EARLY ISSUES OF CAPITAL STOCK (continued)
Elinore McDonough
Galveston, Texas
May 25, 1927
THE GALVESTON CITY COMPANY
At a called meeting of the Board of Directors of the old company,
held on May 10, 1879, to hear the report of the Finance Committee,
that committee was ordered to turn over to Mr. George Sealy, Trustee,
as part of the assets of the company covered by the trust deed,
a donation from the Galveston City Company of Ten Thousand Dollars.
This donation was made by the Galveston City Company at a meeting
held on April 5, 1875, "to encourage the early construction of the
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railroad", and was to have been paid in
installments as construction reached certain designated points.
All land titles in the City of Galveston derive from the Galveston
City Company, which was incorporated by an Act of the Fifth Congress
of the Republic of Texas, approved Feb. 5, 1841. However, the Galveston
City Company had been in existence before that time, having been
organized by Michel Branamour Menard, to take over and dispose of
the league and labor of land including the east end of the Island
of San Luis, or Galveston, which had been conveyed to him by Don
Juan Nepomucino Seguin et al., of the Town of San Fernando de Bexar,
under date of June 23, 1834. The land had been granted by the government
of the State of Coahuila and Texas to Don Juan Nepomucino Seguin
et al. on April 27, 1833, out of the distribution of the vacant
lands of the empire. Michel B. Menard's title was confirmed by an
Act of the Congress of the Republic of Texas, approved Dec. 9, 1836.
The conditions of the Act having been complied with, Sam Houston,
then President of the Republic of Texas, issued a patent for the
land to Michel B. Menard on Jan. 25, 1838. Menard had actually taken
possession of the land in 1837.
Mrs. Mary LeClere, a member of the Menard family, who died shortly
prior to 1900, bequeathed sufficient funds to erect a memorial tower
to Michel Menard on St. Patrick's Church, on the corner of 34th
St. and Avenue K, Galveston. This tower, very tall and slender,
with an electrically lighted cross on its summit, was wrecked in
the great storm of 1900, falling on the church and almost completely
wrecking it also. Though the church was rebuilt -- along somewhat
different lines -- the tower was never raised to its former height.
However, the marble tablet still remains in the vestibule of the
church, with its inscription to Michel B. Menard, founder of the
City of Galveston.
Michel B. Menard left no direct descendants, but among his collateral
descendants is Mr. W. Kendall Menard now Paymaster of the Gulf,
Colorado and Santa Fe Railway Company at Galveston. Besides his
relationship to the founder of the City of Galveston, Mr. Menard
is also, through his mother, a grandson of Gen. Sidney Sherman,
commander of one wing of the Texas army at the Battle of San Jacinto,
and to whom most historians give the credit for having won the battle
from the Mexican forces under Santa Anna. General Sherman was also
the first to raise the battle cry "Remember the Alamo".
In connection with this sketch, it is interesting to note that
it was chiefly due to the untiring efforts of Gen. Sidney Sherman
that the first railroad in Texas was built. This was the Buffalo
Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railroad, chartered by the Third Legislature
of the State of Texas, Feb. 11, 1850, and now a part of the Southern
Pacific System through its purchase in 1868 by the Galveston, Harrisburg
and San Antonio Railway Company. The road was financed by the sale
of Harrisburg town lots, and the first locomotive was named the
"General Sherman".
That so many of the firms that were subscribers to the capital
stock of the original Santa Fe are no longer in existence, is due,
in some measure, to the road itself -- not through loss of money
invested in the new venture, but because the era of railroad construction
was at first calamitous for the city. From the early days of the
State, the products of the eastern United States and of Europe were
brought to its people by vessels of various sorts through the port
of Galveston, and the city became a great distributing center. But
with the building of the railroads, things changed. The cities of
the interior sprang up and flourished, and the great wholesale houses
on the Strand at Galveston closed their doors. The business of the
city had to start all over again -- a great export business had
to be built up to take the place of the imports that had failed
it. Under the changed circumstances that exist today, the present
Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway has become the main artery of
the tide of business prosperity that flows into the city. And though
control of the Santa Fe has long since passed out of the hands of
those who first planned it, it still remains, in the thought of
the people of the city, a Galveston road.
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