Category Archives: Uncategorized

Chick-Fil-A’s Grand Opening in Bay City – 12/1/2023

The joyous countdown is over! The much-anticipated new Chick-Fil-A on Hwy 60 heading to Van Vleck finally opened its doors in Bay City yesterday morning, and happy Bay City residents were already lining up by 5:30am, eager to be the first to enjoy those famous chicken sandwiches and waffle fries. You could feel the excitement and see the smiles on folks’ faces as they waited, chatting merrily with their neighbors about their go-to orders and plans to make Chick-Fil-A a new weekly – or even daily! – tradition. This Chick-Fil-A will surely spread cheer in the community for years to come.

Noteworthy Tidbits 11/20/2023

A historical marker dedication hosted by the Matagorda County cemetery Association and the Matagorda Historical Commission was held Saturday, Oct. 21, 2023 for James Henry Selkirk, the son of William Selkirk at the Matagorda Cemetery.

Matagorda Texas and the surrounding areas are rich with history. I will be sharing some of the interesting findings I run across and hope you enjoy catching up on all the history embedded in our community.

From Handbook of Texas online:

•William Selkirk, one of Stephen F. Austin’s Old Three Hundred colonists, one of at least two sons of James and Elizabeth (Henry) Selkirk, of Selkirk, New York, was born on July 24, 1792.
•His father was a Scottish immigrant. 
•Before coming to Texas around the fall of 1823 William Selkirk served in the War of 1812, worked as a silversmith, and married Matilda Hallenbake, with whom he had two children before her death on August 25, 1820.  
•He left the children under the guardianship of his brother and went to Texas, where he became a surveyor for the Austin colony.
•For a time he employed Daniel Shipman as an assistant, paying him one dollar per day in “land office money,” or credit toward buying land in the
•Selkirk, listed as a goldsmith in the March 1823 census of the Colorado District, took part in the alcalde election at San Felipe de Austin in December 1823, went with Aylett C. Buckner, Thomas M. Duke, and others to make a treaty with the Waco and Tawakoni Indians in July 1824, and about the same time was made second sergeant in the second company of the colonial militia.  
•On August 10, 1824, he received title to a sitio of land at the mouth of the Colorado River, now in Matagorda County.  
•The land, called Selkirk’s Island because it was originally isolated by the flow of the river, was still owned by Selkirk descendants in the 1970s, when it was subdivided into resort-home lots.  
•In 1974 or 1975 Selkirk Island received a state historical marker from the Texas Historical Commission.
•Selkirk helped lay out Matagorda, the first county seat of Matagorda County.  
•He attended a meeting in January 1827 called to support the Constitution of 1824 and condemn the Fredonian
•He died between June 1830 and November 1, 1830, when Elias R. Wightman and Thomas J. Tone were appointed administrators of the Selkirk estate.  
•In 1835 or 1836 Selkirk’s son James Henry Selkirk came to Texas as a lieutenant with a company of New York volunteers for the Texas army.  
•He probably settled on his father’s land near Matagorda, where he held numerous city and county offices.

Colorado River Flood May 2015

It is 2:56pm, Saturday, May 30th and the water has breached the south levee. The center will fill slightly. We have been told that it will be nothing like the 2004 flood. Here are some photos of the island this morning.

photo 13                         photo 23

photo 2photo 3photo 44                                                                    photo 33                                             photo 22

photo 34

 

Tram News 6/9/14

In conjunction with Interstate and Houston Bearing, it has been determined that the gear box on the tram is where the problem lies. Houston Bearing will be disassembling the gear box to take in and rebuild. Hopefully within the next couple of weeks the tram will be running, fingers crossed!