Liberty, Texas Liberty, Texas Location of Liberty, Texas Location of Liberty, Texas County Liberty Liberty is a town/city in the U.S.

State of Texas, inside Houston The Woodlands Sugar Land urbane area.

It serves as the seat of Liberty County.

Liberty is the third earliest town/city in the state established in 1831 on the banks of the Trinity River.

The town/city also has a twin of the Liberty Bell from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Liberty, Texas is the governmental center of county of Liberty and the third earliest town in Texas.

Three brothers from Liberty died at the Alamo, while some 50 Liberty people fought in the Battle of San Jacinto in 1836 when Texas won its independence.

Highway 90 in the south central part of Liberty County and the Houston, Texas Metropolitan Area.

Liberty once stood at the head of navigation, both steamboat and barge, on the Trinity River.

The town was established by Mexican territory commissioner Jose Francisco Madero Gaxiola in 1831 near the sites of a Spanish settlement called Atascosito (established in 1756) and Champ d'Asile, a French colony established in 1818. The region was first occupied by American squatters as early as 1818, when it was still under Spanish law.

In this Anglo-American colonization period, as stated to some sources, the town shortened its name to Liberty, honoring both the Spanish name and after Liberty, Mississippi, from which many of the early pioneer had come to Liberty, Texas.

But the history of the Liberty region actually was recorded much earlier in maps and documents.

Alarmed at reported French activities in Texas, the Viceroy of Spain in 1689 dispatched a Spanish expedition under Captain Alonzo de Leon, with one hundred men who penetrated the Trinity River region of Texas in the vicinity of present Liberty.

On Friday, May 19, 1690, two days before the Sunday of the Holy Trinity, Alonzo de Leon appeared at this river and following the custom of the Spanish explorers of the day, titled the river after this theological Holy Day "Rio de la Santissima Trinidad" or the River of the most Holy Trinity." He reached the Trinity near Liberty, "finding Indians on the Trinity River living in rancherias of bearskin tents." Texas Governor don Antonio Cordero dispatched from Nacogdoches a business of 110 men in 1805 to be stationed at Arkokisa above the mouth of the Trinity, near the present town of Liberty, supplementing a detachment of 50 men already there.

Troops and supplies for this station came by the La Bahia Road, marking out the route known as the Atascosito Road, the earliest known road crossing the Trinity River in this region at a point about three miles north of the present town of Liberty.

Generals Charles Lallemand and Antoine Rigaud, formerly of Napoleon's Old Guard, headed a French expedition that established a colony twenty leagues from the Gulf of Mexico on the Trinity, near the present town of Liberty in 1818.

The locale of "Champ d'Asile," while not positively proven, is designated by a State of Texas Historical Marker to be on the easterly side of the Trinity river bridge to the south on U.S.

White is thought by many to be responsible for the establishment of the longhorn cow in the Liberty and southeastern part of Texas.

Throughout the reconstruction - Liberty served as a shipping point for plantations along the Trinity, for lumber operations, and for a range of shipments from farmers.

By 1840, James Taylor White, in cooperation with Jones & Co., an English firm, had assembled what was probably the first meat packing plant in Texas on the banks of the Trinity River in Liberty, marked also by Historical marker.

He maintained two plantation homes in Liberty County until his death.

In the Texas Revolution, Andrew Briscoe's Liberty Volunteers, organized in 1835, fought at the siege of Bexar and the battle of Concepcion, and it was to Liberty in February 1836 that one of William B.

Liberty became the governmental center of county and was incorporated in 1837.

James Taylor White furnished most of the beef for Jones and Company, the English beef-packing company positioned at Liberty Landing.

Liberty period as a shipping point when the Texas and New Orleans Railroad reached it in 1858, and in 1860 a Market House was under assembly at the site of the future Sam Houston Elementary School.

The Liberty Observer was first presented in 1870, the Star State was first presented in 1875, and the Vindicator in 1887.

The East Texas Bee was first presented at Liberty in 1902; the Liberty Daily Courier, Progressive Outlook, and Liberty County News followed.

Oil discoveries in 1903 at the Batson-Old oilfield in neighboring Hardin County made Liberty, the nearest train stop, a boomtown.

By 1907 the Trinity Valley and Northern Railway Company, assembled for use of the Dayton Lumber Company, served Dayton, positioned on the west side of the Trinity River and originally known as West Liberty.

A primary boost in the populace came in 1925 with the evolution of the South Liberty oilfield.

Efforts to make the Trinity navigable for steamers continued from 1852 to 1940, when 236 miles of waterway had been instead of and Liberty served as an inland port with barge connections to the Houston Ship Channel.

Highway 146, which provides a route from East Texas to Baytown and the Texas City-Galveston area, was instead of in 1950.

Humphreys Cultural Center was opened in 1969, housing the Liberty Municipal Library and a performing arts theatre utilized by the Valley Players for incessant stage productions.

The Liberty Bell of Liberty also has rung proudly in an award-winning bell fortress located at the Geraldine D.

Liberty is also known as one of the most earliest suburbs in Texas.

According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, the town/city has a total region of 35.4 square miles (92 km2), of which 35.0 square miles (91 km2) is territory and 0.4 square miles (1.0 km2) (1.02%) is water.

As of the 2010 census Liberty had a populace of 8,397.

The town/city of Liberty is served by the Liberty Independent School District.

All inhabitants are zoned to San Jacinto Elementary School, Liberty Elementary School, Liberty Middle School, and Liberty High School. The 43,000 volume Liberty Municipal Library is positioned in the Geraldine D.

Humphreys Cultural Center in Liberty.

The universal has doubled the size of the municipal library serving Liberty, Texas and southeastern Liberty County. The Sam Houston Regional Library and Research Center, directed by the Texas State Library and Archives Commission is positioned 3 miles (4.8 km) north of Liberty in an unincorporated area.

Liberty Municipal Airport, a general aviation airport is positioned approximately 6 miles east of Liberty, just north of the intersection of FM 160 east with FM 2830.

The Liberty Municipal Airport has a pilot courtesy room and fueling facilities with primary renovations in progress, including new T-hangars and many technological improvements.

The theatre sat idle, then in 1993, the Cox family purchased the theatre and re-furbished the building, re-opening it as The Liberty Opry; a live, Branson-style musical entertainment venue.

Although the owners have changed over the years, The Liberty Opry continues to operate today with weekly shows ranging from Country to Gospel to Rock & Roll every Saturday evening under the direction of Jay Cantu at 7:00 pm.

Humphreys Cultural Center, a 23,000 square feet (2,100 m2) municipal facility, homes the Liberty Municipal Library and the 153 seat Humphreys-Burson Theatre.

KSHN-FM - Liberty County's only daily news source.

The Liberty Vindicator - Serving Liberty and Liberty County since 1887.

Liberty County Courier 2010 general profile of populace and housing characteriticis from the US census for Liberty City of Liberty.

"Liberty ISD".

"Liberty Municipal Library." City of Liberty.

Climate Summary for Liberty, Texas The Handbook of Texas Online,article on Liberty, Texas Municipalities and communities of Liberty County, Texas, United States

Categories:
Cities in Texas - Cities in Liberty County, Texas - County seats in Texas - Greater Houston