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The Houston Rockets went on the road to out-duel the Atlanta Hawks Monday, 132-126.
Houston withstood 41 points from Trae Young to snap a two-game skid.
Eric Young finished with 32 points for the Rockets.
The Houston Rockets went on the road to out-duel the Atlanta Hawks Monday, 132-126.
Houston withstood 41 points from Trae Young to snap a two-game skid.
Eric Young finished with 32 points for the Rockets.
It was 200 years ago that the first land grants were issued to families as part of Stephen F. Austin’s original colony in Texas. The majority of these original land grants, known as the Old 300, are located along the rivers and large creeks, especially the Brazos River which ran through the middle of the colony. Henry Mayo with the Texas Society of Professional Surveyors says part of College Station is part of the Old 300. “Down right below Wellborn, the Creek Meadow subdivision is there and you can see how the roads the boundaries of the subdivision are exactly where they were established 200 years ago,” says Mayo. There are also a few parcels of land along OSR near the RELLIS campus. Mayo says most of the original parcels of land have been broken up, but he has met people who still live on a piece of their ancestors’ Old 300 land. Listen to “Celebrating the 200th Anniversary of the Old 300 Land Grants” on Spreaker. News release from the Texas Society of Professional Surveyors: In early July 1824, Commissioner of Colonization Baron de Bastrop arrived at San Felipe de Austin and began issuing land titles to Empresario Stephen F. Austin’s first colonists. In July through mid-August of 1824, Bastrop issued titles to approximately 270 Mexican land grants, totaling over 1.5 million acres of land. These first families of Austin’s colony became known as the “Old 300” since Austin had been authorized to bring 300 families to Texas, under his colonization contract with the Mexican government. The remaining “Old 300” grants authorized under the first contract were issued at San Felipe in May and June of 1827, while grants under the second contract were also being issued. The majority of these original land grants are located along the rivers and large creeks, especially the Brazos River which ran through the middle of Austin’s colony, bounded on the south by the Gulf of Mexico and the north by the Old San Antonio Road (El Camino Real). The surveyors of Austin’s colony had been busy since late 1823, measuring and mapping the sitio and labor tracts being granted to immigrant settlers. The unit of measure was the Spanish vara which was established in Austin’s colony as being equal to 33.4 inches, but later became standardized across Texas as being equal to 33-1/3 inches. The sitio de tierra grants, intended for ranching, were one league (5000 varas) square, or a tract of equivalent area (25 million square varas). Based on the 33-1/3 inch vara standard, a square “league” of land was 4428.4 acres. The labor grants, intended for farming, were 1000 varas square, or a tract of equivalent area (1 million square varas), equal to 177.1 acres of land. Although Mexico began using the metric system of measurement in the mid-1800s, Texas still uses the vara as its official unit of measure for State-owned property. The Texas General Land Office, established in 1836, has scans of the original land grant documents, surveys and maps available online at www.glo.texas.gov/ and www.historictexasmaps.com/ The San Felipe de Austin State Historic Site is operated by the Texas Historical Commission. Situated within the townsite of Austin’s colonial capital, the new museum there was opened in 2018 and offers exhibits which share the varied stories of early settlement in Mexican Texas, including surveying and land distribution. Adjacent to the museum is the Villa de Austin, a town block from the 1830s with reconstructed buildings and furnishings. The museum’s current, temporary exhibition Finding Your Way To Texas, The 200th Anniversary of the Anglo Colonization of Texas is ending its year-long installation on Labor Day, September 2, 2024. Please join surveyors, realtors, landmen, landowners and all interested citizens in celebrating this milestone anniversary in Texas history. To receive a free, interactive .kmz map file showing where the Old 300 land grants are located, send an email to surveyor Henry Mayo, Chairman of the Texas Society of Professional Surveyors Historical Committee, at hpmayo@gmail.com
Bryan police announces the recovery of 11 stolen guns and other property taken from at least 20 unlocked vehicles in Bryan and College Station dating back several months. A BPD news release says the property was recovered from the home of a Bryan man who was arrested Sunday (August 4) around 4:30 in the morning. BPD arrest reports say undercover officers arrested 22 year old Conner Zaragoza after he was identified as the suspect in two vehicle burglaries and theft of three guns east of the Brazos County Expo complex. One of three guns stolen from one of the vehicles was found in Zaragoza’s car. That led to the search of his home north of the expo, where a BPD news release said ten more stolen guns were found along with other unidentified property. Zaragoza, who was arrested for the two vehicle burglaries, three firearm thefts, and possessing a vape pen containing THC, remained in jail as of August 5 in lieu of bonds totaling $85,000 dollars.
Bryan ISD school board members take the next step towards the possibility of offering property tax breaks to attract a $10 billion dollar high tech manufacturing facility to build on the RELLIS campus. Board members during Monday’s meeting (August 5) approved hiring two consultants. Assistant superintendent Kevin Beesaw and school board member Ruthie Waller said the $15,000 dollar cost for each consultant will be paid by the company looking to locate in Bryan. One consultant would provide legal services associated with tax abatements. The other would help prepare an application that is required by the state comptroller’s office so the district could offer the economic development incentive. Later in the meeting, the BISD board met in private for nearly 90 minutes, in part to discuss the tax abatement request identified in BISD documents as “America’s Foundry Bryan LLC” and “Project Gemini Power Phase One”. Click HERE to read and download BISD’s agreement with MoakCasey LLC. Click HERE to read and download BISD’s agreement with O’Hanlon, Demerath, & Castillo. Click below to hear comments from the August 5, 2024 Bryan ISD school board meeting.
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