Rainbow
Bridge 1938
opening
brought an end
to area
ferries
By W. T.
Block
First
published in
Beaumont
Enterprise on
Saturday
November 27,
1999.
NEDERLAND—The
“horse and
buggy days”
officially
ended with the
arrival of the
1933 Ford V8,
and never
again would
Americans
worship at the
altar of slow
movement.
One
problem that
remained was
transportation
arteries, for
the nation’s
highway system
was still
geared to the
ox wagon, with
still too many
dirt roads and
ferries. The
residents of
Jefferson
County were
more than glad
to say
‘good-bye’ to
the last
ferry,
Dryden’s
between Port
Arthur and
Orange, and
for a moment
they could
boast that
their Rainbow
Bridge was the
tallest in the
South.
After
Jefferson
County became
a political
entity, many
pioneers
sought to
establish
ferries, which
meant a
guaranteed
income. Soon
John Sparks
operated the
ferry across
Taylor’s Bayou
on the dirt
road to Sabine
Pass. James
Chessher owned
the ferry
across Pine
Island Bayou
on the dirt
road to
Woodville, and
Brown’s ferry
crossed
Village Creek.
Many
of the
earliest
county records
are ferry
licenses,
including the
requirements
of ferry
operators.
During the
1830s Richard
Ballew owned
the ferry
across Sabine
River, several
miles north of
Orange, and W.
C. Beard and
William
Ashworth owned
the Santa Ana
ferry (at
Mobil
refinery).
Each was
permitted to
charge “short
ferriage” or
“long
ferriage”
rates. “Long
ferriage” at
Santa Ana
meant
traveling 2
miles to high
land up
Beard’s Bayou.
“Long
ferriage” at
Ballew’s was a
4-mile voyage
up the old
Sabine River
channel to
Niblett’s
Bluff.
In
1847 the Santa
Ana ferry
franchise was
revoked and
passed to
Nancy
Hutchinson.
After Ballew
died about
1840, his
ferry
franchise
passed to
Ursin Guidry.
During
the 1830’s
Henry Millard
operated the
“Pine Bluff”
ferry about 3
miles north of
Beaumont.
After Millard
moved to
Galveston, his
ferry
franchise was
transferred to
John and
Person
Collier.
The
early ferries
were allowed
to charge a
specified fee
for a horse
and rider, a
buggy or
wagon, and 2
cents for each
head of cattle
crossed.
Ordained
ministers
crossed free
of charge.
Often ferrymen
were required
to provide
food, lodging,
and cattle
pens, and some
ferries were
licensed to
sell liquor.
Each ferryman
paid a
percentage of
his receipts
as a county
tax.
Guy
Mansfield
operated the
Mansfield
Ferry near
Jefferson
County
courthouse
from 1900
until 1928,
and it was the
next to last
Neches River
ferry to cease
operation. As
a child, the
writer crossed
over that
ferry many
times and
recalls that
house boats
were docked
‘three deep’
on each side
of the river
near the
ferry.
The
last ferry on
the lower
Neches River
to close down
was Dryden’s,
which operated
from about
1913 until the
Rainbow Bridge
was completed
in 1938.
During the
1920s, that
ferry was
about 85 feet
long by 24
feet wide,
with a
capacity for
about 12 cars.
A small
tugboat, that
could reverse
direction by
swinging
around,
propelled it
and the voyage
usually
required 15
minutes if no
ship were
close.
Surviving
photos of the
ferry’s east
landing reveal
a long canal,
which would
suggest a
levee through
the marsh for
a shelled
roadbed.
However, that
assumption
would be
false.
Earlier
the canal had
floated a pile
driver that
drove wooden
pilings for
1-½ miles
through the
marsh to high
land near
Bridge City.
Then creosoted
trestle
timbers were
bolted
horizontally
to the
pilings, upon
which 4-inch
creosoted
stringers were
bolted to the
trestles. The
bridge through
the marsh had
4-foot high
wooden fences
built on each
side, and
being only
about16 feet
wide, there
was barely
room for one
auto to pass
another.
Rainbow
Bridge was
worth its
weigh in gold
during World
War II, when
it permitted
residents of
one county to
work in the
shipyards and
defense plants
of the
adjacent
county.
|