Oakhurst
Oakhurst, at the junction of U.S. Highway 190 and Farm Road 946, eighty-three miles north of Houston in northern San Jacinto County, was named for the community's location on a wooded hill, or hurst, in a grove of oaks. In 1899 or 1900 the Columbia Lumber Company established a sawmill at Oakhurst, which had a population of 116 in 1900. A commissary, a drugstore, a barbershop, and office buildings were added, and a post office was established. The old tram railroad connection with the International-Great Northern line in Walker County was incorporated and converted to a common carrier known as the Trinity Valley Railway Company. By 1908 the Palmetto Lumber Company had purchased the Oakhurst mill. After the company consolidated its operations at the new site, the population of Oakhurst was 600. The Palmetto Company sold the Oakhurst mill in 1911 and purchased the Foster Company plant at Elmina, Walker County. A bank was opened at Oakhurst to handle Liberty bonds purchased by lumber workers from 1916 to 1919. The Oakhurst sawmill shut down in 1930, and with it the commissary, the drugstore, and many social centers closed as well. The Trinity Valley Railway, with headquarters at Oakhurst, followed suit in 1936. A Civilian Conservation Corps camp was set up in Oakhurst in 1933, providing some 250 youths with work and educational opportunities during the Great Depression