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San Patricio County TX
San Patricio County


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SAN PATRICIO, TEXAS

First San Patricio County Seat


San Patricio County, Texas Gulf Coast

27°57'33"N 97°46'23"W (27.959196, -97.773134)

FM 666
11 Miles S of Mathis
28 Miles SW of Sinton the county seat
9 Miles N of Banquette
28 Miles NW of Corpus Christi
ZIP code 78368
Area code 361
Population: 375 Est. (2019)
395 (2010) 318 (2000) 369 (1990)

Book Hotel Here › Corpus Christi Hotels

1872 San Patricio County Courthouse in San Patricio, TX
Replica of the 1872 San Patricio County Courthouse in San Patricio. The original courthouse burned in 1889. This replica was constructed in 1985 by the San Patricio Restoration Society.
See San Patricio County Courthouses

Photo and research by Terry Jeanson, December 2006

History in a Pecan Shell

San Patricio was an Irish settlement founded by empresarios James McGloin and John McMullen in 1829. They had been granted permission to settle 200 Catholic families which were mainly recruited from New York. First residents were lodged at the old mission at Refugio in the fall of 1829 before choosing a site on the Goliad to Laredo Road where the Atascosito Road forded the Nueces River.

The move was completed by 1830 but conditions at the settlement were extremely primitive. An official townsite four leagues square was granted by Mexican Land commissioner José Antonio Saucedo in late 1831 and was declared Villa de San Patricio de Hibernia to honor St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland. In 1834 the town dropped the extra Spanish baggage and the town took on the simplified name of San Patricio.

In 1836 the Matamoros Expedition led by Col. Francis W. Johnson began to march on Mexico, but were met by Gen. José Urrea's troops and defeated before they could get started. The dead from the battle of San Patricio were interred in what is now known as "the Old Cemetery on the Hill." Families fled the threat of future attack and retreated to Victoria, leaving behind their livestock and property. The town became a ghost town for the first time and remained as such until the arrival of Gen. Zachary Taylor in 1845. Troops were stationed in San Patricio and it slowly returned to normal.

San Patricio was designated the county seat by the Texas Legislature on March 17, 1836. A post office was granted in 1848. The town was on the Cotton Road and the valuable cotton trade and the open country attracted bandits who gave the area an unsavory reputation. In the 1880s the town had a population of 200 which had doubled by 1890. In 1876 two schools were established: St. Paul's Academy for boys and St. Joseph's Convent for girls.

In 1894 Sinton was declared to be the new county seat and San Patricio declined accordingly. The town was disincorporated in 1901 and the town was virtually abandoned - becoming a ghost for the second time.

In 1872 the City of Corpus Christi was seeking to annex land on the Nueces River which included the former town. This land-grab rallied area residents and they reincorporated San Patricio in August of 1972. The fight rekindled interest in the town's history and the San Patricio Restoration Society has since built replicas of the towns early buildings - including the 1872 courthouse. The population has declined in recent years from 369 in 1990 to 318 for the 2000 census.


San Patricio Area Hotels:
Corpus Christi Hotels
Sinton Hotels
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Historical Marker: Old Courthouse site; FM 666, San Patricio

San Patricio de Hibernia

Founded in 1830 by John McMullen and James McGloin as the seat of their Irish colony under an empressario contract dated August 17, 1828 which was fulfilled by the empresarios 1830-1835. Named in honor of Saint Patrick the Patron Saint of Ireland. As the frontier outpost of Texas when the revolution began San Patricio 1835-1845 suffered all the miseries of that conflict with no compensating returns. At and near San Patricio, on February 27, 1836 general Jose Urrea's division of Santa Anna's Army surprised and overwhelmed Johnson's Texan party of 35 men, 9 or 10 Texans were killed, 6 or 7 escaped and 20 were sent to Matamoros as prisoners. After San Jacinto the town was destroyed and its inhabitants driven away.

In Memory of Rev. Henry Doyle, Rev. T.J. Molloy, Wm. O'Docharty, Geo. O'Docharty, Walter Henry, Patrick Henry, John Hart, Michael Haley, Mark Killalea, Wm. Hefferman, Oceola Archer, Lewis Ayers, Catherine Hoye, Owen Gaffney, John Ross, Wm. Pugh early settlers of San Patricio. John McMullen delegate to the consultation, 1835. John Turner, John White Bower, signers of the Texas Declaration of Independence. John McGloin, John Fadden, Dennis McGowan, Andrew M. O'Boyle, Geo. Pettuck, Matthew Byrne, Patrick Nevin, Edward Garner, Edward Ryan, Dennis Mahoney, Miles Andross, W.M. Quinn Soldiers in Texas Revolution. San Patricio has contributed the following distinguished citizens. Patrick O'Docharty, Susanna O'Docharty, Thomas O'Callaghan, Patrick McGloin, Chris Sullivan, Rose K. Mahoney, John Ryan, Geo. McCowan, Catherine Ryan, James McKeown, Patrick McMurray, Thomas Magowan, Wm. P. Allen, Mary Ann Collins, Hubert Timon, David Odem, John Timon, Andrew Jackson Brown, John Donahue, Mary E. McCloin, Margaret Hart McFall, Patrick Brennan, Margaret Baldeschwiler, John Corrigan, Margaret Q. James, Andrew Gerhardt, Matthew Kivlin, James Grover, Robert Weir, Eliza A. Sullivan, J. Chrys Dougherty, Steve J. Lewis, Joe E. Sullivan, Hugh Touhy, John Dee.

1936



San Patricio Chronicles

Hanging preceded death of a town by Delbert Trew

Chipita Rodriquez died on Friday, Nov. 13th, 1863. She is believed to be the only woman ever legally hanged by the state of Texas. Though guilty by circumstantial evidence only, her death seemed to place a curse on the town of San Patricio, Texas, as it signaled the beginning of the end of the small settlement...more


Chipita's Ghost by Murray Montgomery



People
Sarge Cummings Master of the Long Loop by Linda-Kirkpatrick

Robert H. “Sarge” Cummings was known as a master of the long loop, a cowboy term for rustler. This old coot was loved by all, except for maybe the Texas Rangers. Children were ecstatic whenever he came to visit a spell. Some would crawl under his chair just to spin the rowels on his spurs as he spun tales of the wild west.

Sarge was born in Texas around 1852. His parents, Mary Elizabeth Torrence and Lawrence Cummings, struggled to keep the family going in the small Irish community of San Patricio, Texas... more



Take a road trip
Texas Gulf Coast

San Patricio, Texas Nearby Towns:
Sinton the county seat
Mathis
Banquette
Corpus Christi

See San Patricio County | Nueces County | Jim Wells County

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Corpus Christi Hotels | More Hotels

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