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Newton County Website is available for adoption.
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texascourthouses.com |
| The act of April 22, 1846, created
Newton County, from the east side of the original Jasper County. The
citizens having failed to establish a county seat, the Legislature on
February 10, 1848, enacted that it be located on "a tract of land
belonging to John R. Burke," and be named " Burkeville."
Burke donated the land for the county grounds. The northern part of the
county, being an agricultural district, was first settled, some of the
old Bevil colonists being among the early inhabitants. The southern half
of the county is low and even yet is sparsely occupied, requiring
considerable drainage. Thirty years ago it was stated that only about
one-twentieth of the county's area was cleared out for cultivation, and
probably that was an exaggeration, since a recent estimate is that about
ninety-seven per cent of the area is covered with pine and hardwood
forests. The raising of cattle and hogs was the chief dependence of the
people until after the war, though this industry was on a much smaller
scale than in the prairie counties. There were several mills in the
county during the '60s, but only for supplying the local demand for
lumber, meal, etc.
Newton County was at the center of the long-leaf
pine district of Texas and Louisiana, but development on a commercial
scale hardly began until the present century. Lack of railroads retarded
improvement in the county, and all the railroads were constructed as
adjuncts to the lumber interests. The Orange & Northwestern has been
built to Newton and is part of the Frisco System, while a spur of the
Santa Fe crosses the county from Kirbyville to the Sabine. Before the
railroads came, the Sabine River was largely used to get products to
market.
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Burkeville, the first county seat, and located
near the best farming district, was for long the principal town. A few
years after the organization of the county, the seat of government was
moved to Newton. In 1870, the postoffices of the county were Burkeville,
Newton, Salem and Bleakwood. Burkeville was estimated to have 410
population in 1900, but since then other places have risen as railroad
and lumber centers, and Newton, though still unincorporated, is said to
have a population of about one thousand five hundred, and other towns
are Hartburg, Ruliff, Dewey, Call, Bleakwood and Adsul.
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Surrounding
Counties |
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* Sabine
County (north)
* Beauregard Parish, Louisiana (east)
* Orange County (south)
* Jasper County (west)
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