HomeMy WebLinkAboutProvidence Church DedicationPublic Dedication
of the
PROVIDENCE CHURCH
HISTORIC SITE
Monday, April 21, 2008.- 1:00 p.m.
at the intersection of
Raymond Stotzer Pkwy. and
Turkey Creek Road
College Station, Texas
presented by:
The Brazos County Historical Commission
and Texas Department of Transportation
PROGRAM
Welcome
Henry P Mayo,
Vice -Chair - Brazos County Historical
Recognition of guests and dignitaries
Henry Mayo and Regina Opersteny
History of the area pioneer families
Mary Esther Burton
Jones / Wooten family descendent
TxDOT's obligation for the memorial
Maury W. Jacob, RLA
Landscape Architect - TxDOT Bryan District
Research and design of the memorial
Shweta Gupta and James R. Schutt, RLA
Texas Transportation Institute (TTI)
TxDOT partnerships
Bob Colwell
Public Information Officer — TxDOT Bryan Dist.
Closing
Henry Mayo
A Transcript of the Plaques
CULTURE
The Brazos Valley was first settled and formed by
people from all over America and other foreign
lands. The earliest Anglo settlers arrived in
this Mexican province from nearby southern states,
lured by large Mexican land grants. After the
Texas Revolution, the Republik of Texas also
granted land for service during the fighting.
Typically, land would remain in a family and be
apportioned to grown children as they began their
own families. Areas quickly became populated by
many families with just a few surnames.
German immigrants began arriving in the mid -1800s
followed by Italian, Polish, and Slavic settlers.
As the original land grants were * divided, portions
were sold to these later settlers whose surnames
also can be found throughout the area. The
history and development of the Brazos Valley and
the people associated with this memorial are
typical of rural Texas.
In February, 1829, JOHN HENRY JONES arrived in
Texas from Jefferson County, Tennessee. One of
Stephen F. Austin's Old Three Hundred, he received
a Mexican land grant of "a league and labor of
land" (4605 acres) . The next year brought Dr.
Thomas Wooten from Henry County, v 4 rginia. Dr.
Wooten, who received a grant of land from Stephen
F. Austin in 1832, brought family including his
daughter Martha Jane who later married John Henry
Jones. In October of 1836, Jones enlisted as
Texas Ranger, serving under Captain William W.
Hill. Called "Choctaw" by fellow Rangers, Jones
received a Bounty Warrant amounting to an
additional 320 acres after his discharge in 1837.
John Henry and Martha located their first home
beside the Brazos River. The site is still noted
on modern maps bearing the name "Jones Bluff ".
Filled with trees and heavy brush, the land was
not ideal cropland. With sweat and hard work,
they managed to raise cattle and hogs and enough
crops to support their family, which eventually
grew to nine children. Following John Henry's
death in 1850, Martha Jones remarried Jabez M.
Roberts and had three more children. Jabez, like
many Texas settlers, served in the Confederate
Army.
JOHN HENRY JONES, Jr. was the second son of John
Henry Jones and Martha Jane Jones. He also served
in the Confederacy during the Civil War, enlisted
in Company I, 21st Texas Cavalry. The 21st was
part of Parson's Brigade, which provided dangerous
scouting and advanced picket duty for the Army of
the Trans - Mississippi in Arkansas and Louisiana.
After a year away, he was transferred home to the
Commissary Department at Boonville due to illness.
John and his wife settled in his parents' first
home on Jones Bluff. There they started a ferry
service known as Jones Ferry, just below the bluff
on the edge of the Brazos River. DR. THOMAS J.
WOOTTEN was among the first physicians in Brazos
County. His land grant was iocated along the
Brazos River above Jones Bridge Road. The
Wooten's established their home near Turkey Creek
and the present Leonard School Road.
The descendents of these and other pioneer
families founded the cities and towns we live in
today. Their names are commemorated on streets,
buildings, creeks, and schools throughout the
Brazos Valley. Names like Curd, Creed, Clower,
Conaway, Coulter- Robinson, Deason, Dillieshow,
Dominik, Dowling, Duncan, Drummond, Echols,
Millican, Edge, Fullerton, Gorbet, Hemphfling,
Henry, Hugh, Henserling- Easterling, Holick,
Holmes, Horton, Hudson, Kurten and Weedon are
commonly found throughout the area. The names
serve as reminders that progress is the fruit of
all too often mundane, but sometimes heroic tasks
of everyday living.
COMMUNITY
Pioneer Communities in Brazos County were aptly
called neighborhoods or settlements. Settlements
usually include a church, a school and perhaps a
crude cotton gin but often little else. This
memorial is located on what is left of a two acre
site that once contained Providence Missionary
Baptist Church. Typical of many farming
neighborhoods in the area, the church was the
cultural center of Providence Community.
Settlements dotting Brazos County were frequently
known by the names of their churches or schools
such as St. Mark's Church, Leonard School, Brushy
Creek Church, Rosprim, Silver Hill Church,
Jerusalem Church, Dowling School, Parker's Store
and Stearne Chapel. Small rural churches often
shared the services of a single pastor who
provided services at each on a rotating basis.
Such farming neighborhoods are a common form of
community development throughout Texas. Though
few have left more than a trace of their
existence, in their day they provided an
agricultural bounty that supplied many larger
cities of this young nation. More importantly, to
their citizens they provided strength of shared
purpose, that pioneering spirit needed to survive
on a demanding frontier.
Providence Community, with a schd'ol, a church, and
perhaps a business, was . typical of many
neighborhoods founded in the - area. Providence
Missionary Baptist Church, formed in February 1858
was "named so that it might invoke the blessings
of heaven." Gone for many years, Providence
School was located a short distance west towards
the Brazos River.
COMMUNITY LIFE
More than meeting the religious need of the
settlers, churches were also social and cultural
centers. The site of christenings,. weddings, and
social gatherings attended by settlers from far
and near, church buildings also hosted political
rallies, lodge meetings and often functioned as
schools. Churches were usually established as
small log structures and replaced by simple wood
frame structures as the neighborhood grew. The
typical church was one room with flooring and pews
of hand -sawed cedar planks. Some churches also
had cemeteries.
A hard life in early Texas left little free time
for casual socializing. A variety of important
community activities provided the setting. Barn
raisings, corn shucking, syrup boiling, hog -
killing, and philanthropy were all occasions for
gathering and socializing. Societies or
cooperatives of four to eight families often
formed and each family took turns providing meat
for meals to the other members.
Providence Church served toe community until 1948.
In the early 20th century, as people left the farm
to fight in World War II or for paying jobs in the
cities, the congregation slowly dispersed. A
similar fate befell many surrounding communities.
Finally, in 1940, the two -acre Providence Church
site was deeded by J.H. Jones, Carl Jones, and
Zula Jones to the Texas Highway Department for the
sum of one dollar. Included iv the deed was the
proviso that on any remnant a permanent memorial
be created to commemorate the church. A roadside
park with a plaque about the church fulfilled that
obligation for many years. As transportation
needs increased, the park was lost when the
highway was widened in 1992.
On this tiny remnant of the original two acres,
you stand at a new memorial, designed and
constructed by the Texas Department of
Transportation to commemorate the Providence
Community and its church. Enjoy this brief tale
of a settlement, unique in its history, yet
representative of so many communities that once
dotted Texas.
CONNECTION
BRAZOS COUNTY AND THE BRAZOS RIVER
The 840 -mile Brazos is the longest 'river entirely
within Texas. The Brazos carries more water into
the Gulf of Mexico than any other such river. The
Brazos and the Navasota Rivers determine the
physical landscape of Brazos County, and thus
shaped the economic and social development of the
vicinity by serving as primary transportation
routes into and out of the area. The Brazos River
was, for much of the year, navigable to boat
traffic only up to Hidalgo Falls, 20 miles south
of the FM 60 Bridge. But in wet seasons boats
could often travel as far upstream as Port
Sullivan or even Waco. As important as they were
for transportation into and out of the region, the
rivers also proved barriers to local overland
travel.
ROAD TRANSPORTATION
The early settlers usually lived some distance
from their nearest neighbors. They were connected
by the unimproved dirt roads they cut that became
dust tracks in the summer and quagmires in the
winter. Crossing creeks and streams could be a
risky undertaking. The most used roads were those
that took the best advantage of terrain in order
to reduce these problems. These routes often
traced wild game trails and Indian paths laid out
hundreds of years earlier. Many were eventually
paved with gravel and finally asphalt or concrete
and incorporated into the modern road system that
is today built and maintained by the Texas
Department of Transportation.
RAILROAD
Construction of the Houston and Texas Central
Railroad halted at Millican during the Civil War,
not reaching Bryan until 1867 and Hearne a year
later. New communities quickly sprang up at
intervals along the tracks. Train service
delivered fresh farm produce to distant markets
and delivered needed trade goods to local farmers.
Rail -side communities such as Millican, Wellborn,
Allenfarm, Steele's Store, Stone City, and "
Pleasant Grove Church became the new business
centers.
RIVER CROSSING AND EARLY FERRIES
As westward settlers began traveling through, the
need for safe river crossings became apparent.
The roads, developed following established trails,
found their way to ancient Indian crossings.
These became the sites of ferries and later,
bridges. John H. Jones, Jr. built one of the fist
ferries in the area just north of the present
Highway 60 Bridge. More ferries were built
upstream and down, including Moseley's, Pitts,
Evan's, Riden's, Batt's, Bowie, Evitt's,
Aldrige's, and Robinson's. There were so many
such crossings it seemed that nearly every
landowner operated a ferry some time. For a fee,
ferrymen transported travelers, livestock, and
freight across the river.
BRIDGES
The earliest bridges were mostly mud bridges,
wooden planks held together with mud. True
bridges, constructed of limber and iron became
more common over time, the foundations of which
can be seen from today's modern steel and concrete
structures. On May 18, 1889, Brazos County
Commissioners Court decided to build two iron
bridges across the Brazos River. Because Jones
Bluff offered a very stable approach, engineers
located one of the bridges there, above Jones's
Ferry. The road to the bridge became known as
Jones Bridge Road and passed close by the site of
Providence Church just as today's Farm -to- Market
Road 60 passes this memorial.
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