Nederland
is on Farm
roads 365 and
366, State
Highway 347,
and U.S.
Highway
69/96/287,
seven miles
southeast of
Beaumont in
eastern
Jefferson
County. The
site was
developed by
the Port
Arthur
Townsite
Company and
the Port
Arthur Land
Company as
part of Arthur
E. Stilwell'sqv
effort to make
his newly
built Kansas
City,
Pittsburg and
Gulf Railway
profitable.
Stilwell, who
had received
much of his
financial
backing from
Dutch
investors,
wanted a
community for
Dutch
immigrants to
Southeast
Texas. The
first such
settler at
Nederland was
George
Rienstra;
forty others
arrived in
November 1897.
As other
immigrants
followed,
Nederlanders
began
establishing
truck and
dairy farms.
Rice farming
was especially
popular until
overproduction,
overspeculation,
and the
depression of
1907 virtually
wiped out the
rice industry
at Nederland.
Many of the
recent
immigrants
left.
Prosperity was
restored by
the discovery
of the
Spindletop
oilfieldqv
on January 10,
1901. The Sun
Oil Company
established a
major terminal
just to the
north at Sun,
and the Texas
Company built
a plant a mile
south of
Nederland. An
interurban
line tied the
former Dutch
community with
Beaumont and
Port Arthur in
1913.
Electricity
was provided
shortly
thereafter,
and telephone
and gas
service came
during the
mid-1920s.
During the
same decade
the Humphrey
Oil Company
and Pure Oil
Company
(subsequently
Union Oil)
built a
refinery at
Smith's Bluff
to the east,
drawing large
numbers of
former
Louisiana
residents to
Nederland. The
refineries and
related
petroleum
industries
have continued
to be the
mainstays of
the city's
economy. A
weekly
newspaper, the
Mid-County
Chronicle,
was
established in
1930. The town
incorporated
on April 29,
1940, and the
population
reached 3,801
in 1950.
Nederland grew
rapidly as a
residential
center during
the boom years
that followed.
By 1970 the
number of
inhabitants
had surpassed
16,000. Though
the local
economy was
hurt by the
declining
demand for
petroleum
during the
1980s, the
city's rated
businesses
increased from
136 in 1972-73
to 401 in
1984-85. The
population was
reported at
16,855 in 1980
and 16,192 in
1990. At that
time Nederland
had two
museums, the
Dutch Windmill
Museum and La
Maison
Acadienne.
They stood
side by side
in Tex Ritter
Park, situated
in the heart
of Nederland.
By 2000 the
population was
17,422.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Mrs. J. M.
Fleming et
al., comps., Nederland,
1898-1973:
Diamond
Jubilee
(Nederland,
Texas:
Nederland
Publishing,
1973).
W.
T. Block,
Marie Rienstra
Fleming, and
W. D. Quick
- Handbook
of Texas
Online,
s.v. ","
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/NN/hen1.html (accessed
March 3,
2008).
(NOTE: "s.v."
stands for sub
verbo, "under
the word.")
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