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Nederland is on Farm roads 365 and 366, State
Highway 347, and U.S. Highway 69/96/287, seven miles southeast
of Beaumont in eastern Jefferson County. The site was developed
by the Port Arthur Townsite Company and the Port Arthur Land
Company as part of Arthur E. Stilwell'sqv
effort to make his newly built Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf
Railway profitable. Stilwell, who had received much of his
financial backing from Dutch investors, wanted a community for
Dutch immigrants to Southeast Texas. The first such settler at
Nederland was George Rienstra; forty others arrived in November
1897. As other immigrants followed, Nederlanders began
establishing truck and dairy farms. Rice farming was especially
popular until overproduction, overspeculation, and the
depression of 1907 virtually wiped out the rice industry at
Nederland. Many of the recent immigrants left. Prosperity was
restored by the discovery of the Spindletop oilfieldqv
on January 10, 1901. The Sun Oil Company established a major
terminal just to the north at Sun, and the Texas Company built a
plant a mile south of Nederland. An interurban line tied the
former Dutch community with Beaumont and Port Arthur in 1913.
Electricity was provided shortly thereafter, and telephone and
gas service came during the mid-1920s. During the same decade
the Humphrey Oil Company and Pure Oil Company (subsequently
Union Oil) built a refinery at Smith's Bluff to the east,
drawing large numbers of former Louisiana residents to
Nederland. The refineries and related petroleum industries have
continued to be the mainstays of the city's economy. A weekly
newspaper, the Mid-County Chronicle, was established in
1930. The town incorporated on April 29, 1940, and the
population reached 3,801 in 1950. Nederland grew rapidly as a
residential center during the boom years that followed. By 1970
the number of inhabitants had surpassed 16,000. Though the local
economy was hurt by the declining demand for petroleum during
the 1980s, the city's rated businesses increased from 136 in
1972-73 to 401 in 1984-85. The population was reported at 16,855
in 1980 and 16,192 in 1990. At that time Nederland had two
museums, the Dutch Windmill Museum and La Maison Acadienne. They
stood side by side in Tex Ritter Park, situated in the heart of
Nederland. By 2000 the population was 17,422.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Mrs. J. M. Fleming et al.,
comps., Nederland, 1898-1973: Diamond Jubilee (Nederland,
Texas: Nederland Publishing, 1973).
W. T. Block, Marie Rienstra Fleming, and W.
D. Quick
- Handbook of Texas Online, s.v.
","
http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/NN/hen1.html
(accessed March 3, 2008).
(NOTE: "s.v." stands for sub verbo, "under the word.")
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