A twice-built community on Lake Buchanan — the original town drowned by the dam in 1938, the new one watching from higher ground as the ruins surface during droughts.
Bluffton is an unincorporated community in Llano County on the northern shore of Lake Buchanan, approximately 25 miles northwest of Burnet. The current settlement sits on a low ridge above the lake, with a population of roughly 180 residents (2020 Census estimates). Bluffton exists in two versions: the "new" Bluffton, a quiet cluster of homes, a general store, and a community center along FM 2241; and "Old Bluffton," the original 1850s townsite that lies beneath the waters of Lake Buchanan and reappears only when drought drops the lake level below approximately 990 feet.
Bluffton is known almost entirely for the periodic emergence of its drowned predecessor. When Lake Buchanan drops low enough — as it did in 1984, 2009, and most dramatically in 2011–2012 — the foundations, streets, and structures of Old Bluffton become visible, drawing visitors who walk among the ruins of a town that was sacrificed to create the Highland Lakes.
The original Bluffton was established in 1852 when Billy Davis settled on the west bank of the Colorado River. In 1853, Isaac B. Maxwell arrived and named the community after his hometown of Bluffton, Arkansas. The town sat on a bluff above the river — hence the name — at a point where the valley widened enough to support agriculture. By the early 1900s, Bluffton had a cotton gin, a hotel, saloons, a blacksmith shop, a school, and a church. The community served as a trading center for the surrounding ranches and farms. Pecan orchards lined the river, and cotton was the primary cash crop. A post office was established in 1873. In 1883, a fire destroyed much of the town, prompting residents to rebuild a half-mile north.
When the Lower Colorado River Authority began filling Lake Buchanan in 1937, the residents of Bluffton were given notice to relocate. Roughly 50 families were forced to sell their land. The town's cemetery — containing more than 300 graves dating to the 1860s — was exhumed and moved to higher ground at the current Bluffton Cemetery on FM 2241. The process was difficult and likely incomplete; some graves were unmarked, and local accounts suggest that not all remains were successfully relocated. The living residents moved five miles west to the present townsite, carrying what they could and leaving the structures behind. The LCRA did not demolish the buildings before flooding; they were simply left in place as the water rose.
When the lake level drops below approximately 990 feet above mean sea level — roughly 30 feet below the conservation pool — the ruins of Old Bluffton begin to emerge. The most dramatic exposure occurred during the drought of 2011–2012, when Lake Buchanan fell to approximately 975 feet, its lowest recorded level. At that depth, the entire original townsite was accessible on foot.
What visitors see during these exposures includes the concrete foundations of the hotel and general store, the slab of the cotton gin, the remains of fence lines and property boundaries, scattered household artifacts (glass bottles, ceramic fragments, iron hardware), and the stumps of the pecan orchard that once lined the river. The old road grid is visible as cleared paths through the dried lakebed. In 2011, visitors also found intact sections of the original wooden bridge that crossed the Colorado River at the town crossing, as well as the remnants of the town's baseball diamond.
The ruins are located on LCRA land and are accessible to the public when exposed, though there is no formal trail or signage. Artifacts are protected under Texas antiquities law — removing items is illegal. The Vanishing Texas River Cruise has occasionally offered boat excursions to the site during low-water periods.
The drought of 2011 was the most severe single-year drought in Texas recorded history. Lake Buchanan, which began the year at approximately 1,008 feet, dropped steadily through the summer and fall as inflows from the Colorado River essentially ceased. By December 2011, the lake had fallen below 980 feet, exposing not only Old Bluffton but also other submerged features including old river channels, pre-dam road crossings, and the remains of other small settlements along the original Colorado River corridor.
The exposure lasted through much of 2012 before rains began refilling the lake in late 2012 and 2013. During this period, Old Bluffton became a regional curiosity, drawing hundreds of visitors on weekends. Local media covered the site extensively, and the Texas Historical Commission documented several previously unrecorded features. The experience reinforced for the surrounding community just how much the Highland Lakes system depends on rainfall — and how quickly the landscape can revert to its pre-dam state.
The current Bluffton is not a town in any formal sense. It has no municipal government, no city limits, and no commercial district. What it has is a post office (ZIP code 78607), a volunteer fire department, the Bluffton Community Center (which hosts occasional events and serves as a polling place), and a general store that sells basic supplies, bait, and cold drinks.
| Facility | Address | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Bluffton Store | 11635 FM 2241, Bluffton, TX 78607 | Basic provisions, snacks, bait, cold drinks. The social hub. |
| Bluffton Community Center | FM 2241, Bluffton, TX 78607 | Hosts events, serves as polling place. |
| Bluffton Cemetery | FM 2241, Bluffton, TX 78607 | Contains relocated graves from Old Bluffton. Maintained by local association. |
The permanent population consists primarily of retirees, ranchers, and a handful of families who have been in the area for generations. Some residents are descendants of the original Bluffton families who relocated in the 1930s. The community is quiet to the point of isolation — the nearest grocery store is in Burnet, 25 miles away. Social life revolves around the community center, the volunteer fire department, and the informal gatherings at the general store.
Lodging in the immediate Bluffton area is limited to RV parks and campgrounds, such as Oasis Lake Buchanan, which cater to visitors looking for direct lake access and a quiet, rural setting. There are no hotels or motels. More extensive accommodations are available in Burnet or Llano.
* Getting There: Bluffton is located on FM 2241, approximately 25 miles northwest of Burnet via Highway 29 and FM 2241. The road is paved but narrow and winding.
* Pace and Vibe: Extremely quiet. This is not a tourist destination in any conventional sense. There are no restaurants, no gas stations, and no attractions beyond the lake itself and the periodic emergence of the ruins.
* Checking Water Levels: To determine whether Old Bluffton is visible, check the LCRA's Hydromet website for the current Lake Buchanan elevation. Significant exposure begins below 990 feet; full townsite exposure occurs below 980 feet.
* Supplies: Bring everything you need. The general store carries basics, but for fuel, food, or any significant supplies, stop in Burnet or Llano before arriving.
Bluffton is a physical reminder of what the Highland Lakes cost. The dam system that provides water to Austin and the lower Colorado River basin required the deliberate drowning of established communities. Bluffton is the most visible example — a town that periodically returns from beneath the water to remind the region of the trade-offs embedded in its infrastructure. It matters because it is not a museum or a monument; it is an actual place, still inhabited by people whose families made the original sacrifice, watching the lake rise and fall over the bones of their ancestors' town.
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