75 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
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First National Bank of Bowie
· 0.1 mi · Historical Marker
The oldest financial institution in Montague County, this bank was chartered on March 10, 1890, eight years after the town of Bowie was created on the line of the Fort Worth and Denver City Railway. Beginning with an…
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Wagonseller, Wayne Warren
· 0.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
Wayne Warren Wagonseller, attorney, Texas state legislator, and rancher, son of Amos Warren Wagonseller and Clara Augusta (Beck) Wagonseller, was born in Nocona, Montague County, Texas, on February 1, 1921. He was the…
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Lamb, William Robert
· 0.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
William Robert Lamb, Texas Populist leader, was born on October 21, 1850, in McNair County, Tennessee, one of seven children of John Madison and Parmelia A. (Thomason) Lamb. His father was from Missouri. While he was a…
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Bowie, TX
· 0.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
Bowie is an incorporated community on U.S. Highway 81 fifteen miles southwest of Montague in southwestern Montague County. In 1882, when the tracks of the Fort Worth and Denver Railway were built through the area, local…
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Duke & Ayres
· 0.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, and right here in Bowie, you're passing the birthplace of a Texas retail giant. Back on October 15, 1894, Hardie Duke opened 'The Nickel Store' – the very first Duke & Ayres. This…
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Allred, Renne, Jr.
· 0.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bowie, Texas, the hometown of Renne Allred Jr. He was born here in 1901 and got his start learning shorthand and typing at the local "Knowledge Box" commercial college. Allred went on to become a…
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Saint Peter Lutheran Church
· 0.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Saint Peter Lutheran Church. Organized in 1894 by German immigrants, this congregation built its first sanctuary nearby in 1894, later moving facilities here in 1948. Services were held…
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Allred, Governor James V., Home County of
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
(March 29, 1899-Sept. 24, 1959) Vigorous, forthright and humane chief executive of Texas in years 1935-1939. Born in Bowie, one of nine children of Renne and Mary Henson Allred worked in youth as a soda pop bottler,…
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Montague County
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
Created December 24, 1857; organized August 2, 1858; named in honor of Daniel Montague 1798-1876; Pioneer Texas surveyor and Indian fighter; commander of a company in the Mexican War; Montague, County Seat
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Elmwood Cemetery
· 1.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Elmwood Cemetery, a final resting place for Bowie's earliest residents. It all started in 1880 when settler James W. Stallings donated the first land, just two years before the town of Bowie itself…
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Lindale Cemetery
· 3.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Lindale Cemetery, established in 1880 when the Lindale School District bought land for a burial ground. The first recorded burial was E. T. Foster, and the cemetery grew to three acres by 1893. It…
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Brushy Cemetery
· 3.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Brushy Cemetery, established around 1880. It serves as a reminder of the once thriving community of Brushy. The earliest documented grave here is W.C. Hatfield, who died in 1877.
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Briar Creek Cemetery
· 3.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Briar Creek Cemetery, where many of the area's pioneers are buried. The first burials here were in the late 1870s, including an infant of the Dooley family. Land for the cemetery was later deeded by…
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Salona Cemetery
· 6.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Montague County, past the site of the old Salona community. Settlers arrived in the 1870s, establishing a school by 1881 and a post office that served from 1889 to 1905. The Salona Cemetery itself…
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Davis, Lincoln, Sr. [Link]
· 9.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, maybe near Wills Point, and right here in Sunset, Texas, a musical legend was born. Lincoln "Link" Davis, Sr. started fiddling as a kid, but by the late 1920s, he was all about the…
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Sunset, TX
· 9.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Sunset, Texas, a town with a name almost as colorful as its origin story. Back in the 1870s, a settler named Sam Smith opened a store and wanted to name his budding community Smithville. But that…
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United Methodist Church of Montague
· 10.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Montague's United Methodist Church. The fellowship began in 1873 with four members, led by The Rev. Joseph Clinton Weaver. The original meetinghouse was built in 1878, moved to this site…
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Montague County
· 10.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Montague County, right on the Oklahoma border. This land was once the site of major Wichita and Comanche settlements, even a Spanish fort! In 1759, Spanish soldiers tried to attack these villages,…
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Montague, TX (Montague County)
· 10.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Montague, the county seat that almost got its own railroad! Established in 1858, this town was once the only place for farmers to get their grain milled. But as railroads bypassed Montague in the…
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Montague Cemetery
· 10.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Montague Cemetery, a final resting place for many of this county's earliest residents. The first settlers arrived here in 1849, and by 1871, the town was growing fast. Back in 1862, pioneer James…
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Montague Catholic Cemetery
· 10.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Montague Catholic Cemetery, a testament to the Italian immigrants who settled here in the early 1880s. They established St. John Catholic Church in 1901, and the bishop purchased this land for…
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San Teodoro
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Montague County, not far from Spanish Fort. Right here, back in the 1700s, stood San Teodoro, a major Taovaya Indian settlement. It wasn't just any village; it was a bustling intertribal trading…
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Spanish Fort, TX
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Montague County, heading towards the Red River, and you're passing through a place that was once a battlefield. Spanish Fort started in the 1750s as a fortified Taovaya Indian village. In 1759,…
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Bellevue, TX
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bellevue, a town that almost didn't make it. It was founded in 1882 as a railroad shipping point, and things were looking good. But on April 26, 1906, a devastating tornado ripped through town.…
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Fruitland, TX
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Montague County, just southeast of Bowie. Right here, you're passing through what used to be Fruitland. It started in the early 1880s as a railroad stop called Plano, then Woodswitch. The name…
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Gladys, TX (Montague County)
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through eastern Montague County, not far from Saint Jo. Right here is the Clear Creek valley, the site of a brutal Kiowa raid back in 1868. On January fifth and sixth of that year, raiders swept through…
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Italians
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right now, you're passing through a story of migration. Between 1880 and 1920, thousands of Italians came to Texas, fleeing tough times back home. They settled across the state, from…
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Red River Station, TX
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Montague County, and just off the road here, you might have passed the site of Red River Station. It started in 1860 as a frontier community, trying to hold its own against hostile Native…
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Spanish Fort Sites
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be a major hub for Native American tribes, right here along the Red River. Settlers in the 1800s found earthworks and mistakenly thought they were Spanish forts. But later studies…
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Belcherville, TX
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what's left of Belcherville, a town that owes its very existence to a railroad that never quite arrived. Founded as Belcher Ranch headquarters, the townsite was plotted in 1887, anticipating…
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Cable, Robert Lee
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Montague County, not far from Saint Jo, where Robert Lee Cable made his home. Cable wasn't just a farmer and stockman; he was a state legislator for over a decade, serving in the Texas House…
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Forestburg, TX
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Montague County, heading towards Forestburg. This community started out in the early 1850s, but frequent Indian raids kept it from really developing until the 1870s. It was first called Horn Hill,…
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Matlock, Avery L.
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, and right here is where Avery L. Matlock took on the desperadoes of the legendary XIT Ranch. In 1887, this attorney and former state senator was sent to the massive XIT properties.…
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Melton, Amos W.
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, maybe past Bellevue, where Amos W. Melton was born. He wasn't just a local kid, though. After graduating from TCU and touring Asia, Melton became a sports writer for the Fort Worth…
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Rock Island System
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, and right here, the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad pushed its way into the Lone Star State. In 1892, they chartered a company specifically to build south from the Oklahoma…
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Saint Jo, TX
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Saint Jo, Texas, a town with roots stretching back to 1849. It all started with the Singletary brothers, Ithane and Prince, who were actually looking for gold! Their search was fruitless, but they…
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Chicago, Rock Island and Texas Railway
· 10.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, a region transformed by the arrival of the railroad. Back in 1892, the Chicago, Rock Island and Texas Railway was chartered to push south from the Oklahoma border, aiming for…
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Highway Paved with Gold
· 14.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Ringgold, and you might be driving on gold! Forget those old legends of cities paved with gold. Back in 1936, the Texas Highway Department was paving U.S. Highways 81 and 287 right here. The sand…
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Dye Mound Cemetery
· 14.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Dye Mound, a community that sprang up in the late 1850s, named for a trapper's trading post. By 1889, the Dye Mound Cemetery trustees purchased over three acres for burials. The town saw…
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Olive Branch Cemetery
· 15.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Olive Branch Cemetery, a final resting place born from a wagon train tragedy. Back in the early 1870s, settlers H. H. Bradford, B. P. Cox, J. C. Cartwright, and J. C. Weaver donated this land…
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Perryman Cemetery
· 15.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Perryman Cemetery, a final resting place for folks who shaped this corner of Texas. The story here starts in 1862 with the unmarked grave of an infant. Not long after, in 1863, a well-digger…
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Thompson, General Ernest O.
· 16.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Alvord, Texas, the birthplace of a true oil titan, General Ernest O. Thompson. He left college during World War I to earn a battlefield commission, becoming one of the youngest lieutenant…
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Rhoads Family Cemetery
· 16.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Wise County, heading towards Alvord. Look to your right, and you'll see the Rhoads Family Cemetery. Originally from Tennessee, Abner and Chloe Rhoads arrived here in 1870 with their family,…
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Uz Community
· 16.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Montague County, passing the site of a farming community named Uz. Early settlers chose the name from the Biblical Book of Job. By the 1870s, Uz was a thriving farming town, peaking in the early…
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City of Alvord
· 16.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Alvord, a town that owes its start to the railroad and an old Indian trail. By 1882, this agricultural community was already growing, but the arrival of the Fort Worth & Denver Railroad that year…
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Alvord Lodge No. 512, A.F. & A.M.
· 16.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Alvord Lodge No. 512, a Masonic organization. It began in 1879 near Audubon, moved to Alvord in 1886, and built this new stone hall in 1991. The Masons continue their tradition of community…
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First United Methodist Church Alvord
· 16.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the First United Methodist Church in Alvord. Originally organized in 1884 as the Methodist Episcopal Church, south, it has served the community for 130 years. The original 600-pound bell from 1884 is…
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Covington, Weldon Joseph
· 16.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, and right here in Alvord, a young Weldon Covington was already making music. At just nine years old, he was the pianist for the local Baptist church. Then, in his junior year of high…
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Buffalo Springs, C.S.A.
· 16.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Buffalo Springs, a Civil War sentry post on the North Texas frontier. From <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1861</say-as> to <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1865</say-as>, cavalry…
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Boner, Charles Paul
· 16.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, and right here in Nocona, Texas, was born C. Paul Boner. He wasn't just any physicist; he was a pioneer in sound! While working at the University of Texas in the 1920s, Boner helped…
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Justin, Herman Joseph
· 16.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, and right here is the story of Herman Joseph Justin, a pioneer bootmaker. He arrived in Gainesville back in 1877, but it was in Spanish Fort, in 1879, that he opened his own boot shop…
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Nocona Boot Company
· 16.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Nocona, Texas, and right here is the home of a bootmaking legend. The Nocona Boot Company started in 1925, founded by Enid Justin Steltzer. Her father's family business had moved to Fort Worth,…
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Nocona, TX
· 16.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Nocona, a town with a name that echoes the frontier. It started in the 1870s as a cattle ranch, but when the railroad came through in 1887, the owner, D. C. Jordan, donated land for a townsite. It…
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Wichita Indians
· 16.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, and right here, around the site of present-day Nocona, was once the heart of Wichita Indian power. From the 1750s to about 1810, this Red River area was home to a prominent band of…
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Forestburg
· 16.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Forestburg, a town born from the ashes of the Civil War. Look around at the land that was once a battleground. Pioneers settled here after the war, facing down the challenges of the frontier and…
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Pleasant Valley Cemetery
· 16.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving near Buffalo Springs, Clay County. This Pleasant Valley Cemetery was established in 1883 on land donated by Jim Draer. The earliest documented burial here is Lydia Bowman, who died in 1883.
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Mount, R.C., House
· 17.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the R.C. Mount House, a testament to early Texas grit and resourcefulness. Mount, a surveyor, preacher, and the first tax assessor-collector for Wise County, started building this home in 1872. He…
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Farmers and Merchants National Bank
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Nocona, and right here is the Farmers and Merchants National Bank, the oldest financial institution still operating in town. It opened its doors way back in 1905, starting with thirty thousand…
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Central Christian Church
· 17.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Nocona, and right here is the Central Christian Church. Founded in 1888 by The Rev. M.F. Smith, this church boasts a striking Gothic Revival design. Built by craftsmen Roger Brothers and R.…
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Ball Knob Cemetery
· 17.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Ball Knob Cemetery in Wise County. Originally owned by pioneer James Ball, Sr., it served as a burial ground for family and friends. The land was deeded to the Audubon community in 1890 and…
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First Baptist Church of Nocona
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the First Baptist Church of Nocona. Organized in the summer of 1889, the congregation first met in a schoolhouse before completing their own sanctuary in 1897. The church was renamed…
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Red River Station
· 17.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Montague County, heading towards Nocona. Right around here, back in 1861, was the site of Red River Station. This wasn't just any outpost; it was a Civil War-era defense against the very real…
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Audubon
· 17.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Audubon, a town that vanished right here in Wise County. Settled in 1865 by D. D. Shirey, it was named for the famous naturalist John J. Audubon. Shirey's farm became a stagecoach inn,…
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McGrady Cemetery
· 17.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past McGrady Cemetery, a quiet reminder of Montague County's pioneer heritage. It began in the 1860s when a McGrady employee was killed by Native Americans and buried here on the family farm. Later, an…
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Huff Family Massacre
· 18.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Wise County, near Alvord. It's 1874, and this area is seeing one of its last Indian raids. While C.W. Huff and his son were working the far fields of their new homestead, tragedy struck the home.…
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Montague County, Early Trails in
· 18.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through what's now Montague County, but imagine this place over 150 years ago. It wasn't just open land; it was a crossroads of American expansion! The Chihuahua Traders Trail blazed through here in 1840,…
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Chico, TX
· 18.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Chico, a town that owes its start to a man named J. T. Brown, who hailed all the way from Chico, California. He arrived in the mid-1870s, setting up a general store near Dry Creek. This little…
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Siddons-Barnes Log Cabin
· 18.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Siddons-Barnes Log Cabin, a structure built in the early 1870s. This humble cabin was more than just a home; it was the very first place of worship for Methodists in the area and also served as…
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Red Branch, TX (Leon County)
· 18.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through northeastern Leon County, near Oakwood. Right here is the community of Red Branch. It all started around 1856, when the nearby community of Ringgold got a post office. Eventually, the Mount Pisgah…
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Ringgold, TX
· 18.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what's now Ringgold, Texas, a town born from the railroad. Back in 1892, Joe Harris sold land where two rail lines crossed, laying out a new townsite. He wanted to name it Harrisonia after…
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Stephens, Ira Kendrick
· 18.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wise County, maybe not far from Chico, the birthplace of Ira Kendrick Stephens. Born in 1887, Stephens overcame early health issues and taught in country schools before earning degrees from…
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Brown Hotel
· 18.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Chico, and right here is the site of the old Brown Hotel. Colonel J.T. Brown, who founded this town back in 1876, built this hotel in 1888. Now, this place saw some real history. Imagine standing…
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First Baptist Church of Chico
· 18.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Chico, where the First Baptist Church was organized in 1874. Starting with just five members, the congregation met in homes and a brush arbor before building several structures over the years,…
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Indian Captives Dot and Bianca Babb
· 19.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Chico, and we're flashing back to 1865. Imagine this: two kids, 13-year-old Dot Babb and his 9-year-old sister Bianca, playing near their home. Suddenly, a Comanche raiding party of nearly 40…
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Hopewell Baptist Church
· 19.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Hopewell Baptist Church, organized in 1874 with 35 charter members. The congregation moved to this location in 1887 and built a new sanctuary in 1899. Initially meeting one Sunday a…