Sabine River

Earliest History

The Sabine River, first named the "Rio de Sabinas" is the 33rd longest river in the United States. The word 'sabinas' is the Spanish word for cypress and refers to the cypress trees that grow in abundance along its banks. In its earliest history the river valley was inhabited by a first nation people called the Caddo. The Caddo culture thrived there for over 500 years but by the time the first European explorers arrived in the 1500's only remnants of their civilization were visible and very few of the Caddo people were still inhabiting the area. It is unknown when the name officially changed to the Sabine River but a map from as late as 1721 identified it as Rio de Sabinas.

Geographic Information

The river flows for 510 miles through parts of Texas and into Louisiana. It rises in northeast Texas and as it winds past Mineola, Gladewater, Big Sandy and Longview, it forms the Texas-Louisiana border. The Sabine is still described as the line of division between the New Southwest and the Old South. It eventually flows in a southeastern direction into Lake Sabine and then through the Sabine Pass, finally draining into the Gulf of Mexico.

Transportion and Migration Route

Although the Sabine was too deep to ford, it proved to be navigable and crossable by ferry. The first recorded ferry use dates back to 1794 when Louis Chabinan built a river ferry called Paso Del Chaland near where Texas State Highway 21 and the Louisiana State Highway 6 now meet at Pendleton Bridge. By the 1840s steamboats were on the river and traveling from Sabine Lake north to Logansport. This provided an easier way for settlers to reach the frontier areas and it afforded a significant amount of missionary work to be done in that area by various religions.