In 1819,
James Long based his operations in the area where Port Bolivar would eventually be located. Undeterred by the Spanish presence, Long quickly began raising money to equip a second expedition to revitalize the failed republic of Texas. He joined refugees from the first expedition on the Bolivar Peninsula in April 1820, bringing his pregnant wife Jane and 300 troops. Though Long restored elements of the former government, the expedition stalled for more than a year as men began to desert. On October 4, 1821, Long and his troops seized Presidio La Bahía, but Spanish troops forced the expedition to surrender four days later In 1838, Samuel D Parr surveyed the land, and it was granted to him by the
Republic of Texas, to be called Parrsville. this Fort Travis started construction in 1898 and adopted the name from the Galveston Island fort. The new fort had its own railroad spur. The
1915 Galveston hurricane damaged Port Bolivar, and its port was mostly not rebuilt. Until the Second World War, the
Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway served the length of the peninsula, extending as far west as Port Bolivar, and provided a ferry service to Galveston for railcars. In 1942, the rail service was cut back to
High Island, east, where the Bolivar Peninsula expands onto the full mainland. The rails on the Bolivar Peninsula were scrapped for the war effort. After
Hurricane Ike, the
United States Postal Service temporarily relocated Port Bolivar post office box services to
Winnie, north of High Island. In 1968, filming began in Port Bolivar on the made-for-television movie,
My Sweet Charlie. Starring
Patty Duke and
Al Freeman Jr., the film focused on the grudging friendship that develops between two fugitives; an outcast, pregnant young white woman, and a black lawyer accused of murder. The actors themselves were targeted for harassment by some local residents, and filming was plagued with problems until then-governor,
John Connally, intervened and worked with local authorities to stop harassment of the production company and the actors. ==Transportation==