Kellner Townsite
Posted by: Raven
N 29° 47.185 W 095° 58.121
15R E 213000 N 3298814
A marker on US Hwy 90 just west of Brookshire, Waller County. It briefly denotes Kellner (which became part of Brookshire) as the area's first settlement and its particular geographic/economic significance in this region of the state.
Waymark Code: WMND6D
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 02/18/2015
Views: 7
Per
Wikipedia:
"[...] In 1893 John Kellner donated land and filed a plat for the Town of Kellner out of the William Cooper Survey, one of the oldest headrights in the state. Also in 1893, John Brookshire and O. C. Drew filed their plat for the Town of Brookshire out of the H. H. Pennington Survey. On May 24, 1946, the city of Brookshire was incorporated, comprising both the Kellner and the Brookshire/Drew plats."
The Texas Historical Commission's "
Handbook of Texas Online" website provides further details on how the town of Brookshire (together with "Kellner") came to being --- as well as its regional historic/economic significance:
"[...] The town is named for Capt. Nathen Brookshire, who received title to a league of land as a member of Stephen F. Austin's fifth colony in 1835. Many skeptics thought that the area, which was surrounded by coastal prairies, was unfit for settlement. Detractors were surprised when—because of the rich alluvial soil of the Brazos river bottom and the arrival of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad—Brookshire developed into a thriving agricultural community. The railroad and Brookshire's proximity to Houston made the town an ideal shipping point for crops such as cotton, melons, corn, and pecans. By 1893 a post office had been established at the community. With agriculture as its basis, the economy of Brookshire flourished. By 1897 the Brookshire Times noted that the town had some thirty businesses and had shipped 10,000 bales of cotton that year. Although cotton remained king in Brookshire in 1900, the crop's economic significance diminished over the next three decades because of falling cotton prices and the demand for farm labor in the lucrative war industries. The community's economy, however, was not devastated, as rice became a major cash crop that increased in production every decade after 1900. Brookshire's population was 1,250 in 1920, then fluctuated over the next two decades, then steadily increased through the 1980s. In 1980 Brookshire, with a population of 2,244, was a center for rice, peanut, soybean, and cattle production. The town had a number of churches, a sizable consolidated school district, two banks, and several large businesses. The Waller County Museum, in the home of former resident Dr. Paul Donigan, is located in Brookshire. [...]"