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Revolution and Texas Independence The Allen Brothers and Their Dream Town The Last Quarter of the Nineteenth Century |
Early European Exploration
In 1685, Rene Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, claimed all the lands west of the Mississippi River for King Louis XIV of France. La Salle built Fort Saint Louis near the site of present-day Port Lavaca, southwest of Houston. He camped at the headwaters of Cypress Creek in the greater Houston area in February 1687, and soon afterwards was murdered by members of his own party near Navasota to the northwest. In the eastern part of Texas, competition between the French and Spanish characterized most of the eighteenth century. Trade routes, including the Spanish Atascosita Trail, which is now northern Harris County, stretched from Louisiana to the Rio Grande. However, neither the Spanish or the French successfully introduced permanent settlements or gained firm control of the area.
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