|
SARATOGA, TEXAS
by Archie P. McDonald,
PhD |
|
About
fifty years ago, I worked as a "hop boy" on a milk delivery truck
that ran the country route for Kelly's Dairy in Beaumont,
Texas. Dad was the salesman who drove the truck, so I had a
sympathetic boss and could consume all the pint bottles (once upon
a time milk came in such), of chocolate milk I wanted. I "wanted"
when we served the customers in Saratoga, in Hardin County.
The reason: the water smelled highly of sulfur. It really didn't
taste bad if you held your nose, but a boy has his foolishness,
so I disdained the smelly stuff and succumbed to the seduction of
chocolate. Upon reflection, maybe Saratoga's water was just an excuse.
Anyway, that water helped this East
Texas community earn its name and gave it unfulfilled notions
of becoming a famous health spa like the one in New York from which
it borrowed its moniker. J.F. Cotton discovered a spring
at the site of this future town in the 1850s. I expect he
smelled it before he saw it. In the 1880s, P.S. Watts
attempted to capitalize on the water's unique properties. This was
a time in which many people placed great faith in hydropathy,
or the healing power of water. Watts may not have thought he was
dealing with another Lourdres, but he did hope for another Saratoga,
as in New York, where the elite retreated to "take the waters,"
sometimes seeking health and sometimes just enjoying their wealth.
Watts
built a hotel and rental cottages and such, and changed the name
of the community from New Sour Lake to Saratoga, hoping
to attract customers. Not many came, but what made the water smell
the way it did eventually brought some measure of riches anyway.
Old Cotton himself attempted to find oil in the area of Saratoga
as early as 1865, and others tried again in 1887 and located a small
well. Much larger production followed the discovery of Spindletop,
about thirty miles south of Saratoga, in 1901. And the arrival of
a railroad also enabled the expansion of sawmilling because timber
produced there then could reach distant markets.
Saratoga enjoyed a period of some prosperity from oil-and-timber
production, but failed to hold its advantage. From a population
of 1,000 in 1925, it fell to about 350 in 1950, though lately the
number of folks who call Saratoga home has reach about 1,000 again.
Dad sometimes got a sore back from lifting those cases of milk and
our family frequently vacationed in Hot Springs, Arkansas, so he
could take the famed baths there. He might have been as well off
in Saratoga.
Fifty years later, I don't know if the water still smells like sulfur
in Saratoga, and even if it does I might not be so persnickety now.
On the other hand, chocolate offers a powerful alternative.
All Things Historical
July
8-14, 2001
(Archie P. McDonald is Director of the East Texas Historical Association
and author or editor of over 20 books on Texas)
|
|
Saratoga Forum:
Subject:
Bragg Light Misnomer
Dear TE, I have lived in Saratoga, Texas my entire my life (36 years)
and grew up a quarter of a mile from the end of Bragg Road. Everyone
who grew up in Saratoga knows [the local mysterious light] it as
Bragg Light, not the ghost light, ghost road light, nothing with
the name ghost or Saratoga even mentioned in the name. The light
is there and it's not swamp gas as other people try to say because
there aren't any swamps around Bragg Road. My granddad was born
in 1897 and was raised in Saratoga and always talked about the light.
So does my dad, who has spent his entire life here (since 1934).
People try to write articles about the road and light, that are
not from the area and they get so much wrong about it. Just like
it is known that oil was discovered in Saratoga way before Beaumont,
but because it wasn't a boom it's not recognized as that. I just
wish someone could write a completely accurate article on the Bragg
light so it is known that it is there and what it is. My Dad tells
me the story of the headless man looking for his head is something
that someone from out of town made up and that people that descended
from Saratoga never heard of it until they talked to people from
other areas. I apologize if it sounds like I'm "going off" on this
subject but as someone who has lived here all my life it's irritating
to hear people talk and write about things that they don't completely
know about. I have a magazine from years ago that featured Bragg
Road and was fairly accurate on the article because they did a lot
of research from the people around here before it was published.
- Thomas Tomlinson, Saratoga, Texas,, May 03, 2007
I was born
and raised in Beaumont
and heard many stories about the "ghost" of Saratoga.... A friend
of mine once told me that her car was actually attacked and dented
by an unseen force when she was in Saratoga. .... On a double-date,
I was taken out there late at night, but nothing occurred. ... I
would like to know more of the story (legend), whether it be true
or not. ... - Thank you, Rhoda W., January 02, 2002
Texas Escapes, in its purpose
to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing Texas, asks that
anyone wishing to share their local history and vintage/historic
photos, please contact
us.
|
|
|