BUNA, TEXAS. Buna is at the junction of
Farm roads 253 and 1004, U.S. Highway 96, and State Highway
62, thirty-six miles north of Beaumont in south central Jasper
County.
The Beaumont Lumber Company mill in southern Jasper
County was first called Carrolla for the Carroll family, prominent
Beaumont lumbermen and industrialists. The site was subsequently
renamed Buna, however, in honor of one of the family's cousins,
Buna Corley. A post office was established there in 1893.
With
substantial operations in Jasper County underway by 1890, the
Beaumont Lumber Company built a tram road from Buna to Ford's
Bluff, on the Neches River. John Henry Kirbyqv later bought
the ten-mile-long tram line and by 1896 had converted it to
a common carrier and extended it to Beaumont in the south and
Roganville in the north. The revamped railroad was called the
Gulf, Beaumont and Kansas City.
Buna's economic position was
solidified in 1902, when the Orange and Northwestern Railway
linked the logging town with Orange.
Four years later the Orange
and Northwestern was extended from Buna to Newton.
A townsite
situated between the two railroad lines was platted on July
21, 1916.
Although the region's economy suffered as the virgin
forests were reduced, in later years second-growth timber continued
to provide local jobs.
In addition to logging, farming remains
important to local residents. Numerous oilfields, first discovered
in 1948, lie to the west and north of Buna and further augment
the local economy.
The weekly East Texas News was
founded at Buna in 1967.
The population of Buna was estimated
at 650 in the early 1940s, 1,650 by the early 1970s, 2,000
in 1985, and 2,127 in 1990. In 2000 the population was 2,269.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: S. G. Reed, A History of the Texas Railroads (Houston:
St. Clair, 1941; rpt., New York: Arno, 1981).
Robert Wooster
From http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/BB/hjb22.html