
It's
not
much to look at and it is not one of the more scenic places on the
bayou,
but the land fronting the bayou at this particular spot (see photo) is
the
site known in the 19th century as the Arsenal Block. Located at the
bend
in Buffalo Bayou about a half mile east of the foot of Main Street, the
Houston
Arsenal, or Armory, was established by the Texas Army on this block,
designated
as City of Houston Block 108, in 1837.
The Armory originally consisted of a blacksmith shop, but in May, 1838,
Joseph
Daniels built a sturdy log structure for the special purposes of the
arsenal
on Lots 1, 2 and 3 of the block. By October, 1838, there was a
significant
expansion of the facilities as workshops, artillery shops and magazines
were
built on the site.

Situated on the south bank of
Buffalo Bayou at
the north end of Crawford Street, the Arsenal Block was bisected by a
large
gully. The Bird's Eye Map of 1873 depicts the size and location of the
ravine
that had its mouth in the center of the bend in the bayou. This gully
was
a significant landmark in the early days of Houston.
Some time after the Battle of San Jacinto, William Hodge settled on the
north
side of the gully and built his home there. Hodge subsequently
purchased the
10 acre tract from the Allen brothers on April 13, 1837. The
description of
the bounds of the tract in the deed makes a specific reference to the
gully:
"Beginning at two white oaks on the bank of the Bayou near the mouth of
the
first ravine above said Hodge's..." The boundary followed the bank of
the
bayou north to the modern day McKee Street bridge. From there, the
boundary
went due south along the modern McKee Street to a point due east of the
origin
at the gully.
On the same day that Hodge purchased his land, Jonathan B. Frost
purchased
the adjoining 15 acres of land which later became known as Frost Town.
Frost,
too, had a house on his land at the time of purchase, and it is a
matter of
some conjecture as to when the Frost household, which numbered about a
dozen
persons, settled on the place. Frost brought his household to Texas in
March,
1836, and he may have settled them in this vicinity before he joined
the
Texas Army prior to the Battle of San Jacinto.

This seems to give some credence
to
the reports that a settlement existed near this bend in the bayou prior
to
the founding of the City of Houston in August, 1836. Some accounts say
that
the Allen brothers lived in this community and had a warehouse, which
they
leased from William Austin, on the banks near what would later become
the
Arsenal Block. And, this is, perhaps, where Major George Erath saw the
warehouse
at "Allen's Landing" on his trip up Buffalo Bayou in May, 1836.
Although Erath seems to have been quite familiar with the Allen
warehouse
and its location, in late December, 1836, Francis R. Lubbock had
considerable
difficulty finding the landing at the town of Houston. The banks were
so overgrown
and the road to the bayou so indistinct that Lubbock's steamboat shot
past
the "landing" for Houston and had to back down the bayou to dock there.
How
could this description be the same place that Erath found so easily?
A suitable landing may have existed
near the location of the Arsenal Block,
however. A large sand bar at the foot of La Branch Street, about one
block
to the west of the gully, was the site of the Arsenal Swimming Hole.
The Bird's
Eye Map of 1873 clearly shows this sand bar and it suggests that there
was
a landing on the site as well. This natural landing may have been the
one
Erath was referring to.
The location of the 1836 warehouse
and the confirmation that the Allen brothers lived in this area during
the
first half of 1836 is one of those mysteries surrounding the early days
of
Houston that is awaiting the discovery of more documentation.
Although the Armory was soon moved from this location, the block was
still
known as the Arsenal Block as late as the 1860's. A deed of November,
1859,
referred to the property owned by Martin Floeck as the "land adjoining
the
Arsenal Block." The gully, as mentioned above, was prominent on maps as
late
as 1873, but, by 1891, the landscape had changed. The gully on the
Arsenal
Block and the upstream sandbar are gone. The deepening and
channelization
of the bayou to make the docks at the foot of Main Street more
accessible
to shipping seem to have resulted in the formation of the bayou much
like
we see it today. The gully has been filled in and reclaimed, and the
bank
is rip-rapped to prevent natural erosion. The Elysian Viaduct dominates
both
the skyline and the land on Block 108 that once was the Houston Arsenal.