With
the Sabine
Pass Ship
Channel, the
Sabine-Neches
Waterway forms
a Y-shaped set
of
interlocking
river channels
and canals
extending from
the Gulf of
Mexico to Port
Arthur,
Beaumont, and
Orange, Texas.
The
Consultationqv
of 1835
designated the
mouth of the
Sabine River a
port; a
customhouse
was built
there three
years later.
Union forces
unsuccessfully
attempted to
use the Sabine
and Neches
rivers to
threaten
Southeast
Texas during
the Civil War,qv
but their
effort was
thwarted at
the battle of
Sabine Pass.qv
Extensive
construction
to improve the
waterways
began with
river and
harbor acts of
1875, 1882,
and 1896, when
the mouth of
the channel
was deepened
and jetties
were built to
prevent
silting. Some
improvements
in the Sabine
and Neches
rivers were
authorized in
1878, and the
Port Arthur
Canal and Dock
Company began
building a
more suitable
channel to
Port Arthur in
1895. Legal
entanglements
necessitated
the use of
private funds
to dredge the
Port Arthur
Canal west of
Sabine Lake;
the canal
opened in
1899. The
discovery of
the Spindletop
oilfieldqv
in 1901
increased
demand for
deep-water
navigation
along the
lower Sabine
and Neches
rivers. With
the support of
Congressman
Samuel Bronson
Cooperqv
and future
governor
William P.
Hobby,qv
Congress
appropriated
funds for
extending the
channel.
Despite
unfavorable
reports by
engineers, a
twenty-five-foot-deep
channel was
completed to
Beaumont in
1916.
Additional
dredging and
improvements
extended the
waterway to
Orange. By
1972 the
Sabine-Neches
Waterway was
forty feet
deep and 400
feet wide.
A
series of
jetties,
canals,
rivers, and
turning basins
now compose
the waterway.
At the mouth
of the channel
is the port of
Sabine Pass,
with jetties
extending
three miles
into the Gulf
of Mexico.
Twenty-four
miles north,
up the
waterway via
the Sabine
River, Sabine
Lake, Port
Arthur Canal,
and Gulf
Intracoastal
Waterway,qv
is Port
Arthur. The
Sabine-Neches
Waterway then
splits. To the
west the port
of Beaumont is
nineteen miles
up the Neches
River from
Port Arthur.
To the east
the port of
Orange is
fifteen miles
above the
junction via
the Sabine
River and
Intracoastal
Canal. The
Sabine-Neches
Waterway and
Sabine Pass
Ship Channel
have been
tremendously
important to
Southeast
Texas
development,
despite
recurring
problems of
silting. The
system
supported more
than
45,000,000
tons of cargo
annually by
the late
1930s. Over
40,000 vessels
used the
waterway in
1943. In 1979
well over
75,000,000
tons passed
through the
Sabine Pass
jetties,
making the
Sabine-Neches
shipping
district the
second largest
in the state,
behind that of
Galveston-Houston-Texas
City.
Petroleum and
petroleum-related
products
shipped in and
out of the
waterway's
four ports, as
well as
assorted
cargoes
associated
with the
Intracoastal
Canal,
dominate the
busy channels.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
W. T. Block, A
History of
Jefferson
County, Texas,
from
Wilderness to
Reconstruction
(M.A. thesis,
Lamar
University,
1974;
Nederland,
Texas:
Nederland
Publishing,
1976). Paul C.
Wilson, Jr.,
"History of
the Salt Water
Barrier on the
Neches River,"
Texas
Gulf
Historical and
Biographical
Record
17 (1981). WPA
Federal
Writers'
Project, Beaumont
(Houston:
Anson Jones,
1939). WPA
Federal
Writers'
Project,
Port Arthur
(Houston:
Anson Jones,
1939).
Robert
Wooster
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