
Corpus Christi stories run with the wind and the water. They'll tell you the Gulf breeze never quits — which is exactly why the bay is one of the great windsurfing and kiteboarding spots in the country. They'll tell you that down on Padre Island the beach runs wild for nearly seventy miles, the longest undeveloped stretch of barrier island in America, where Kemp's ridley sea turtles still come ashore to nest. And they'll point out across the water to the Blue Ghost, riding at anchor where a carrier has no business being, as if to say the strangest and finest things in South Texas all gather on this one bay.
The Corpus Christi Bay country was long the coastal homeland of the Karankawa and Coahuiltecan peoples. A Spanish expedition associated with Alonso Álvarez de Pineda mapped the bay in 1519 and gave it the name it still carries. The modern city began in 1839, when Henry Lawrence Kinney set up a trading post on the western shore; it became the Nueces County seat in 1846 — a staging ground for Zachary Taylor's army on its march toward the Mexican-American War — and was incorporated in 1852. Wool, cattle, and the railroad built the town through the 1870s, but the turn came in 1926, when the deepwater Port of Corpus Christi opened, and in 1930, when oil was struck in the county. Salt water and crude oil have shaped the city ever since.
Why People Visit Corpus Christi Texas
- Tour the USS Lexington, the WWII carrier "the Blue Ghost," moored as a museum on the bayfront.
- Explore the Texas State Aquarium for Gulf of Mexico wildlife and sea-turtle conservation.
- Walk the wild dunes and beaches of Padre Island National Seashore — nearly seventy miles of protected barrier island and Kemp's ridley turtle nesting grounds.
- Beachcomb and birdwatch on Mustang Island, just across the causeway.
- Stroll the downtown seawall, the marina, and the bayfront miradores for skyline and harbor views.
- Visit the Mirador de la Flor, the bayfront seaside memorial to the Queen of Tejano music.
- Wander Heritage Park's restored historic homes for the city's multicultural story.