Brazoria County ( ) is a county in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, the population of the county was 372,031. The county seat is Angleton.
Brazoria County is included in the Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land metropolitan statistical area. It is located in the Gulf Coast region of Texas.
Regionally, parts of the county are within the extreme southernmost fringe of the regions locally known as Southeast Texas. Brazoria County is among a number of counties that are part of the region known as the Texas Coastal Bend. Its county seat is Angleton, and its largest city is Pearland. Brazoria County, like Brazos County farther upriver, takes its name from the Brazos River. It served as the first settlement area for Anglo-Texas, when the Old Three Hundred emigrated from the United States in 1821. The county also includes what was once Columbia and Velasco, Texas, early capital cities of the Republic of Texas. The highest point in Brazoria County is Shelton's Shack, located near the Dow Chemical Plant B Truck Control Center, measuring 342 ft above sea level.
History
Brazoria County takes its name from the Brazos River, which flows through it. Anglo-Texas began in Brazoria County when the first of Stephen F. Austin's authorized 300 American settlers arrived at the mouth of the Brazos in 1821. Many of the events leading to the Texas Revolution developed in Brazoria County. In 1832, Brazoria was organized as a separate municipal district by the Mexican government, so became one of Texas original counties at independence in 1836.
An early resident of Brazoria County, Joel Walter Robison, fought in the Texas Revolution and later represented Fayette County in the Texas House of Representatives.
Stephen F. Austin's original burial place is located at a church cemetery, Gulf Prairie Cemetery, in the town of Jones Creek, on what was his brother-in-law's Peach Point Plantation. His remains were exhumed in 1910 and brought to be reinterred at the state capital in Austin. The town of West Columbia served as the first capital of Texas, dating back to prerevolutionary days.
thumb|Group of men at work in Brazoria County, 1939
The Hastings Oil Field was discovered by the Stanolind Oil and Gas Company in 1934. Production was from a depth of , associated with a salt dome structure. Total production by 1954 was about 242 million barrels.
Lake Jackson is a community developed beginning in the early 1940s to provide housing to workers at a new Dow Chemical Company plant in nearby Freeport. The county has elements of both rural and suburban communities, as it is part of greater Houston.
thumb|Back view of agricultural trucks, 1939
On June 2, 2016, the flooding of the Brazos River required evacuations for portions of Brazoria County.
Geography
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of , of which are land and (16%) are covered by water.
Adjacent counties
- Harris County (north)
- Galveston County (northeast)
- Gulf of Mexico (southeast)
- Matagorda County (southwest)
- Wharton County (west)
- Fort Bend County (northwest)
National protected areas
- Brazoria National Wildlife Refuge
- San Bernard National Wildlife Refuge (part)
Communities
Cities
- Alvin
- Angleton (county seat)
- Brazoria
- Brookside Village
- Clute
- Danbury
- Freeport
- Iowa Colony
- Lake Jackson
- Liverpool
- Manvel
- Oyster Creek
- Pearland (small parts in Harris and Fort Bend counties)
- Richwood
- Sandy Point
- Surfside Beach
- Sweeny
- West Columbia
Towns
- Holiday Lakes
- Quintana
Villages
- Bailey's Prairie
- Bonney
- Hillcrest
- Jones Creek
Census-designated places
- Damon
- East Columbia
- Rosharon
- Wild Peach Village
Unincorporated communities
- Amsterdam
- Anchor
- Brazosport
- Bryan Beach
- Chenango
- China Grove
- Chocolate Bayou
- Danciger
- English
- Four Corners
- Hinkle's Ferry
- Lochridge
- Old Ocean
- Otey
- Ryan Acres
- Silverlake
- Snipe
- Turtle Cove
Ghost towns
- Hasima
- Hastings
- Lake Barbara
- Mims
- Oakland
- Perry's Landing
- Velasco
