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Water School

What is the Brazos River?

The Brazos River is the longest river contained entirely in Texas, with its watershed stretching from New Mexico to the Gulf of Mexico. The Brazos River draw lies approximately 50 miles west of the Texas-New Mexico border, beginning a watershed that stretches 1,050 miles and comprises 44,620 square miles, 42,000 of which are in Texas.

The Brazos River proper is formed at the confluence of the upper forks of the river, the Salt and Double Mountain, in Stonewall County. The Clear Fork joins the river just above Possum Kingdom Lake in Young County. The river enters the Gulf of Mexico two miles south of Freeport in Brazoria County.

The Brazos crosses most of the physiographic regions of Texas -- the High Plains, West Texas Rolling Plains, West Cross Timbers, Grand Prairie and Gulf Coastal Plains -- offering a variety of landscapes including canyons in the upper portion, rolling hills and plains in the central and beaches near the Gulf. The river descends at a rate of three feet to one-half foot per mile flowing 938 miles down to the Gulf of Mexico.

In addition to the Salt, Double Mountain, and Clear Forks, there are five other principal tributaries along the Brazos River. These include the Clear Fork, Yegua Creek, and the Bosque, Little and Navasota Rivers. Within these tributaries are 15 subtributaries, including the Leon River, a tributary of the Little River.

The most prevalent cities in the Brazos River basin are Lubbock, Graham, Waco, Temple, Belton, Freeport and Galveston with the major metropolitan cities of Dallas-Fort Worth, Austin and Houston lying just outside the watershed boundaries.

Like the terrain, the climate throughout the river basin varies significantly, from temperate to subtropical. The average annual temperature ranges from 59 degrees in the upper basin to 70 degrees in the coastal area. Although winters are typically mild and brief, temperatures below zero have been recorded.

Rainfall averages from 16 inches annually in the northwest to 47 inches in the southeast region. The soil along the basin ranges from sandy loams to deep clay. Natural vegetation consists of grasses in the dry portions to hardwoods in the wet portions. Farming and ranching is possible in almost all areas in the basin. Cotton, cattle and oil have been the most prominent products.

The first permanent settlement on the river was San Felipe de Austin at the Atascosito Crossing of the Brazos. Founded by John McFarland, a member of one of Stephen F. Austin's "Old Three Hundred" families, the town became the colonial capital of Texas.

The Brazos at Velasco was the scene of the first colonial resistance to Mexican authority. The Brazos River settlements of Columbia and Washington-on-the-Brazos served as the first two seats of government of the Republic of Texas.

Navigation of the river became a priority to many Texans in hope of expanding trade throughout the state. With river flows alternating between drought and floods, the task was difficult as best. In the early 1900s, the US Army Corps of Engineers began building a series of locks that would allow navigation as far north as the City of Waco. However, a major flood destroyed the majority of work begun and the Corps chose not to rebuild.

The natural mouth of the river was located at Quintana, two miles southeast of Freeport. However, shifting Gulf sandbars created a hazard to shipping and in 1929 the US Army Corps of Engineers diverted the mouth of the river a few miles down the coast.

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The information provided on this site is intended as background on water within the Brazos River basin. There should be no expectation that this information is all encompassing, complete or in any way examines every aspect of this very complex natural resource.

If you have questions about a post or would like additional information, please contact us or call 888-922-6272.

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