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East Texas
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:''Please note: The term eastern Texas is not a synonym for this region, and that as a proper noun east is capitalized in East Texas.''
Image:East Texas map.PNG right|300px|thumb|Red counties show the core of East Texas; pink and red counties may or may not be included in East Texas, and thus their inclusion varies from source to source.
'''East Texas''' is a distinct cultural and geographic area in the
United States U.S. state of
Texas. There are various ways to define East Texas, but the least subjective is that it the area of Texas that is part of the
Southeastern United States Ecology ecologically. More subjective is the cultural definition; East Texas has been described as the most culturally Southern area of Texas—although this can be offensive to other Texans who consider themselves Southerners—or that the region is not really part of Texas—which offends East Texans. Simply put, East Texas is the region of Texas that looks and feels more like
Louisiana and
Mississippi than it does
South Texas South and
West Texas.
According to the ''
Handbook of Texas'', the East Texas area "may be separated from the rest of Texas roughly by a line extending from the Red River in north central
Lamar County, TX Lamar County southwestward to east central
Limestone County, TX Limestone County and then southeastward to Galveston Bay", though some separate the Gulf Coast area into a separate region. This area includes all or parts of 49 counties, totalling almost 40,000 square miles (100,000 km²) and a population of almost 6 million.
Most of the region consists of the
Piney Woods ecoregion, and East Texas can sometimes be reduced to include only the Piney Woods. Houston has distanced itself from East Texas over the past fifty years; however
Houston, Texas Houston has been considered part of East Texas for most of the city's history.
A popular definition defines East Texas as the region between
Highway 45 linking Dallas and Houston and the Louisiana Border.
Geography
Image:Caddo Lake- Cypress.jpg left|300px|thumb|Caddo Lake
Climate is the unifying factor in the region's geography—all of the East Texas has the
Humid subtropical climate humid subtropical climate typical of the Southeast. East Texas receives more rainfall, 35 to 50
inches (890 to 1270 mm), than the rest of Texas. In Houston the average January temperature is 50.4 °F (10.2 °C) and the average July temperature is 82.6 °F (28.1 °C), however Houston has slightly warmer winters than most of East Texas due to its proximity to the coast.
All of East Texas also lies within the
Gulf Coastal Plain, but with less uniformity than the climate with
rolling hills in the north and flat
coastal plains in the south. Local vegetation also varies from north to south with the lower third consisting of the
temperate grassland extending from
South Texas to
South Louisiana. The upper two-thirds of the region dominated by
temperate forest known as the
Piney Woods, which extends over 23,500
square miles (61,000 km²). The Piney Woods are part of a much larger region of
pine-
hardwood forest that extends into
Louisiana,
Arkansas, and
Oklahoma. The Piney Woods thins out as it nears the
Gulf of Mexico.
Image:Large Houston Landsat.jpg thumb|right|275px|A [[Landsat 7 satellite image showing
Houston and its surroundings]]
The
Sabine River and
Trinity River (Texas) Trinity River are the major rivers in East Texas, but the
Brazos River and
Red River (Mississippi watershed) Red River also flow through the region. The Brazos cuts through the southwest portion of the region while the Red River forms its northern border with
Oklahoma. In East Texas and the rest of the South, small rivers and creeks collect into swamps called "''
Bayou Bayous''" and merge with the surrounding forest.
Taxodium distichum Bald cypress and
Spanish moss are the dominate plants in bayous. The most famous of these bayous are
Cypress Bayou and
Buffalo Bayou. Cypress Bayou surrounds the Big, Little, and Black Cypress rivers around
Jefferson, Texas Jefferson. They flow east into
Caddo Lake and the adjoing wetlands cover the rim and islands of the lake. Most of Buffalo Bayou was cleared to create the
Houston Ship Channel, the remaining portions of
Buffalo Bayou are in
Downtown Houston.
Outside of the
Greater Houston area the average population density is around 18–45 per
square mile mi2 (7–12 per
square kilometre km2), with the populaiton density near the Big Thicket dropping below 18 people per mi
2. East Texas' population is centered around Greater Houston and
Beaumont, Texas Beaumont/
Port Arthur, Texas Port Arthur/
Orange, Texas Orange in
Southeast Texas,
Lufkin, Texas Lufkin/
Nacogdoches, Texas Nacogdoches in
Deep East Texas, and
Tyler, Texas Tyler,
Longview, Texas Longview/
Marshall, Texas Marshall, and
Texarkana, Texas Texarkana in
Northeast Texas. At its western edge, East Texas overlaps with
Central Texas Central and
North Texas; so cities like
Bryan, Texas Bryan/
College Station, Texas College Station,
Corsicana, Texas Corsicana, and
Greenville, Texas Greenville may be included in liberal definitions of East Texas.
Culture
Culturally East Texas is more closely akin to Arkansas, Louisiana, and even
Mississippi than it is to
West Texas. East Texas is in the
Bible Belt creating a strong
Fundamentalism Fundamentalist Christian sentiment. Sizable
Jewish communities have also thrived in
Houston, Texas Houston,
Galveston, Texas Galveston and
Marshall, Texas Marshall since the late
19th century. Though a fifth of Texas' population is now
Hispanic,
African Americans are still the most populous
minority in East Texas. Hispanics outnumber African Americans in Houston. During the
American Civil Rights Movement Civil Rights Movement, several communities clashed over
integration.
The Museum of East Texas was opened in
Lufkin, Texas Lufkin in
1976 under the name the ''Lufkin Historical and Creative Arts Center''.
References
Books
*''Gone to Texas: Genealogical Abstracts from The Telegraph and Texas Register 1835-1841'', compiled by Kevin Ladd
*''The EAST TEXAS SUNDAY DRIVE Book'', by Bob Bowman ISBN 1878096001
*''Wild Flowers of the Big Thicket, East Texas, and Western Louisiana'', by Geyata Ajilvsgi ISBN 0890960658
External links
*{{handbookoftexas|id=EE/rye1|name=East Texas}}
-
East Texas Historical Association
See also
List of regions of the United States#Texas List of Texas regions
{{Texas}}
Category:Geography of Texas
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