Access to a river or a stream is, and
has been, a major consideration in estimation of the value of a tract
of land. In the early days of the Republic of Texas, settlers acquiring
property in Texas sought land located on major streams, and many of
those who bought land on the periphery of the town of Houston from the
Allen brothers wanted land that fronted on Buffalo Bayou.
Today, the tree-lined south bank of Buffalo Bayou, sitting in relative
obscurity less than a mile east of Main Street, shows little of the
potential as prime real estate that it held for one of its earliest
owners. A 231 feet segment of the south bank, now visually
indistinguishable in the riparian vegetation along the bank, was part
of a fifteen acre tract that John Wyatt Moody purchased from Augustus
C. Allen and John K. Allen in 1837.

John Moody was born in Lunenburg County, Virginia, 65 miles southwest
of Richmond, on June 10, 1776, and, as a teenager, he moved with his
family to Iredell County, North Carolina in 1790. He married Mary
Baldwin in Warren County, Ohio, on March 13, 1806, and after living in
several places in Alabama, Moody finally moved his family to Wyumka in
the Creek Indian territory in 1833. While there, he became interested
in the settlement of Texas, and he came to Texas in May, 1835 with his
wife Polly, his three sons Francis, John and William and daughter
Dorinda. He settled first in Bastrop, but moved to La Grange in 1836.
Within a short time after his arrival, Moody became an active
participant in the independence movement. On December 20, 1835, he was
elected as the auditor of the Provisional Government. As the Texas Army
was being formed, he was appointed to the Legion of Cavalry on January
9, 1836, with the rank of Major. After the victory at San Jacinto,
Moody became the Auditor of Public Accounts for Texas, a position he
held during the first two years of President Sam Houston's
administration. He was in Houston in the spring of 1837 in an official
capacity with the new government of the Republic of Texas as were many
others who were drawn to the town by the convening of the Congress on
May 1, 1837.
On April 26, 1837, A. C. and J. K. Allen sold to Moody fifteen acres of
land "adjoining the City of Houston" and "adjoining the land of Frost,"
as described in the deed. Moody's property shared a common boundary
with the fifteen acres of Jonathan Frost along both the south and east
edges of the Frost tract. From the southeast corner of the Frost tract,
the Moody property line went due north to Buffalo Bayou. The property
line then followed the bayou east for 231 feet to the boundary of the
land owned by Samuel M. Williams. The Moody property line followed the
Williams property line due south for 1,534.5 feet to a stake in the
prairie which is near the modern intersection of Canal Street and
Chartres Street. From that stake, the boundary went due west "to a
stake near a cluster of small post oak trees in the prairie," which is
near the modern intersection of McKee Street and Chenevert Street,
before returning to the origin near the Reliant Energy southern
property line on McKee Street. The "backwards L" shape of Moody's tract
locked in the Frost property, and the long, slender parcel on the east
side of Frost's land gave Moody access to Buffalo Bayou.

The description of the Moody property in the deed gives us an idea of
what the terrain was like in 1837. The expanse of land south of Buffalo
Bayou was a coastal prairie. Clusters of small oak trees dotted the
prairie, but the trees did not seem to be a dominant feature of the
landscape. A riparian woodland was most likely found along the banks of
the bayou.
The price that Moody paid for his land was $1,500, or $100 per acre.
Both Jonathan Frost and William Hodge had purchased adjacent tracts of
land two weeks earlier for the same price of $100 per acre. With these
three transactions, the Allen brothers netted $4,500 for a fairly small
portion of the 6,647 acres of the John Austin Survey that they had
purchased in August, 1836 for $9,428, approximately $1.42 per acre.
True to their profession as land speculators, the Allen brothers sought
to sell the land around the town of Houston at more than fifty times
what they paid for it.
During the boom town atmosphere that characterized Houston in the first
few years of the Republic, everyone seemed to be a land speculator, or
wanted to be. The deed records of the county are filled with the
notations of land sales, and John Moody actively participated in this
practice. It does not appear the Moody intended to live on the fifteen
acres that he bought near Frost and Hodge. He owned other property in
town and it appears that he lived there. Moody also acquired property
and built a home north of Houston on Spring Creek, perhaps intending to
make that his residence.
Early in 1838, Moody subdivided his fifteen acre tract, which became
known as the Moody Addition, and began to sell lots. Between April 4,
1838 and May 15, 1839, he sold at least twenty pieces of property in
the Moody Addition. After the death of Jonathan Frost, who had a home
and a blacksmith facility on his property and clearly intended to live
there, the Frost family decided to follow Moody's lead and subdivide
their tract into lots, too. On March 26, 1838, Samuel Frost, the
administrator of the Frost estate, petitioned the probate court to
allow him to subdivide the land and sell lots in the Frost tract. Frost
began selling his lots on July 4, 1838, and by April, 1839, sixty-six
lots were sold.
The large number of lots that were sold within the year in both the
Frost and Moody subdivisions indicate that the speculative ventures
were successful. And, neither Moody nor Samuel Frost would choose to
make their homes near Houston. Samuel Frost moved to Fort Bend County,
near Hodge's Bend, soon afterward and was married there in March, 1843.
Moody bought land for a farm on Spring Creek. Unfortunately, he died
unexpectedly in Houston of congestive fever on August 21, 1839, at age
63.
John W. Moody died intestate and Michael R. Goheen, a Captain of the
army at San Jacinto and husband of Moody's daughter Dorinda, was
appointed administrator the estate. The probate inventory filed in 1841
showed that Moody did not accumulate much personal wealth, despite his
land deals. His personal assets included one silver watch, one
four-horse wagon, one lot of cows and young cattle, and various pieces
of household and kitchen furniture. His land holdings included a
fractional interest in eight separate properties, including a one
quarter interest in the headrights and bounty land of six individuals.
Although he had an interest in over 6,300 acres of land, his partial
interest in the parcels combined with the decline in the value of the
land during the 1840's made it difficult to dispose of the his assets.
The probate of Moody's estate dragged on for eighteen years until
March, 1857.
The Frost and Moody subdivisions proved to be a popular residential
location, especially for many of the German immigrants who began
arriving in Houston in the early 1840's. Since the Frost subdivision
and the Moody subdivision were linked both by their geographical
location and the intent of their developers to simultaneously subdivide
and sell lots, it seems natural that the name of the neighborhood
encompassing both subdivisions would coalesce into a single name. The
area became known simply as Frost Town.
The deed of July 20, 1847 conveying land from Richard Insall to John W.
Schrimpf illustrates how the Moody Addition was absorbed into Frost
Town. The deed states that Insall does "sell and release unto the said
John W. Schrimpf the following described property in Frost Town, a
suburb of the City of Houston,...Two lots of ground known and
designated as lots number fourteen and fifteen in Moody's square number
one now occupied as part of the residence of the said John W.
Schrimpf..."
By 1869, the Moody tract had a total of twenty-three houses. The tract
on the east side of the Frost Town blocks contained only one house,
however, the three blocks lying to the south of the Frost Town blocks
were heavily developed and contained twenty-two residences. Although
the Galveston and Houston Junction Railroad owned the large square
tract of the Moody Addition through which the railroad tracks make a
diagonal cut, many prominent citizens continued to live nearby. The
Heitmann house was located on Runnels Street, east of the G&HJ
railroad tracks. The Seneschal house was located on the southeast
corner of Runnels Street and Gabel Street, and the Super family lived
at the northwest corner of Runnels Street and Schrimpf Street which was
on the eastern edge of the Moody tract. Other notable families residing
in the Moody Addition were Harris, Benson, Brown, Ettinger, Cook,
Reichter, Pallas, Wilson and
Donaldson.
During the last two decades of the nineteenth century, the character of
the Frost Town area, including its sister subdivision the Moody
Addition, changed significantly. As second and third generation
Houstonians found their place in society and prospered, they moved to
other, more fashionable areas around Houston. They followed the trend
of residential development to the south and west of the downtown
district. The industrialization of the east side of downtown started
with the construction of the Galveston, Houston and Henderson Railroad
to Houston in 1859 and the subsequent connection of the GH&H
railroad with the Houston and Texas Central Railroad across Frost Town
in 1865.
In 1877, the Texas Western Narrow Gauge Railroad began operating from
its depot on the edge of Frost Town at Chartres Street and Magnolia
Avenue (modern Ruiz Avenue). Through this terminal, a spot situated
today under the elevated freeway US59, about three blocks northeast of
Minute Maid Park, the TWNG railroad brought agricultural products from
the Brazos Valley near Pattison and Sealy to the International Press
and Union Compress on the north side of Buffalo Bayou.
By 1885, the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe RR had built tracks along the
eastern edge of the Moody tract. Lying parallel to the Texas Western
Narrow Gauge, the GC&SF tracks ran north across the bayou to the
industrial plants on the north bank. The A. Bering and Brothers Planing
Mill was built east of the GC&SF tracks between Runnels Street and
German Street (modern Canal Street) to take advantage of the rail
connections for the receipt of raw materials and the shipment of
finished goods. Richardson's Grist Mill was located east of the
GH&H tracks on Runnels Street on a site that, by 1896, became the
Kuhlman's Wood Yard and the Kuhlman's Hay and Feed Warehouse.
Other industrial sites arose adjacent to the railroad tracks by 1907,
including a mattress factory on North Hamilton Street. Harwell's Iron
Works, a foundry that made ornamental iron work for the local building
industry, was established on the south half of the eastern block of the
Moody tract.
As the residential quality of the neighborhood declined, the simple
frame dwellings became tenant and low income housing for blacks and
immigrants, many of whom were laborers in the east side industries.
Yet, in spite of the industrial development in the area, the number of
dwellings on the Moody tract continued to increase. By 1891, there were
fifty-four dwellings, most of which were in the three Moody blocks
south of the Frost blocks. The number of houses rose to eighty-one in
1907. Twenty-one dwellings were built on the northeast section of the
Moody tract, north of Race Street. There were sixty houses in the
southern blocks south of Lyle Street along with three small businesses
and a school, the Women's Free Kindergarten.

The Women's Free Kindergarten, which was located on the southeast
corner of Gabel Street and Maple Place, was a service of the Women's
Club of Houston that provided educational opportunities for the
children of poor working mothers in Houston's immigrant community. It's
location on the narrow, unpaved Maple Place reflected the desire to
place the school in close proximity to the people it served. The
kindergarten program eventually expanded to provide social programs for
adults in the evening, and it was eventually absorbed into the social
programs of the Settlement House organization.
By 1924, the Moody tract had reached its high point in terms of housing
density, and probably population, too. The number of houses in the
section north of Race Street remained constant at twenty-two, but the
dwellings and businesses in the south blocks, between Lyle Street and
Maple Avenue increased to sixty-eight houses, eleven stores and three
businesses.
The industrial development of the area continued as well. The Hartwell
Iron Works plant expanded its facilities to include separate structures
for a foundry with a coke oven, a pattern shop, a machine shop, a
structural and sheet steel department, and other auxiliary buildings.
Other businesses, such as the Stower's Furniture Company and the
Lilienthal Brothers Company hay and grain storage and machine shop,
have located along the rail line.
The influence of the railroad industry in Houston was seen in the
construction of Union Station at

Crawford Street and Texas Avenue
in 1910. Significant developments by the rail companies in the
mid-1920's would transform the east side of downtown, including the
Moody Addition. By July, 1927, the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad
had completed construction of a large freight terminal on the section
of the Moody Addition bounded by Lyle Street on the north, Gable Street
on the west, Maple Avenue on the south and the GH&H tracks on the
east. All of the homes and businesses on the tract were demolished to
make room for this huge, modern facility. The MK&T Freight Terminal
had separate warehouses set aside as a Motor Freight Station, an
electric supplies warehouse and a beer warehouse. The eastern side of
the terminal had rail sidings to serve warehouses for the Builders
Supply Company for building materials, tile products and sand and
gravel
bins.
By mid-century, the residential nature of the Moody Addition had
completely disappeared. The dwellings on the north end of tract,
opposite the Hartwell Iron Works, were demolished. The Hartwell Iron
Work itself lay in ruins, encircled by a six foot wire fence, after it
was destroyed by a fire. Across the street, the Humble Oil and Refining
Company established a Production Warehouse with a pipe yard in the
north end of the Moody Addition from Race Street to the bayou.
The construction of the Eastex Freeway in the mid-1950's completed the
transformation of the Moody Addition into the what we see today. The
elevated freeway, US 59, and its associated off ramps and on ramps
consume the bulk of Moody's original fifteen acres. Sections of the
former MK&T Freight Terminal lie in ruins and vacant. The Star of
Hope's Doris and Carloss Morris Men's Development Center, a social
service facility at 1811 Ruiz Street offering sleeping quarters to the
homeless, is the only remaining representation of the residential
character of this once vibrant, but now forgotten, community.