Marker Details

Houston's Deep-Water Port


Wayside & Clinton Drive, Gate 8

Houston , 77029

Notes:
Class of 2013, 13HR03; THC Atlas entry via alphabetical County listing; Homeland Security prevented photo oportunities at this location after 9/11/2001; access to pavilion granted in Oct. 2014 for this dedication
Directions: From 610 East, exit Clinton; travel west approx. one and eight tenths mile to the second traffic signal, enter property via Gate 8, continue on Ramp Road #2 one half mile to Tour Boat parking lot/Plaza; the marker is near the Tour Boat Sam Houston dock on the lower sidewalk level, next to the boat

Key Time Period: 1893 - 1919 City Beautiful - WW I

Corretions/New Research:

Marker Text: As early as the 1820s, ships began using Buffalo Bayou to connect Harrisburg, now part of Houston, to Galveston Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. As more people came to Houston, traffic and commerce along the bayou grew and the need for a deeper waterway became apparent. After Charles Stewart, U.S. Congressman from Houston, brought attention to the need for work along the bayou in the 1880s, U.S. Representative Joseph C. Hutcheson championed a bill allowing for the committee on rivers and harbors to survey the waterway. Congressman Thomas Ball led the delegation on the survey tour and they agreed that Houston was destined to be a seaport. The destruction of Galveston’s port during the great storm of 1900 created increased pressure for a larger and safer inland deep-water port.

During the early 1900s, Thomas Ball tried to convince Congress to support fully a deep-water port for Houston. Business and civic leaders joined forces in 1909, allowing Ball to propose the “Houston Plan,” in which local constituents offered to pay half the cost of the deep-water dredging. Congress accepted the offer and this cost-sharing agreement set a precedent for funding of future federal projects. Work began in 1912 and the 52-mile-long deep-water channel officially opened on November 10, 1914. By 1919, Houston was the second-largest spot cotton export port in the U.S., with exports growing exponentially each year during the 1920s. Business along the port grew, bringing new industries such as paper mills, motor fuel refineries and the first container terminal along the Texas gulf coast. Houston’s deep-water port transformed a fledgling community into an internationally recognized center of commerce. (2013)



Marker is property of the State of Texas
Marker Type: Marker with Post
Historical Org: Texas Historical Commission (THC)

Key Map Information: 495 N

GPS Coordinates: 29 44.909, 95 17.550

Precinct No: 2

Marker No: 17505