The
town of Sabine
Pass is on
State Highway
87 at Sabine
Pass,qv
thirty miles
southeast of
Beaumont in
extreme
southeastern
Jefferson
County. The
townsite,
first known as
Sabine City,
was perhaps
laid out as
early as 1836.
The Sabine
City Company,
which
organized the
town,
eventually
included such
notables as
Sam Houston,
Philip A.
Sublett,
George W.
Hockley, John
S. Roberts,
Albert G.
Kellogg, Niles
F. Smith, and
Sidney
Sherman.qv
The town was
projected to
be a major
Gulf seaport.
The first
steam sawmill
in Jefferson
County was
built there in
1846, and the
Sabine City
post office
was
established
the next year.
By the time of
the Civil Warqv
the town had a
newspaper (the
Sabine Pass
Times)
and a
connection on
the Eastern
Texas
Railroad.
Cattle and
cotton were
among the
port's major
shipments, and
the post
office had
adopted the
more commonly
used name of
Sabine Pass.
On June 15,
1861, the town
was
incorporated.
During the
Civil War,
forts Sabine
and Griffinqv
were
constructed to
fend off Union
attacks at
Sabine Pass.
An outbreak of
yellow fever
in 1862 led
most residents
to evacuate
but dissuaded
Union troops,
who had landed
near the city
and destroyed
the sawmill,
from
permanently
occupying the
area. Another
projected
federal
invasion was
blunted in the
battle of
Sabine Passqv
in 1863.
Sabine Pass
had 460
inhabitants by
1880, making
it the second
largest town
in Jefferson
County. The
construction
of the Sabine
and East Texas
Railroad in
1881 replaced
the older rail
line, which
had been
abandoned
during the
Civil War, and
seemed to bode
a bright
future for the
city. Several
factors,
however, led
to the decline
of Sabine Pass
in the years
to come. A
hurricane in
1886 killed
eighty-six
persons and
destroyed the
town, and
storms in 1900
and 1915
further
emphasized the
locale's
exposed
position. Also
significant
was the
refusal of the
Kountze
brothers, who
owned most of
the choice
tracts in the
area, to make
a deal with
prospective
developer
Arthur E.
Stilwell.qv
The subsequent
growth of Port
Arthur, as
well as the
construction
of additional
deepwater
ports at
Beaumont and
Orange,
attracted
major
investors to
these rival
cities. As a
result of
these
difficulties,
Sabine Pass
never achieved
the prominence
its founders
had
anticipated.
Its population
was 363 in
1900. Though
the Sun Oil
Company built
docks and a
pumping plant
there in the
wake of the
boom caused by
the Spindletop
oilfield,qv
these
operations
were
discontinued
in 1927.
Commercial
fishing and
marine repair
remained the
major local
industries,
and small
quantities of
oil were
discovered at
the Sabine
Pass oilfield
in 1958.
Though Port
Arthur annexed
the community
in 1978, the
town of Sabine
Pass retained
a distinct
identity
during the
1980s. The
population of
Sabine Pass
had grown to
1,500 by 1984,
when
thirty-nine
rated
businesses
were reported
there. By the
early 1990s,
however, the Texas
Almanacqv
no longer
reported
separate
population
figures for
Sabine Pass.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
W. T. Block,
ed.,
Emerald
of the Neches:
The Chronicles
of Beaumont
from
Reconstruction
to Spindletop
(Nederland,
Texas:
Nederland
Publishing,
1980). W. T.
Block, A
History of
Jefferson
County, Texas,
from
Wilderness to
Reconstruction
(M.A. thesis,
Lamar
University,
1974;
Nederland,
Texas:
Nederland
Publishing,
1976).
Robert
Wooster
-
Handbook of
Texas Online,
s.v. ","
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/SS/hjs2.html (accessed
March 3,
2008).
(NOTE: "s.v."
stands for sub
verbo, "under
the word.")
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