Comal County, Texas, with
New
Braunfels as the county seat, was formed in 1846 by the
Texas legislature under the sponsorship of the Association for
the Protection of German Immigrants in Texas. Its 555
square miles of grassy prairie and timbered hills, cut from
part of Bexar County, is located in south central Texas on the
divide between the Blackland
Prairies and the Balcones
Escarpment. The Guadalupe River and Canyon
Lake provide drainage for the surrounding land as well as add
prime recreational opportunities. The Cibolo Creek
defines the southwestern boundary of the county. Located along
I-35 between San Antonio and Austin, Comal County is
included in the San Antonio Metropolitan Statistical Area.
Comal
Springs was originally the Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe Mission
(1756-1758). The mission was considered indefensible
during the Comanche wars and was closed. The springs
(Las Fontanas) and river (the Little Guadalupe) were named
Comal (Spanish for "flat dish", possibly a
description of the river basin) about a 100 years later.
Comal
County residents voted in favor of secession, but seem to have
escaped the violence between Unionists and Confederates that
decimated counties to the northwest.
Possibly
the most significant portion of Comal County history was made
in 1964, with the creation of Canyon
Lake by the Army Corps of Engineers. Flooding of the
Guadalupe River valley cost the area productive land and two
rural communities, while it provided opportunity which Comal
County promptly developed. The county leaders focused on
the possibility of a resort and tourist industry economy
that added to their manufacturing and agriculture.
(Mineral resources in Comal County of limestone, sand, and
gravel, have triggered a construction-materials industry,
also) Before the dam was completed, residential
subdivisions were planned and some were being built even as
the lake was filling. Waterside public parks and marinas
were designed for weekend visitors, and service industries and
new businesses created thriving commercial centers in Canyon
City. From a rural area with an agricultural base,
Canyon Lake has become one of the largest rural population
centers in Central Texas. Canyon Lake and New Braunfels
boast over thirty hotels and motels thriving in the resort
atmosphere.
Comal
County attractions include Water
Sports, canoeing, rafting, swimming, sunning, picnicking,
skiing and fishing; cultural activities such as Sophienburg
Museum, The
Children's Museum in New Braunfels, New
Braunfels Museum of Art and Music; and natural wonders
such as Natural
Bridge Caverns, pan for gems at Texas's
largest sluice
The
population of Comal County expanded by 21 percent in the
1950's and again by the same percentage in the 1960's.
1980 saw a 50 percent increase from the previous census.
Current (2000) population is 78,021, and Comal is again listed
in the
top 100 cities of the United States for population
increase.