city, seat (1838) of Galveston county, southeastern Texas, U.S., 51 miles (82 km) southeast of Houston. It is a major deepwater port on the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway, at the northeast end of Galveston Island, which extends along the Texas coast for about 30 miles, separating Galveston Bay and West Bay from the Gulf of Mexico. The French explorer La Salle visited the island in 1686 and named it St. Louis for his sovereign, but it remained unoccupied except by Karankawa Indians. In 1777 troops of Bernardo de Glvez, Spanish governor of Louisiana (later viceroy of Mexico), temporarily occupied the island and named it Glvez (whence Galveston). The pirate Jean Laffite made the place his headquarters (181721). Settlement of the island then began, and in 1834 Michel B. Menard organized the Galveston City Company and laid out a townsite. During the Texas revolt against Mexico (183536), the four ships that comprised the Texas Navy (Invincible, Brutus, Liberty, and Independence) were based at Galveston, which briefly, prior to the successful outcome of the Battle of San Jacinto (April 21, 1836), served as the capital of the republic after the temporary president, David Burnet, arrived there with his cabinet. During the Civil War Galveston was an important Confederate supply port; it was captured by a Federal fleet in October 1862 but was retaken by Confederates a few months later. Two factors dislodged Galveston from its leading commercial position: the rise of competitive Texas ports, notably Houston, and a destructive hurricane on Sept. 8, 1900, in which more than 5,000 lives were lost and much of the city was destroyed. After this disaster, a protective seawall 17 feet (5 m) high and 10 miles long was built, paralleled by a wide boulevard overlooked by hotels. The wall broke the force of a powerful hurricane in September 1961 and reduced flood damage. Shipping, oil refining, food processing, and resort business are major economic assets. Chief exports are cotton, grain, and sulfur; imports include sugar, tea, and bananas. Galveston offers ship repairing, including nuclear-service facilities. The island is connected to the mainland by causeways, and a superhighway gives rapid access to Texas City, Houston, and other communities. Access from the northeast is by ferry from Bolivar Peninsula across Galveston Harbor. The city is the site of the University of Texas Medical Branch (1881); a marine sciences and maritime resources branch of Texas A&M University (1962); and Galveston College (1966). Inc. 1839. Pop. (1990) city, 59,067; GalvestonTexas City PMSA, 217,396; (1994 est.) city, 59,224; (1995 est.) GalvestonTexas City PMSA, 237,533.
GALVESTON
Meaning of GALVESTON in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012