Guadalupe
County, Texas, is a
713 square mile
inland county in south central TX. Although bounded by
Comal, Hays, Caldwell, Gonzales, Wilson, and Bexar counties,
it is only 90 miles from the Gulf of Mexico. Cibolo
Creek runs between Guadalupe and Bexar counties, as does the
San Marcos River between Guadalupe and Caldwell counties.
From the Blackland
Prairies to the Upper
Coastal Plain, the rolling terrain has a mild
subtropical climate and an average growing season of 275 days.
Guadalupe
County (pop. 2000: 4,680) is named for the Guadalupe River,
which was named in honor of Our
Lady of Guadalupe in 1689. Commanche raids kept this
area fairly unsettled until the 18th century. Veterans
of the Texas Revolution were given land in the area, and 1838
saw a group of former Texas Rangers (and others) settle on the
northeast bank of the Guadalupe. Originally named Walnut
Springs, the community changed the name to Seguin
(1839) in honor of Juan
N. Seguin. As the presence of troops increased the
security in the area around Seguin, many families elected to
settle there. Seguin, now the county seat and largest town, is
fairly centered in the county.
Good
harvests, healthy livestock, and a major market place with the
Guadalupe River and a new stage line (est. 1847)for shipping
to the rest of the county increased the value of area farms
and livestock almost 600% by 1860.
Following
the Civil War and through the Reconstruction period, Guadalupe
County a severe economic depression, but none of the civil
unrest that characterized its neighboring counties.
Capote
and Sweet Home were settled by freed Blacks in the late
1860's, and other settlements, Kingsbury, Marion,
McQueeney, Cibolo, and Schertz grew around the Galveston,
Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway, which reached Seguin in
1876.
The
Guadalupe River began to be developed in the late 1920s for a
source of hydroelectric power. Lake
Dunlap and Lake
McQueeney, among others, were formed by the dams and
designed for resort and recreation areas. Today, Lake
McQueeney is known as the "water ski capitol of
Texas". Between them, Guadalupe County has
developed major recreational sites featuring marina, and water
sports as well as world renowned fishing and angling along the
Guadalupe
River watershed for largemouth bass, spotted bass, white
crappie, blue catfish, channel catfish, and sunfish.
The
agricultural economy was diversified when oil was discovered
in the Darst Creek oilfield (eastern Guadalupe County - 1922),
and more so with the new service and resort industries.
With the growth of nearby San Antonio ( just 18 miles
southwest of Seguin), a sizeable portion of the county's
population also began to commute.