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Photographer's
Note:
Situated on the railroad
tracks parallel to Hempstead Highway and US290, Satsuma is north of
Eldridge and south of Highway 6. I remembered an old railroad
building that was about six feet in diameter with SATSUMA painted
in black. Upon reaching that stretch of tracks I found it had been
removed. - Ken
Rudine, May 2010
History
in a Pecan Shell
The community dates
from 1910 when developer J. T. Thompson platted a townsite alongside
the tracks of the Houston and Texas Central Railroad.
Thompson was president of the Satsuma Land Company. The name of the
company was taken from (to be installed) satsuma orange groves.
In 1913 C. W. Hahl, a man who envisioned even bigger things, bought
the site from Thompson, replatted the town (but kept the beckoning
name) and started selling lots.
Buyers were scarce. A post office opened in 1909 but was closed by
1914. The community reportedly had a single store that year – with
no population estimates available.
Satsuma did become a shipping point on the railroad,
but (according to the Handbook of Texas) “never developed as a town.”
A Harris County
map from the 1980s included the townsite along with a chapel and an
abandoned railroad
section house. |
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1920s Harris
County map showing Satsuma
(between 'H' & "A' in 'HARRIS')
Photo courtesy Texas General Land Office |
The "Lost"
Towns of NW Harris County:
Kohrville | Louetta
| North Houston | Satsuma
If these are ghost towns, why are there so many people here?
Although they now only exist as sign names at large intersections
(Barker-Cypress, Bammel-North Houston, Aldine-Bender, Alief-Clodine,
et. al.). It may surprise non-natives that all of these names once
represented once struggling or proudly self-sufficient towns. Even
the inside-the-loop street of Crosstimbers was once a separate town.
While most people associate ghost
towns with ruins and desolation - these ghosts live among us.
Were aisles seven and eight at your local HEB once a syrup mill? Was
Radio Shack once a livery stable? Best Buy a cornfield or cotton gin?
Are there unmarked graves under the floor of your favorite Mexican
restaurant?
The short answer is this: In many cases these villages were already
ghost towns - or so close to being ghost towns that you could hardly
tell the difference. Most had their life-blood drained from them after
WWII with the
migration of rural families to Houston.
The phenomenon was statewide. Dallas
and Ft. Worth have
their fair share of postwar "absorbed" ghost towns - as do smaller
cities.
Then "Edge City" happened. The relentless march of strip centers,
subdivisions and gated communities overtook these former towns until
only the names and cemeteries remained.
While the subject is worthy of further investigation (exactly where
is the Lily White cemetery behind Memorial City Shopping Center?),
we're happy to include this topic, made possible by generous grant
of time, sweat and reseach by the Team
Rudine.
- Editor
"15
Minutes of Separation"
May 12, 2010 column |
Texas
Escapes, in its purpose to preserve historic, endangered and vanishing
Texas, asks that anyone wishing to share their local history, stories,
landmarks and vintage/historic photos, please contact
us. |
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