Also known as Taos, was a ferry crossing
and shipping point on the Trinity River during the second half of the nineteenth
century. Located sixteen northeast of Corsicana just off Farm Road 85 in extreme
northeastern Navarro County, it was one of the earliest settlements in the
county. It was founded by Col. Robert H. Porter, who received a tract of land on
the Trinity River in recognition for his service in the Texas Revolution. Porter
conceived of establishing a major shipping center on the river to serve area
plantations. In 1848, with assistance of John H. Reagan, he platted the town and
named it Taos. A ferry began operating sometime later, and by the late 1850s
Taos was a thriving town with a blacksmith shop, several stores, and a sawmill.
The town also served as a port for small steamboats, known as packets, which
before the Civil War plied the Trinity, brought supplies, and transported cotton
down river. Taos continued to prosper until the early 1870s, when the Houston
and Texas Central Railroad extended its line from Bryan to Corsicana.
Competition from the railroad effectively brought and end to the river traffic,
and the town began to decline. The ferry continued to operate until the 1880s,
when it was replaced by a bridge. A post office under the name Porter's Bluff
opened in 1900 but was discontinued in 1904, and by the mid 1930s the community
was a ghost town. In 1990 no traces of the town remained.
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