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Port of Galveston

The Port of Galveston is the port of the city of Galveston, Texas. It was established by a proclamation issued by the Congress of Mexico on October 17, 1825, while the land known today as Texas was still part of Mexico. The Port of Galveston is the oldest port in the Gulf of Mexico west of New Orleans.[1] During the late 1800s, up until the Galveston Hurricane of 1900, the port was the busiest on the Gulf Coast and considered to be second busiest in the country, next to the port of New York City. The port exported most of the nation's cotton, along with large amounts of cattle, rice and other commodities. Galveston's wealth and great esteem was due in large part to the port's activity. The port was devastated by the 1900 Storm, and though it has since recovered, its status was quickly overtaken by the Port of Houston and other deep-water ports that were able to expand without restrictions due to geographic features.

Cranes at the Port of Galveston container terminal

Located on the upper Texas coast on the eastern end of Galveston Island, it is 9.3 miles (15.0 km) from the open Gulf or approximately 30 minutes sailing time. The port is municipally owned by the City of Galveston and is managed by the Board of Trustees of the Galveston Wharves, as designated by the City Charter.

The port is equipped to handle all types of cargo including: containers, dry and liquid Bulk, breakbulk, RO/RO, refrigerated and project cargoes. The Galveston Railroad, a terminal switching railroad, facilitates movement of cargo by rail.[2] In addition, the Port is the year-round homeport to two Carnival Cruise Line vessels as well as one Royal Caribbean vessel. Royal Caribbean's Voyager of the Seas is the largest cruise ship to sail from the Port of Galveston.

The Port of Galveston consists of the Galveston Ship Channel, the south side of Pelican Island, the north side of Galveston Island and the entrance to Galveston Bay. The Galveston Channel has an authorized minimum depth of 40 feet (12 m) and is 1,200 feet (370 m) wide at its narrowest point.

Contents

See also

Houston portal

References

  1. ^ Handbook of Texas: Galveston Wharves
  2. ^ Handbook of Texas: Galveston Railway

External links

vd • Ports of Texas
Deep water seaports Houston (Barbours Cut, Bayport) Beaumont Corpus Christi Texas City Freeport Port Arthur Port Lavaca/Point Comfort Brownsville Galveston
Shallow draft seaports Victoria
Canals / Waterways Houston Ship Channel Matagorda Ship Channel Intracoastal Waterway
CategoryEconomyCommunications
vd • City of Galveston
Attractions Ashton VillaBalinese RoomBishop's PalaceEast End Historic DistrictElissa (ship)Fort CrockettGalveston Island State ParkGalveston Railroad MuseumGalveston SeawallGalveston Island TrolleyGrand 1894 Opera HouseLone Star Flight MuseumMoody GardensMoody PlazaOcean Star Offshore Drilling Rig & MuseumOld RedRosenberg LibrarySt. Mary Cathedral BasilicaSchlitterbahn Galveston Island WaterparkSeawolf ParkStrand Historic District1861 United States Customs and Federal Court HouseUSS Cavalla (SS-244)USS Stewart (DE-238)
Companies American National Insurance CompanyGalveston RailroadIsland TransitMoody FoundationMoody National BankPort of GalvestonTexas First BankScholes International Airport at Galveston
History First Battle of GalvestonSecond Battle of GalvestonBattle of Galveston HarborThe Beach HotelFort Point LightGalveston RailroadGalveston Hurricane of 1900Galveston MovementHistory of GalvestonHistory of the Jews in Galveston, TexasKarankawa IndiansFree State of GalvestonStrand National Historic Landmark District1861 United States Customs and Federal Court House
Geography Galveston BayGalveston IslandGulf of MexicoSan Luis Pass
Education Galveston CollegeGalveston Independent School DistrictO'Connell College Preparatory SchoolTexas A&M University at GalvestonUniversity of Texas Medical Branch
Healthcare & Research Galveston National Biocontainment LaboratoryJohn Sealy HospitalShriners Burns Hospital at GalvestonTransitional Learning CenterUniversity of Texas Medical Branch
Media
Newspapers The Galveston County Daily News
Television KLTJ (Daystar)KTMD (Telemundo)
AM Radio KGBC
FM Radio KOVE
VHF Radio KHB40
vd • State of Texas
Austin (capital)
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Counties

See: Table of Texas counties or List

Categories: Galveston, Texas | Galveston County, Texas | Ports and harbors of Texas | Companies based in Galveston, Texas | Greater Houston

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