
Irishtown - Corpus Christi, Texas
N 27° 48.338 W 097° 23.699
14R E 658103 N 3076704
Quick Description: A historical marker describing Irishtown, in present day Corpus Christi, Texas.
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 9/5/2009 9:41:46 PM
Waymark Code: WM75NJ
Views: 2
Long Description:Text from the Historical Marker:
Irishtown
Bounded by Twigg and Tiger Streets, Hall’s Bayou and Corpus Christi
Bay, the section of the city’s Ward One known as Irishtown included
primarily Irish residents, although there were also Anglo
Americans, Mexican Americans, African Americans, Greeks and others.
By the 1830s, Irish settlers migrated to San Patricio in response
to advertising in the northeastern U.S. by empresarios McMullen and
McGloin. Others came with the establishment of Henry L. Kinney’
trading post or after serving under Gen. Zachary Taylor during the
U.S.-Mexican War (1846-48). Many early settlers were carpenters,
laborers, farmers, cattlemen, merchants or blacksmiths.
In 1853, a Methodist church began in Irishtown; its building
provided space for school as well as worship services. Builders
constructed the first Nueces County Courthouse that year, followed
by the second, built in 1875 and known as the Hollub Courthouse,
and third, built in 1914. By the late 1880s, the San Antonio &
Aransas Pass Railway reached the city, with a depot on Tiger
Street. By 1900, Irishtown had a volunteer firefighting unit,
Shamrock Hose Co. No. 4. The community also had a baseball team
which played on a field at the intersection of Chaparral and
Fitzgerald Streets. Nearby was Artesian Park, where bands featuring
neighborhood musicians held concerts and festivals, and politicians
campaigned for office.
Although Irishtown declined after the replacement of the Bascule
Bridge with Harbor Bridge in 1959 and the loss of county offices in
1977, the Bayfront Science Park would become home to museums,
convention and event facilities, and Heritage Park, which includes
several residences of old Irishtown. Today, the historic
neighborhood continues to be an area rich in culture and
heritage.
(2007)
Marker is property of the state of Texas