Details for Fort Casa Blanca, C.S.A.

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5249001972

Data

Marker Number 1972
Atlas Number 5249001972
Marker Title Fort Casa Blanca, C.S.A.
Index Entry Fort Casa Blanca, C.S.A.
Address SH 359
City Sandia
County Jim Wells
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 610164
UTM Northing 3100210
Subject Codes Civil War; forts; military topics
Marker Year 1965
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location SH 359, NW side, just NE of CR 364 intersection
Private Property
Marker Condition
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text (About 2 1/2 mi. NW) First building erected in area that is now Jim Wells County early as 1855. During the Civil War was on Confederate supply line that started in Corpus Christi, followed the Nueces here, went to Laredo, to Brownsville and back to Corpus Christi. When Federals were in Corpus Christi, Thomas Wright, the sutler, drove from here to other points. Casa Blanca was supplied by small boats that outmaneuvered Federals on Nueces Bay, slipped into the Nueces River, and came up Penitos Creek. They hauled guns, ammunition, medicine, and other wartime goods and took out cotton, "Currency of the Confederate." The fort had walls 28" to 36" thick. An escape tunnel from its well led to the creek. It's one entryway, wide enough for a 2-wheel cart or 2 horses abreast, was closed with a heavy cypress door. Cypress shutters covered its few small windows. Corner parapets and portholes at 3 heights gave it emplacements for defense. It not only warehoused goods, but also provided shelter and water for drivers passing with wagons along the Cotton Road from San Antonio to Matamoros. For cotton wagons it meant safety from bandit chases and from killing thirsts. In the 20th century the fort has disappeared. (1965)

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