Details for Nuecestown (4 Miles North)

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5355006327

Data

Marker Number 6327
Atlas Number 5355006327
Marker Title Nuecestown (4 Miles North)
Index Entry Nuecestown
Address IH 37 frontage rd. at Violet Rd.
City Corpus Christi
County Nueces
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 639770
UTM Northing 3081277
Subject Codes outlaws; settlements; ghost towns
Marker Year 1973
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location I-37 Frontage Road, Westbound, at Violet Road exit, Corpus Christi
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Henry L. Kinney (b. 1914), who founded Corpus Christi, established Nuecestown in 1852 at the location of the first ferry crossing on the Nueces River west of Corpus Christi. He sent agents to Europe, primarily England and Germany, to promote his new settlement. Each immigrant purchased 100 acres of land, a town lot, and 10 head of cattle. Nuecestown, known locally as "The Motts" because of several clusters of trees, grew to have, in addition to the ferry, a hotel, packery, and one of the county's first cotton gins. A Post Office opened in 1859. After the Civil War it was a gathering place for cattle drovers in the area herding longhorns to be driven to northern railheads. On Good Friday, March 26, 1875, Mexican bandits entered the region on a raid, causing many Corpus Christi residents to flee. After plundering the Frank Store (3 miles east), the raiders turned on Nuecestown, looting and burning T.J. Noake's store and Post Office, killing one man, and capturing several hostages. A party of citizens pursued the attackers unsuccessfully, and another man was killed. When bypassed by the St. Louis, Brownsville and Mexico Railway about 1905, Nuecestown began to decline. The post office closed in 1927. (1973)

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