On January 11, 1884, when K. H. Faulkner filed a plat and
dedication establishing the town of Waller, rancher Nape Farr's
five hundred head of cattle and two small houses for his hired
hands were all that occupied the land. The town was named
for Edwin Waller, the first judge of Waller County and one
of the first signers of the Texas Declaration of Independence.
Two brothers who lived on a farm on the Harris County line
near Waller wasted no time in establishing the basics in the
newly platted town. While 38-year-old P. A. "Uncle Doc"
Saunders began to make the necessary arrangements for the
forty-five mile, several day, covered wagon trip into Houston
to bring back the stock needed to open the first store in
Waller, his brother, J. T. Saunders, began the process of
acquiring a post office.
Though Saunders' Grocery remained the only store in town,
only a couple of years passed before the population in and
around Waller had grown enough to justify a school. 1897,
the size of Waller had increased dramatically. More and more
people had begun to find a way to make a living in the small
prairie town surrounded by fields of cotton, corn, and cattle.
The population was almost 200, and a part-dirt, part-sand
Main Street was lined with a dozen or more business establishments.
By 1920, however, more and more automobiles purchased from
the Robertson brothers began to appear among the horses and
buggies on Main Street. In 1914, the brothers had converted
their livery into an automotive garage (the first in Waller),
then in 1919, they had purchased the Ford Motor Company of
Waller from a Mr. Llewellyn. But in spite of the novelty of
the automobile, the ease with which they got stuck on area
roads made using them a very weather related activity, and
wagons and horses remained the transportation of choice for
many Waller residents.
Over the next twenty-five years, the population of Waller
continued to grow. By the late 1940's, the town had almost
700 residents and approximately sixty businesses, with over
300 students enrolled in the Waller Independent School District.
Electricity had arrived in 1928, and the J.C. Jenkins' home
on the NW corner of Penick and Cherry Street, had been the
first to get the service. A devastating fire that same year
had destroyed an entire block of Waller's business district,
and in 1930-31, a new state highway had cut a thirty-foot
swath through the town north of and parallel to the railroad
tracks. And in 1939, the new thoroughfare had been designated
a federal highway - U. S. 290.
The election that created the city of Waller was held on
October 11, 1947. Five days later, on October 16, an area
encompassing approximately 600 acres, which included the township
of Waller and populated areas that had sprung up adjacent
to it, was decreed by Waller County Judge John Winfree to
be the new City of Waller, Texas.
Waller's first city election was scheduled for November 22,
1947. Voting would take place in the Waller School building
for a mayor, five aldermen, and a city marshal whose terms
would last until the regular state election day on the first
Saturday of April 1948.
First City Officials
Waller, Texas
J. E. "Jim" Haney |
Mayor |
J. C. "Zeke" Hoffman |
City Marshal |
O. D. Brown |
Alderman |
Henry Holz |
Alderman |
J. A. Robertson |
Alderman |
R. C. Smith |
Alderman |
C. F. Sorsby |
Alderman |
As soon as the elections were over, the work of setting up
a city began. Over the next few months, the energies of Waller's
city officials were directed toward the building of a city
jail, setting up a city dump, and getting a city water system
built. In the meantime, an ordinance that stated "all
fowls must be kept on the owner's property and not allowed
to run at large," and another that prohibited hogs within
the city limits had been added to the books.
1950 - 1960
By 1950, the city of Waller was growing at a steady pace.
There were 715 people and over 60 businesses in the city,
and more than 500 students were attending the Waller and Prairie
View schools. In 1951, H.C. Richards brought The Waller Herald
to town, and for the first time in many years, the city had
its own home-based newspaper.
By the end of 1952, construction that had widened Hwy 290
to 24 feet through the city was completed, as was the new
Waller Elementary School on Farr Street. In 1957, the Melanee
Smith Memorial Library was established, and a unit of the
Department of Public Safety was assigned to Waller.
In 1960, there were 48 businesses and nearly 1000 residents
in the city of Waller. The railroad serving the city had become
the Southern Pacific, and though passenger trains no longer
stopped in Waller, many tons of local produce were being shipped
out each year.
In January 1963, Forest Daily was appointed Waller's first
city judge, and in April, T.C. "Carol" Baskin, Jr.
served as mayor pro-temp following the death of Henry Holz.
In regular elections held in May of that year, H.D. Carter
was chosen the new mayor of Waller.
In 1965, the "free choice" system of desegregation
was instituted in Waller schools, God's Mercy Store was closed,
and the Waller Baptist Church burned to the ground.
1970 - 1980
Through the efforts of the city and the Waller Volunteer
Fire Department, the Waller Volunteer Ambulance Service was
established in 1970.
In 1975, the city council passed one ordinance that dispensed
with the position of city marshal and another that created
the Waller Police Department. Jimmie Reynolds was named Waller's
first chief of police. Later that year, the old Waller train
depot was sold and moved to Bryan, Texas, to be converted
into a restaurant. In December 1977, the city took over the
financial responsibility of the Melanee Smith Memorial Library.
1980 - 1990
During the next decade, the population of Waller continued
to grow, jumping from 1077 in 1980 to 1500 in 1990, with more
than 80 businesses recorded in the city in 1980. By 1984,
the results of a gradual population expansion from Houston
began to be noticed in Waller. The new shopping center was
completed on FM 2920, and the number of students enrolled
in the Waller Independent School District that year reached
almost 3000.
In 1989, current city tax assessor-collector Brenda Bundick
was hired. In 1992, Gene Schmidt, the city's current fire
marshal and superintendent of public works, and Jerry Knebel,
the city's current animal control officer, were employed.
1990-2000
Growth has been the operative word in the city of Waller
throughout most of the 1990's. The anticipated, and then actual,
construction of the new Highway 290 by-pass from Houston spurred
a blossoming population expansion in the eastern part of Waller
County that affected both the Waller Independent School District
and the city of Waller.
An expansion of the city's sewage treatment plant became
a necessity in the early part of the decade, and once again,
residents of Waller got their own home-based newspaper, The
Waller Times.
Today, 1500 people are residents of Waller and 116 businesses
are listed on city tax rolls. Meanwhile, the Waller city council
continues to deal with problems associated with a growing
population.
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