Brazos Valley - Bold Predictions

1,925 Views | 10 Replies | Last: 10 mo ago by woodiewood
FRESH CLEMENTINES
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Here's the thread for you to make predictions or "outlandish" claims about this part of Texas.

One for me: Snook will have a larger population than Caldwell within 100 years.
woodiewood
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LETTUCE PRAY said:

Here's the thread for you to make predictions or "outlandish" claims about this part of Texas.

One for me: Snook will have a larger population than Caldwell within 100 years.
Who knows?

At one time Millican was the largest town north of Houston/Galveston with about 8,000 persons.

Also, Boonville was the county seat of Navasota county before Brazos county existed. The only thing left of Boonville is the cemetery on Boonville Road in the city of Bryan.



FRESH CLEMENTINES
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Thanks for the fun facts.

I did not know that one about Millican
woodiewood
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LETTUCE PRAY said:

Thanks for the fun facts.

I did not know that one about Millican
Millican, TX.Millican is on the Southern Pacific line at the intersection of Farm roads 2154 and 159, between the Brazos and Navasota rivers fifteen miles southeast of College Station in southern Brazos County. The rolling countryside is part of the East Texas timberlands. Good farmland, other natural resources, and abundant wildlife, including deer and wild turkeys, attracted settlers to Brazos County. The area had been known as Millican since it was settled by Robert Hemphill Millican and his son Dr. Elliott McNeil Millican in the 1820s. By 1845 the place was known as Millican Crossroads. In 1849 the community received a post office, and by 1850 a stagecoach line extended from Houston through Millican. Dr. Elliott Millican sold the northern part of his land grant, three miles north of the site of the older Millican Crossroads community, on December 14, 1859, and the new townsite was named in his honor. From 1860 to around 1867 the town was the terminus of the Houston and Texas Central Railway; the prosperous community built churches and schools. At this time Millican was reportedly the largest city north of Houston and Galveston. During the Civil War years the town became the site of a training camp for 5,000 Confederate troops. In 1864 Millican was incorporated and its population reached 3,000. Millican declined when the railroad resumed its northward expansion to Bryan around 1866; businesses moved north with the railroad. In 1867 the Millican population was further reduced by a yellow fever epidemic. Millican had 1,200 residents in 1868; that year race riots in the community cost more lives. In 1883 the town had a cotton gin, two steam gristmills, four churches, and a school, which in 190405 had eighty pupils and two teachers. In the 1920s the Phillips Petroleum Company drilled a 17,000-foot-deep well into a nearby salt dome, but no oil was found. Highway 6 bypassed Millican in 1930, and by 1940 its population had dwindled to 200. In 1990 Millican had a population of 100, a community center, a volunteer fire station, three churches and two cemeteries, a modern post office, and a fertilizer plant. By 2000 the population was 108.
WolfCall
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AG
On Arbor Day, the commercial developers of Bryan College Station will plant forty thousand trees in and around the two cities to replenish a portion of their deforestation that took place over the last 53 years.
ElephantRider
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AG
The City of College Station will purchase the entire county to keep any unwanted businesses out.
vmiaptetr
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AG
The sell of the Macy's building will be for a profit.
maroon barchetta
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They said bold predictions, not hopes and dreams.
vmiaptetr
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hopeandrealchange
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In the next five years I will have sold all of my rental properties in College Station and at that point be done dealing with the insanity of our City.
woodiewood
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WolfCall said:

On Arbor Day, the commercial developers of Bryan College Station will plant forty thousand trees in and around the two cities to replenish a portion of their deforestation that took place over the last 53 years.
Of the forty thousand trees, 39,000 will be Bald Cypress and will all be planted in rows.

I will give you a bonus prediction. The COCS will continue to increase the Utility rates so that the city council can increase their transfer of Utility receipts into the General Fund in order to fund their pet projects.
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