64 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
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Hamilton, TX
Hamilton is more than just a blip on the map between bigger cities. You see the rolling hills rise up to just over a thousand feet, and you understand why folks settled here. It’s a place where the Leon River provides,…
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Knights of Pythias Lodge Hall
· Historical Marker
You're cruising through Hamilton, and you're passing the old Knights of Pythias Lodge Hall. Built around 1900 by C. W. Cotton, this place started life as a simple one-story building for shops. But in 1913, they added a…
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Saint Mary's Episcopal Church
· Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton, and right here is the site of Saint Mary's Episcopal Church. This wasn't just any church; it was the very first Episcopal church in all of Hamilton County! Services kicked off back in…
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Manning-Gordon-Henderson House
· 0.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton, and you might catch a glimpse of the Manning-Gordon-Henderson House. Built between 1880 and 1885 by local contractor Louis V. Manning, this home has seen a few families call it their…
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2025 UIL 2A Division 1 Football State Champions
· 0.2 mi
Hamilton High School (Hamilton, TX): Most recent: 21-7 over Joaquin · 2025 2A Division 1 final.
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Brushy Bill Grave
· 0.2 mi · Web
Twenty miles south of Hico in the Hamilton city cemetery, there's a headstone that reads William Henry Roberts, also known as Billy the Kid. The marker went up in the early two thousands, replacing the original. Whether…
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Waerenskjold, Elise
· 0.2 mi · Historical Marker
Influential early promoter of Norwegian emigration to Texas; born Elise Tvede in 1815. In 1846, after John Reiersen migrated to Texas to found the first Norwegian settlement in the state, she became editor of his…
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Hamilton National bank
· 0.2 mi · Historical Marker
J. T. James and Z. C. Law had the town's first drugstore in 1876. Law appointed postmaster, used a small safe in official duties. In 1881 Dr. George Perry bought Law's interest, but the safe remained in the store. The…
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Hamilton County Courthouse
· 0.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton, and right here is the Hamilton County Courthouse. Before this impressive limestone building went up in 1887, this county government bounced around! They met in stores, a livery stable,…
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Moore, Billy [Tiny]
· 0.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
Billy "Tiny" Moore, mandolinist and fiddler, was born on May 12, 1920, in Hamilton County, Texas. Moore's mother and grandfather taught him piano, fiddle, and guitar during his childhood. As an adolescent he backed his…
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Hamilton County
· 0.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
Hamilton County, in Central Texas, is bounded on the north by Comanche, Erath, and Johnson counties, on the west by Mills County, and on the south by Lampasas and Coryell counties. Its center lies at 31°47' north…
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Hamilton, TX (Hamilton County)
· 0.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Hamilton, the county seat of Hamilton County. The first settlers arrived here in 1855, opening the first store the same year. The town was named for South Carolina governor James Hamilton. Growth…
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Boynton, Charles Milton
· 0.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Hamilton, Texas, the heart of Hamilton County. Right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1877</say-as>, Charles Milton Boynton, a teacher who'd moved around the country, bought the…
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Wallace, Benjamin Rush
· 0.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Shelby County, and right here, in 1843, a town was born: Hamilton. Benjamin Rush Wallace, a pioneer lawyer and businessman who’d settled in San Augustine, was part of the company…
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United Methodist Church
· 0.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Hamilton's United Methodist Church. The congregation formed in the 1850s, with pioneer ministers braving hostile Indians to serve the early members. They worshipped in various places…
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Hamilton - 2025 Texas 2A Division I state football champion
· 0.4 mi · Sports News
Hamilton defeated Joaquin 21-7 for the 2025 Texas 2A Division I state football championship.
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Waerenskjold, Elise
· 0.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Hamilton, where a remarkable woman named Elise Waerenskjold made her mark. From <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1846</say-as> to <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1895</say-as>, her…
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Whitney, Ann
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
Elizabeth (Ann) Whitney, a native of Missouri, accepted a teaching position at a newly erected rural school located about seven miles north of present day Hamilton in 1867. This school, called the Leon River School, was…
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Durham, John J. ("Jack")
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton, and right here is where John J. "Jack" Durham made his mark. Born in Alabama in 1833, Durham arrived in Texas in 1857, eventually settling in Hamilton in 1860. He wasn't just a settler;…
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Twin Oaks
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Twin Oaks, a historic home built in 1904 by Dr. Chas. C. Baker. Baker wasn't just the city's first resident dentist; he was also a descendant of Dallas' founding Beeman family and a Republican state…
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Gentry, Frederick B.
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton, Texas, home of Frederick B. Gentry. Gentry fought in the Texas War for Independence back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1836</say-as>. After the war, he didn't hang up his…
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Whitney, Ann
· 0.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton, Texas, passing the site where a remarkable woman named Ann Whitney met her end in July of 1867. Ann was a teacher at a frontier school, known for her stout build and engaging…
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Baker, William Thatcher
· 0.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton County, heading past the site of where William Thatcher Baker made his mark. Born in Ohio in 1850, Baker headed to Texas, eventually settling near Dallas and marrying the daughter of a…
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Tone, Thomas J.
· 0.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once wild Texas frontier, and right here, in what is now Hamilton County, was land granted to Thomas J. Tone. He was one of Stephen F. Austin's original colonists, arriving in the 1820s.…
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Jonesboro, TX
· 0.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Jonesboro, Texas, a community that started life as Jones Mill. In 1866, brothers William and David Jones built a sawmill and gristmill right here on the Leon River. After the Civil War, families…
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Lampasas River
· 0.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Hamilton County, near the headwaters of the Lampasas River. This very water you see may have been first charted by Spaniards way back in 1721, during the Aguayo expedition. They found it forming…
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Hamilton County
· 1.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton County, a place with a bit of a backstory. It was first created way back in 1842, carved out of Montgomery and Houston counties. But that didn't stick. It was recreated and officially…
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Fairy, Texas
· 5.2 mi · Things to Do
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Durham Ranch House
· 6.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton, and you might just pass the site of the old Durham Ranch House. Built in 1873 by John Jefferson Durham, this two-story rock colonial residence was more than just a home. Durham himself…
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St. Paul's Lutheran Church
· 6.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton, where German immigrants settled in the late 1800s. In 1886, fourteen families organized St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran congregation. Their first worship service was in a schoolhouse,…
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Hamilton County, C.S.A.
· 7.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton County, Texas, a place that organized in 1858. By the start of the Civil War, its residents voted overwhelmingly for secession. Sixty farmers formed the Hamilton County Minutemen, and…
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Andrew Miller
· 8.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Gentry's Mill, a place settled by folks like Andrew Miller. Born in Virginia in 1823, Miller came to Texas as a young man and put down roots near here in 1856. He wasn't just a settler; Miller…
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Shive
· 8.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton County, passing through what was once the growing town of Shive. Settled in the 1870s by families like the Connels and McKinleys, Shive quickly established itself. The first school, Union…
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West, Dr. Wm. Madison
· 10.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton County, folks. Keep an eye out for West Point Cemetery – it's named after Dr. William Madison West. He came to this area in 1874 after studying medicine by apprenticeship back in…
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Toliver Cemetery
· 11.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Comanche County, just west of Lamkin. Look for the Toliver Cemetery, a final resting place for some of this area's very first families. Among them is James H. Neel, who brought his family here way…
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Scott, Gayle
· 11.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Comanche County, near Lamkin, where geologist Gayle Scott was born in 1894. Scott fought in World War I, saw action in France, and was even cited for courage. But his real battlefield was the…
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Trinity Lutheran Church
· 11.7 mi · Historical Marker
German Lutherans in the Pottsville area formed a congregation in 1891. They held services in a schoolhouse until they built their first sanctuary near Pottsville in 1907. Worship was conducted in German until 1929.
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Union Primitive Baptist Church
· 11.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Union Primitive Baptist Church, organized way back in 1892. Charter members and early pastors are listed on the marker, with Elder Len Dalton serving as pastor for most of the time…
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Capt. John Stephen Potts
· 12.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton County, past the town of Pottsville, named for Captain John Stephen Potts. Born in Tennessee in 1816, Potts was a man of many hats: justice of the peace, sheriff in Missouri, and a…
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Martin's Gap
· 13.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton County, passing Martin's Gap. This rugged spot was named for Jim Martin, a frontiersman who met his end here in the 1860s, killed by Indians. Back then, this whole county had fewer than…
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Dutchman's Hidden Valley
· 13.0 mi · Things to Do
Roadside country store and deli on US Highway 281 north of Hamilton. Known for sourdough sandwiches, pie, and a Hill Country general-store vibe.
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Fairy Cemetery
· 13.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton County, passing the site of Fairy Cemetery. It wasn't always called Fairy. Back in the 1860s, this area was known as Martin's Gap, named after a man reportedly killed by Native Americans.…
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Grubb, Wiley Parker
· 13.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Ireland, Texas, and the name Wiley Parker Grubb might ring a bell. Born in Walker County in 1846, Grubb joined the Texas Rangers at just 17 years old. He fought in the battle of Dove Creek near San…
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Jonesboro High School — State Softball 2026
· 15.7 mi
Jonesboro High School in Jonesboro, Texas qualified for the 2026 UIL state softball championships, reaching the state tournament (final four) in Class one A.
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Evant, TX
· 15.7 mi · Local history
Evant, Texas, sits up a bit higher than you might expect, a little over 1,200 feet above sea level. That slight elevation makes a difference in the summer, a touch cooler than down in the lowlands. The town owes its…
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Evant
· 15.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Evant, a town with a name that's a bit of a puzzle. It all started back in 1855 with a settlement called Langford Cove. Then, in 1876, Evan T. Brooks and his family arrived. By 1881, Brooks platted…
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Gholson, Benjamin F.
· 16.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Coryell County, near Evant, where Benjamin F. Gholson lived a long life, witnessing incredible change in Texas. Born in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1842</say-as>, Gholson served with…
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Cranfills Gap, TX
· 17.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Cranfills Gap, a town named for George Eaton Cranfill, who settled near here way back in 1851. The community really got its start in 1879 when a post office was moved into the area. Imagine, a…
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Wood Cemetery
· 17.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Wood Cemetery, likely named for educator D. R. Wood. It was established in 1858 with the burial of Sarah E. Shipman, wife of rancher John K. Shipman. The cemetery still serves descendants today and…
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Old Hico
· 18.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Old Hico, settled back in 1856. John Q. Anderson, M.A. Fuller, and the Barbee and Malone families were among the very first to call this Honey Creek settlement home. Just four years…
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Hurst Ranch Cemetery
· 18.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hamilton County, near Shive. The Hurst Ranch Cemetery was established around 1880. It was recognized as a Historic Texas Cemetery in 2010.
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Site of Swann Hill School
· 18.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Energy, Texas, near where Swann Hill School once stood. Back around 1900, John Henry Swann donated this land, hoping local kids wouldn't have to trek miles to school. So, the old Little Valley…
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Bertrand, John Paney
· 18.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Purmela, and just off the road here is the story of John Raney Bertrand. Born before the Texas Revolution to French immigrants, Bertrand first partnered in a mercantile business. But when the…
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Rinehart, Nolan Arthur [Cowboy Slim]
· 19.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Comanche County, not far from Gustine, where Cowboy Slim Rinehart was born. He became known as the 'King of Border Radio,' singing hillbilly songs from Mexican stations like XEPN near Eagle Pass.…
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Gustine, TX
· 19.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Gustine, Texas, a town born from a move. Settled around 1873 as Old Evergreen, the community packed up and relocated to its current spot in the early 1890s. Why the move? To take advantage of a…
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Turnbow Cemetery
· 19.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Turnbow Cemetery, which began as a family burial ground in 1879. It was the final resting place for Chesley Turnbow, a patriarch of the local family, and many of his descendants. Though…
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Wiseman House Chocolates
· 19.8 mi · Web
Inside a restored Victorian house from nineteen oh eight, an artist turned chocolatier named Kevin Wenzel has been hand making truffles since nineteen ninety six. He studied fine art across Europe and Asia, then learned…
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Hamilton-Soules House
· 19.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Hamilton-Soules House in Star, a home that's been a focal point for community life since it was built around 1900. Thomas Edgar Hamilton, a cotton gin operator and bookkeeper who later became a…
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Koffee Kup Family Restaurant
· 19.9 mi · Web
The Koffee Kup opened in nineteen sixty eight and has been the heart of Hico ever since. What put it on the map is the meringue. Four inches tall, stiff as a snowdrift, the result of three years of testing and a recipe…
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Don Edwards — Hico, Texas
· 19.9 mi · Biography
Country and western singer Don Edwards spent his final years right here in Hico. He wasn't born here — he came into the world as Donald Edward Hezlitt in Boonton, New Jersey, in 1939. But at sixteen he ran off west to…
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The Bertelsen House
· 19.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Bertelsen House, a testament to Norwegian settlement here in Cranfills Gap. The stone part of this home went up in the 1880s for Andres Johnson, likely built by Andrew Mickelson. Then, Bertel and…
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Murrell School
· 19.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the old Murrell School, a testament to education in rural Coryell County. Many early settlers here hailed from Sardis, Mississippi, forming a community named for Postmaster Joe Ater.…
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First United Methodist Church of Hico
· 19.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the First United Methodist Church of Hico. Organized in 1881 with 29 members, the congregation held early services in the local schoolhouse. After fundraising and a land donation, their first…
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Billy the Kid Museum
· 20.0 mi · Web
In nineteen forty nine, an old man in Hico named Brushy Bill Roberts went public with a wild claim. He was Billy the Kid. Said Pat Garrett shot the wrong man back in eighteen eighty one and pocketed the reward. Brushy…