Details for Site of Austinia

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5167009928

Data

Marker Number 9928
Atlas Number 5167009928
Marker Title Site of Austinia
Index Entry Austinia, Site of
Address
City Texas City
County Galveston
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 316358
UTM Northing 3253595
Subject Codes settlements; ghost towns
Marker Year 1993
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Bay St. Park, Bay St. at 14th Ave. N
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Empresario Stephen F. Austin urged Mexico to improve foreign trade by establishing ports in the Galveston area as early as 1825. Historical references suggest Austinia was settled in the 1830s as part of Austin's foreign trade efforts in this area. The original site of Austinia was located on coastal property owned by Austin one mile north of this site. After Austin's death in 1836 his sister, Emily Austin Bryan Perry, became sole proprietor of the village of Austinia. In 1837 George L. Hammeken and partners petitioned the Republic of Texas for a charter to construct a railroad from Austinia, where the main office was to be located, southwest to Bolivar on the Brazos. The railroad was part of a venture connecting Galveston with the mainland to tap the trade of the fertile Brazos River valley. In 1839 emily Perry sold Austinia to her son, William J. Bryan, and his partner, George Hammeken. Later that year Emily's husband, James F. Perry, became treasurer of Hammeken's corporation. James Perry's plans to build 40 or 50 houses and other public buildings in Austinia were never realized as Hammeken later chose an alternate route for the proposed railroad.

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