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Padre Island National SeashoreAn aerial view of the beaches taken probably in the 70s or 80s.
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Padre Island National Seashore
The Nineteenth Century
 
Photo of a woman believed to have been Mary B. Lively, who settled on the island just prior to the Civil War with her husband Amos Lively and her family.
Photo courtesy of Matt Anderson (a descendant of Amos and Mary Lively).
Photo of a woman believed to have been Mary Bartlett Lively, who settled on the island with her husband Amos and family just prior to the Civil War.

During the nineteenth century, the island changed from an isolated wilderness to settled ranchland. The transition was mostly peaceful, with only one minor skirmish occuring on the island during the Civil War.

The nineteenth century also saw the appearance and then disppearance of several local industries that endeavored to make commercial use of the island's natural resources: primarily salt and birds. Another business the island saw come and go was the salvaging and selling of wrecked ships, jetsam, and other debris that washed onto the shoreline. This was known as the "wrecking industry".

Finally, during the times when epidemics (such as yellow fever) were common in the U.S., the island had a quarantine station operated by the city of Corpus Christi at what is now Packery Channel.

Mary Lively
The Ranching Era
Learn more about ranching on the island during the 19th century.
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Pat Dunn
Pat Dunn as an established rancher later in life.
Learn more about the Dunn Ranch
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Union Colonel Neal Dow
Col. Neal Dow of the 13th Maine Infantry Regiment
Learn about Padre Island During the Civil War.
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Interpretive Programs
Interpretive Programs
Learn more about this subject at one of the park's interpretive programs.
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Nesting Kemp's ridley sea turtle  

Did You Know?
Kemp's ridley sea turtles are both the smallest and the most endangered sea turtles in the world and that they are found primarily in the Gulf of Mexico?
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Last Updated: December 22, 2006 at 20:07 EST