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Audio Tour to the East End Lagoon Nature Trail: https://www.galvestonunscripted.com/eel

Tour with Spotify:
๐Ÿ‘‚Listen: Rosenberg Fountains
๐Ÿ‘‚Listen: East End Historical District
๐Ÿ‘‚Listen: Texas Heroes Monument
๐Ÿ‘‚Listen: Quick History of Galveston
๐Ÿ‘‚Listen: The Galveston Seawall - Protection, Entertainment, Recreation
๐Ÿ‘‚Listen: Grade Raising of Galveston - Civil Engineering Marvel

Interested in information covered in this episode? Dive deeper into the links below! :
East End Expansion: https://www.galvestonhistorycenter.org/news/reclaiming-the-swamp-the-east-end-flats-1833-1954
East End Lagoon and Nature Preserve:
http://www.eastendlagoon.org/

Transcript:
The East End lagoon has been a destination for tourists and locals alike since itโ€™s inception on the Far East end of Galveston island. The East End Lagoon Nature Park and Preserve is located at the extreme east end of Seawall Blvd along Boddecker Dr. adjacent to East Beach.In the early to mid 1900โ€™s the East End Lagoon providedย  cabanas and had a clubhouse for the enjoyment for Galveston families and tourists alike. The East End Lagoon is known today as a fishing, birding, and nature watching destination. The lagoon is project of the Galveston Park Board of Trustees, the City of Galveston and the Galveston Island Nature Tourism Council, the East End Lagoon is a unique and valuable area spanning almost 700 acres of diverse habitat exhibiting the ecosystem of a Texas barrier island. The far East End of Galveston Island has not always been the embodiment of natural beauty. Before the eastward Seawall expansion in 1918, The lagoon was in an area known as the east and flat, essentially a swamp that extended from 6th street towards the ship channel. This area was extremely low lying and had very few structures, such as the Fort San Jacinto Military Reservation and one of the Galveston Immigration stations the area was also used as the cities dump for nearly a decade.ย  Once the eastward expansion of the Seawall was complete in 1921, the South Jetty was extended, creating an erosion resistant area in which the East End Lagoon resides today. The Lagoon is one of Galveston's largest undeveloped spaces, including one of the few remaining sizable tracts of coastal prairie which is home to an increasingly rare ecology. The site contains both tidal and non-tidal wetlands, beach dunes, a freshwater pond, black mangroves and upland prairie, along with an extensive marine coastline.This area serves as critical habitat for many species, so preservation is key to all those involved in the area.Go check out the Eas

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