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City Tour of Friendswood
Friendswood is an incorporated residential community on Farm Road 518
twenty-seven miles northwest of Galveston and twenty miles south of Houston
in northwestern Galveston and southern Harris counties. The surrounding
area was originally wooded. The community was founded after a colony of
English Quakers from Kansas moved to Texas and settled in Estacado, Crosby
County, in 1880. They found the plains intolerable, however, and sent
Francis Jacob Brown, a buffalo hunter and Indian fighter of Quaker heritage,
out to locate a colony in South Texas. Brown located a tract of more than
1,500 acres and negotiated with J. C. League for the property in 1895.
After a brief time near Alvin, where they disapproved of local customs
(which included dancing), a group of three of the original families, including
T. H. and Alistus Lewis, acquired land drained by four creeks-Chigger,
Coward's, Mary's, and Clear-and named the new settlement in honor of the
Friends.
The settlers built traditional gabled homes, one of which was used as
a monthly meeting place and Sunday school. A post office was established
at the community in 1899. Brown set up a sawmill, and pine felled by the
Galveston hurricane of 1900 was used to build Friendswood Academy, which
graduated its first class in 1907 and served as the local church. Some
residents worked in dairying or raised poultry, but the principal agricultural
staples were Satsuma oranges, strawberries, figs, and rice, and the Quakers
operated several processing plants until costs grew prohibitive. Oil was
discovered in the area during the 1930s, and the population subsequently
increased; in 1933 Friendswood reported 100 residents and seven businesses.
In the 1940s it had a population of seventy-five and two businesses. A
new church was constructed at the community by 1948. Friendswood remained
predominantly Quaker until 1958, when a local Baptist church was organized.
The community incorporated in 1960. With the location of the NASA Manned
Spacecraft Center ten miles away in 1962, many community residents began
to commute there or to Houston, and Friendswood became a bedroom suburb.
For a time astronaut Donald K. Slayton lived there.
On April 8, 1963, the community became the only dry town in the county;
at the time, smoking and drinking were already forbidden for local public
school teachers. From a population of 1,675 with twenty-six businesses
in 1968, Friendswood grew to 13,585 residents and 158 businesses by 1980.
It then declined to 10,719 residents by 1982. The number of businesses
grew to 315 by 1988. In 1990 Friendswood had 22,814 residents.
Friendswood Links
City of Friendswood
Friendswood Schools
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