Land in what is now Inwood Forest was originally
Native American hunting grounds. In the 1860s
German American farmers settled along the White Oak Bayou. For a 100-year period until 1963, the Fuchs family owned the land that would become Inwood Forest and surrounding subdivisions; during that year a real estate developer bought the land. Many of the original houses in Inwood Forest were developed for oil company executives. The City of Houston annexed the Inwood Forest area in 1975, adding of land to the city limits. The neighborhood began to change after a recession in the late 1980s. Many businesses shut down, and former residents moved to suburbs. Dennie Hodge, an Inwood Forest resident quoted in the
Houston Chronicle, said that around three-fourths of the houses in her neighborhood flooded during
Tropical Storm Allison. After
Hurricane Katrina, evacuees from the hurricane poured into the Houston area. The occupancy rates of apartments around Inwood Forest increased from the 40 to 60 percent range to almost 100 percent. Julie Grothues, president of the Inwood Forest Community Improvement Association, said in a 2008
Houston Chronicle article that she saw children playing in the streets of Inwood Forest while she did not see any in 1978. Throughout several years leading to 2011, the City of Houston had demolished older apartment complexes. In 2011 the city demolished the Gables Apartments. ==Cityscape==