China
is on U.S.
Highway 90 ten
miles west of
Beaumont in
northwestern
Jefferson
County. The
Texas and New
Orleans
Railroad was
completed
through the
area in 1860,
and a water
stop was
established
amidst a grove
of chinaberry
trees near the
community's
present
location; the
stop was
dubbed China
Grove. A post
office by that
name was
authorized in
March 1887 but
was
discontinued
within two
months.
Another
office, using
the shorter
name China,
was
established in
1893.
Two
miles east of
China, Charlie
Nash and
Howell Land
organized a
separate
community
called
Nashland,
which had 174
residents in
1900. The new
townsite plat
was belatedly
filed on
October 30,
1902. When
fire destroyed
the older
China depot to
the west in
1906, the
people of
Nashland
convinced
railroad
officials to
move
operations to
the more
populated
community
center. The
railroad,
however,
stipulated
that the new
depot retain
the name of
China. The
Nashland post
office,
established in
1900, was
therefore
renamed China.
Agriculture
provided the
community with
its economic
lifeblood, and
rice
warehouses
made it a
center for the
area's rice
farmers. The
South China
oilfield,
discovered in
1939, provided
further
growth.
Although the
community's
population
fell from an
estimated 350
during the
mid-1920s to
200 by the
early 1950s,
new
discoveries of
oil and
natural gas at
nearby
oilfields in
1960, 1975,
and 1980
brought new
growth. In
1971 residents
voted 118 to
88 in favor of
incorporation.
By the
mid-1980s
China had a
population of
1,351 and
eighteen
businesses. In
1990 the
population was
1,144, and in
2000 it was
1,112.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
L. I. Adams,
Jr., Time
and Shadows
(Waco: Davis
Brothers,
1971).
Robert
Wooster
-
Handbook of
Texas Online,
s.v. ","
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/CC/hjc10.html (accessed
March 3,
2008).
(NOTE: "s.v."
stands for sub
verbo, "under
the word.")
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