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==History== [[File:BastropDowntown1.JPG|thumb|left|200px|Historic downtown Bastrop]] Spanish soldiers lived temporarily at the current site of Bastrop as early as 1804, when a fort was established where the [[Old San Antonio Road]] crossed the [[Colorado River (Texas)|Colorado River]] and named ''Puesta del Colorado''. Bastrop's namesake, [[Felipe Enrique Neri, Baron de Bastrop]], was a commoner named Philip Hendrik Nering Bogel, who was wanted for [[embezzlement]] in his native country of the [[Netherlands]]. In Texas, he assisted [[Moses Austin|Moses]] and [[Stephen F. Austin]] in obtaining land grants in Texas and served as Austin's land commissioner. In 1827, Austin located about 100 families in an area adjacent to his earlier Mexican contracts. Austin arranged for Mexican officials to name a new town there after the baron who died the same year. On June 8, 1832, the town was platted along conventional Mexican lines, with a square in the center and blocks set aside for public buildings. The town was named Bastrop, but two years later, the [[Coahuila y Tejas]] legislature renamed it Mina in honor of [[Francisco Javier Mina]], a Mexican revolutionary hero and [[martyr]]. The town was incorporated under the laws of the [[Republic of Texas]] on December 18, 1837, and the name was changed back to Bastrop. Overlooking the center of the town is the [[Lost Pines Forest]]. Composed of [[loblolly pine]]s (''Pinus taeda''), the forest is the center of the westernmost stand of the [[Piney Woods|southern pine forest]]. As the only timber available in the area, the forest contributed to the local economy. Bastrop began supplying Austin with lumber in 1839 and then [[San Antonio]], the western Texas frontier, and parts of Mexico. A fire in 1862 destroyed most of downtown Bastrop's commercial buildings and the county courthouse. As a result, most current downtown structures postdate the [[American Civil War|Civil War]]. In 1979, the [[National Register of Historic Places]] admitted 131 Bastrop buildings and sites to its listings. This earned Bastrop the title of the "Most Historic Small Town in Texas". The first edition of the ''Bastrop Advertiser and County News'' (now ''[[The Bastrop Advertiser]]'') was published on March 1, 1853, giving it claim to be the oldest continuously published weekly (semiweekly since September 5, 1977) in Texas. The wider Bastrop County is also covered by papers such as the ''[[Elgin Courier]]''. On September 4, 2011, two wildfires started when trees fell on power lines. The first fire started in the community of [[Circle D-KC Estates, Texas|Circle D-KC Estates]] near [[Bastrop State Park]], and the other fire started about {{convert|4|mi|0|abbr=on}} north. The two fires merged into the [[Bastrop County Complex fire]]. This was the worst and most destructive wildfire in Texas history, as it destroyed 1,691 homes, killed two people, and caused $325 million of insured property damage. The drought in Texas at the time combined with strong winds from the [[Gulf of Mexico]] caused by [[Tropical Storm Lee (2011)|Tropical Storm Lee]] helped fuel the fire.
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