Houston was named for Samuel Houston (1793-1863),
the politician and general who was at the forefront of Texas' fight for
independence from Mexico. He later became President of the Republic of
Texas; when Texas became part of the Union, Houston served as a Senator
and later Governor of Texas.
Located in southeast Texas, the city was founded in 1836 and laid out
by Augustus C. Allen and John K. Allen. Its coastal environment was not
a healthy environment; together with the climate it encouraged many diseases,
the most threatening of which was Yellow Fever. By 1900, spraying for
mosquitoes eventually controlled this.
In 1914 the Houston Ship Channel was created, beginning a whole new life
for Houston. The 50-mile long channel linked Houston to Galveston Bay
and the Gulf of Mexico. This deep-water port became a major shipping link
and an important area for the U.S. grain market.
The following year oil was discovered and the boom began. Oil companies
flooded the area and by the end of the decade there were forty companies
located in the city. Although cotton was the major industry in the area
it was World War II that brought the biggest demand on the Houston for
gasoline, oil, explosives, ships and many other local commodities.
In 1958 the National Aeronautics and Space Administration made its home
in Houston assuring the city its place in space age technologies.
Now the largest City in Texas with a population of over 1,500,000, Houston
has much to offer both visitor and resident including more than twenty
Universities and Colleges such as the distinguished University of Houston,
the University of Texas-Houston Health and Science Center, Texas Southern
University and Rice University.
A world center of oil, natural gas, iron and steel, paper products, electrical
and electronic machinery, Houston also offers the visitor a diverse cultural
environment.
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