Indianola, Texas

E332267

Indianola, Texas was a once-thriving 19th-century Gulf Coast port city that became a ghost town after being devastated by hurricanes.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Indianola, Texas canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (45)

Predicate Object
instanceOf former city
ghost town
causeOfDestruction hurricanes
coordinateLocation 28.5383°N 96.5319°W
country United States of America
currentStatus ghost town site with historical markers
no longer an incorporated city
declineCause competition from railroads
repeated hurricane destruction
destroyed devastated by the 1886 hurricane
largely destroyed by the 1875 hurricane
elevation approximately sea level
foundedAs Indian Point Energy Center
surface form: Indian Point
hasHistoricalSignificance example of a U.S. city destroyed by natural disasters
major 19th-century Gulf Coast port city
once one of the most important ports in Texas
hasMemorial historical markers commemorating the town
hasTypeOfClimate humid subtropical (historically)
heritageDesignation Texas historical site
inception 1844
locatedIn Texas
locatedInAdministrativeEntity Calhoun County, Texas NERFINISHED
locatedNear Port of Port Lavaca–Point Comfort
surface form: Port Lavaca, Texas
locatedOn Gulf Coast of Texas
Matagorda Bay
namedAfter Indiana
partOf Gulf of Mexico maritime trade routes
surface form: Gulf of Mexico maritime trade network

history of German immigration to Texas
history of Texas ports
peakActivity mid-19th century
populationTrend abandoned after repeated hurricane damage
renamed Indianola
riskFactor exposure to Gulf hurricanes
storm surge vulnerability
significantEvent hurricane of 1875
hurricane of 1886
landing point for European immigrants to Texas
major Gulf Coast port in the 19th century
port of entry for U.S. Army supplies to the western frontier
supply port for the interior of Texas
timePeriod 19th century
transportFunction port for cattle and cotton shipments
terminus for overland routes into western Texas
usedBy U.S. Army during frontier campaigns
U.S. Army during the Mexican–American War

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Indianola, Mississippi, United States namedAfter Indianola, Texas
subject surface form: Indianola, Mississippi