191 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
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Bryan, TX
· Local history
Bryan, Texas, owes its very existence to the railroad. The story goes that in 1866, when the Houston and Texas Central Railway was laying tracks north, they needed a spot for a depot. William Joel Bryan, nephew of…
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Town Named for William Joel Bryan
· 0.1 mi · Historical Marker
(1814-1903) 
 Native of Missouri. Member of prominent family who were Texas statesmen, planters, developers. Grandson of Moses Austin, who obtained from Mexico charter for American colony in Texas, but died…
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Brazos County Confederate Commissioners Court
· 0.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Brazos County Confederate Commissioners Court. In the heat of the Civil War, these officials weren't just meeting; they were running a home front war effort. They supplied horses,…
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First Baptist Church
· 0.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Bryan, and right here, back on November 21st, 1866, a Baptist church was organized with sixteen members. Mrs. Sara Dodson wrote, 'I hope a better day is dawning.' Their first house of worship,…
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E.J. Jenkins House
· 0.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the E.J. Jenkins House, a classic Queen Anne home built right here in 1893. Charlie Jenkins, a prominent Bryan builder, constructed it for his brother, Edwin James Jenkins. E.J. was an English…
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Mitchell, Harvey
· 0.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Brazos County, home to Harvey Mitchell, often called the 'Father of Brazos County.' Mitchell arrived in Texas way back in 1839, joining the minute men defending the frontier. He served in nearly…
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Astin-Porter Home
· 0.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Astin-Porter Home in Bryan, a grand Classical Revival residence built for Onah Astin, wife of a cotton planter. Construction started in 1901 and took two years, featuring a striking two-story…
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Site of First Public School in Bryan
· 0.2 mi · Historical Marker
Hey road-trippers! You're passing the site of Bryan's very first public school. Back in 1877, Bryan voted to create a free public graded school, a bold move when most education was private. Citizens quickly donated this…
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Wilkerson, A.W.
· 0.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past the A.W. Wilkerson house in Bryan, built in 1912 by contractor Charlie Jenkins. This was the era when Bryan's business leaders flocked to this neighborhood. Banker A.W. Wilkerson owned it until…
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Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church
· 0.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Saint Andrew's Episcopal Church in Bryan. Its story starts way back in 1864, with services held in the nearby town of Millican. But a devastating yellow fever epidemic swept through Millican, forcing…
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Waldrop House
· 0.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Waldrop House, a prime example of American Four-Square architecture. Built for Allister and Nanne Waldrop in the early 1900s, this home was designed by Houston architects Jones & Tabor. Allister…
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La Salle Hotel
· 0.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through downtown Bryan, and right here, you're passing the La Salle Hotel. Completed in 1928, it was the tallest building in town, a real sign of Bryan's boom as a railroad hub. Imagine this place…
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Edge, Eugene
· 0.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former home of Eugene Edge, an early Bryan businessman. <break time="400ms"/> This house, built between 1901 and 1902 by local builder Charles Jenkins, is a fascinating blend of architectural…
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Cavitt House
· 0.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Cavitt House in Bryan, a home with a story that spans over a century. Attorney William R. Cavitt bought this city block back in 1875, the same year he married Mary Mitchell. Around 1880, they…
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McMichael-Wilson House
· 0.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the McMichael-Wilson House in Bryan, a beautiful example of Queen Anne architecture. Built in 1904 for George Washington McMichael, a lumberman and county clerk, it was purchased in 1912 by Alfred…
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Allen Academy
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
This school originated as Madison Academy, founded in 1886 in Madisonville by John Hodges Allen (1854-1920), an educator from Mississippi. When his brother Rivers O. Allen (1865-1925) joined him in 1896, the institution…
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Bryan City Cemetery
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Bryan City Cemetery, established way back on June 13th, 1868. Just three years after the townsite of Bryan itself was dedicated, landowner J.C. Hubert sold this twenty-acre plot to the city for a…
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Edge House
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Edge House in Bryan, a grand home built in 1925 for Eugene Edge, a prominent local merchant. Look for its classic Georgian Revival style – notice the symmetrical design, the Doric columns at the…
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Jenkins, Charlie Eric
· 0.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a man who shaped Bryan's skyline. Charlie E. Jenkins arrived from England in 1873, settling here in 1878. He became one of Bryan's most prolific builders, known for his distinctive…
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First Presbyterian Church
· 0.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Bryan, and right here is the site of the First Presbyterian Church. Organized way back in November of 1867, this was actually the second church group to form in Bryan. They built their first…
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Colson, Esther Neveille Higgs
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
Neveille Colson, Texas legislator, was born on July 18, 1902, to Walter J. and Ollie (Jowers) Higgs in Bryan, Texas. She attended school in Bryan and entered Baylor University in Waco in 1923. After a year she took a…
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Mims, Henry Lucius
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
Henry Lucius Mims, founder of the National Alliance of Postal Employees, composer, geologist, and piano manufacturer, was born on August 13, 1873, in Bryan, Texas, to Alfred and Carrie Mims. His early years were spent…
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Ward, Seth
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
Seth Ward, Methodist bishop, son of Samuel Goode and Sarah Ann Ward, was born in a log cabin near Bryan, Texas, on November 15, 1858. His parents tutored him at home. On January 5, 1886, he married Margaret E. South at…
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Brazos County
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Brazos County, a place with a story that goes back thousands of years. But right here, the story of settlement really kicks off in 1841. The county seat was established and named Boonville, after…
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Bryan, William Joel
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bryan, Texas, a town named for William Joel Bryan. He was a man who saw Texas through revolution and reconstruction. Bryan fought with Sam Houston during the Texas Revolution, though he missed the…
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Courthouse Cedar
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bryan, Texas, where a single, ancient eastern red cedar tree has witnessed the rise and fall of five county courthouses. It started as a sapling back in 1841, near the first temporary courthouse.…
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Rountree, Frances Mitchell
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Brazos County, and right here is where Frances Mitchell Rountree made history. Born in Llano back in 1880, she became a newspaperwoman, managing the Bryan Daily Eagle. After her husband passed…
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Woman's Club
· 0.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Bryan, and right here is the site of the Woman's Club. It started way back in October of 1895 as the Mutual Improvement Circle, with twenty members meeting in their homes. Their goal? To improve…
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Barron, Wingate Stuart, Sr.
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Brazos County, near Bryan, and you're passing through the heart of Texas politics from the 1920s. Wingate Stuart Barron, Sr., started as a school superintendent, then became a lawyer. But his real…
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Bryan, TX
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bryan, Texas, a town born from a railroad deal. Back in 1859, William Joel Bryan, nephew of Stephen F. Austin, donated land for a new townsite to the Houston and Texas Central Railroad. The…
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Goodwin, George Iverson
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Brazos County, and right here in Bryan, George Iverson Goodwin made his mark. Born in Georgia, Goodwin moved to Texas as a boy and studied law in Richmond. After serving in the Civil War, he…
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Gorbet, Chester Spaulding
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Brazoria County, an area that was once home to Chester Spaulding Gorbet, one of Stephen F. Austin's original colonists. He arrived in Texas back in the winter of 1821-22, eventually…
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Smythe, David Porter
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bryan, Texas, home to Texas A&M University. Right here, back in the late 1870s and early 1880s, Dr. David Porter Smythe served as the college physician. His salary? A unique five-dollar assessment…
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Wilson, Lorenzo Jackson
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bryan, Texas, a town that Lorenzo Jackson Wilson helped lead. Wilson was a legislator and a Civil War captain. He served in the Mexican War, joining up in Rusk County in 1846. His unit was headed…
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Hood, Dorothy Rose
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bryan, Texas, the birthplace of Dorothy Rose Hood. Born in 1918, she grew up to become a significant visual artist, spending decades in Mexico City where she knew Frida Kahlo and was mentored by…
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Site of Odd Fellows University and Orphans Home
· 0.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of what was once Odd Fellows University, founded way back in 1870 by a local lodge. This wasn't just any school; it was a two-story building packed with classes for students of all ages,…
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St. Joseph Catholic Church
· 0.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Bryan, and right here is the site of St. Joseph Catholic Church. Catholic services started here as early as 1869, but the first actual church building went up around 1871. Imagine this: fire guts…
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Haswell, George Tyler
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Brazos County, and right here in Bryan, George Tyler Haswell was a key player in the town's early growth. Back in 1867, Haswell helped establish St. Andrew's Parish, the very first…
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Law, Francis Marion, Jr.
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bryan, Texas, the birthplace of Francis Marion Law Jr. He started his career right here, as a bookkeeper at the First National Bank of Bryan in 1897. But Law didn't just stay local. He rose…
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Myers, TX
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through eastern Burleson County, near the Brazos River. This spot, once known as Pelham, became Myers in the late 1800s. The name change came when Joseph Allen Myers, the postmaster in Bryan, requested a…
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Newland, Hardin S.
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Brazos County, not far from Bryan, where Captain Hardin S. Newland faced a political battle after the Civil War. After serving the Confederacy, Newland returned to Texas and founded the Rusk…
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Randal, John Leonard
· 0.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Brazos County, not far from Bryan. Right here is where John Leonard Randal lived out his final years. Born in North Carolina in 1800, Randal came to Texas in 1838, settling first near San…
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Site of Villa Maria Ursuline Academy
· 1.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Villa Maria Ursuline Academy, a school that brought education and service to Bryan in the early 1900s. Founded by Ursuline Sisters with a long history stretching back to Italy in 1535,…
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Mount Calvary Cemetery
· 1.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Mount Calvary Cemetery, a final resting place with a story tied to a city ordinance. Back in the late 1800s, Bryan's St. Joseph Catholic Church served a growing community. For years, parishioners…
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First National Bank of Bryan
· 2.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Bryan, and right here is the site of a Texas financial institution that's been part of this community for over a century. The First National Bank of Bryan started way back in 1862 as a private…
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Site of the Town of Boonville
· 2.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Boonville, a town that once held the county seat. Established in 1841 and named for Mordecai Boon, it thrived for over two decades. But progress, in the form of a railroad, would spell…
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Weddington, Wesa
· 2.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Bryan, where Wesa Weddington spent her career shaping young minds. A granddaughter of pioneer settler Harvey Mitchell, Wesa began teaching Latin and Spanish right here in Bryan's public schools back…
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Martin's Place
· 2.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Martin's Place, a roadside institution that first opened its doors in December of 1924. Martin Kapchinskie bought this land along a simple country road connecting Bryan to Texas A&M University and…
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Ryan, TX
· 2.9 mi
Ryan, Texas. It’s a place where the wind whispers across the plains, a place that feels both ordinary and somehow touched by something special. You can stand on the edge of town, 820 feet above sea level, and see…
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Bryan & College Interurban Railway
· 3.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the path of the Bryan and College Interurban Railway. Back in 1909, Bryan's mayor and the Retail Merchants Association dreamed up this electric trolley line to connect their town of 4,000 to the…
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College Station, TX
· 3.8 mi
College Station wasn't destined to be much of anything. It sits on fairly flat land, a bit higher than the surrounding plains, giving it that humid, sticky feeling in the summer. Post oak and blackjack oak fill the…
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The Dixie Chicken
· 4.2 mi
The Dixie Chicken is the oldest and most famous bar on College Station's Northgate strip, open across from Texas A&M since 1974. Named after a Little Feat album, it is the birthplace of the Aggie ring-dunk tradition and…
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Duddley's Draw
· 4.2 mi
Duddley's Draw is one of the original dive bars on College Station's Northgate strip, in business for nearly fifty years. It's known for a laid-back vibe, free pool and darts, cheap drinks, and live music that leans…
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Baine, Noel Moses
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Stephen F. Austin's colony, and right here, in what is now Brazos County, was the home of Moses Baine. He arrived in Texas from Ireland in 1830 with his wife, Cecilia, and quickly…
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Carter, Richard
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Brazos County, and right here is where Richard Carter, one of the very first white settlers, staked his claim back in 1831. Imagine arriving with your family to an area described as an unbroken…
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Hanover, Hiram
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Brazos County, and right here is an area once known as Hanover. It was named for Hiram Hanover, a Maine native who came to Texas in 1838, drawn by tales of fortune. He first taught school near…
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Millican, Elliott McNeil
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Millican, Texas, a town with roots stretching back to Stephen F. Austin's Old Three Hundred colonists. Right here, Elliott McNeil Millican arrived with his family in 1821. He became a physician, a…
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Millican, TX
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through southern Brazos County, not far from College Station. Right here, you're passing through the area that was once Millican, a boomtown that briefly rivaled Houston and Galveston. In the early 1860s,…
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Boonville, TX
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Boonville, the first county seat of Brazos County. Back in 1841, a committee selected this spot, then a post oak forest, to build a new community. They named it, likely, in honor…
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Brasher, Semore C.
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Brazos County, Texas, and right here is where Semore Brasher organized a company of Confederate soldiers in the fall of 1861. He was a farmer and a Mason, but he answered the call to…
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Curtis, James, Jr.
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Brazos County, and you're passing through the story of James Curtis, Jr. He was an 'Old Three Hundred' settler, arriving in Texas with his family in 1824. He received his land title on…
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Daniel, John Warwick
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Brazos County, but back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1862</say-as>, this was Camp Speight near Millican. Right here, John Warwick Daniel, a farmer who’d moved his family…
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Gillespie, Clayton Crawford
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Brazos County, not far from where, back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1862</say-as>, Clayton Crawford Gillespie accepted command of the Twenty-fifth Texas Cavalry Regiment. He was a…
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Millican, William Templeton
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Brazos County, and you're passing through the story of William Templeton Millican. He arrived in Texas back in December of 1821, one of Stephen F. Austin's original Old Three Hundred…
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Wellborn, TX
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past Wellborn, a community that sprang up in 1867 as a railroad construction camp. It was built right on the land grant of A. M. McMahon. The Royder brothers, John and Thomas, set up the first store, a…
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Harvey, TX
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Harvey, Texas, established back in 1879. <break time="400ms"/> This community owes its existence to Colonel Harvey Mitchell, a true pioneer. <break time="400ms"/> He was so…
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Hope, James
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now southwestern Brazos County, and right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1824</say-as>, James Hope became one of Stephen F. Austin's original Old Three Hundred colonists.…
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Mudville, TX
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through western Brazos County, and right here is the site of Mudville, also known as Steele's Store. The name Mudville came from the sticky floodplain mud of the Brazos and Little Brazos rivers, a common…
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Tabor, TX
· 4.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Tabor, Texas, a community that started with a single settler back in 1873. Maj. M. J. Tabor staked his claim, and by 1876, a handful of families had joined him. Things really picked up in 1888…
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College Station Railroad Depots
· 4.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through College Station right now, and this spot is where a town got its name! Back in 1871, commissioners were picking a site for the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, and the Houston and…
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Main Drill Field, Texas A&M University
· 4.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the heart of Texas A&M's historic campus, the Main Drill Field. Opened in 1876, A&M was founded with a Congressional mandate to teach military tactics, and this field was the center of it all. Cadets…
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Carter, Richard
· 4.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the area where Richard Carter, a Virginia native and War of 1812 veteran, settled in 1831. He came from Alabama to claim a land grant in the Stephen F. Austin Colony. Carter quickly became one of the…
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Moravian Cemetery
· 4.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Moravian Cemetery, a small piece of Czech heritage here in Brazos County. Land was sold way back in 1889, specifically for a Moravian burial ground. Most of the eleven headstones you might see…
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Texas A&M Corps of Cadets
· 4.6 mi · Historical Marker
Soon after its opening in 1876, the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas (Texas A&M) established the Corps of Cadets to fulfill its mandate to instruct its students (all-male until the early 1960s) in military…
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Where Texas Learned to Farm With Science
· 4.6 mi
College Station is home to Texas A&M, a school that helped teach an entire state how to farm with science. It opened in 1876 as the first public college in Texas. A few private colleges came before it, but A&M was the…
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Farming by the Square Foot
· 4.6 mi
For most of history, a farmer treated a whole field the same way: same water, same fertilizer, same seed spacing, edge to edge. The trouble is that a field is never really uniform. One corner drains fast and stays dry,…
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Letting the Dirt Ask for Water
· 4.6 mi
Imagine if the soil itself could raise a hand and say, I am thirsty, water me now. That is basically what smart irrigation does. Small sensors buried in the ground constantly measure how much moisture is in the soil at…
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Breeding a Crop That Laughs at Drought
· 4.6 mi
Some crops give up the moment the weather turns harsh. Sorghum is not one of them. It is a tough cereal grain that thrives in the heat and dryness of West Texas, in fields where corn would shrivel and die. At Texas A&M,…
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Texas A&M University
· 4.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the historic campus of Texas A&M University. Back when it opened in 1876, the campus was pretty isolated. The university needed housing for its professors and staff, so they built five brick homes…
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Early Play-By-Play Radio Broadcast of a College Football Game
· 4.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past College Station, where, back in 1921, Texas A&M students pulled off a radio first for the Lone Star State. The year before, a plan to broadcast a football game failed, but they tried again in 1921…
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African American Education in College Station
· 5.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through College Station, and right here is the story of African American education in this town. It all started back in 1871 with the Public School Act. For years, classes were scattered across small…
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Locomotive 4141: The Train That Carried a President Home
· 5.9 mi
Union Pacific locomotive No. 4141, an SD70ACe nicknamed for George H. W. Bush, is painted to resemble Air Force One in honor of the 41st U.S. president. Unveiled near the George H. W. Bush Presidential Library in…
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George H.W. Bush Presidential Library
· 6.0 mi · Historical Marker
George Herbert Walker Bush came to Texas from Connecticut in 1948, drove to Odessa in a red Studebaker, and started working in the oil fields. He built a fortune, moved to Houston, entered politics, and spent the next…
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Shiloh Community
· 6.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past what used to be Shiloh, a community founded in the 1860s by Czech, German, and Polish immigrants. They built a life here with family farms, a community center, a school, even a vineyard and a…
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Wixon Cemetery
· 6.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through the area once known as Wixon, settled in the late 1860s by folks from the war-torn South. This cemetery holds many of those early settlers, their descendants, and at least seventeen Confederate…
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A&M College Consolidated Rural School
· 6.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the birthplace of College Station's school system! Back in 1909, Texas A&M needed a school for the local kids, but there weren't enough students. So, A&M's president teamed up with a professor and…
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Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: A&M Consolidated (College Station)
· 6.5 mi
A&M Consolidated (College Station, TX) placed on the 5A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Joseph Young (0.537 avg); Luke Hargett (0.469 avg, 2 HR).
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Benchley, TX
· 7.3 mi · Local history
Benchley, Texas sits at the crossroads of old cattle trails and newer farm-to-market roads in northern Robertson County. Unlike many of its neighbors, Benchley never boomed with cotton production, instead remaining a…
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Alexander Cemetery
· 7.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Alexander Cemetery, a resting place with roots reaching back to Texas's earliest days. Legend says the first burial here was a child named Whitley, way back in 1854, though that grave is…
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Alexander Methodist Chapel
· 7.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Alexander Methodist Chapel, organized way back in 1854 by Robert Alexander, a circuit rider. The first church, built by settlers from hand-hewn logs, went up in 1856. Ten acres for…
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El Camino Real
· 7.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising down the highway, but this road has seen centuries of Texas history! This is El Camino Real, also known as the Old San Antonio Road or Old Spanish Trail. Imagine, this path was forged by buffalo and…
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Staggers Point
· 7.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Robertson County, passing the site of Staggers Point. This was the earliest large community in Robertson's Colony, settled by Irishmen who first arrived in America in 1821. After stops in South…
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Barry, Maggie Wilkins Hill
· 7.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through College Station, home of Texas A&M University. Right here, in the early 20th century, Maggie Barry was pioneering a movement to support rural women. Hired by A&M in 1918, she became the first…
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College Station, TX
· 7.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through College Station, a town born from a railroad stop and a dream. Back in 1871, this spot was chosen for a new agricultural and mechanical college. By 1877, a post office opened right near the…
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Moran, Charles Barthell
· 7.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the heart of Aggieland, and right here, Texas A&M owes a lot to Charles 'Uncle Charley' Moran. He coached football here from 1909 to 1914, leading the Aggies to their best winning percentage ever…
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Asbury, Samuel Erson
· 7.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through College Station, home to Texas A&M University. Right here lived Samuel Erson Asbury, a chemist who became fascinated with Texas history. Asbury believed music could tell historical stories. He…
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Connell, John Henry
· 7.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Brazos County, and right here is where a Texan named John Henry Connell revolutionized farming. Back in 1893, Connell took charge of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station. He…
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Nagle, James C.
· 7.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Brazos County, and right here is where James C. Nagle spent nearly thirty years shaping Texas engineering. From 1890 to 1913, he was a professor of civil engineering at the Agricultural and…
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Robert Henry
· 7.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a man who lived a truly remarkable life. Robert Henry, born in Ireland in 1801, arrived in Texas in 1832, joining Robertson's Colony. He fought bravely in the Texas Revolution, serving in…
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Rock Prairie School and Church
· 8.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Rock Prairie School and Church, a place that served German immigrants right here in the Brazos Valley. Back in 1891, Adam Royder donated land for a one-room schoolhouse. Local…
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El Camino Real
· 8.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past a piece of Texas history that's literally a thousand miles long! El Camino Real, the King's Highway, connected Saltillo, Mexico, all the way to Louisiana. The oldest part, the 'Trail of the Padres,'…
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2017 UIL 5A Division 2 Football State Champions
· 9.3 mi
College Station High School (College Station, TX): Most recent: 20-19 over Aledo · 2017 5A Division 2 final.
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Wilson Chapel Cemetery
· 9.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Wilson Chapel Cemetery, a testament to John Riley Sadberry's vision for the Benchley community. Sadberry, who moved here around 1896, purchased land in 1909 for a school and adjacent…
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Kurten, TX
· 9.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Kurten, Texas, a community with roots stretching back to the mid-1800s. It all started with Henry Kurten, a German soldier who loved Texas so much he decided to stay. After working as a freighter,…
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Brazos River Levee
· 10.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a devastating flood that reshaped life in Burleson County. In <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1899</say-as>, a massive rainstorm caused devastating floods, killing 35 people and…
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Steele's Store Community
· 10.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Brazos County, passing by the site of what was once Steele's Store. It started as Mudville, a name fitting for a community often flooded by the Brazos River. But in 1855, Henry Steele built a…
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San Salvador Mission Church
· 10.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Caldwell, and right here is the San Salvador Mission Church. This place tells a story of Italian immigrants who arrived in Texas back in 1894, hailing from Cefalu, Sicily. They named this mission…
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Moseley's Ferry
· 10.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past where the Old San Antonio Road once crossed the Brazos River. Back in 1846, Michael Boren started a public ferry right here. Four years later, Daniel Moseley took over, and his family kept the ferry…
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The Navasota River's Many Names
· 11.7 mi
The Navasota River, in central-east Texas, has carried several names. The indigenous people knew it as the Nabasoto. The Spanish explorer Domingo Teran de los Rios called it the San Cypriano; the Franciscan missionary…
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Fort Tenoxtitlan
· 12.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Burleson County, not far from where the Mexican government tried to put the brakes on American expansion. In July of 1830, they established Fort Tenoxtitlan right here, naming it after the ancient…
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Carrington Creek
· 13.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Burleson County, near the community of Tunis. Right here, Carrington Creek was the lifeblood for Italian immigrants who settled this area in the 1890s. They came from Sicily to work the…
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Tunis, TX
· 13.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through eastern Burleson County, and right here is the site of Tunis. Settlement began in the early 1820s, but the town itself was founded in the mid-1800s as a trading center for several large…
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Brazos Bottom Baptist Church Cemetery
· 13.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Brazos Bottom Baptist Church Cemetery, also known as the Old Tunis Cemetery. Graves here date back to the 1840s, and land was formally set aside in 1867 for this graveyard and a Baptist Church…
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Dunn Cemetery
· 13.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Dunn Cemetery, the final resting place for some of Texas's earliest Irish settlers. James and Isabella Dunn, along with eight other families, made a long journey, first from Ireland to America in…
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Snook
· 13.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Snook, Texas, a town with roots stretching back to the 1880s. It started as 'Sebesta's Corner,' a gathering place for Czech immigrants. By 1895, it was officially named Snook, after John Snook,…
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Santa's Wonderland — Texas's 150-Acre Christmas Park
· 14.0 mi · Verified Web
Santa's Wonderland started as a drive-through Christmas light display on Highway 6 south of College Station and grew into what its operators now bill as the largest Christmas park in the world. The grounds cover roughly…
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Snook Brethren Church
· 14.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Snook, a community settled in the 1870s by Czech immigrants. They brought their traditions, including beliefs of the Brethren Church, which officially organized here in 1886. By 1913, they had…
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Snook, TX
· 14.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Burleson County, heading southeast of Caldwell. Right here is the town of Snook, which owes its name to a postmaster. Back in 1895, this growing Czech farming settlement, originally called…
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El Camino Real de los Tejas
· 14.3 mi · Historical Marker
Before there were highways, before there were railroads, before there was a Texas, there was El Camino Real. The Royal Road was the main artery of Spanish colonial Texas, stretching from Mexico City through San Antonio,…
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Museum of the American G.I.
· 14.3 mi · Local Knowledge
You're about a mile from the Museum of the American G I — and it's not your usual military museum. Most museums put tanks on concrete pads with signs you can't lean on. This one runs them. Brent Mullins, an Aggie who…
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Snook Cemetery
· 14.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Snook Cemetery, a final resting place for generations of settlers here in Burleson County. This community, originally known as Sebesta's Corners, was renamed Snook in honor of the Caldwell…
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Fort Oldham
· 14.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Fort Oldham, built back in 1836 and 1837. Settlers, seeking safety from Indian raids, found refuge here with Major William Oldham. He was a veteran of the Texas War for Independence, and…
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Broaddus, Andrew S., Judge
· 15.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're passing through Cooks Point, the home of Judge Andrew S. Broaddus, a true pioneer leader. Back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1854</say-as>, he piloted a mile-long wagon train carrying 200 people all…
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Cooks Point
· 15.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Cooks Point, a community founded around 1840. Imagine this spot as a crucial crossroads, where the colonial road from the southeast met the San Antonio Road. The first settler here, Gabriel…
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Giesenschlag Cemetery
· 15.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Giesenschlag Cemetery, a final resting place established by a Prussian immigrant. Johann Joachim Giesenschlag arrived in Texas in 1855 with his wife and children. They settled in Washington…
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Old Cavitt House
· 15.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Old Cavitt House, a Republic of Texas homestead. The first log cabin went up here in 1836. But the main house, built with hand-finished lumber, didn't take its present form until…
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Goodwill Missionary Baptist Church
· 15.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Cooks Point, home to the Goodwill Missionary Baptist Church. Its story begins not with a building, but with people. In 1854, enslaved families, led by A.S. Broaddus, made a grueling six-month wagon…
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New Hope Missionary Baptist Church
· 15.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of New Hope Missionary Baptist Church, established in the 1800s. In the 1890s, church member Lucy Bell Stubbs Mitchell donated land for a permanent home. The church moved to this site in…
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Wheelock
· 15.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Wheelock, a town founded way back in 1833. Colonel E. L. R. Wheelock, the man who started this place, was quite a character. He was a soldier, a lawyer, and an educator, and even helped organize…
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Providence Baptist Church
· 15.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Caldwell, and right here is the site of Providence Baptist Church, organized way back in 1841, during the Republic of Texas. Imagine, 32 members meeting just a few times a year, with planters and…
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Providence Cemetery
· 15.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Providence Cemetery, a final resting place for folks in this area since the 1830s. The oldest marked grave is Elizabeth Hughes, who died in 1841, but oral tradition says burials started even earlier.…
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William Templeton Millican
· 16.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Millican, a town named for William Templeton Millican. He arrived in Texas with his family in 1821, becoming one of Stephen F. Austin's Old Three Hundred colonists. Millican's land grant here was…
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Keith: From a Schoolhouse to Almost Nobody
· 16.1 mi
Keith sits on the west bank of Hog Creek, settled by a pioneer family in the 1840s. It was never big -- twenty-five people in 1890, down to just five by 1900, when the post office closed and mail started coming from…
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Fort Tenoxtitlan
· 17.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Fort Tenoxtitlan, a frontier outpost with a name as old as Mexico itself. Founded by Mexico in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1830</say-as>, its mission was to stop the flood of…
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Elizabeth Chapel Methodist Church
· 17.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the very first Methodist Church in Burleson County. It all started around 1839, not in a building, but as a Sunday School held in the home of Isaac Addison. Later, it moved to the home of…
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Wilson, James
· 17.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Bryan, and right here is the story of James Wilson, a Presbyterian minister who came all the way from Ireland. He arrived in the U.S. in 1842, studied at Lafayette College and Princeton…
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Millican
· 17.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Millican, a town that boomed because of the Civil War. When the fighting started in 1861, this was the northernmost railroad stop in Texas. Imagine the hustle: cotton from across North Texas and the…
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Cooks Point United Methodist Church
· 17.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Cooks Point, Texas, a community with roots stretching back to 1881. This United Methodist Church began as a beacon for German-speaking immigrants, organized by Anna Duewall, who arrived here just…
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Macedonia Hix Baptist Church
· 17.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Macedonia Hix Baptist Church, a congregation with roots stretching back to the 1840s. Traveling ministers held services here even before the church was officially organized around 1852.…
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Millican, TX
· 17.4 mi · Local history
Millican, Texas, sits in the heart of Washington County, a place where the sandy loam soil and abundant rainfall create ideal conditions for peanut farming. This area has been linked to peanut production since the early…
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Suggs Cemetery
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Suggs Cemetery, a silent testament to the Black Jack community's roots. The Suggs family arrived from Georgia in the late 1860s, settling here around 1868. This land, purchased by Calvin A.…
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Duewall House
· 17.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Duewall House, a home built with history right into its walls. Rudolph and Anna Duewall settled this land in the 1880s, starting a family farm. Their son Edward and his wife Lizzie kept the farm…
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Katy Holland McDowell Treadwell Cobb
· 17.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Iola, and right here is the story of Katy Holland McDowell Treadwell Cobb. Born in 1815, she was just seven years old when she journeyed to Texas with her parents, becoming part of Stephen F.…
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Lone Oak Baptist Church
· 18.1 mi · Historical Marker
Look to your right, past the highway sign for Snook. You're driving by the site of the Lone Oak Baptist Church. Traveling preachers held early services here, and in 1905, locals officially organized this Baptist church.…
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The 2015 Carlos-to-Iola Tornado
· 18.2 mi
In 2015 an EF1 tornado touched down near Carlos and tracked north toward Iola, its path mapped point by point by the National Weather Service. EF1 means winds up to about a hundred and ten miles an hour -- enough to…
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The Crossroads
· 18.4 mi · Manual Curated
Hearne, Texas calls itself "The Crossroads," and it earned that nickname the honest way — by being one. In the late 1860s, the Houston and Texas Central Railway pushed north through this flat stretch of Robertson…
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Hearne, TX
· 18.4 mi · Local history
Hearne owes its existence to the iron horse. Before the railroads, this part of Robertson County was mostly farmland, dotted with small settlements. But when the Houston and Texas Central Railway pushed its way north in…
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FM 39: A Highway on a Dead Railroad
· 18.5 mi
The farm road that runs into Iola, FM 39, isn't just a road. For about seventy-one miles it sits right on top of an abandoned railroad grade -- the old Mexia-to-Nelleva cutoff, a ninety-four-mile shortcut pushed through…
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Davis, Isham, Home
· 18.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Isham Davis Home, built way back in 1848. Look for the hand-hewn cedar in the log foundation, ceilings, and beams – that's some serious craftsmanship from the early days. This place stayed in the…
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The Town That Moved Itself
· 18.6 mi
Iola wasn't always where it is now. When two railroads reached the area in 1906 and 1907, the little settlement of about a hundred and fifty people simply picked up and moved to the new depot. Houses, the newspaper, the…
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New Tabor Cemetery
· 18.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the New Tabor Cemetery, a final resting place for Czech and German immigrants who settled this area in the late 1800s. The community itself was named for a town in Czechoslovakia. In 1888, this land…
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Iola, TX
· 18.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Iola, a community named for one of Stephen F. Austin's earliest colonists. Edward Ariola settled here back in 1836. For decades, Iola grew slowly, with a gristmill and a church that also served as…
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The 1912 Iola State Bank Heist
· 18.7 mi
On a Saturday night in 1912, burglars dynamited the vault of the Iola State Bank and made off with somewhere between one thousand and fifteen hundred dollars. The strange part: Houston officers had warned the town weeks…
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Texas HS Baseball Playoff Leaders 2026: Iola (Iola)
· 18.7 mi
Iola put 2 players on the statewide leaderboards of the 2026 Texas high school baseball playoffs. Brody Vaughn had 47 strikeouts (3rd in the state). Ryan Roubion had 9 stolen bases (11th in the state).
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New Tabor Brethren Church
· 18.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Burleson County, passing a piece of Czech-American history. Around 1870, immigrants seeking fertile land and religious freedom settled here. For years, Joseph Macat hosted informal services in his…
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Chris 'Birdman' Andersen, Raised in Iola
· 18.9 mi
The NBA champion Chris Andersen, known to fans as Birdman, grew up on about ten acres in unincorporated Iola. He didn't even play organized basketball until his high school coach, Robert Stewart, talked him into it.…
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Colored Graveyard in the Old Town of Hearne
· 19.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hearne, near the site of what was once the Colored Graveyard. This place served the African American residents of the area, likely starting as a farm or slave cemetery. The earliest known burial…
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The Lone Grave
· 19.0 mi · Things to Do
A single 1911 grave of formerly enslaved woman Hollie Tatnell sits in the median of Wheelock Street and is the last remnant of a Black cemetery whose other…
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Adams-White Place
· 19.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Adams-White Place, built in 1896 by Horatio Adams, a notable citizen who worked in public relations in Washington D.C. The contractor was A.A. White. After 1911, it became known as the Dr. John…
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Lake Grove Community
· 19.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the old Lake Grove community, a place that started as a simple church, school, and cemetery for local farmers back in 1874. Ben Goodrich and H.H. Boone, a former Texas Attorney General,…
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Waugh Campground
· 19.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Waugh Campground, a place that saw more than just Sunday sermons. Originally given to the Methodist church by the Isaac S. Addison family, this spot was named for Bishop Beverly Waugh,…
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Hearne, TX
· 19.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Hearne, a town with roots stretching back to the days of Texas independence. Land here was originally granted to José Francisco Ruiz, who commanded Fort Tenoxtitlán in 1830. But the town as we…
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Salter, Charles P.
· 19.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Robertson County, and right here, in Hearne, a clever plan was hatched to help the Confederacy during the Civil War. Charles P. Salter, a wealthy planter and Confederate officer, was tasked with…
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Townsend, William Parnell
· 19.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Robertson County, Texas, a place that became a major cotton producer thanks to men like William Parnell Townsend. Townsend arrived here in 1852, and by 1860, he'd more than doubled his enslaved…
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Westbrook Plantation
· 19.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving south of Hearne, right here in Robertson County, past the site of the old Westbrook Plantation. This land was developed starting in 1858 by Lewis Whitfield Carr, who came from Mississippi. He bought up…
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Lewis, Charles
· 19.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Robertson County, and right here in Hearne, you're passing through a town that owes a lot to planter and legislator Charles Lewis. Lewis first came to Texas in 1852, eventually settling in…
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First Baptist Church of Hearne
· 19.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the First Baptist Church of Hearne, a congregation that's been a cornerstone of this community for over a century. It all began on April 18th, 1869, with just eleven charter members, originally…
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Swisher, James Gibson
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Robertson's Colony, and right here in Tenoxtitlan, in what is now Burleson County, James Gibson Swisher made his mark. Arriving in Texas in 1833, Swisher was no stranger to conflict,…
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Twin Sisters
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Burleson County, but back in 1835, this was a crucial spot for Texas independence. Right here, Texas agents were raising funds to buy two iron cannons from supporters in Cincinnati,…
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Fort Tenoxtitlan
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Burleson County, near where the Old San Antonio Road once crossed the Brazos River. Right here, in 1830, stood Fort Tenoxtitlan. It was built by the Mexican government, part of a plan to bring…
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Isbell, William
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Central Texas, and right here, in what is now Burleson County, is Prairie Mound, the final resting place of William Isbell. Isbell fought for Texas independence, serving in the battle of San…
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Oldham, William
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Burleson County, and right here is the site of Fort Oldham. In the 1830s and 40s, Major William Oldham's homestead became a refuge for settlers during Indian alarms. It was known as 'Fort Oldham.'…
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Olney, Joseph Graves
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Burleson County, the birthplace of Joseph Graves Olney. Born in 1849, Olney wasn't your average rancher. By 1874, he was embroiled in a dispute that ended with him shooting a man in…
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Woman Suffrage
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, a land where women have long been partners in hardship and work, but not in politics. For decades, the idea of woman suffrage was a radical notion, seen by many as a threat to the social…
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Site of Piedmont Springs Resort
· 19.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Anderson, and you might have missed it, but not too long ago, this area was famous for its sulphur springs. As early as 1850, Piedmont Springs Resort opened, drawing folks looking for health…
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Piedmont Springs: A Vanished Resort
· 19.5 mi
Where there's nothing now, there was once a grand resort. Piedmont Springs drew crowds to its sulfur springs as early as 1850, and in 1860 a four-story hotel with a hundred rooms went up. Guests played billiards and…
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Allen, Robert Cyrus
· 19.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Hearnewood, a Victorian home built in 1900. Robert Cyrus Allen, a prominent merchant and banker, had this house constructed as a wedding present for his bride. Allen was also instrumental in…
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Cooks Point, TX
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Burleson County, on State Highway 21, and you're passing through Cooks Point. This community is one of the oldest in the county, named for Silas L. Cooke, who surveyed here during the days of the…
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Frenstat, TX
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through southern Burleson County, and right here is the site of Frenstat. In the mid-1830s, settlement began in this area, but it was in 1884 that Czech Catholic families, emigrating from Frenštát,…
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Hogg, TX
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through western Burleson County, not far from Caldwell. Right here, you're passing through the area that was once Hogg. Settlement began back in the early 1860s, with the White family establishing the…
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Moseley's Ferry
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near the Brazos River, and right here is where a vital crossing once served travelers on the Old San Antonio Road. For years, ferries were the main way to cross this wide river. This spot was known as…
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Pittsbridge, TX
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through eastern Burleson County, not far from where the Brazos River flows. Right here, the community of Pittsbridge sprang up after the Civil War, named for a man named Pitt who superintended a vital…
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Chriesman, TX
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Burleson County, and right here is the community of Chriesman. It started back in the 1830s as Yellow Prairie, named for the tall, golden grasses that carpeted this land. When the railroad arrived…
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Sebesta, TX
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Burleson County, near what's now Snook. This spot was once known as Sebesta's Corner. Back in the 1880s, Czech families settled here, forming an all-Czech community. They built a cooperative…
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Whittaker, TX
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Burleson County, near the Brazos River. Right here was once the farming community of Whittaker. It sprang up in the late 1800s, near a massive plantation, and a post office opened in 1891. Soon,…
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St. Phillips Episcopal
· 19.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're passing St. Phillips Episcopal Church in Hearne. Two families, the Wadsworths and the Wilkerson, moved here from Matagorda and founded this church back in 1871. It was named for the Rev. J. W. Philips, who…
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Allen Hardware Store
· 19.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hearne, and right here is the Allen Hardware Store, built way back in 1872. Originally bought from the railroad company, this place has seen a lot of owners. But R.A. Allen took over in 1891, and…
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A Century of the Methodist Church
· 19.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hearne, where Methodism has been a cornerstone for over a century. The church here organized way back in November of 1870. In 1885, they built their first church right on this spot. Fast forward…
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Josef Masik
· 19.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Caldwell, and right here is the story of Josef Masik, the very first Czech teacher in Texas. Born way back in 1810 in Moravia, he was certified to teach at just sixteen! He came to Texas in 1855,…
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City of Hearne
· 19.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past Hearne, a town that owes its start to a railroad and a promise. It all began on land granted back in 1830 to Francisco Ruiz. The real push started with S. Code Brown, who ran a tavern, store, and…
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Nashville
· 19.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Milam County, and just ahead is the site of Nashville, Texas. Surveyed in the fall of 1835, this was meant to be the capital of Robertson's Colony. It was named for Nashville, Tennessee, the…