High Island's Live Oaks - Safe Landfall for Migrating Birds
The woods of High Island have undoubtedly been an important stopping place for migratory birds for thousands of years. However, they have only been attracting birdwatchers since the 1940s, when birders from nearby Beaumont began to haunt the woods every spring.
Recognizing the value of High Island's habitat,
the Houston Audubon Society bought
what was to become the core of the High
Island sanctuary system, the four-acre Louis
B. Smith Bird Sanctuary (also known as Boy
Scout Woods) in 1981. An additional 11 acres
surrounding this small core was leased from
Amoco Production Company. In 1991 the opportunity arose to purchase a
40% undivided interest in the Smith Oaks
Sanctuary nearby.
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Spring at Boy Scout Woods |
The High Island Initiative was formed in 1992 with the goals of expanding the HAS sanctuary system on High Island and establishing a bird observatory to address the needs of migratory birds. The partners in the Initiative were HAS, the Nature Conservancies of Texas and Louisiana, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Amoco Production Co. and Phillips Petroleum Co. The actions of the partners resulted in the establishment of the Gulf Coast Bird Observatory, as well as the large-scale expansion and habitat improvements of the sanctuaries we see today.
Unique Geology
High Island is the surface expression of a salt
dome at the edge of the Gulf of Mexico. A thick
layer of ancient salt exists throughout southeast
Texas about 30,000 feet below the surface. At
some locations, like High Island, a column of salt
was squeezed upward toward the surface. This
"dome," is a salt cylinder, some six miles tall and
about a mile in diameter. As the salt dome rose,
it brought massive amounts of salt and smaller
amounts of other minerals close to the surface
of the earth, where they sometimes mixed with
groundwater. The movement of the salt shattered and tipped overlying sediment layers, and oil
and gas in the rocks then traveled along the
cracks in the rocks and "pooled" around the edges
of the dome.
Oil exploration began on High Island in 1901,
soon after the Spindletop discovery on a similar
salt structure in the Beaumont area. Commercial
production began in 1922. Exploration and
production continues today, and oil, natural gas
and sulfur have all been extracted from sediments
brought up by the dome. Most production has
been found along the west, north and east sides
of High Island.
Today High Island rises 32 feet above the surrounding
marshes, providing soil conditions
favorable to trees and shrubs. It forms a unique
and important island of habitat for migrating birds.
History of High Island
High Island was undoubtedly used by Native
Americans for thousand of years. No archeological
site has been excavated on the island, but shell
middens, pieces of black pottery and arrow points
dating from as far back as 1200 A.D. have been
found on Bolivar Peninsula and around Galveston
Bay These indicate the presence of hunter gatherers
who roamed the region collecting shellfish and
hunting the abundant wildlife. Native Americans
may have also visited the mineral springs that
were a result of the minerals associated with the
salt dome mixing with groundwater, which used
to exist on High Island.
According to legend, the pirate Jean Lafitte
and his crew sometimes had parties in the big
grove of oak trees that covered the island when
they cruised the coast in the early 1800s. There
are rumors that the pirates buried some of their
treasure here. Although many have searched, no
one has ever reported finding any trace of the
pirates or their treasure.
One of the early settlers of High Island was
Martin Dunman, who arrived in 1845. He had
received a league of land (three square miles)
that included part of High Island for his participation
in the Texas Revolution. Reportedly there
was at least one house on High Island at that
time, which had been built by Charles Cronea,
one of Lafitte's cabin boys, when Dunman arrived
with his wife and two sons. A historical marker,
erected in Cronea's honor, can be found in the
High Island cemetery.
The island's mineral springs played an important
role in the local economy in the late 1800s.
The railroad ran excursions to the community
so that people could visit the springs and the
beach.
The town had a large, ornate hotel called The
Seaview, which was erected in 1895 by W.T. Cade. Built
on the east side of the island, The Seaview
faced the Gulf of Mexico. The hotel had a large
ballroom and a mule drawn rail car that carried
visitors to and from the beach several times a
day. High Island's time as a resort was ended
by the 1900 hurricane. However, the hotel
survived the hurricane and was a very active
location for many years. It was abandoned
during World War II and burned in 1947.