| Quintana's history
dates back to 1528 when Spanish survivors of the Navarez
Expedition, a search party looking for Montezuma's gold, were
adrift and dying of thirst when they noticed a current of muddy
water flowing into the Gulf. The water was drinkable -
"fresh water from the sea" they said and followed the
current to the mouth of the river calling it Los Brazos de Dios,
the Arms of God.
Stephen F. Austin's colonists
landed the Lively here in 1821. Austin was commissioned to lay
the town out in 1833 and named it after General Adreas Quintana,
deputy minister of Mexican Foreign and Internal affairs, who was
sympathetic to Austin's efforts to colonize the area.
Quintana prospered with a dry goods warehouse, meat market,
school, hotel, grocery store and post office. It became a
popular resort for plantation owners who built huge summer homes
on the beach.
The Civil War brought about a
decrease in the population and a confederate fort guarded the
mouth of the Brazos. During the last decade of the
nineteenth century the population increased dramatically as a
result of work on the harbor and jetties and other improvements
related to a deep-water port. In 1891 residents voted
thirty-seven to nineteen to incorporate the town and authorize the
election of a mayor, a marshal and five alderman as officers of
the city.
But during the last 100 years,
six hurricanes leveled nearly every structure and at least two
major outbreaks of yellow fever and cholera kept it's population
in check. The hurricane of 1915 turned Quintana into a ghost
town.
During
WWII, the Gun Mounds at
the base of shipping canal, which are now within the County Park,
were erected to protect Dow's Magnesium plant. Guns were
placed atop the mounds to protect the defense plant from aircraft,
warships and submarines.
With the jetty's intact, it was
possible to maintain dredged water depths, opening the way for
modern shipping. The discovery of sulphur nearby paved the
way for the first of the local chemical industries. But
flooding of the river could no longer be tolerated and in 1929 The
Corps of Engineers dug a new channel to the Gulf and the old river
was sealed three miles above the mouth. At about the same
time the Intracoastal Waterway was also completed, turning
Quintana into a man-made island.
Today, the island is home to
about 100 permanent residents. |