The area in which Missouri City is now located holds a significant part in the
history of Texas that dates back to its early days as part of the United States. In August 1853, the
Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railway (BBB&C), began operating its first of rail line that stretched from
Harrisburg (now
Houston) to Stafford's Point (now
Stafford). It was the first railroad to begin operating in Texas, and the first
standard gauge railroad west of the
Mississippi River. The railway continued its extension westward until, in 1883, it linked with its eastward counterpart, completing the Sunset Route from
Los Angeles to
New Orleans. Today, the route of the BBB&C (now owned by the
Union Pacific Railroad) is still an important and heavily operated railroad line. In 1890, two real estate investors from Houston (R. M. Cash and L. E. Luckle) purchased of land directly on the route of the BBB&C, only a mile and a half from its first stop at Stafford's Point. They advertised the property as "a land of genial sunshine and eternal summer" in
St. Louis, Missouri, and its surrounding areas. Three years later, W. R. McElroy purchased in the same vicinity, and in an effort to promote the area jointly with Cash and Luckle in St. Louis, he named it "Missouri City". Its first settlers were, however, from
Arlington, Texas, between
Dallas and
Fort Worth. The settlement was officially registered in Texas in 1894, and began to take shape as a railroad town along Main Street and Blue Ridge Road, now known as
US 90A and Texas Parkway, respectively. Its growth took an unexpected turn when, on February 14, 1895, shortly after the first group of settlers had arrived, the town was hit with a
blizzard. This discouraged some of the newcomers, who gave up and moved elsewhere. Those unwavered stayed and found success in farming and ranching. Among its first businesses were a
blacksmith shop, a depot, and a general store, which also housed the first
post office. The first
Catholic church was built in 1913, but was destroyed by a
hurricane in 1915. The new church built to replace it stood until 1990.
Oil was discovered at Blue Ridge southeast of town in 1919; soon after, a
salt mine opened there. Missouri City became the railroad shipping point for these two resources. In 1925, at the same location,
natural gas was discovered. After a pipeline had been constructed the following year, Missouri City became the first town in Fort Bend County to make use of natural gas. With the benefit of a railroad, Missouri City had already been home to
commuters who, by train, traveled to adjacent towns such as
Stafford's Point and
Sugar Land to work. With the increase of automobiles and the improvement of roads and highways in the early part of the 20th century, the developing community of Missouri City gradually attracted a wealth of newcomers. This gave birth to a new generation of commuters, replacing railroad commuting that eventually became obsolete. By the 1950s, the town began to take shape as a "
bedroom community" suburb of Houston. After fear and rumor spread of possible
annexation of the unincorporated town by Houston, town leaders scrambled to piece together a
city government. On March 13, 1956, the community that began as a small settlement more than 55 years earlier was
incorporated. Missouri City has since seen tremendous economic growth, moving eastward, southward, and then westward. The city was first made over by Fondren Park (in Harris County), near US 90A, in the early 1960s, followed by
Quail Valley, along Cartwright Road between Texas Parkway and Murphy Road, in the late 1960s. Unlike neighboring Houston, Missouri City has been a
zoned city since 1981. Multifamily complexes (e.g. apartments and condominiums) are a rare find because of the current zoning ordinance. In the 1980s, an influx of middle-class
African Americans – most of them first-time homeowners – were attracted to developing communities south and west of Houston. Many of them made the
subdivisions of Missouri City home. Teal Run and other unincorporated areas east of Highway 6 became ethnically diverse before neighborhoods farther west. Many of the newcomers were employees within nearby Houston work centers (e.g.,
Texas Medical Center and
Greenway Plaza). In 2000, Missouri City was named a model city for middle-class African Americans by
Black Entertainment Television. The Missouri City area's recent upscale, master-planned residential developments include Lake Olympia, south of Quail Valley, and portions of
Riverstone, south of
State Highway 6. The nearby unincorporated area of
Sienna Plantation, also located south of Highway 6, is situated on and around land once occupied by plantations, where among other things,
sugarcane and
cotton were harvested. In 2018 Yolanda Ford became the first black mayor and first female mayor of Missouri City. In 2020, Ford lost her campaign for reelection. ==Geography==