College Port
Collegeport
Year Marker Erected: 1990
Location: 3228 Mopac Road; intersection of Mopac Road
and FM 1095; Collegeport
Marker Text:
Jonathan Edward Pierce and Abel Brown Pierce hired land developer Burton
D. Hurd to sell off 9,000 acres of their ranch lands in 1908. The agreement
with Hurd called for the development of a town that would include a college
and a port on Trespalacios Bay. Advertising the venture in newspapers
of northern states, Hurd promoted the area's mild climate and promising
farming opportunities. A number of families relocated to Collegeport to
purchase land, establish farms, and build new homes. The Gulf Coast University
of Industrial arts, the college promised by the town's developer, opened
in 1909. Served by the Missouri Pacific (MoPac) Railroad, Collegeport
grew quickly and by 1912 included a bank, post office, school, two churches,
retail stores, and other commercial businesses. It boasted the county's
first free public library, its first Boy Scout troop, and the Women's
Club, founded in 1910. In 1914 a heavy freeze killed most of the farmers'
crops. The following year the area experienced a drought and a disease
which devastated the livestock herds, causing many families to move away.
The railroad depot, known as Mopac House, was dismantled and rebuilt as
part of the public library in 1935. (1990)