Taylor
(Taylor's)
Bayou was on
Taylor Bayou
ten miles
south of
Beaumont in
central
Jefferson
County. The
name referred
to widely
scattered
settlements
throughout
much of the
area between
the sites of
present Sabine
Pass and
Fannett.
Although
settlers had
arrived during
the 1830s, the
community and
bayou were
apparently
named for
James G.
Taylor, who
purchased land
there in 1841.
Early
residents were
predominantly
Catholic; many
Louisianans
were attracted
by the fertile
soil's sugar
cane yields.
Cattle were
also important
to the area's
economy. The
Taylor's Bayou
post office
was
established in
1876, and by
1880 the
estimated
population
numbered 250.
In
1886 Edgar
Caruthers, Dan
Wingate, and
Louis Bordages
produced
commercial
quantities of
rice in
central
Jefferson
County. Rice
cultureqv
became a major
industry five
years later
with the
construction
of a small
pumping plant
on Taylor
Bayou for
irrigation. In
1903 Taylor
Bayou mail was
rerouted to
Fannett, a
change that
reflected the
growing
importance of
the newly
constructed
Gulf and
Interstate
Railway.
Scattered
residences
remain in the
area once
known as
Taylor's
Bayou; larger
numbers of
inhabitants
live in the
nearby
communities of
LaBelle,
Hamshire, and
Fannett. Small
quantities of
oil were
discovered at
the East and
South Taylor
Bayou fields
in 1973.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
L. I. Adams,
Jr., Time
and Shadows
(Waco: Davis
Brothers,
1971). 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/TT/hvt6.html (accessed
March 3,
2008).
(NOTE: "s.v."
stands for sub
verbo, "under
the word.")
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