Jackson County
History
(from Centennial
monument on Courthouse Grounds, 115 W. Main St., Edna)
JACKSON COUNTY
Home of the Karankawa Indians granted in part to Stephen
F. Austin and to Martin de Leon. Settled 1824-1835 by colonists
largely from Alabama, Louisiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and west of
the Lavaca, Mexico. Organized as a municipality December 5, 1835.
Named in honor of Andrew Jackson, president of the United States.
Created a county March 17, 1836, organized in 1836 with Texana,
formerly Santa Anna, county seat; Edna,
county seat since 1883. In memory of John Mc Henry, Francis M. White,
James Kerr, F. F. Wells, early settlers. William Menefee, Elijah
Stapp, signers of the Texas Declaration of Independence. William
Sutherland, martyr of the
Alamo; George Sutherland, John S. Menefee, James A. Sylvester,
heroes of San
Jacinto. Clark L. Owen, colonel in the Confederate army, and
other pioneers who resided in this county before or directly after
the Texas Revolution.
Jackson County: average altitude 75 feet, annual rainfall 37 inches.
Soil: black hogwallow, sandy loams, alluvial. Crops and products:
cotton, livestock, corn, dairying, vegetables, poultry, pecans,
oil and gas.
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