Hispanic or Latino of any race were 21.48% of the population. The racial makeup of the city was 54.17% White, 30.52% African American, 1.06% Native American, 0.12% Asian, 11.80% from other races, and 2.35% from two or more races. There were 768 housing units at an average density of 257.4 per square mile (99.5/km 2).
The population density was 571.1 people per square mile (220.8/km 2). Somerville racial composition as of 2020 Īs of the 2020 United States census, there were 1,312 people, 438 households, and 284 families residing in the city.Īs of the census of 2000, there were 1,704 people, 639 households, and 430 families residing in the city. Texas State Highway 36 passes through the city, leading northwest 17 miles (27 km) to Caldwell, the county seat, and southeast 15 miles (24 km) to Brenham.Īccording to the United States Census Bureau, Somerville has a total area of 3.0 square miles (7.7 km 2), of which 0.02 square miles (0.05 km 2), or 0.60%, is water. The city is bordered to the west by Somerville Lake, a reservoir on Yegua Creek, part of the Brazos River basin. The Reservoir, like the community of Somerville on the northeastern rim of the lake, derives its name from Albert Somerville, first president of the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway, which constructed a line through the area in the 1880s and subsequently established a large crosstie processing plant in the town.Somerville is located near the southern border of Burleson County at 30☂0′41″N 96☃1′49″W / 30.34472°N 96.53028°W / 30.34472 -96.53028 (30.344616, –96.530335). The shores are fringed with numerous camping facilities, two floating marinas, ten boat ramps, and extensive nature trails and playgrounds. At least seven parks have been developed in the vicinity, including four operated by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, a city-owned park, and the two-unit Lake Somerville State Recreation Area these attract several hundred thousand visitors annually. Much of the lake is set in extensive groves of post and red oaks, yaupons, and willows. By the early 1970s the reservoir had won renown for the quality of its bass fishing. Somerville Lake has become a significant recreational area in south central Texas. The dam provides flood protection for 9,000 acres of land along Yegua Creek and helps protect 887,000 acres of agricultural land along the Brazos. At its peak flood control elevation of 258 feet the reservoir has a capacity of 500,000 acre-feet of water and covers an area of some 24,400 acres.
At the conservation storage elevation of 238 feet above mean sea level the lake has a capacity of 160,100 acre-feet and a surface area of 11,160 acres. In addition to Yegua, at least a dozen smaller creeks and streams feed Somerville Lake, which drains an area of 1,006 square miles above the dam. By 1967 the dam was completed impoundment of water began immediately, and the reservoir received its official dedication on May 17, 1968. In 1962 construction began on the Somerville Dam, which is located two miles south of Somerville and twenty miles upstream from Yegua Creek's confluence with the Brazos River. The lake is operated by the Brazos River Authority for a variety of industrial, recreational, and irrigation functions in addition to its conservation role. The reservoir was constructed at an initial cost of $25 million by the United States Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth District, primarily in order to control the frequent floods in the Yegua Creek watershed that brought destruction in forty-three of the forty-six years between 19. It extends nine miles upstream from Somerville Dam and has eighty-five miles of shoreline, much of it sand covered. Somerville Lake is a large multi-purpose lake on Yegua Creek in the Brazos River drainage basin thirty miles southwest of Bryan in southern Burleson, northwestern Washington, and eastern Lee counties (at 30☂0' N, 96☃2' W).