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Bastrop County is one
of about 3,141 counties and county
equivalents in the United States. It has
888.3 sq. miles in land area and a
population density of 78.7 per square
mile. In the last three decades of the
1900s its population grew by 233.8%. On
the 2000 census form, 97.8% of the
population reported only one race, with
8.8% of these reporting
African-American. The population of this
county is 24.0% Hispanic (of any race).
The average household size is 2.77
persons compared to an average family
size of 3.23 persons.
In 2005 educational services was the
largest of 20 major sectors. It had an
average wage per job of $30,622. Per
capita income grew by 10.7% between 1994
and 2004 (adjusted for inflation). |
People
& Income Overview
(By Place of Residence) |
Value |
Industry Overview (2005)
(By Place of Work) |
Value |
| Population
(2005) |
69,932 |
Covered
Employment |
12,055 |
| Growth
(%) since 1990 |
82.8% |
Avg wage
per job |
$27,891 |
| Households
(2000) |
20,097 |
Manufacturing - % all jobs in County |
8.2% |
| Labor Force
(persons) (2005) |
34,189 |
Avg wage
per job |
$32,698 |
|
Unemployment Rate (2005) |
4.6 |
Transportation & Warehousing - % all
jobs in County |
D |
| Per Capita
Personal Income (2004) |
$22,791 |
Avg wage
per job |
D |
| Median
Household Income (2003) |
$43,633 |
Health
Care, Social Assist. - % all jobs in
County |
D |
| Poverty
Rate (2003) |
12.6 |
Avg wage
per job |
D |
| H.S.
Diploma or More - % of Adults 25+ (2000) |
76.9 |
Finance and
Insurance - % all jobs in County |
3.1% |
| Bachelor's
Deg. or More - % of Adults 25+ (2000) |
17.0 |
Avg wage
per job |
$33,002 |
Bastrop County (L-17), located on State
highways 71, 95, 21, and 304, on the upper Gulf
coastal plains just below the Balcones
Escarpment, encompasses 895 square miles of
southeast central Texas. Its seat of government,
Bastrop, is situated in the center of the county
at approximately 30� north latitude and 97�west
longitude, a location about thirty miles
southeast of downtown Austin. The terrain
throughout most of the county is characterized
by rolling uplands and broken hills with surface
layers of primarily sandy, loamy soils, and
woods where post oaks predominate but where
cedar, hickory, elm, and walnut also occur. In
the northwestern corner of the county and along
the central southeastern border, the topography
changes to blackland prairie with waxy clay soil
and tall grass cover. The Colorado River bisects
the county from northwest to southeast; along
this waterway and its tributaries can be found
rich alluvial silts and clays. Near the river,
the Lost Pine Forestqv
extends through an east central section of the
county. Elevations range from 400 to 600 feet
above sea level. The county's climate has been
described as subtropical humid, with a low
average January temperature of 40� F, a high
average July temperature of 96� F, and an
average annual rainfall of 36.82 inches; the
growing season is 270 days long. Mineral
resources include clay, oil, gas, lignite, sand,
gravel, and surface and underground water.
The McCormick site near McDade has produced
archeological evidence of human life in the area
during the Neo-American period, a thousand years
ago. By the beginning of the nineteenth century,
Tonkawa Indians inhabited the area, and Comanche
Indians came to hunt along the river each
autumn. With an early road between Nacogdoches
and San Antonio running through the region, in
1804 Spanish governor Manuel Antonio Cordero y
Bustamanteqv
established a fort at the Colorado River
crossing where the town of Bastrop now stands.
The Baron de Bastropqv
planned a German community at the site, but it
was not until after Stephen F. Austinqv
obtained a grant for a "Little Colony" from the
Mexican government in 1827 that settlement
began. Pioneers met with intense Indian
resistance, but by 1830 the town of Bastrop,
named for the baron, had been founded and
settlers from Austin's lower colonies were
clearing farms over the southern portion of the
county.
In 1831 Austin received a second land grant;
the two grants, Mina Municipality,qv
took in almost all of what is now Bastrop
County. The district was presumably named in
honor of Spanish general Francisco Xavier Mina.qv
In 1834 the vast municipality, comprising all or
part of sixteen present-day counties, was
established by the government of Coahuila and
Texas,qv and
the town of Bastrop also took the name Mina.
When Texas became a republic, Mina Municipality
assumed its place as one of twenty-three
original counties. In 1837 the Congress of the
Republic of Texasqv
changed the county name to Bastrop in honor of
the baron and allowed the town to revert to the
name as well. Congress also began whittling away
at the boundaries of the huge county; in 1840,
when Travis County was formed, Bastrop County
shrank almost to its present dimensions.
The year 1837 had seen the arrival of slaves
and cotton cultivation in the county. Though
Bastrop County was never a leader in cotton
production, this crop was favored over others
for the next fifty years. In 1838 another
significant industry began when the Bastrop
Steam Mill Company started operation. It
initiated Lost Pines lumbering activity that
reached a peak in the early 1840s, as Bastrop
mills supplied lumber to Austin, San Antonio,
Houston, and other settlements. Lumber
production continued for decades until available
timber declined, but agriculture remained the
predominant means of making a living. In 1850
the county had a population of 2,180, including
919 slaves. The county produced about 1,500
bales of cotton that year and harvested, in
addition, 148,360 bushels of Indian corn and
18,552 bushels of sweet potatoes.
In 1853 a county courthouse was constructed
in Bastrop to replace the rented building that
had been serving the purpose. The next year
twenty-three common-school districts were
reported in the county. Settlement was spreading
through the southern two-thirds of the county,
with many immigrants arriving from the southern
United States. In addition, hundreds of German
emigrants were joining the Americans or
establishing their own communities, such as
Grassyville.
Between 1850 and 1860 the population of
Bastrop County more than tripled, reaching
7,006, with 2,248 slaves making up almost a
third of the total and foreign-born residents
totaling 700. The county had 596 farms in 1860,
and livestock raising was growing; the number of
cattle increased from about 12,000 in 1850 to
over 40,000 in 1860. Six churches were reported
in an 1860 survey: two Methodist, two Lutheran,
one Christian, and one Baptist.
Despite the fact that the county possessed a
large slave population and a growing cotton
economy, Bastrop County residents voted 352 to
335 against secession.qv
But they rallied for the Confederate cause,
arming and equipping military companies and
providing for soldiers' families. Reconstructionqv
brought tensions similar to those experienced
across the South, with racial confrontations
flaring around the community of Cedar Creek.
In 1870 Bastrop County's population topped
11,000, and it had thirty-four manufacturing
establishments. The following year brought a
further stimulus to growth in the form of the
Houston and Texas Central Railway, completed
through the northern part of the county to
connect Austin and Brenham. Towns soon sprang up
along the railroad, the most substantial being
Elgin. Now many farmers had a freight outlet for
their harvests of corn and cotton.
In 1874 Bastrop County assumed its present
size with the establishment of Lee County. Nine
years later, the Bastrop County Courthouse
burned and a new one, still in use more than 100
years later, was built. Further railroad
development occurred in the 1880s and 1890s,
when the Taylor, Bastrop and Houston Railway
connected the Bastrop County towns of Smithville
and Bastrop with Lockhart, Waco, San Antonio,
and Houston. In 1894 the Missouri, Kansas and
Texas Railroad, which had taken over the Taylor,
Bastrop and Houston, selected Smithville as the
site of its central shops. This move soon made
the community rival Bastrop and Elgin in size.
At the turn of the century Bastrop County had
26,845 residents and was still primarily
agricultural, with a peak number of farms
(3,509) and peak production of cotton (41,730
bales) reported in the 1900 census. In this year
the county also reported its largest number of
manufacturing establishments, though the
eighty-seven concerns employed only 293 people.
The discovery of oil in the county in 1913
led to years of oil testing and drilling at
various sites. The pool found at the Yost farm
four miles east of Cedar Creek in 1928 was
representative of those discovered杙roductive but
unspectacular. In the 1920s, however, oil was
not the only resource being developed. County
coal belts were being mined, with the Winfield
mines providing lignite to various state
institutions. Clay deposits around Elgin were
making the town the "Brick Capital of the
Southwest," and the lumber industry around
Bastrop was reviving.
At the same time, changes were occurring in
Bastrop County agriculture. Farmers had
continued to raise corn and cotton primarily,
and 1920 was a peak year for corn, with almost a
million bushels harvested. Although most of the
county's cultivated land was still set aside for
cotton, the county picked only 14,250 bales that
year. A farm depression that began in 1920
forced changes in land use, with greater
agricultural diversification and increased
cattle production.
The 1920s farm depression was followed by the
general economic depression of the 1930s. The
number of farms in Bastrop County dropped
between 1920 and 1940 from 3,325 to 2,473, and
farm value decreased from over $17 million to
$7,246,372. Population, too, was sliding. In
1920 the county reported a population of 26,649,
with the ratio of white to black about two to
one. In 1940 the population was 21,610.
The World War IIqv
years brought an acceleration in cattle
production and an economic upsurge for Bastrop,
Elgin, and other communities with the foundation
of the army training facility Camp Swift in the
north central part of the county. But the war
also drew residents off farms to work in war
plants, and many did not come back. In the late
1940s, Bastrop County faced an economic decline.
Camp Swift was phased out, the coal mines were
closed, and lumbering had exhausted the
remaining commercial timber. Cotton cultivation
occupied only one-sixth its 1920 acreage.
However, farmers were diversifying
successfully. Sorghum was being produced in
large quantities, watermelons were a significant
cash crop, and increasing crops of peanuts and
pecans were being produced. In 1950 alone,
Bastrop County farmers harvested 1,719,200
pounds of peanuts. More significantly, the
number of cattle in the county had grown to
41,529 in 1950 as agricultural emphasis shifted
from crop production to beef-cattle raising and
more land was set aside for pasture.
Only fourteen manufacturing establishments
employing 387 workers were reported in the
county in 1947; the steadiest industry was
probably brick and tile manufacturing at Elgin,
where two large plants were operating in the
1940s, to be joined by a third in the 1950s.
Bastrop County population continued to
decline, hitting a low of 16,925 in 1960. The
number of farms continued to decline as well,
reaching a low of 1,029 in 1969. But by then,
population was gradually rising. The number of
cattle continued to rise, too, with 68,769
reported in that year.
The beef industry remained strong through the
1970s and early 1980s, with 70,066 cattle
reported in the 1982 census. But pasturelands
were being taken over by suburban development as
the growth of nearby Austin produced growth in
Elgin, Bastrop, and such smaller communities as
Cedar Creek and Red Rock. By 1980 the county
population had risen to 24,726 and was soon to
surpass the 1900 high of 26,845. The census
classified three-fourths of the population as
white, among these 3,402 Hispanic; the black
population numbered 4,259. The three largest
communities remained Elgin, with 4,535 people,
Bastrop, with 3,789, and Smithville, with 3,470.
The county population in 1990 was 38,263.
In 1982 the county reported 1,507 farms. Over
one-third of these were producing hay;
ninety-seven were harvesting nuts and fruits,
while only twenty-eight were producing
vegetables for sale. In the same year, the
county had twenty-eight manufacturing
establishments employing 700 workers. Wages paid
were over $9.5 million, and product value was
almost forty million dollars. Industries ranged
from two brick plants still operating in Elgin
to an oil-well supply in Bastrop. Both towns had
furniture plants. Bastrop had a tourist industry
stimulated by historical preservation efforts
and by the proximity of Lake Bastrop and Bastrop
and Buescher State parks.qqv
In the early 1990s, residents of Bastrop County
were coping with the challenges of growth
brought on by the suburban development of nearby
Austin and were seeking further opportunities
for agricultural and industrial diversification.
For most of its history Bastrop County has
been staunchly Democratic, although Republicans
made inroads in the late twentieth century,
particularly in presidential and statewide
races. Republican presidential candidates won in
the 1972 and 1984 elections, but Democrats
Michael Dukakis and Bill Clinton managed to
garner a majority of the votes in the 1988 and
1992 elections respectively. Democratic
officials have also continued to maintain
control of most county offices. In the 1982
primary 97 percent voted Democratic and 3
percent Republican, with a total of 5,578 votes
cast.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Bastrop Advertiser,
Homecoming and Progress Edition, July 21, 1980.
Kenneth Kesselus, History of Bastrop County,
Texas, Before Statehood (Austin: Jenkins,
1986). William Henry Korges, Bastrop County,
Texas: Historical and Educational Development
(M.A. thesis, University of Texas, 1933). Bill
Moore, Bastrop County, 1691-1900 (Wichita
Falls: Nortex, 1977).
Paula Mitchell Marks
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