Marker Details

Woodland Heights Community


3300 Beauchamp & 300 Highland

Houston , 77009

Notes: 08HR08, Class of 2008; Marker application approved by HCHC, reference 4th Quarter Meeting notes; submitted to THC
Directions: From I-45 exit North Main, west of North Main two blocks, approx. one tenth mile, left on Beauchamp, two tenths mile to Highland; marker is at the southeast corner of Sparks Park, park is south of Travis Elementary School, at intersection of 3300 block of Beauchamp & 300 block of Highland

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

Corretions/New Research:

No data available

Marker Text: In the early 20th Century, William A. Wilson, with the financial backing of James A. Baker, Jr., Joseph B. Bowles, Rufus Cage and J. M. Cotton, established the Woodland Heights Community north of and topographically higher than downtown Houston. Among the partners, William Wilson chose to live on Bayland Street in the Woodland Heights neighborhood. The developers’ firm, the William Wilson Realty Company, platted the addition as a streetcar suburb, where residents would commute to and from work and shopping by use of public transportation. Built in the southwestern area of Germantown, the community included water piped into every house, concrete sidewalks, graded streets, and trees and shrubs for beautification purposes.

The developers began selling land and constructing houses in 1907. Residents soon organized community institutions, including the Beauchamp Springs Presbyterian, Woodland Baptist and Zion Lutheran Churches, and the Woodland Masonic Lodge #1157, A. F. & A. M. The Woodland Heights Garden Club later developed, which was followed by the Woodland Heights Civic Association. The developers also provided for education by deeding land to the Travis Elementary School (previously Beauchamp Springs Public School). Businesses, including several grocery stores, would also open in the primarily residential neighborhood.

Many of the neighborhood’s historic structures, built between 1907 and 1925, and reflecting arts and crafts and bungalow styles, remain. The community was later incorporated into Houston, and today, Woodland Heights continues to be a thriving neighborhood. (2008)

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

Key Map Information: 493 B

GPS Coordinates: 29 47.248, 95 22.452

Precinct No: 2

Marker No: 14729