
It started with a mission and a river. In 1718 Spanish friars founded a mission and a presidio on a spring-fed river in South Texas and named both for St. Anthony. Within a few years there were five missions strung along the water, and a town grew up among them — built by Spanish friars, Canary Island farmers, German brewers, and Texas cattlemen. Three centuries later the missions are a World Heritage Site and the river is the most famous walk in Texas. This is the deep, layered San Antonio underneath it all — and this page tells that story.
Today San Antonio is the second-largest city in Texas and one of the most-visited in the country, but its heart is still the oldest civic story in the state: a 1718 mission on a river, five Spanish missions strung along the water, a town founded by Canary Island colonists, and three centuries of Tejano, Spanish, German, and Texas-cattle heritage layered one over another. Our San Antonio designs gather that identity into wearable form — the river, the missions, the longhorn-and-star, the 1718 founding. From the mission bells to the River Walk — wear a little of San Antonio's three centuries of Texas soul.
Why People Visit San Antonio Texas
People come to San Antonio for the River Walk and the Alamo, but the city rewards anyone who follows the older thread: a chain of five Spanish missions along a quiet river, a downtown laid out by Canary Island colonists in 1731, and a Tejano culture you can hear in the music and taste in the food. It's warm, walkable, and layered — three centuries of South Texas history sitting right alongside the modern city.