BastropInterpretive Guide |
Interpretive Guide of Bastrop State Park (SP) in Texas. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.
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THE L O ST P IN E S
ARE I N Y O U R H A N D S
While enjoying Bastrop and Buescher State Parks, please
remember everything you see in the parks is protected.
Artifacts, rocks, animals, and plants (even pine cones) are all
part of the region’s rich natural and cultural heritage. Help us
keep these parks a special place for everyone.
• Preserve the integrity of the historic CCC structures by
using them with respect. They are part of our heritage!
BASTROP
AND
BUESCHER
STATE PARKS
L O S T
PINES
THE
WELCOME
TO
THE LOST PINES
OF
TEXAS, THE
H O M E
O F
BASTROP AND
B U E S C H E R
STATE PARKS.
THE
UNIQUE
SETTING
OF
• Hike only on designated trails and stay out of closed areas.
BOTH
PARKS
• Leave no trace. Keep your parks clean by picking up
your trash.
EVOKES A SENSE OF MYSTERY, AS THE
• Preserve the parks for future generations and leave plants,
animals, and rocks where you find them.
SEEMS OUT OF PLACE. WHILE GREATLY
ISOLATED FOREST OF LOBLOLLY PINES
IMPACTED BY A 2011 WILDFIRE,
•
BASTROP STATE PARK IS RECOVERING
WITH POCKETS OF LOBLOLLY PINES
Bastrop State Park • Box 518, Bastrop, TX 78602
(512) 321-2101 • www.tpwd.texas.gov/bastrop
SEEN THROUGHOUT THE PARK.
Buescher State Park • PO Box 75, Smithville, TX 78957
(512) 237-2241 • www.tpwd.texas.gov/buescher
HISTORIC STONE CABINS AND
BEAUTIFUL STRUCTURES SUCH AS
BRIDGES BUILT BY THE CCC
DOT THE LANDSCAPE. STUNNING
CRAFTSMANSHIP BRINGS THESE
HISTORIC TREASURES TO LIFE.
© 2019 TPWD. PWD BR P4505-043P (7/19)
In accordance with Texas State Depository Law, this publication is available at
the Texas State Publications Clearinghouse and/or Texas Depository Libraries.
TPWD receives funds from the USFWS. TPWD prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, disability, age, and gender,
pursuant to state and federal law. To request an accommodation or obtain information in an alternative format, please contact TPWD on a Text Telephone
(TTY) at (512) 389-8915 or by Relay Texas at 7-1-1 or (800) 735-2989 or by email at accessibility@tpwd.texas.gov. If you believe you have been discriminated against by TPWD, please contact TPWD, 4200 Smith School Road, Austin, TX 78744, or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office for Diversity and
Workforce Management, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041.
Texas State Parks is a division of the
Texas Parks and Wildlife Department.
Citizens of Bastrop
and Smithville recognized early on
that this land was
worth protecting.
Even before Bastrop
State Park existed,
a local hunting and
fishing club laid the foundation for recreation in the Lost
Pines. Bastrop and Smithville, plus local landowners,
provided the land that became Bastrop and Buescher
State Parks. In the 1930s, the Buescher (pronounced
“Bisher”) family donated 636 acres for the park. Since its
dedication in 1937, Bastrop State Park has grown to over
6,600 acres of rolling hills while Buescher complements
this preserve with about 1,000 acres.
Long ago, Native American groups passed through here
and relied on game animals, plants, stones for tools, and
water. A convenient river crossing made Bastrop County
a likely place for early European settlement as well. The
vital Spanish travel route known as El Camino Real de los
Tejas traversed the area and contributed to the colonization of Texas.
The natural resources of the area were important to
regional development. Timber harvest of loblolly pines
fueled construction in Austin and San Antonio. The
town of Bastrop, known as Mina when established in
1832, is one of the oldest towns in Texas. Bastrop timber
was exported as far as northern Mexico.
TPWD/JOHN CHANDLER
CLAIRE BOYER
INTERPRETIVE GUIDE
A N D
B U E S C H E R
S T A T E
P A R K S
GROWING
FROM THE GROUND
ROOSEVELT’S FOREST ARMY
In 1933 companies #1805 and #1811 arrived at Bastrop
and Buescher State Parks to transform the over-cut pine
forest into a scenic wonder by seeding, transplanting
and clearing the tangle of brush and fallen timber. These
recruits enrolled for a six-month period and were paid
$30 per month, with $25 of the monthly wage being sent
back home to the CCC worker’s family.
TPWD/JOHN CHANDLER
I
magine being
20 years old and
without enough
money to buy your
next meal. This was
reality for many young
men in the early 1930s
during the Great
Depression. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt
created a public works organization known as the Civilian
Conservation Corps (CCC) in an effort to put young men
to work, to conserve the nation’s natural resources, create
public recreational areas, and to help boost the economy.
In 1933, the
National Park
Service (NPS),
the CCC and
the Texas
State Parks
Board (now
the Texas
Parks and
Wildlife
Department)
joined forces to design and construct buildings and facilities in
many Texas parks. The architect of Bastrop State Park,
Arthur Fehr, followed National Park Service design principles
that suggested harmony with the surrounding landscape of
rolling hills and pine forests and use of native materials for
construction. The stone cabins at Bastrop appear to grow out
of the ground like a natural outcrop. The same non-intrusive
design elements were followed for dams, culverts, bridges and
fences. Similar design concepts can be seen in other parks
around the nation. Bastrop’s refectory is a showplace of CCC
craftsmanship. Cedar, oak, walnut and pine indigenous to the
park and red sandstone quarried nearby come together in an
attractive stone structure featuring carved mantles, roof beams
and handmade furniture.
In 1997, Bastrop State
Park was awarded
National Historic
Landmark status, due
largely to the enduring
craftsmanship and
landscape work done
in the park by the CCC.
It is one of only seven
CCC parks in the nation
with this recognition.
THE “LOST PINES” ARE NOT LOST
Before the 2011 wildfire, loblolly pines covered most of Bastrop
State Park. Because this pine pocket was separated from the
East Texas Pineywoods by over 100 miles, this area is known as
the “Lost Pines.” How did they get here? Pollen records show
that pines have persisted in this area for over 18,000 years. They
were probably once connected to the Pineywoods
region. Over time, the climate became drier and
the region covered by pines shrank. The local
PINEYWOODS
sandy soils provided conditions for these
LOST
“Lost Pines” to survive. In fact, the pines
PINES
have become genetically unique, having adapted
to 30% less rainfall than loblollies from East Texas
and adjacent states. The Lost Pines loblollies represent
the westernmost stand of loblolly pine trees in the United States.
An Uncertain Future
Wildfire!
You don’t have to look far to
see that the loblolly pines are
making a comeback at Bastrop
State Park. Even though the
wildfire damaged over 90% of
the park, only 30% was heavily
burned. Recovery and management of the ecosystem will be an active and ongoing
process for years to come. One
tool TPWD is using to help the
landscape recover is prescribed
fire. Low-intensity prescribed
fire will clear out the dead fuel,
keep the growth of oak trees in
check, and allow a new pine
forest to flourish.
In 2011, Texas had the warmest summer for any U.S. state
since 1895 – it was even warmer than the Dust Bowl years
of the 1930s! Bastrop had three months of 100°-plus days,
drying the area. On September 4, high winds from Tropical
Storm Lee knocked brittle, drought-stressed trees into power
lines, igniting the most destructive wildfire in Texas history.
The fiery monster burned for days, devouring 32,400 acres in
Bastrop County, killing two people and destroying 1,696
houses and commercial structures.
Hundreds of defenders, including more than 140 Texas Parks
and Wildlife Department employees, commercial partners and
firefighters from all over the country, battled the blaze. The
wildfire affected over 90% of Bastrop State Park. But because
of the firefighters’ efforts, only
the roofs of two CCC overlook
structures burned.
The 2011 wildfire came close
to Buescher State Park but
skirted the park boundary. Just
a few years later in 2015, the
Hidden Pines fire burned the
northern section of Buescher
State Park, further impacting
the Lost Pines ecosystem.
Bastrop and Buescher state
parks lie within the ecological
region known as the Post Oak
Savannah. The seasonally
moist, sandy soils provide critical habitat for the endangered
Houston toad. While historic habitat loss due to intensive agriculture severely reduced the Houston toad’s
range in Texas, the 2011 wildfire dealt a devastating blow
by reducing their habitat even more.
Recovery Efforts
The Lost Pines Today
While it will take decades for significant stands of
loblolly pines to regrow, you will see exciting changes
each time you visit. This living laboratory is regularly
visited by students and scientists as they study fire’s
effects on birds, mammals and vegetation. You can
make your own discoveries by visiting the park and
seeing how the landscape changes over time.
RACHEL ROMMEL
B A S T R O P