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  Texas : Features : Columns : "Texas Tales"

Granite

by Mike Cox
Mike Cox

It’s certainly not the most compelling of Texas’ unsolved mysteries, but it would be interesting to know how some multi-ton chunks of granite have managed to disappear.

Back in the 1950s, Austin’s Airport Boulevard carried light traffic to and from the city’s small airport, a wooden facility built in the 1930s. Railroad tracks paralleled the roadway from Airport’s intersection with North Lamar Blvd. to East Avenue, a thoroughfare that later became Interstate 35. And along the railroad right of way lay several large blocks of pink granite.

For those not familiar with Austin’s landscape, pink granite is not indigenous to the area. The closest point it occurs naturally is the wrongly named town of Marble Falls, which more accurately should be Granite Falls.

One summer afternoon in the mid-50s, my grandfather took me to a Dairy Queen then located on Airport. Pointing to one of the big rocks adjacent to the railroad tracks, he said, “Do you know where that came from?”

When I replied that I did not, he related, “It fell from a train hauling granite to build the Capitol. Reloading it would have been too much trouble, so the railroad just left it where it lay.”

Granddad knew what he was talking about. Though born a little more than 10 years after the Capitol’s 1887 dedication, his father (my great-grandfather) had been one of the construction workers. (A paid employee, I hasten to add, not one of the convicts also used in building the state house.)

After the decision had been made to build the capitol of Texas granite rather than Indiana limestone, the contractor needed some way to get 50,000 tons of donated granite from a quarry at Marble Falls to Austin.

Necessity being the mother of capitalism as well as invention, a group of investors incorporated the Austin and Northwestern Railroad on April 19, 1881. Not encumbered by today’s environmental clearance processes, lengthy right of way acquisition and other factors, trains were running over 60 miles of track from Burnet to Austin by May 2, 1882, barely a year after the railroad’s organization.

Oxen teams hauled the granite from near Marble Falls to the rail head at Burnet, and from there it went to the Austin and Northwestern depot between 4th and 5th streets, just east of present I-35. The granite then went by a short line to near the capitol construction site.

A steam engine called the Lone Star pulled 15,700 car loads of granite to Austin, including the 16,000-pound piece used for the cornerstone laid on March 2, 1885.

One flatcar could only carry two blocks of granite, the load placed over each set of wheels. The heavy loads put huge pressure on the 40-pound narrow-gauge rails, often causing them to spread. When that happened, the cars jumped the tracks and the granite spilled from the train.

Several years ago it occurred to me that the granite chunks once seen along Airport were gone. I remember seeing them well into the late 1960s, but I can’t remember having seen them since.

Where did they go?

That some souvenir hunter took the granite can pretty easily be ruled out. Granite weighs 168 pounds per cubic foot, compared to a mere 62 pounds for a cubic foot of water. Obviously, it would take heavy equipment to remove those rocks.

Clearly, at some point in the 1970s someone using some stout hydraulic equipment must have removed the granite along Airport Boulevard, but the files of the Austin History Center are silent on the matter. Why they removed the stone is also a good question, though it probably had to do with the value of the granite finally exceeding the cost of moving it.

Not all the granite that once lined the tracks in Austin has disappeared. There’s still a medium-sized chunk on the railroad right of way where 38 ½ Street crosses the track, just east of I-35. Other pieces of granite can still be seen from State Highway 29 between Burnet and Austin. And a derailment in 1886 left 36 giant blocks lying in Brushy Creek, where they remain today.

Thirty-two miles of the Austin and Northwestern right of way, with modern, standard-gauge trackage, will carry the city’s first commuter rail trains starting later this year. If you have occasion to ride the train, don’t take it for granted if you see chucks of granite along the way.

© Mike Cox - "Texas Tales"
January 31, 2008 column
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