user

City of Los Fresnos

Government Administration

View the employees at

City of Los Fresnos

Overview

a ranch called Los Fresnos (ash trees) is said to have occupied a site as early as 1770 near where Los Fresnos exists today. The promise of railroad development in this area in the early 1900s brought trainloads of land speculators into South Texas. In 1907 Lon C. Hill, Jr. bought 14,232 acres and parceled them into lots. This eventually evolved into the layout of the original town site of “modern” Los Fresnos which was finally developed in 1915. Settlers, mostly farmers, were lured into the area from mid-western states. This new influx of people led to a diversification of land use in what had been almost exclusively ranch land. A post office was granted in 1919, although it closed its doors a mere three years later. With the actual arrival of the railroad in 1927 the post office was reopened in 1929 when the community had nearly 400 residents. From 1939 to 1944 the population remained at 475, growing to 1,113 in a post war boom. Throughout this time Los Fresnos was primarily a farming community, gradually increasing it population to 1,500 by the mid 1960s. The population steadily increased over the following decades to the present day to number well over 5,000 within the actual city limits and to over 16,000 encompassing all the adjacent communities. With new real estate developments utilizing much of the surrounding farm land, the crop of the future for this area is housing. Given this history and Los Fresnos’ proximity to the United States border with Mexico it should not be a surprise to learn that Los Fresnos is a magnificent mixture of people and cultures. Today, Los Fresnos’ population is roughly 84% Hispanic, 14% white non-Hispanic, and 2% of a variety of other backgrounds that add their unique influence on the community. Los Fresnos, part cow town, part farm community, very Texan, always a vibrant All-American city!