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Angelina County, Texas
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==History== The county's first Anglo settlers were what John Nova Lomax described as "[[Ulster Scots people|Scotch-Irish]] backwoods folk."<ref name="Lomax3">Lomax, John Nova. "Texas Tweakers." ''[[Houston Press]]''. Wednesday November 16, 2011. [http://www.houstonpress.com/2011-11-17/news/texas-tweakers/3/ 3] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111129115208/http://www.houstonpress.com/2011-11-17/news/texas-tweakers/3/ |date=November 29, 2011 }}. Retrieved on November 19, 2011.</ref> Cotton farmers and slaves did not come to Angelina County because it had poor soil. Lomax added that "Culturally, the county was less moonlight-and-magnolias Dixie than a little pocket of [[Appalachia]], where pioneers, often from similarly hardscrabble areas of [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]], [[Alabama]] and [[Mississippi]], wanted nothing more than to carve homesteads out of the Piney Woods and river thickets, farm a little, maybe raise a scraggly herd of tough cattle to drive to market in [[New Orleans]]."<ref name="Lomax3"/> Lomax added that "[t]hey also wanted to brew up a little whiskey and subsist on the bass, catfish and perch they hauled from the Neches and Angelina rivers and whatever they could trap and shoot on dry land."<ref name="Lomax3"/> Settlement was still thin when Texas won its independence. Angelina County was organized on April 22, 1846, when Nacogdoches County was divided. The first permanent settler after the county was formed is thought to have been George W. Collins. The population increased quickly thereafter due to the good farming land and to the rivers, which made steamboat transportation possible. The population reached 1,165, of whom 196 were slaves, in 1850. The first county seat was Marion; successively, Jonesville became county seat in 1854, Homer in 1858, and Lufkin in 1892. Lufkin was favored by the route of the Houston, East and West Texas Railway (now the Southern Pacific), which had been built in 1882 from Houston to Shreveport. Angelina County was settled predominantly by natives of the southern United States, some of them slaveowners who established plantations in their new Texas home. Large plantations were owned by the Stearns, Oates, Kalty, Stovall, and Ewing families. However, many Angelina County farmers were relatively poor men who owned no slaves. In 1847 slaves numbered 154, out of a total population of 834. In 1859 the number of slaves had grown to 427, valued at $269,550, and the total population was 4,271. Cotton culture, however, occupied only 2,048 acres of county land in 1858, a relatively small area for East Texas. Between 1850 and 1860 improved land in the county increased from about 3,000 to about 16,000 acres. In 1861 Angelina County was the only county in East Texas, and one of only a handful of other Texas counties, to reject secession. This election result was startling when compared with that of Angelina County's neighbor to the immediate south, Tyler County, which supported secession by a 99 percent vote. Angelina County had also given the Constitutional Union party candidate, John Bell, a strong minority vote in the 1860 election. Two companies of county men were organized to fight in the Civil War, but they saw only limited action; only nineteen Angelina County men lost their lives in the war, and no Union soldiers entered the county before 1866.<ref>[https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/hca03 Texas State Handbook Online]</ref>
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