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Timeline of Brownsville, Texas
Last updated
February 12, 2025
The following is a timeline of the
history
of the city of
Brownsville
,
Texas
, USA.
Contents
18th-19th centuries
20th century
21st century
See also
References
Bibliography
External links
This is a
dynamic list
and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by
adding missing items
with
reliable sources
.
18th-19th centuries
Part of
a series
on the
History of
Texas
Timeline
Pre-Columbian Texas
Early Spanish explorations
1519
–
1543
French Texas
1684
–
1689
Spanish Texas
1690
–
1821
Mexican Texas
1821
–
1836
Republic of Texas
1836
–
1845
Statehood
1845
–
1860
Civil War Era
1861
–
1865
Reconstruction
1865
–
1899
Years in Texas
Texas
portal
v
t
e
1771 - José Salvador de la Garza settles in area per Espíritu Santo land grant.
[
1
]
[
2
]
[
3
]
1846
March:
Fort Taylor
established by
Zachary Taylor
.
[
4
]
[
5
]
May 8:
Battle of Palo Alto
.
[
4
]
1848 - Brownsville founded by
Charles Stillman
.
[
6
]
[
5
]
1849
Travellers of the
California Gold Rush
pass through town.
[
6
]
Stillman house built.
[
6
]
Brownsville Lyceum founded.
[
7
]
1850
Market Square built.
[
8
]
Sentinel
newspaper begins publication.
[
9
]
Population: 2,734.
1853 - "Police force" established.
[
10
]
1859
First Cortina War
.
[
5
]
Immaculate Conception Church
built.
[
6
]
1863 - November 2–6:
Battle of Brownsville
; Union wins.
[
4
]
1865
May 12–13:
Battle of Palmito Ranch
fought near Brownsville; Confederates win.
[
4
]
Saint Joseph Academy
established.
[
4
]
1867 - Hurricane.
[
9
]
1870
Point Isabel
-Brownsville railway built.
[
6
]
Population: 4,905.
1874 -
Roman Catholic apostolic vicariate of Brownsville
established.
[
11
]
1875 -
Porfirio Díaz
plots
Mexican coup
from his temporary base in Brownsville.
[
12
]
[
6
]
1877 - Alonso house built.
[
8
]
1878 - Sabas Cavazos Cemetery established.
[
3
]
[
10
]
1883 -
Cameron County Courthouse
built.
[
10
]
1890 - Population: 6,134.
[
4
]
1892 -
Daily Herald
newspaper begins publication.
[
13
]
1900 - Population: 6,305.
[
4
]
20th century
1903 -
St. Louis, Brownsville and Mexico Railway
begins operating.
[
6
]
1906 - August:
Brownsville Affair
(racial unrest).
[
4
]
[
14
]
1907 - Snakeville in business.
[
15
]
[
16
]
1910
Brownsville & Matamoros International Bridge
opens.
[
10
]
Dittmann Theater (cinema) built.
[
15
]
Population: 10,517.
[
4
]
1913 - County Jail built.
[
10
]
1914 - New
Cameron County Courthouse
built.
1926 -
Junior College of the Lower Rio Grande Valley
established.
1927 - KGFI
radio
begins broadcasting.
[
17
]
1930 - Population: 22,021.
1934 -
El Heraldo de Brownsville
newspaper begins publication.
[
13
]
1936 -
Port of Brownsville
opens.
[
14
]
1938 -
Matamoros
-Brownsville
Charro Days Festival
begins.
[
18
]
1945 - U.S. Army
Fort Brown
decommissioned.
1946 - Teatro Victoria in business.
[
19
]
1949 - Charro Drive-In cinema and Majestic Theatre in business.
[
19
]
1950
Texas Southmost College
active.
Population: 35,086.
1960
Stillman House Museum opens.
[
8
]
Population: 48,040.
1965 -
Roman Catholic Diocese of Brownsville
established.
[
11
]
1970 - Population: 52,522.
1971 -
Gladys Porter Zoo
established.
[
20
]
1978 - Palo Alto Battlefield National Historic Site established. (
Palo Alto Battlefield National Historical Park
since 2009.)
1979 -
Brownsville Urban System
(transport) established.
1980 - Population: 84,997.
1990 - Population: 98,962.
1991
University of Texas at Brownsville
active.
Pat Ahumada becomes mayor.
1997 - City website online (approximate date).
[
21
]
[
chronology citation needed
]
1999 -
Blanca Vela
becomes mayor.
2000 - Population: 139,722.
21st century
2001 -
El Nuevo Heraldo
newspaper in publication.
[
13
]
2007 - Pat Ahumada becomes mayor again.
2010 - Population: 175,023.
[
22
]
2013 -
Filemon Vela, Jr.
becomes U.S. representative for
Texas's 34th congressional district
.
[
23
]
2018 - Trey Mendez elected mayor.
2023 - John Cowen Jr. elected mayor.
See also
Brownsville, Texas history
Matamoros, Mexico history
National Register of Historic Places listings in Cameron County, Texas
Timelines of other
cities
in the
South Texas
area of Texas:
Corpus Christi
,
Laredo
,
McAllen
,
San Antonio
References
↑
Simons 1996
.
↑
Armando C. Alonzo (1998).
Tejano Legacy: Rancheros and Settlers in South Texas, 1734-1900
. University of New Mexico Press.
ISBN
978-0-8263-2850-2
.
1
2
Awbrey 2013
.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Britannica 1910
.
1
2
3
Webster's Geographical Dictionary
, Springfield, Massachusetts: G. & C. Merriam Co., 1960, p.
164,
OL
5812502M
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Federal Writers' Project 1940
.
↑
Davies Project.
"American Libraries before 1876"
. Princeton University
. Retrieved
June 27,
2016
.
1
2
3
"Our Locations"
. Brownsville Historical Association
. Retrieved
June 27,
2016
.
1
2
"Major Historical Events (timeline)"
.
Brownsville & Matamoros History
. University of Texas at Brownsville
. Retrieved
June 27,
2016
.
1
2
3
4
5
"Historical Landmarks of Brownsville"
.
Brownsville & Matamoros History
. University of Texas at Brownsville
. Retrieved
June 27,
2016
.
1
2
"Chronology of Catholic Dioceses: USA"
. Norway:
Roman Catholic Diocese of Oslo
. Retrieved
June 27,
2016
.
↑
Paul Garner (2014).
"Chronology"
.
Porfirio Diaz
. Routledge.
ISBN
978-1-317-88705-8
.
1
2
3
"US Newspaper Directory"
.
Chronicling America
. Washington DC: Library of Congress
. Retrieved
June 27,
2016
.
1
2
Federal Writers' Project 1940
, p.
671: "Chronology"
1
2
Gene Fowler (2008).
Mavericks: A Gallery of Texas Characters
. University of Texas Press.
ISBN
978-0-292-71819-7
.
↑
"Makes His Living by Boarding Fifty Thousand Snakes"
.
Illustrated World
.
37
. Chicago. June 1922.
OCLC
1752683
.
↑
Jack Alicoate, ed. (1939),
"Standard Broadcasting Stations of the United States: Texas"
,
Radio Annual
, New York: Radio Daily,
OCLC
2459636
↑
"Handbook of Texas Online"
.
Texas State Historical Association
. Retrieved
June 27,
2016
.
1
2
"Movie Theaters in Brownsville, TX"
.
CinemaTreasures.org
. Los Angeles: Cinema Treasures LLC
. Retrieved
June 27,
2016
.
↑
Vernon N. Kisling, Jr., ed. (2001).
"Zoological Gardens of the United States (chronological list)"
.
Zoo and Aquarium History
. USA:
CRC Press
.
ISBN
978-1-4200-3924-5
.
↑
"Brownsville Texas Home Page"
. Archived from
the original
on January 3, 1997
–
via Internet Archive,
Wayback Machine
.
↑
"Brownsville city, Texas"
.
QuickFacts
. U.S. Census Bureau
. Retrieved
June 27,
2016
.
↑
Civic Impulse, LLC.
"Members of Congress"
.
GovTrack
. Washington, D.C
. Retrieved
June 27,
2016
.
Bibliography
"Brownsville"
.
Texas State Gazetteer and Business Directory
. Detroit: R.L. Polk & Co. 1890
–
via Internet Archive.
W. H. Chatfield, The Twin Cities of the Border and the Country of the Lower Rio Grande (New Orleans: Brandao, 1893)
"Brownsville"
.
Encyclopædia Britannica
. Vol.
4 (11th
ed.). 1910. p.
675.
Federal Writers' Project
(1940),
"Brownsville"
,
Texas: A Guide to the Lone Star State
,
American Guide Series
, New York: Hastings House,
hdl
:
2027/mdp.39015002677667
–
via HathiTrust
{{
citation
}}
: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (
link
)
+
chronology
Betty Bay. Historic Brownsville: Original Townsite Guide (Brownsville, Texas: Brownsville Historical Association, 1980)
Robert B. Vezzetti and Ruby A. Wooldridge, Brownsville: A Pictorial History (Virginia Beach, Virginia: Donning, 1982)
Milo Kearney, ed., Studies in Brownsville History (Pan American University at Brownsville, 1986)
Milo Kearney and Anthony Knopp, Boom and Bust: The Historical Cycles of Matamoros and Brownsville (Austin: Eakin Press, 1991)
Milo Kearney, ed., Still More Studies in Brownsville History (University of Texas at Brownsville, 1991)
Helen Simons; Cathryn A. Hoyt, eds. (1996).
"Laredo and the Rio Grande Valley: Brownsville"
.
A Guide to Hispanic Texas
(Abridged
ed.). University of Texas Press. pp.
81+.
ISBN
978-0-292-77709-5
.
Carl S. Chilton (2010).
Historic Brownsville: an Illustrated History
. San Antonio, Tx.: Historical Publishing Network.
ISBN
978-1-935377-15-3
.
Betty Dooley Awbrey; Stuart Awbrey (2013). "Brownsville".
Why Stop?: A Guide to Texas Roadside Historical Markers
(6th
ed.).
Taylor Trade Publishing
. p.
63+.
ISBN
978-1-58979-790-1
.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Brownsville, Texas
.
"Brownsville"
.
Texas Archive of the Moving Image
. Austin, TX.
"Historical Maps of Texas Cities: Brownsville"
.
Perry–Castañeda Library Map Collection
. University of Texas at Austin.
Alicia A. Garza; Christopher Long.
"Brownsville, TX"
.
Handbook of Texas Online
.
Texas State Historical Association
.
Items related to Brownsville
, various dates (via
Digital Public Library of America
).
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