Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Deep in the Piney Woods of Texas


Bon Weir is in Newton County Texas, a few miles west of the Louisiana border. Bon Weir is a crossroads community, at the intersections of Farm Roads 363 and 1416 and U.S. Highway 190.

“The town was established in 1905 as a station on the Jasper and Eastern Railway, which linked Kirbyville to the Sabine River, and was named for B. F. Bonner and R. W. Wier, manager and surgeon, respectively, of the Kirby Lumber Company. The company built Bon Wier to take advantage of the lush forests in the vicinity as part of its huge expansion program. Specifically, the town was to serve Trotti and Lee's Mill. Bon Wier opened a post office in 1906. Logging camps operated there from 1918 to 1924, again from 1927 to 1929, and finally from 1932 to 1935. The Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway acquired the 17½-mile Jasper and Eastern in 1948, before becoming the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe the same year. Several sawmills still operated in Bon Wier in 1990. Its population, estimated to be about 300 in 1936, reached an apparent high of 500 during the late 1940s before dropping slightly in the 1960s to an estimated 475, a level it maintained in 1990.”

https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hlb44

Kirby Lumber Co. at one time controlled more than 300,000 acres of East Texas pineland and operated 13 sawmills. With investors from Boston, John Henry Kirby built the Gulf, Beaumont and Kansas City Railroad. Sale of the railroad to Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad led to organization of the Houston Oil Co. of Texas and Kirby’s lumber company. Although owning or leasing thousands of acres of pine wood in East Texas, Kirby lived almost all his adult life in Houston.

Here is a link to photographs of Bon Weir:

http://www.texasescapes.com/EastTexasTowns/Bon-Wier-Texas.htm

Belgrade is a few miles south-southwest of Bon Weir.

Wikipedia says of Newton County: “As of 2000, it had the second-lowest population density for all counties in East Texas, behind only Red River County, and the lowest population density in Deep East Texas.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newton_County,_Texas




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