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Change
came to Port
Neches via
relocation of
post office
By W. T.
Block
Reprinted
from Beaumont
Enterprise,
Saturday July
3, 1999.
NEDERLAND
-- During the
past century,
many U. S.
post offices
were robbed,
but seldom in
history has an
entire post
office been
"stolen," that
is, with the
exception of
Port Neches.
Beginning
in 1905, the
business
district of
Port Neches
(now referred
to as "old
town") was
confined to
the 100-200
blocks of
Avenue A, now
Grigsby St.
There were
then 2
merchants
there, D. A.
Bibb Grocery
and Insurance
Agency and
Gregg,
Trussell and
Co., also a
small church
and school.
And the center
of industrial
life was the
new Texas Co.
(Texaco)
asphalt and
roofing plant,
located a few
blocks to the
east, where
the first Port
Neches post
office was
established in
1902.
By
1918, several
other business
houses had
located in
"old town,"
including the
C. O. Baird
school, Z.
Goolsbee and
Co., George
Thomas
Pharmacy,
Liberty
Theater,
Franks Hotel,
J. Levy Dry
Goods, Oaks
Hotel and the
jail house.
The First
National Bank
opened there
in 1920. And
D. A. Bibb was
postmaster in
a small wooden
building on
the northwest
corner of Ave.
A and Dearing
St. By 1922
the old
theater housed
the
newly-organized
St. Elizabeth
Catholic
Church.
Until
1940, a vacant
strip of land,
the width of
Port Neches
Park and about
2 miles long,
belonged to
the City of
Port Arthur
and separated
"old town"
from "new
town," the
latter’s
business
district
consisting of
the 900
through 1300
blocks of Port
Neches Ave. By
1918 three
realtors,
Abbie and Will
Block and M.
E. Merriman,
had each
surveyed a
housing
addition on
each side of
Port Neches
Ave. And 2
merchants,
Will Meeker
and A. C.
Bigelow, built
several new
business
buildings
there. In 1921
Bigelow sold a
vacant lot to
the new bank,
and the next
year First
National Bank
moved into its
new home in
the 1100 block
of Port Neches
Ave.
In
1922 Mrs. W.
E. Parsons was
appointed the
new Republican
postmaster to
replace D. A.
Bibb, and the
"old town"
merchants knew
that if she
moved the post
office to "new
town," it
would signal
the end of
"old town" as
a business
location.
Hence they
signed a
petition to
retain the
post office
where it was,
and a justice
of the peace
threatened to
obtain a court
injunction to
keep it there,
although
during the
1920’s, a 3rd
class
postmaster
could move a
post office
wherever he or
she desired.
Unknown
to the public,
a new building
had just been
completed at
1108 Port
Neches Ave. to
house the new
post office in
"new town."
One Sunday
night while
the "old town"
residents were
in church, the
new postmaster
and several of
her friends
backed trucks
up to the "old
town" post
office. They
quickly
unbolted the
mail boxes,
counter
furniture,
scales, and
other
appurtenances
and loaded
everything on
to the trucks.
As
a parting
gesture, they
left a note on
the door that
postal
activities
would begin
Monday at the
new location
in "new town."
Then they
worked late
into the night
to install the
furniture in
the new
building.
The
"old town"
merchants were
certainly
right about
one thing. The
removal of the
post office
and bank to
"new town"
quickly
resulted in
the demise of
most business
activities in
"old town."
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