La Marque, Texas: A Historical Overview of the Community


By: Diana J. Kleiner

Published: 1952

Updated: March 1, 1995

La Marque, also known as Highlands and as Buttermilk Station, is an incorporated residential community on Interstate Highway 45, State Highway 3, and Farm roads 519, 1765, and 2004, some twelve miles northwest of Galveston in northwestern Galveston County. The community was originally known as Highlands, probably for its location near Highland Creek, and was renamed in the 1890s when residents learned of another mainland community of the same name. Madam St. Ambrose, postmistress, chose the new name, which in French means "the mark." The community's post office operated from 1887 until the 1930s. During the Civil War the town was known as Buttermilk Station after the soldiers' practice of purchasing buttermilk there on the trip between Galveston and Houston. In 1867 the town had six families, including two black families, and its residents raised cattle or rice. The local population rose from 100 in 1890 to 175 in 1896, when the community had a Baptist church and several fruit growers. A school with fourteen students existed before 1895, when Amos Stewart gave land for a larger facility. By 1909 two teachers served an enrollment of fifty-five students, and in 1913 further construction began. By 1914 the community had been reached by four railroads: the International and Great Northern; the Galveston, Houston and Henderson; the Missouri, Kansas and Texas; and the Interurban. At that time La Marque had both a railroad station and general store located in a private home. The town's population reached 500 in 1914 and 1,500 by 1952, when it had ninety businesses. As it grew together with nearby Texas City, La Marque served as a residential community for employees at a nearby Union Carbide plant and other plants in the La Marque-Texas City area, as well as the Galveston Island Medical Center. The town had a population of 17,000 and 130 businesses in 1977. In 1988 it had 15,697 residents and 158 businesses, and in 1991, some 14,258 residents and 272 businesses. In 2000 the population was 13,682 with 506 businesses.

TSHA is a proud affiliate of University of Texas at Austin
Galveston County, Texas: An Economic Base Study (University of Houston Center for Research on Business and Economics, 1965). Samuel Butler Graham and Ellen Newman, Galveston Community Book: A Historical and Biographical Record of Galveston and Galveston County (Galveston: Cawston, 1945).

Places:

The following, adapted from the Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition, is the preferred citation for this entry.

Diana J. Kleiner, “La Marque, TX,” Handbook of Texas Online, accessed June 17, 2025, https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/la-marque-tx.

Published by the Texas State Historical Association.

TID: HEL01

1952
March 1, 1995

Find out more about this place from our Texas Almanac.

Place
La Marque
Currently Exists
Yes
Place Type
Town
USGS ID
2411575
Town Fields
  • Has post office: Yes
  • Is Incorporated: Yes
Belongs to
  • Galveston County
Associated Names

Lamarque

Buttermilk Station

Highlands

Coordinates
  • Latitude: 29.36894950°
  • Longitude: -94.99562100°
Population Counts
People Year
7,359 1950
13,969 1960
16,131 1970
15,372 1980
14,120 1990
13,682 2000
14,509 2010
16,817 2019
18,030 2020
18,697 2021

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