Details for Foster Community

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5157013291

Data

Marker Number 13291
Atlas Number 5157013291
Marker Title Foster Community
Index Entry Foster Community
Address
City Rosenberg
County Fort Bend
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 225960
UTM Northing 3283029
Subject Codes settlements; pioneers
Marker Year 2004
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 4 mi. NW of Rosenberg on FM 359 (1.4 mi. from FM 723)
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text The Foster community began in the fall of 1821 as a permanent campsite settled by Randolph Foster (1790-1887) on what was then one of the largest single land grants in Texas (11,601 acres). The John Foster grant, deeded by Stephen F. Austin, came from the relationship between Foster, his father John (1757-1837) and Austin. John was one of Austin's "Old Three Hundred" colonists, and Foster family members participated in the Texas War for Independence. Sugar cane was the area's dominant industry in the 1840s, and Foster community thrived from its production and export. Other crops that benefited the community included pecans and cotton. Local residents tamed wild horses found on the upland prairies for domestic use and trade. The community's first school, which offered up to grade five, was held in Randolph Foster's home before construction of a one-room schoolhouse also used for early community religious services. African American students studied at Jones Creek School. The community's first post office initiated mail service from the area's general store in 1882. The volume of local sugar production was so great that in the 1920s, Imperial Sugar Company built a railroad between Foster community and mills in Sugar Land. In 1928, Sugar Land Industries bought acreage in this area and named it Foster Farms. By the end of World War II, several factors led to the community's decline: the end of area sugar crops; the closing of the railroad; the Great Depression; and changes in ownership and farming techniques. In 1944, the community's schools, post office and general store closed. Today, adjacent to Houston, the state's largest urban area, Foster exists in memory as a pioneer Texas community. (2005)

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