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History and Location
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In 1892,
the UT Board of Regents reported to
Texas Governor Jim Hogg that, The coast of the great State of Texas, washed by the tides and currents of the
magnificent inland sea, the Gulf of Mexico, offers unrivaled opportunity for
the establishment of a Marine Station.
Strange animals and plants, a fauna and flora little known,
invite the research of the student and investigator.
In May of 1900 the Board appropriated $300 for a marine laboratory at
Galveston, and the first class of five students began to study littoral and
shallow water fauna. |
Only a few months later the disastrous 1900 hurricane struck,
all but destroying the marine laboratory’s steam launch research vessel.
Fifteen years later The
University of Texas tried again at Galveston. Regent George W.
Brackenridge donated his own yacht, the imposing 114 foot schooner NAVIDAD and $500 to convert her into a research vessel, to
be the nucleus of a grand Gulf Biological Station.
Before NAVIDAD could go into service, another tropical storm
hit, causing such damage that she was sold and marine science, or at least
the grand Gulf Biological Station, was dead in Texas.
It was 1935 when
Dr. E.J. Lund, a zoologist from The University of Texas, came to Port
Aransas to investigate a massive fish kill, constructing a small rough
lumber one-room shack on the old Corps of Engineers dock.
Dr. Lund recognized the uniqueness of the local environment and
the need for public education about the natural resources of the Gulf of
Mexico and gradually rekindled interest in marine science at the
University. The Marine Science
Institute was formally founded in 1941 with Dr. Lund as the first
Director. Research began in the old pier building with one of the first
projects being on the distribution, life history and relative abundance
of marine fishes of Texas, by Dr. Lund and Dr. Gordon Gunter, who was
Lund’s student and later followed Lund as Director.
Gunter also undertook a study for the U.S. Navy on the problem of
fouling on ships’ bottoms.
With the end of the war, development of
the Institute resumed. Lund
purchased and donated 12 acres.
The old Army Corps of Engineers building, constructed in 1890
and veteran of several hurricanes, was included.
This building survives today, serving as a dormitory where
students still relax on an old fashioned porch and watch ships and
porpoises almost at the doorstep on the Aransas Pass.
By 1946 the first truly permanent
marine laboratory was established in Texas.
Two frame buildings had been constructed, which still serve
as the cafeteria and a dormitory, and a full time staff was in
residence. A laboratory was
built on the pier in 1948. Major expansion of physical facilities
took place in the 70's with the acquisition of 49 acres of land,
additional laboratories, dormitory, apartments, maintenance complex
and a 5¼ acre boat basin.

At Port Aransas, Marine Science has
been able to survive Hurricanes Carla, Beulah, Celia and Allen.
Celia, on August 3, 1970, was
the most destructive and for the third time a University research
vessel suffered severe storm damage.
Unlike previous instances the result was a
major step forward.
The R/V MARCIA K. was beyond economical repair, but she was
replaced with the 85 foot R/V LONGHORN in 1971, which was
repowered, rebuilt, and
lengthened to 105 feet in 1986 and still serves as flagship of The
University of Texas fleet.
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MSI was greatly expanded with the
acquisition of the National Marine Fisheries Service Laboratory,
first by lease in the late 70's and by formal transfer in 1987,
adding another 10 acres on the ship channel and an additional
major research building. A new Library and Visitor’s Center was
built in 1982.
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Thousands
visit each year through MSI's Marine Education Services program,
which provides instructional trips aboard the R/V KATY
for hundreds of public school classes and other groups, teacher
training, short courses and other public services.
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