La Grange was the site of an early crossing of the Colorado River along
La Bahía (Lower Road) of the
El Camino Real (Kings Highway), during the
Spanish period. The earliest
Anglo-American settlers in the area were Aylett C. Buckner and Peter Powell, who lived slightly to the west. The first Anglo-American settlement on the city's present location was by
Stephen F. Austin's
band of colonists in 1822.
John Henry Moore built a
blockhouse in 1828 (some sources cite 1826) as protection from the
Comanche. The building is known as
Moore's Fort and can be found today in nearby
Round Top, having been moved there for restoration. By 1831 a small community had developed around Moore's Fort. The town of La Grange was
platted in 1837, during the
Republic of Texas period, as the
county seat for the then-new
county of Fayette. Both of these place names were in honor of the
Marquis de Lafayette, who fought with the Americans and aided the cause of the
American Revolution; he died in 1834. Lafayette's castle in France for which La Grange was named is the
Château de la Grange-Bléneau. In the immigration wave of
Germans after the revolutions of 1848, the town was a major site of German settlement; newcomers said (like the
Czechs who followed them) that the rolling hills and forests were reminiscent of their homelands. In the 21st century, the German and Czech influences on the town are still visible in many local customs, the architecture, and the town's reputation for rejecting
prohibition of alcoholic beverages during the 1920s and 1930s—beyond a token effort by the local authorities. German and Czech culture had a more social tradition around drinking. La Grange became the home of many
Jewish immigrants in the late 19th century, who entered the region through the port of
Galveston. La Grange has a number of properties listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. The town was the departure point for the
Mier Expedition, known for the Black Bean Episode. Team members had gathered at a historic oak that is a local landmark. The tree survives, although it was damaged from being hit by the car of a drunk driver. The tree has a concrete support for stability.
Monument Hill and Kreische Brewery State Historic Sites After independence, Texas continued to have armed confrontations with Mexican forces over control of the territory between the
Rio Grande and the
Nueces River. In what is known as the 1842
Dawson Massacre, numerous Texas militia were killed by Mexican forces near
San Antonio. Several years later, the remains of those dead and of those from the black bean death lottery (
Mier Expedition), were exhumed and reinterred in La Grange in a large common tomb with a sandstone vault. This took place in a ceremony on September 18, 1848, at the location now known as Monument Hill; more than 1,000 people attended, including former president of the Republic of Texas,
Sam Houston. On January 17, 1849, Heinrich Ludwig Kreische, a recent German immigrant, purchased of land which included the tomb. He built a three-story house and, in 1860, began building a
brewery. By 1879, it was the third-largest brewing operation in Texas, with its flagship product being "Kreische's Bluff Beer". Kreische maintained the tomb for the rest of his life, but the tomb and Kreische Brewery began to deteriorate after his death in 1882. The brewery closed in 1884. The Kreische family asked the city to remove the tomb from their property, as it was frequently vandalized. On April 15, 1905, the Texas Legislature passed a bill to authorize acquisition, by purchase or condemnation, of the of land occupied by the tomb. The state acquired the land by
condemnation on June 24, 1907. In 1933, during the Great Depression, the State Highway Commission fenced the 0.36 acres and agreed to maintain it as a state park, as one of the infrastructure projects of this period. In the same year, the
Daughters of the Republic of Texas purchased a new granite vault for the tomb. For the 1936 Texas Centennial, the Texas Centennial Commission erected a shellstone monument with an
art deco mural to mark the mass grave. In 1949, the state transferred authority for the site to the
Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. In 1956, the citizens of Fayette County purchased around Monument Hill and deeded the land to the state for parkland. Another , including the Kreische Brewery and the Kreische Home, were added to the park site in 1977. The complete site, called
Monument Hill and Kreische Brewery State Historic Sites, opened to the public in 1983, after
archaeological studies were completed. Outside La Grange was a
brothel known as the
Chicken Ranch. It closed in 1973 after its operations were revealed, largely through the investigative and reporting efforts of Houston television journalist
Marvin Zindler. The brothel inspired the 1973
ZZ Top song "
La Grange". The band performed in La Grange at the Fayette County Fair on September 5, 2015. The Chicken Ranch also served as the basis for the 1978
Broadway musical The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas and its
1982 movie adaptation. In 1974, a
little league team from La Grange won the Texas state championship. The Texas Czech Heritage and Cultural Center is located at 250 Fair Grounds Road in La Grange. The center constructed a new
archives building, aided by a seed donation in 2007 from the estate of
Adolph R. Hanslik of
Lubbock. Hanslik was known as the "dean of
West Texas cotton producers" and was a native of
Hallettsville in
Lavaca County. ==Geography==