the
ideal shade
tree for the
Dutch
immigrants’
front lawns. A
thousand
seedlings for
transplanting
at Nederland
were awaiting
the arrival of
the human
transplants
from
Europe..."
(East Texas
Historical
Journal, XIII,
No. 2)
Had the
railroad
waited until
Sept. 13,
1897, when a
hurricane
killed ten
persons at
Port Arthur,
the farm might
have chosen a
different
variety of
tree.
Nederland’s
umbrella china
trees had just
matured when
the hurricane
of Aug., 1915
arrived,
uprooting
nearly all of
them.
Apparently
enough
remained to
produce a
second crop,
that had also
matured by
1935. And when
the hurricane
of 1938 hit
here, it blew
down all the
remainder of
Nederland’s
chinaberry
trees,
including five
large trees at
my mother’s
home.
The passing
of the
umbrella china
also meant the
loss of
ammunition for
a student’s
"pea shooter."
It was not
uncommon to
see a
chinaberry hit
a school
blackboard
with
sufficient
force to
shatter the
chinaberry.
Such a toy
was made from
a short piece
of elderberry
limb, which
has a hollow
interior that
had to be
lubricated
with butter.
When a
3/8-inch dowel
pin ‘plunger’
was inserted,
it could
propel a
chinaberry
sufficient to
sting, but not
create a
wound.
However, one
might have a
real problem
locating any
chinaberries
around here
anymore.
Thanks to that
second
hurricane, our
"city tree" is
about extinct
in Nederland.
W. T. Block
of Nederland
is a historian
and author.
His website is
http://block.dynip.com/wtblockjr/. This database is very large (350
articles) and
is intended as
an area
history source
for students.
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