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Fayette County is on Interstate Highway 10 sixty miles
southeast of Austin in the Blackland Prairies region of south
central Texas. The center of the county lies at 29°55' north
latitude and 96°55' west longitude. La Grange is the county
seat and largest community. In addition to Interstate 10, transportation
needs are served by U.S. highways 77, 90, and 290 and State highways
71, 95, 159, and 237. The county's terrain varies from level land
to steep slopes, with altitude ranging from 200 to 600 feet. The
Colorado River, which bisects the county from northwest to southeast,
is fed by several major creeks: Rabb's, Cedar, and Baylor on the
east and Buckner's and Williams on the west. Cummins Creek flows
through the eastern part of the county and the East and West Navidad
rivers through the southern part. Potable groundwater is readily
available from the Carrizo-Wilcox and Catahoula-Oakville aquifers
at relatively shallow depths. The county covers 950 square miles
and is composed of three land resource areas-Blackland Prairies
(63 percent), the Post Oak Belt (30 percent), and the Colorado
river bottom (7 percent). Within the Blackland Prairie on the
uplands are the clayey blacklands and loamy claypen areas. The
bottomlands contain dark loamy and clayey soils. The Post Oak
Belt contains the Texas Claypan Area with uplands of gray, slightly
acid sandy loam and sandy to clayey bottomland soils. Scattered
outcrops of the Willis Formation form gravelly ridges along the
Colorado River and large areas of gravelly soils in the northern
half of the county. The vegetation is a mixture of the post oak
savannah and Blackland Prairie region, with tall grasses, oak,
and elms predominating. Also commonly found are eastern red cedars,
pecans, cottonwoods, and sycamores. Some hickory, walnut, mesquite,
and yaupon grow in diverse areas. The north central section is
forested by loblolly pine, a continuation of the Lost Pine Forestqv of neighboring Bastrop County. Whitetail deer are native to the area, especially in the timbered areas, and raccoon, beaver, and
possum live along the many creeks. Coyotes are so numerous that
a control program has been instigated. Game species found in this
district include squirrel, quail, dove, and water fowl. Southern
bald eagles traverse the county, particularly along the Colorado
River. Natural resources include timber, lignite, sand, gravel,
bleaching clays, volcanic ash, oil, and gas. The climate is subtropical
humid, with hot summers and mild winters. The average annual precipitation
is thirty-six inches. Temperatures range from an average low of
41° F in January to an average high of 96° in July,
and the average growing season is 277 days. Flooding is common
along the Colorado River; major floods in 1869, 1870, 1900, 1938,
and 1992 caused considerable damage to crops and property.
Prior to European settlement Lipan Apaches and Tonkawa
Indians inhabited parts of what is now Fayette County. Many Indian
artifacts have been found, especially along the Colorado River
and near Round Top. A few miles north of the Colorado River, above
Little Pin Oak Creek, a stratified multicomponent campsite was
found, with Clovis, Plainview, and other later artifacts. In the
early eighteenth century Spanish explorers passed through the
area. La Bahía Road,qv which ran southwest to northeast and crossed the river at the site of present La Grange, was the major route for travel during the Mexican period. The area was part of Stephen F. Austin'sqv first colony, but the earliest known white settlers, Aylett C. Buckner and Peter Powell,qqv arrived earlier and lived on La Bahía Road west of La Grange, where they ran a trading post. Formal settlement began in 1822 with the arrival of the Austin colonists.
From 1824 to 1828 ten members of the Old Three Hundredqv received title to their land grants in the fertile Colorado River valley; William Rabbqv received four leagues in order to build a mill. A total of ninety-two
Mexican land grants were granted in the area that is now Fayette
County. The earliest settlers gathered at Wood's Fort, Moore's
Fort (La Grange), the James Ross home, and Jesse Burnam'sqv blockhouse, twelve miles below La Grange. Burnam's Ferryqv on the Colorado River provided a cutoff route from La Bahía Road to San Felipe. Prior to Texas independence, the area above
La Bahía Road was in the Mina Municipalityqv and the area below in the Municipality of Colorado. Gotier's Trace,qv the Wilbarger Trace, and the La Grange-San Felipe road intersected La Bahía Road. Ferries were used to cross the Colorado River until the first bridge was built at La Grange by private subscription in
1883. On December 14, 1837, upon petition of the citizens, the
Congress of the Republic of Texasqv established the county of Fayette, named in honor of the Marquis de Lafayette. La Grange, the name of the chateau to which Lafayette retired, was designated the county seat. The citizens organized the county government on January 18, 1838, and the southwestern
boundary of the county was extended westward on May 3, 1838. The
county lost territory in the south to Lavaca County in 1854 and
in the north to Lee County in 1874.
The early settlers' life revolved around their plantations,
but problems with Indians occupied much of their time. Sometimes
the settlers felt so threatened that they moved down to the lower
Colorado River area. At other times they grouped together, sometimes
aided by Lipan Apache and Tonkawa Indians who were friendly to
the settlers, to resist marauding bands of Comanches, Wacos, and
Kichais. Fayette County men were prominent in the Texas Revolution;qv more than fifty men participated in the battle of San Jacinto,qv including Joel Walter Robinson,qv one of the captors of Antonio López de Santa Anna.qv The Somervell, Mier,qqv and Dawson expeditions were composed mostly of Fayette County men. In 1848 the remains of the men killed in the Dawson Massacreqv and in Perote Prisonqv were returned to Fayette County and interred on Monument Hill; in 1933 a granite tomb was dedicated there (see MONUMENT HILL-KREISCHE BREWERY STATE HISTORIC SITE). The historic Muster Oak, still standing on the square, has been a rallying site since
the early settlement. William Menefee,qv a signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence,qv was from Fayette County. A proposal to permanently locate the
state capital in Fayette County was approved on April 11, 1838,
by an overwhelming majority of the Second Congress. Local citizens
arranged for the purchase of the Eblin league on the east side
of the Colorado River near La Grange, reserving all vacant lands
within a nine-mile radius. The measure was vetoed by Sam Houston,qv however, and the capital was located upriver in what later became Austin.
The first private schools opened in the county as
early as 1834. Academies and institutes were operated in La Grange,
Fayetteville, and Round Top in the 1840s. The Methodists founded
Rutersville College,qv one of the first colleges in Texas, in 1840; it consolidated with the Texas Military Institute, Galveston,qv in 1856. The earliest churches organized in the county were Methodist (1838), Baptist (1839), Presbyterian (1841), and Episcopal (1852).
Most of the early settlers were from the Old South, but the Austin
Colony also included a few German immigrants. In 1832 Joseph Biegel
received title to a league in the area and developed the first
German community in the county, Biegel Settlement. In the 1840s
many more German immigrants settled in Fayette County. The Adelsvereinqv purchased a league in 1843 and established a plantation called Nassau Farm.qv During the mid-1850s sizable numbers of Bohemian Czechs also began moving into the county. In the 1856 the first Bohemian settlement in Texas, Dubina, was founded in Fayette County. The county's
population grew rapidly, especially after Texas joined the Union;
already by 1850 it had 3,756 residents. During the early years
the economy was based largely on subsistence farming, but during
the late 1840s and 1850s a thriving plantation economy emerged.
In the early 1850s plantations were producing impressive quantities
of corn and shipping tobacco, wool, and cotton to outside markets.
To clear land, harvest crops, and perform other forms of labor,
planters brought in increasing numbers of African-American slaves.
Between 1840 and 1850 the slave population grew from 206 to 820,
and by 1855 the number had reached 2,072. On the eve of the Civil
Warqv Fayette County was among the most well-developed areas in the state, with nearly 1,000 farms containing 75,463 improved acres.
In 1859 farmers produced 12,683 bales of cotton and 320,580 bushels
of corn, placing Fayette County among the state's leaders in both
categories. The population of 11,604 was more than three times
what it had been only a decade before; the number of slaves alone
(3,786) in 1860 exceeded the entire population for 1850. Despite
the county's large slave population, however, voters narrowly
rejected secessionqv by a margin of forty-six votes (626 against, 528 for), primarily due to the area's numerous German and Bohemian residents, who generally opposed slavery.qv Despite the result, after the war broke out three volunteer companies
were immediately organized, and before the war's end a total of
about 800 men had served in the Confederate army.
The Civil War and its aftermath brought profound
changes to the county. Although it made only a small material
contribution to the war effort, the lack of markets and wild fluctuations
in Confederate currency caused hardships for many. The end of
the war brought wrenching changes in the economy. For many whites
the abolitionqv of slavery meant devastating economic loss. Before the war slaves had constituted more than a third of all taxable property in the county, and their loss coupled with a sharp decline in property
values caused a profound disruption for most planters. The county's
African Americansqv fared no better. Although most of the county's black residents remained, many left the farms owned by their former masters to seek better working conditions. For the vast majority, the change
brought only marginal improvement in their living and working
conditions; most ended up working on the land on shares, receiving
one-third or one-half of the crop for their labors.
During Reconstructionqv Fayette County received little attention from federal political or military authorities. Federal troops were stationed there only briefly, and there was little of the violence that many other
areas experienced. The economy began to recover in the late 1860s,
and by 1870 production levels neared or exceeded the 1860 figures.
During the next three decades the county experienced a long period
of growth, fueled in large measure by a surge of new German and
Slavic residents. Many of the early plantation owners, hard-pressed
to make ends meet without their bondsmen, sold their lands to
German, Bohemian, or Wendish settlers, who in turn sold portions
of it to others. As a result the large plantations that had dominated
antebellum Texasqv were gradually replaced by smaller, more numerous farms. This trend is reflected in the agricultural census of the late nineteenth century, which shows the number of farms increasing from 1,483
in 1870 to 5,189 in 1900. The number of acres under cultivation
also grew dramatically during this period, rising from 76,401
to 287,853. Although the new farms were smaller, they tended to
be much more productive because of intensive cultivation by the
Germans and Bohemians. Most of these small farmers grew cabbages,
tomatoes, potatoes, beans, peas, turnips, and peaches, but the
leading cash crops remained cotton and corn. In 1880 farmers produced
24,766 bales of cotton and 694,833 bushels of corn; by 1890 cotton
output had grown to 37,559 bales, and corn production topped 912,000
bushels.
The influx of German, Czechs, and Wendsqqv after the Civil War also gradually altered the cultural face of
the county. Although some of the new settlers moved in from other
counties, including most of the Wends, many of the settler were
new immigrants who brought their own distinct culture with them.
The tide of immigration was particularly strong in the 1880s,
as numerous additional German and Bohemian settlers arrived. By
1890 nearly one-fourth of the county's residents (7,856 of 31,481)
were foreign-born, with the largest contingents from Germany (3,667)
and Austria-Hungary (3,224). As a result, by the late nineteenth
century many of the leading businesses and civic organizations
were dominated by Germans and Czechs. During the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries La Grange had two foreign-language
newspapers, the Svobodaqv (Czech) and the La Grange Zeitung (German). The Germans and Czechs formed shooting clubs, poetry groups, and fraternal and religious organizations. The KJT (Czech Catholic Union), the
SPJST (a Czech benevolent society), and the Round Top Rifle Association,
founded in the nineteenth century, still existed in the early
1990s. Public education in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
century was supplemented by private and parochial schools, which
were often taught in German and Czech. Despite the increasing
number of white residents, African Americans continued to form
a large segment of the population. In 1870 the black population
was 5,901, and as late as 1900 blacks still represented about
one-third of the population; in spite of these numbers, however,
African Americans had little political power. While Fayette County
citizens rejected the white primaryqv-largely due to German and populist sentiment against it-African-American voters were often excluded from voting and had little say in the local political structure.
During the early decades of the twentieth century
Fayette County continued to grow and prosper. Corn remained an
important crop, with cattle and dairy products also providing
significant sources of income. But it was cotton which emerged
as the single largest cash crop. Cotton production averaged more
than 30,000 bales annually between 1900 and 1930, and by 1929
more than half of all of the cropland (118,256 of 196,847 acres)
was devoted to cotton. The growth of cotton in turn fueled a steady
rise in farm tenancy.qv By 1920 nearly half of all farmers (2,195 of 4,728) were tenants. During the years of the Great Depression,qv when nearly all farmers suffered, these tenants found themselves particularly hard pressed. Overproduction, droughts,qv and boll weevilqv infestations combined to drive down prices and reduce the crop
size. Between 1930 and 1940 the amount of land planted in cotton
fell by more than 50 percent (from 118,858 to 50,858 acres), and
production was barely a third of what had been during the peak
years of the 1920s. After World War IIqv the agricultural emphasis changed. Cotton continued to be grown
on a much smaller scale through the early 1950s, but farmers also
turned increasingly to cattle raising. By 1987 there were 2,235
milk cows and 110,511 head of cattle in the county, and cotton
was no longer being grown. Due to rich soils and abundant surface
and ground water, Fayette County remains an important agricultural
county. In the late 1980s it ranked among the top three counties
in the state in cow and calf production. In 1989 there were 2,476
producers. Leading crops included corn, grain sorghums, peanuts,
and pecans. The estimated gross agricultural income for 1988 was
$42,427,000-beef cattle 57 percent, grain 10 percent, poultry
(eggs) 8 percent, swine 8 percent, hay 8 percent, dairy products
7 percent, pecans 1 percent, and miscellaneous 1 percent. Of the
2,750 farm operators, about half held additional jobs.
During the 1980s and 1990s the economic development
of the county was largely dependent on its natural resources.
Construction gravel and sand, grinding pebbles, clays, and fuller's
earth were mined. Oil, first discovered in 1943, was an important
source of income. Due to new horizontal drilling techniques Fayette
County experienced a dramatic rise in oil and gas production in
the early 1990s. As a highly active part of the Giddings oilfield
of the Austin Chalk trend, the county produced 14,044,733 barrels
of oil and 72,469,984 million cubic feet of gas in 1992. Timber
is selectively cut for commercial purposes from 28,200 acres of
privately owned woodlands. Agribusiness plays a major role in
the economy. Light industry includes shops, a cabinet factory,
plastic recycling, gas processing, and other manufacturing. The
Lower Colorado River Authorityqv Fayette Power Project is the largest employer in the county, with around 500 workers. Other sources of employment are banking, services, retail sales, trucking, government, schools, and drilling and pipeline management.
Beginning in 1872, the development of the railroad
system caused the decline of many rural communities and the development
of the new towns of Schulenburg and Flatonia. In the 1990s three
railroad lines crossed the county-the Missouri, Kansas and Texas
from east to west and two branches of the Southern Pacific, one
from north to south and the other along the southern boundary.
A public airport for light planes was located in La Grange. Fayette
County has published English-language newspapers since 1843. Three
were published in the early 1990s-the Fayette County Record,
the Flatonia Argus, and the Schulenburg Sticker.
In the early 1990s there were five independent school districts,
one Catholic high school, and two Catholic schools through eighth
grade. Although Father Michael Muldoonqv visited the county under Mexican rule, followed by other visiting
priests and Lutheran pastors, the Catholic and Lutheran churches
did not flourish until the second half of the nineteenth century
under German, Czech, and Wendish influence. In the 1990s there
were sixty churches and one Jewish temple; Lutheran and Catholic
churches accounted for half the total.
Historically, the majority of county voters have
been Democratic or independent, and Democratic candidates have
typically received the majority of the county's votes. Populist,
Greenback,qqv and other third-party candidates fared well during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. In recent years, however, Republicans have been making strong inroads, particularly in presidential
and statewide races. Republican presidential candidates won every
election between 1968 and 1992, with the exception of 1976, when
Democrat Jimmy Carter eked out a narrow victory. Democratic officials,
however, continued to maintain control of most county offices,
and as late as 1982, 97 percent of voters in the primary voted
Democratic. The population of Fayette County reached an all-time
high of 36,542 in 1900 but has been gradually declining. The population
was 29,796 in 1910, 29,965 in 1920, 30,708 in 1930, 29,246 in
1940, 24,176 in 1950, 20,384 in 1960, 17,650 in 1970, and 18,832
in 1980. In 1990 the county recorded a small gain, rising to 20,095.
The largest communities were La Grange (3,951), Schulenberg (2,455),
Flatonia (1,291), and Fayetteville (283). The largest minority
groups were African Americans (8.4 percent) and Hispanics (8.5
percent). Most of the residents (80 percent) live in small communities
or rural areas. Tourism and recreation are a growing economic
resource for Fayette County. The cooling pond of the Fayette Power
Project has been developed into a stocked fishing lake of 2,400
surface acres, averaging a depth of thirty feet. It is open to
the public and has become especially popular with bass fishermen.
Monument Hill-Kreische Brewery State Historic Site, the historic
Henkel Square in Round Top, and Winedale Historical Centerqv draw visitors year round. Antique fairs, the International Festival-Institute at Round Top,qv ethnic and town festivals, and the County Fair are popular special
events. The "painted churches" at Dubina, Praha, Ammansville,
and High Hill offer popular historic-preservation tours, and each
of the four major towns has a museum actively preserving county
history.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Frank Lotto, Fayette County: Her
History and Her People (Schulenburg, Texas: Sticker Steam
Press, 1902; rpt., Austin: University of Texas Press, 1981). Worth
Stickley Ray, Austin Colony Pioneers (Austin: Jenkins,
1949; 2d ed., Austin: Pemberton, 1970). Julia Lee Sinks, Chronicles
of Fayette (La Grange, Texas, Bicentennial Commission, 1975).
Julia Lee Sinks, "Editors and Newspapers of Fayette County,"
Quarterly of the Texas State Historical Association 1 (July
1897). Houston Wade, comp., The Dawson Men of Fayette County
(Houston, 1932). Leonie Rummel Weyand and Houston Wade, An
Early History of Fayette County (La Grange, Texas: La Grange
Journal, 1936).
Daphne Dalton Garrett
This information comes from the Texas State Historical Association
Handbook of Texas Online.
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