 
Seagoville, Texas | Municipal Water Utility Company | Public Service Announcement
The municipal water supply in City of Seagoville may be contaminated with several concerning substances including Monobromoacetic acid, Methyl ethyl ketone and o-Xylene, and residents might experience increasing issues with water hardness levels. City of Seagoville provides this area with municipal water sourced from Purchased surface water systems.
What's in your tap water?
For a Limited Time - Request the City of Seagoville Official Water Score Report at No Cost.
US Public Records
City of Seagoville Area Details
 
Area served:
Seagoville, Texas
 
Population served:
15567
 
Water source:
Purchased surface water
 
Phone:
972-287-2050
 
Address:
702 North Highway 175, Seagoville, TX 75159
 
3date
Contaminants Detected In Seagoville, Texas
Bromodichloromethane; Chloroform; Chromium (hexavalent); Dibromochloromethane; Dichloroacetic acid; Total trihalomethanes (TTHMs); Trichloroacetic aci… more
 
For a Limited Time - Request the City of Seagoville Official Water Score Report at No Cost.
DISCOVER THE TRUTH & SAFEGUARD YOUR FAMILY!
US Public Records
City of Seagoville
Annual Municipal Water Report
List of Municipal Water Contaminants Tested by City of Seagoville
Tested But Not Detected:
  1,1-Dichloroethane; 1,2,3-Trichloropropane; 1,3-Butadiene; 1,4-Dioxane; Asbestos; Bromochloromethane; Bromomethane; Chlorate; Chlorodifluoromethane; Chloromethane; Molybdenum; Nitrite; Perfluorobutane sulfonate (PFBS); Perfluoroheptanoic acid (PFHPA); Perfluorohexane sulfonate (PFHXS); Perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA); Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS); Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA)
 
What's in your tap water?

Discover which contaminants exceed Legal and Health Guidelines in your water supply.
DISCOVER THE TRUTH & SAFEGUARD YOUR FAMILY!
US Public Records
City of Seagoville
About Us
Quality First - We are pleased to present our annual municipal water quality report. As in previous years, our utility remains dedicated to delivering the highest quality tap water possible. We continue to meet the challenges of new regulations, source water protection, conservation initiatives, and community education while meeting the needs of all our water users. Thank you for allowing us to serve you.
We encourage you to share your thoughts about the information in this report. Well-informed customers are our greatest allies in maintaining water quality.
Water Source Information
City of Seagoville's water customers benefit from abundant water resources from four sources: Elm Shell Trinity River, Lake Tawakoni, Lake Beam Hubbard, and Bachman Lake. To learn more about your watershed, visit the U.S. EPA's Watershed website at www.epa.gov/surf.
Health Information
Some individuals may be more vulnerable than the general population to certain microbial contaminants in tap water, such as Cryptosporidium. This includes infants, elderly persons, and those with compromised immune systems (including those undergoing chemotherapy, organ transplant recipients, individuals on steroid treatments, and people with HIV/AIDS). Please consult your healthcare provider regarding your drinking water. Additional guidelines on reducing infection risk from Cryptosporidium are available from the Safe Drinking Water Hotline at (800) 426-4791.
To ensure tap water safety, the U.S. EPA establishes regulations limiting contaminant levels in public water systems. FDA regulations set similar limits for bottled water. All drinking water, including bottled water, may reasonably contain at least small amounts of some contaminants, which doesn't necessarily indicate a health risk.
Potential Contaminant Sources
Water sources (both tap and bottled) include rivers, lakes, streams, ponds, reservoirs, springs, and wells. As water travels over land or underground, it can pick up:
- Microbial Contaminants: viruses and bacteria from sewage treatment, septic systems, agricultural operations, or wildlife
- Inorganic Contaminants: salts and metals (naturally occurring or from urban runoff, wastewater discharges, oil/gas production, mining)
- Pesticides and Herbicides: from agriculture, urban runoff, and residential uses
- Organic Chemical Contaminants: synthetic and volatile organic chemicals from industrial processes, petroleum production, gas stations, runoff, and septic systems
- Radioactive Contaminants: naturally occurring or resulting from oil/gas production activities
Some contaminants in water may affect taste, odor, or color without posing health concerns. For information about taste, odor, or color issues, please contact our office.
Cross-Connection Concerns
Cross-connections contaminating water lines are a major concern. These occur when drinking water lines connect to equipment or systems containing chemicals or water sources of questionable quality. Contamination can happen when pressure in equipment exceeds water line pressure (backpressure) or when water line pressure drops due to routine events like main breaks or high demand (backsiphonage).
Common household cross-contamination sources include garden hoses (when submerged in pools or attached to chemical sprayers), improperly installed toilet valves, and certain plumbing fixtures. We regularly inspect commercial, industrial, and institutional facilities to identify potential cross-connections and ensure proper backflow prevention devices are installed and maintained.
Community Participation
We invite you to participate in our public forum and voice concerns about your municipal water. The City Council meets the first and third Monday of each month at 7:00 p.m. at City Hall, 702 North Highway 175, Seagoville, Texas.
Water Main Flushing
Distribution mains (pipes) carry water to homes, businesses, and fire hydrants. Water quality can deteriorate in areas of the distribution system over time. Water main flushing is the process of cleaning pipes by sending rapid water flow through them.

For more information on your municipal water, visit the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency:
City of Seagoville Municipal Water Company and EPACity of Seagoville Municipal Water Report Info
The Town of Seago was established in 1876 by T.K. Seago (1836-1904), who cleared dense woodland and built the area's first store. His initial inventory consisted of $200 worth of dry goods and groceries. Mr. Seago became the Seago postmaster in 1881 and served until at least 1883 before relocating to Comanche, Texas, where he later represented Comanche County in the Texas Legislature.
The first school in the area, Brinegar School, was constructed around 1867—a one-room log building with split log seating located in what is now Heard Park. Professor J.T. Doss built the next school in 1880, a frame structure that burned down in 1909. A brick high school was constructed in 1910 at the current site of Seagoville Elementary School on Kaufman Street.
The T&NO Railroad's arrival in 1880 transformed Seago into a thriving rail center. This significant development meant residents no longer needed to travel to Lawson for mail, and farmers could ship their cotton and crops to Dallas via rail instead of wagons. Before the railroad, the area received freight via river barges at locks on the Trinity River several miles south of town—remnants of which can still be seen during severe droughts.
The first official town plat was recorded in Dallas County Deed Records in 1883, with a second plat filed in 1926 when the City of Seagoville was incorporated. The U.S. Post Office added "ville" to "Seago" in 1910 to prevent confusion with another Texas town named Sego.
Religious institutions appeared early, with the First Baptist Church of Seago organizing in 1876 under Pastor O.E. Baten and the First United Methodist Church constructed in 1885. The agricultural economy was supported by B.F. Peak's cotton gin built in 1879. The community had its own newspaper by 1907—the Seagoville Star edited by W.S. McCauley, which became the Seagoville News by 1913 under editor Fred R. Kreiger.
Dr. S.M. Rutherford served as the community's first known physician. In 1890, J.L. Fly established a general mercantile business selling the area's first farm implements. He became Justice of the Peace that same year, and his son Ben H. Fly later became a Dallas County Judge, while another son, J. Lawrence Fly, became an Assistant U.S. District Attorney.
Lee Cemetery, located at the intersection of Seagoville Road and Highway 175, ranks among Dallas County's oldest cemeteries. Named for the James W. Lee family, its origins date to a November 13, 1870 deed designating "1 1/8 acres reserved as a graveyard." Today covering approximately three acres with over 1,200 known graves, its oldest burial is Samule T. Cravens (1859-1872). The cemetery's headstones reflect virtually all Seagoville's pioneer families.
A.H. McWhorter constructed three brick buildings in 1914, one housing a "moving picture show," while M.P. Hawthorne built five more brick structures around the same time. An artesian well dug in 1912 provided healthy water for Seagoville's 700 residents for many years, with electricity arriving in 1925.
In 1912, C.C. Cobb owned one of Texas's largest farms, encompassing several thousand acres in Seagoville. The current Federal Correctional Institution, originally built in the 1930s as a women's detention facility, has contributed significantly to the local economy through employment opportunities. Today, Seagoville has approximately 13,850 residents.
Municipal Water Utility Company FAQ

For more information on your municipal water, visit the U.S. CDC:
City of Seagoville Municipal Water Company and CDC.. ...

City of Seagoville provides municipal water services to the public of Seagoville, and Seagoville, Texas.
Free Water Safety Report for City of Seagoville. (limited time offer)

DISCOVER THE TRUTH & SAFEGUARD YOUR FAMILY!
US Public Records
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