Sabine,
on the west
bank of Sabine
Pass south of
Farm Road 3322
and thirty-two
miles south of
Beaumont in
extreme
southeastern
Jefferson
County, was
founded in
1878 by New
York
financiers who
objected to
the price of
waterfront
property at
the town of
Sabine Pass.
By the winter
of 1879-80 a
six-foot
channel linked
Sabine to the
Gulf of
Mexico, and in
1882 jetties
were begun.
Dock and port
facilities
were
installed, and
the Windsor
resort hotel
opened. A post
office was
established in
1899 but was
discontinued
sometime in
the 1930s.
Though the
town served as
the terminus
of the Sabine
and East Texas
Railroad, its
growth was
curtailed by
heavy losses
from coastal
storms in 1886
and 1900 and
by competition
from Port
Arthur. By
1914 the Texas
and New
Orleans
Railroad was
in operation
at Sabine, and
the town had a
population of
300, two
churches,
several
stores, and a
school; at
that time it
also had
sulfur mines
and shipped
fish and
fertilizer.
The Sabine
population
rose to 400 by
1925 and
remained at
that level
until the late
1940s; during
this period
the highest
number of
businesses
reported there
was five. In
1933 the
railroad was
discontinued
and its
installations
removed. The
1936 county
highway map
showed a
school,
several
buildings, and
scattered
dwellings near
Kountze Lake.
By 1949 the
community had
become a
fishing resort
and had an
estimated
population of
250. Its
population
numbered 260
from 1950 to
1964, rose to
310 in 1965,
and fell to
100 in 1966,
when only one
business
remained. From
1972 until
1988 the
population was
estimated at
seventy-five,
after which it
was no longer
recorded. In
the 1990s a
quarantine
station and a
United States
Coast Guard
station were
maintained at
the site, and
Dick Dowling
Park was a
half mile
south.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Beaumont Enterprise,
August 2,
1927,
September 10,
17, 1933, July
4, 1948. W. T.
Block, A
History of
Jefferson
County, Texas,
from
Wilderness to
Reconstruction
(M.A. thesis,
Lamar
University,
1974;
Nederland,
Texas:
Nederland
Publishing,
1976). James
L. Rock and W.
I. Smith, Southern
and Western
Texas Guide
for 1878
(St. Louis:
Granger,
1878).
Diana
J. Kleiner
-
Handbook of
Texas Online,
s.v. ","
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/SS/hns2.html (accessed
March 3,
2008).
(NOTE: "s.v."
stands for sub
verbo, "under
the word.")
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