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Texas Day by Day

February 7, 1853


Seguin incorporates

On this day in 1853, the town of Seguin was officially incorporated. This South Texas seat of Guadalupe County saw settlement as early as the 1830s, and founders originally called the site Walnut Springs before changing the name to Seguin in honor of Tejano revolutionary and Texas Republic senator Juan Nepomuceno Seguín in 1839. The town enjoyed a rich agricultural landscape and ample water resources thanks to the nearby Guadalupe and San Marcos rivers and Cibolo and Geronimo creeks. Its original schoolhouse, built in 1850, was still used for educational purposes well over 100 years later, when the state recognized the structure as the oldest continuously used school building in Texas. Texas Lutheran College relocated to Seguin in 1912, and the town’s economy experienced a major upswing with the discovery of oil in the nearby Darst Creek fields in the late 1920s. Throughout the twentieth century the community supported agricultural, oil-based, and manufacturing interests. In 2000 Seguin had a population of 22,011.

Links to Related Handbook of Texas Online Articles
SEGUIN, TX
GUADALUPE COUNTY
SEGUIN, JUAN NEPOMUCENO
TEXAS LUTHERAN UNIVERSITY
DARST CREEK OILFIELD

Other Texas Day by Day Articles for This Date
Transfer of command misfires in Republic of Texas army (1837)
Cowboy, author, and detective born on Texas coast (1855)


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