arcola real estate
ARCOLA, TEXAS.
Arcola
is at the junction of Farm Road 521 and State Highway 6 and the
intersection of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe and the Missouri
Pacific railroads, twenty miles east of Richmond in southeastern
Fort Bend County. The site is on part of the league granted in 1822
to David Fitzgerald,
one of the Old Three Hundred.
A large portion of the grant was sold to Jonathan Dawson Waters
in the middle 1840s. By acquiring the whole league in 1850, Waters
became the owner of one of the largest cotton and sugar plantations
in Texas, which he called Arcola. The Houston Tap Railroad was built
through the area of the plantation in 1858. After Waters' death the
plantation lands were purchased by Col. T. W. House
of Houston. The Arcola community was formed predominantly by freed
slaves. A post office was established in 1869 and served off and on
until 1920. Arcola became a railroad junction in 1878 when the Gulf,
Colorado and Santa Fe was built through the county. By 1884 the
community had a sugar mill, two steam gristmill-cotton gins, two
general stores, a Baptist church, and a school. In 1903 the Arcola
school district had two schools serving forty-two white pupils and
four schools serving 176 black pupils. In 1914 the community had an
estimated fifty inhabitants and one general store. In 1940 Arcola
had a church, a school, the Riceton-Arcola cemetery, and four
businesses. Arcola's population slowly grew to 120 in 1949, 299 in
1968, and 661 in 1986, when the community incorporated. Some of its
growth may be attributed to its proximity to Houston. Arcola had two
churches, a school, and a number of scattered dwellings in 1980 and
a population of 666 in 1990.
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