
RED BLUFF, TEXAS. Red Bluff (Redbluff)
overlooked the east bank of the Navidad River eleven miles
southeast of Edna in Jackson County. Before the arrival of
European settlers, Karankawa Indians camped on the elevated
ground above the river, where they were safe from floodwaters
and enemies. As early as 1690 Manuel José de Cárdenas y Magaña
explored the Red Bluff area. In the 1820s Sylvanus Hatch,
accompanied by a few blacks and an Indian guide, reconnoitered
the area; Hatch was probably the first American to do so. In
October 1830 Patrick Scott, an Irish settler, obtained a Mexican
land grant in the Red Bluff vicinity. Scott died in 1835,
leaving his lands to his children. In November 1830 American
colonist Jesse White received the second grant in the area.
White died in 1842, apparently without developing his land.
Also in 1830 empresario Stephen F. Austin
acquired a two-league grant along the Navidad River and had hoped to
colonize the Red Bluff site. Austin died, however, before his plans came
to fruition. After Austin's death the Red Bluff section passed to James
Franklin and Emily Austin Perry, Austin's sister and brother-in-law. The
Perrys held the land until 1849, when they sold it to James P. DuPrey, who
ranched there until 1880. DuPrey sold a portion of his spread to R. F.
Clement, who also raised cattle on the acreage. Clement, however, did not
find ranching as profitable as he had hoped and divided his holdings into
small farming tracts.
Clement laid out a townsite with the
self-commendatory name of Clement. No one else, however, used that
appellation, preferring Red Bluff, after the russet clay bluff that
towered almost 100 feet above the Navidad River. During the winter of
1894-95 the settlement was first recorded by that name, and the
establishment of the town can be traced to that date. The first business
was Webb's General Merchandise Store, which provided most of the
community's needs. In 1896 residents erected a schoolhouse, and a post
office named Redbluff was established the next year. In 1898 Red Bluff
comprised some seven domiciles and about six businesses.
The St. Louis, Brownsville, and Mexico Railway
bypassed Red Bluff and constructed a switch at nearby Lolita in 1909.
Thereafter, Red Bluff's population declined sharply. The businesses,
beginning with the gin, were moved to Lolita. The post office closed in
1915, essentially bringing an end to Red Bluff as a viable community. By
1948 Red Bluff had ceased to be listed on county road maps.
History from the Handbook of Texas Online