The crossroads of US-90 and US-83 — county seat, honey country, and home to the oldest working opera house in Texas.
Uvalde is the county seat of Uvalde County, eighty-four miles west of downtown San Antonio at the junction of U.S. Highway 90 and U.S. Highway 83. Population is approximately 15,150. Elevation is 913 feet. The town sits on the Leona River at the edge of the Edwards Plateau, where the Hill Country transitions into the brush country of the Rio Grande Plain. It is the largest community on the US-90 corridor and the commercial and governmental center of the surrounding ranch country.
Uvalde is known for four things: the Grand Opera House, the Garner and Briscoe political legacy, the honey industry, and its position as the gateway to the Nueces and Frio canyon country to the north. The Opera House (1891) is billed as the oldest continuously functioning theater in Texas. John Nance "Cactus Jack" Garner — Speaker of the House and then Vice President under Franklin Roosevelt — made Uvalde his home for nearly seventy-five years, and his house is now a National Historic Landmark museum. Dolph Briscoe, the 41st Governor of Texas, was a Uvalde rancher whose family's legacy is woven through the town's institutions. And the huajilla and catclaw brush surrounding Uvalde produces a distinctive light honey that earned the town the title "Honey Capital of the World" — a claim promoted by the city and the local honey industry for decades.
Uvalde County was created in 1850 and organized in 1856, named for Juan de Ugalde, the Spanish governor of Coahuila who defeated a Comanche force near the Sabinal River in 1790. The town of Uvalde was established as the county seat in 1856. Reading Wood Black, a surveyor and early settler, laid out the town site. The original courthouse was built in 1856; a second was completed in 1890; the current Uvalde County Courthouse at 100 North Getty Street was completed in 1928, designed by architect Henry T. Phelps.
The Grand Opera House was built in 1891 by the Uvalde Real Estate and Building Company — a partnership of local businessmen, merchants, and ranchers. The architect was B.F. Frester. The two-story brick structure has Richardsonian Romanesque elements and follows the typical Texas opera house plan of the period: the auditorium above commercial spaces on the first floor. It was an immediate success and became the social center of Uvalde and the surrounding region. The building was sold to Fred Locke in 1900 and to the John Nance Garner family in 1916. By the early 1940s most tenants had moved out and the building declined. In July 1978 the Garner descendants donated the property to the City of Uvalde, which restored it to its 1890 condition. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on May 22, 1978, and designated a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark in 1967.
John Nance Garner was born November 22, 1868, near Detroit in Red River County. He moved to Uvalde in 1890, read law, and was admitted to the bar. He served as judge of Uvalde County from 1893 to 1896, then in the Texas House of Representatives from 1898 to 1902. He was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1903 and served continuously for thirty years, becoming Speaker of the House in 1931. He served as Vice President of the United States under Franklin Roosevelt from 1933 to 1941. He returned to Uvalde after leaving office and lived there until his death on November 7, 1967, at the age of ninety-eight. His home at 333 North Park Street — designed by architect Atlee Ayres and built in 1920 — was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1976 and now houses the Briscoe-Garner Museum, operated by the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History at the University of Texas at Austin.
Dolph Briscoe Jr. was born in Uvalde in 1923 and served as the 41st Governor of Texas from 1973 to 1979. A rancher and banker, he was one of the largest individual landowners in Texas. His wife, Janey Slaughter Briscoe, served on the University of Texas System Board of Regents. The family's restoration of the Opera House and their support of the Garner Museum are the most visible legacies in town.
Uvalde sits at the southern edge of the Edwards Plateau. To the north, US 83 runs up through the Nueces River canyon toward the Frio country and Garner State Park (named for John Nance Garner). To the south and west, the terrain flattens into brush country — mesquite, huajilla, catclaw, and prickly pear.
The honey industry developed because of this brush. Huajilla (Acacia berlandieri) and catclaw (Senegalia greggii) bloom prolifically in the spring, producing a light, mild honey with a distinctive flavor that differs from the darker honeys of East Texas or the Midwest. The bloom season runs roughly from February through May, depending on rainfall. Commercial beekeeping in the Uvalde area dates to the late nineteenth century, when settlers recognized that the dense brush country supported large populations of feral bees. By the early twentieth century, Uvalde County was one of the leading honey-producing counties in Texas.
The city has promoted itself as the "Honey Capital of the World" for decades. Uvalco Supply, a local agricultural cooperative, has been a major honey packer and distributor. The annual Uvalde Honey Festival (held in April) celebrates the industry with a parade, vendors, live music, a 5K run, and a pancake breakfast. The festival is organized by Main Street Uvalde and draws visitors from the San Antonio metro area.
The Leona River, a spring-fed stream, runs through the eastern part of Uvalde. It is smaller than the Nueces or Frio but provides a green corridor through town. The Leona River Greenway trail follows the river through several city parks. To the north, US 83 climbs into the Edwards Plateau toward Garner State Park (named for John Nance Garner, who donated the land to the state in the 1930s), Concan, and Leakey. This is the western approach to the Frio Canyon system.
| Name | Address | Known For |
|---|---|---|
| The Local Fix | 2401 E Main St | Coffee, breakfast, brunch. 184 reviews on Yelp. |
| Town House Restaurant | 2105 E Main St | Tex-Mex and American comfort food. Multi-generational family operation. |
| Sunrise Restaurant | 510 W Main St | Breakfast and lunch. Downtown. |
| Vasquez 1935 | 601 W Main St | Mexican food. Named for the founding year. Downtown. |
| Event | Timing | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Uvalde Honey Festival | April (annually; 2026: April 5–6) | Parade, vendors, live music, 5K run, breakfast. Organized by Main Street Uvalde. |
| Briscoe Birthday Celebration | April (annually) | Open house at the Briscoe-Garner Museum. |
| Independence Day Open House | July 4 (annually) | Performances, activities, and family events at the Briscoe-Garner Museum. |
| Garner Birthday Celebration | November (annually) | Commemorating VP Garner's birthday (Nov 22). Historically drew politicians and VIPs from around the country. |
Uvalde has standard highway-corridor lodging along US 90 and East Main Street — chain motels and independent properties. As the largest town on the corridor, it has the most lodging options between San Antonio and Del Rio.
Uvalde is the western anchor of the US-90 corridor and the crossroads between the highway and the canyon country. Its significance is political, cultural, and geographic: the home of a Vice President and a Governor, the site of the oldest functioning theater in Texas, the center of a distinctive honey industry, and the last full-service town before the road turns north into the Frio and Nueces canyons. It is not a tourist town in the way Castroville is — it is a working county seat with a deep history and a genuine downtown. The Opera House alone, still hosting performances after 135 years, is reason enough to stop. The Garner and Briscoe legacies give the town a political weight that no other community on this corridor can match.
Planning a trip to Uvalde? Ask Emile, the local guide, anything — the Grand Opera House, the honey country, the crossroads of US-90 and US-83, or where to stay. Ask Emile at castroville.ai →