Mineral

Mineral is at the intersection of Farm roads 623 and 673, fifteen miles northwest of Beeville in north central Bee County. The first settler in the community was Ross (or Rust) Morris, from Montgomery County, Tennessee, who moved to San Domingo Creek in 1836. Nine years later, President Anson Jones granted to Henry Coley's heirs from Tennessee 1,000 acres of land in the area. By 1874 Thomas Malone and Robert Ricks had purchased part of the tract belonging to Coley's heirs. When wells were dug by the settlers, the water was not found potable by man or sheep. Various county histories attribute the condition to an oil seep in the vicinity or to mineral deposits from bones of prehistoric creatures. A test of the water from William and Susan Sanford's well revealed sixteen minerals in the water. In 1877, with news that the water had healing powers, people moved to the settlement that became known as Mineral City. Many lived in tents. That same year the Sanford Hotel, churches, stores including a drugstore, a gristmill, and a school were in operation at Mineral City. A post office was established in 1878. Whatever the healing powers of the water, however, the excitement soon dissipated, possibly because the mineral content decreased when the well was deepened in 1889. By 1895 City was no longer used in the post office name. The hotel was not listed in the 1896 gazetteer.