April 12, 2018
The Bastrop Historical Museum had one of the most interesting prehistoric artifacts we’ve seen. It’s a fossil of the basal rear part of an American Mastodon skull found in the Colorado River near Bastrop in 1992.
The city of Bastrop was established in 1832 where the Colorado River crossed El Camino Real. It was the westernmost Anglo settlement.
Baron de Bastrop had used his influence to help Moses Austin gain approval to bring settlers to the area and the town was named for him. Moses Austin’s son Stephen chose Bastrop for his third colony.
The museum included some exhibits of items from Bastrop residents who were involved in the Texas Revolution.
Bastrop was an important cotton-growing area. An exhibit showed some ways cotton is used.
A couple of blocks from the museum is Fisherman’s Park. The city of Bastrop set aside some land on the river for a dock for fisherman. In the 1950’s, a Ford dealer who owned an adjacent property gave customers who bought a new car each one square foot of that land. Deeds were recorded at the courthouse. When an individual with a quit-claim deed tried to clear the land in 1985, citizens protested. They thought the land was theirs. The case was brought to trial and the citizens prevailed.
We checked out some of Bastrop’s historical buildings after our visit to the museum. The museum itself was the town’s first firehouse, then a jail, and then city hall before becoming a museum.
1 Comment
Laura · May 10, 2018 at 5:24 am
How I DO love old stuff.