Aurora
was located
near the mouth
of Taylor
Bayou on
Sabine Lake,
at the site of
present-day
Port Arthur.
The town was
conceived as
early as 1837,
and by 1840
promoters led
by Almanzon
Hustonqv
were
advertising
town lots.
Although some
lots were
sold,
Houston's
project failed
to
materialize.
The area came
to be known as
Sparks after
John Sparks
and his family
moved to the
shores of
Sabine Lake
near the
Aurora
townsite. The
Eastern Texas
Railroad,
completed
between Sabine
Pass and
Beaumont just
before the
outbreak of
the Civil War,qv
passed about
four miles
west of
Sparks. The
railroad
passing track
at this point
was named
Aurora after
the Houston
project. The
rails were
removed during
the Civil War.
A few
scattered
settlers
remained until
1886, when a
destructive
hurricane led
residents to
dismantle
their homes
and move to
Beaumont. By
1895 Aurora
was a ghost
town. The
abandoned
community,
however, soon
became the
site of Arthur
E. Stilwell'sqv
new city, Port
Arthur.qv
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
S. G. Reed, A
History of the
Texas
Railroads
(Houston: St.
Clair, 1941;
rpt., New
York: Arno,
1981). WPA
Federal
Writers'
Project,
Port
Arthur
(Houston:
Anson Jones
Press, 1939).
Robert
Wooster
- Handbook
of Texas
Online,
s.v. ","
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/AA/hva32.html (accessed
March 3,
2008).
(NOTE: "s.v."
stands for sub
verbo, "under
the word.")
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