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Site of Cincinnati,
Texas showing 1936 Centennial Marker
Photos courtesy Barclay
Gibson, May 2013 |
History in
a Pecan Shell
Established as
early as 1836-1837, Cincinnati was a ferry crossing and port on the
Trinity River. James C. DeWitt is credited as being the town founder.
The community sat along the Huntsville
- Crockett road.
Growth was very slow in the early years but as the Trinity River trade
increased, the town became a collection point for goods to be shipped
to Galveston.
The river was notorious for stranding vessels due to unpredictable
rises and falls in the river level.
Sources report that Cincinnati peaked in the early 1850s. Amenities
and businesses included a wagonmaker, blacksmith, a cotton warehouse
and two physicians.
The available population figures are only estimates and they vary
from 200 to 600 residents before tragedy struck the town in 1853 in
the form of a yellow fever epidemic. Reports of a traveler from Galveston
bringing the disease to town set off a panic which nearly emptied
the town. Although it wasn't as devastating as people feared, the
exodus of Cincinnatians never returned. Refugees from Cincinnati provided
the initial population for the nearby town of Tuscaloosa.
The town's fate was sealed with the arrival of the railroad in 1872.
The main line from Dallas
to Houston was at Riverside
- a mere 15 miles from Cincinnati. In the early 1880s only 35 people
were reported at Cincinnati and those eventually moved away.
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Cincinnati 1936
Centennial Marker
On Private Property.
No Location Information
Photo
courtesy Barclay
Gibson, May 2013 |
Texas Centennial
Marker:
Site of Cincinnati
Important shipping
point in Trinity River navigation. Founded in 1838 by James C. De
Witt. Abandoned after yellow fever scourge in 1853. |
Cincinnati in
1851 Walker County
map
Courtesy Texas General Land Office |
Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history, stories,
landmarks and recent or vintage photos, please contact
us. |
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