154 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
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Linden, TX
· Local history
Linden, Texas, sits nestled in the rolling hills of East Texas, not far from Cypress Creek, which winds its way toward the Red River. The town was established in 1848 and given its name for the beautiful linden trees…
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Cass County Courthouse (Texas)
· 0.1 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Hold onto your hats, folks, because you're about to see Texas history standing tall! The Cass County Courthouse in Linden isn't just old, it's the oldest continuously operating antebellum courthouse in the entire state.…
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Walker, Aaron Thibeaux [T-Bone]
· 0.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
T-Bone Walker also known as Oak Cliff T-Bone, the only son of Rance and Movelia (Jamison, Jimerson) Walker, was born Aaron Thibeaux Walker in Linden, Texas, on May 28, 1910. Looking for a better future for her son, his…
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Linden, TX
· 0.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Linden, the county seat of Cass County, and right here is where a town was born out of a boundary dispute. Back in 1852, when the map of Texas was redrawn, the old county seat, Jefferson, ended up…
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Henry, Robert Lee
· 0.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bowie County, and right here in Linden, Robert Lee Henry got his start. Born in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1864</say-as>, he was a lawyer and politician who even served nine terms in…
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Wood, Jeremiah M.
· 0.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Cass County, Texas, where the town of Linden got its name from a Tennessee hometown. That's thanks to Jeremiah M. Wood, who moved here from Perry County, Tennessee, in 1849. Wood was a busy man in…
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Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Linden-Kildare (Linden)
· 0.6 mi
Linden-Kildare (Linden, TX) placed on the 2A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Maddox Hankins (0.537 avg).
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Civilian Conservation Corps at Linden
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
As part of the New Deal's efforts to offer unemployed workers jobs on public projects, President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the United States Congress created the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in March 1933. Three…
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Pleasant Hill School
· 3.4 mi · Historical Marker
Pleasant Hill is one of the oldest African-American communities in Texas. Pleasant Hill Baptist Church was organized in 1843. Prominent church members donated this land beside the Old Monterey Road, and a frame church…
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Baker, Cullen Montgomery
· 5.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
Cullen Montgomery Baker, infamous desperado and guerilla, the son of John and Elizabeth Baker, was born in Weakley County, Tennessee, probably on June 22, 1835. The family moved to Texas in 1839 and eventually settled…
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Trammel's Trace
· 5.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
Trammel’s Trace, an early road into Texas, ran from the Red River to Nacogdoches where it met the Camino Real de los Tejas ( see OLD SAN ANTONIO ROAD ). The trace had two points of origin—one at Pecan Point, Texas, and…
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Cass County
· 5.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Cass County, right on the Texas border with Arkansas and Louisiana. This place has a name that changed with the political winds! Originally named Cass County in 1846, honoring a US Senator, it was…
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Floyd Hill, TX
· 5.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Cass County, near Douglassville, on Farm Road 2345. Right here is the site of Floyd Hill, a community born from faith. In 1854, land was deeded for the Floyd's Hill Church, and a log church went…
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Cass County
· 6.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Cass County, Texas, a place that's worn two different names. Formed in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1846</say-as>, it was originally named for General Lewis Cass, a U.S. statesman who…
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Corinth Cemetery
· 6.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Corinth Cemetery, established in 1876 when the Watson family donated land for the Corinth Baptist Church. The earliest marked grave here is little Terrissa Ellington, who died in 1878. This cemetery…
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Masonic Lodge Hall and First Baptist Church
· 8.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're rolling through Kildare, Texas, where you can still see one of the oldest buildings in town. This structure, erected in 1878, was a joint project between the First Baptist Church and Jim's Bayou Lodge. Built from…
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Mount Zion Baptist Church of Christ
· 9.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving by Mount Zion Baptist Church of Christ, organized in 1851 with twelve members. This sanctuary was built in 1885, replacing the original log church. A historic cemetery next to it dates back to 1864.
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Whittaker Memorial Cemetery
· 9.6 mi · Historical Marker
This African American cemetery was once part of a large plantation owned by South Carolina native Willis Whitaker (Whittaker), who came to Texas in 1840 with his family and more than 50 slaves. Whitaker had acquired…
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Law's Chapel Methodist Church
· 9.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Law's Chapel Methodist Church, the very first Protestant church in this area. It was founded back in 1853 by George and Martha Law, pioneers who'd come all the way from Georgia. They…
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Floyds' Hill Church - Cemetery
· 10.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Cass County, past the site of Floyds' Hill Church and its cemetery. Back in 1854, Killis Floyd donated land for a Missionary Baptist congregation. They held services in a pioneer family's home…
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Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church
· 10.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hughes Springs, near where Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church began in 1861. Originally called Black Cypress Church, it organized in the community of Sardis. Members elected pastors yearly, with…
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Heard, John Robin, Cemetery
· 11.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the area where John Robin Heard established his family cemetery. Heard, a pioneer who arrived in Texas in 1853 and founded the town of Cussetta, donated the land for this burial ground. The first…
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Dennis Cemetery
· 12.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Cass County, passing the Dennis Cemetery. Eliza Ann Dennis was buried here on her family farm in 1873, and her husband Allen joined her in 1880. Their farm became a family cemetery, later expanded…
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Douglassville Baptist Church
· 12.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Douglassville, where this Baptist Church was organized back in 1869 with 14 charter members. They built their first church building in 1870, and that old frame chapel was later relocated in 1948.…
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Methodist Episcopal Church of Douglassville
· 12.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Douglassville. Area Methodists established a church here in 1856, shortly after the town was founded. The current building was erected in 1908 and later…
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Douglassville Cemetery
· 12.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Douglassville Cemetery, a place named for town founder John C. Douglass, who bought land here in 1855. The land for the cemetery itself was donated in 1850 by ferryman Williamson Petty. The oldest…
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Coleman, Bessie
· 13.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
Bessie Coleman (Brave Bessie or Queen Bess), the world's first licensed black pilot, daughter of Susan Coleman, was born in Atlanta, Texas, on January 26, 1892, the twelfth of thirteen children. She grew up in…
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Stuckey, Nathan Wright II [Nat]
· 13.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Cass County, Texas, where country music songwriter Nat Stuckey got his start. Born in 1933, Stuckey began as a radio DJ in Atlanta, Texas, before hitting the national charts. His song "Sweet…
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Atlanta, TX (Cass County)
· 13.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Atlanta, Texas, a town born from the railroad. In 1871, the Texas and Pacific Railway pushed through this area, and settlers, many from Atlanta, Georgia, followed. They named this new community…
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Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana Railway
· 13.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Cass County, near Atlanta, where a little railroad once connected two bigger lines. Chartered in 1897, the Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana Railway was just eight miles long, linking the Texas and…
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Avinger, TX
· 13.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Avinger, Texas, a town that owes its existence to a railroad and a name change. Right here, the East Line and Red River Railroad built a station in 1876. Before that, a settlement called Hickory…
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Atlanta, TX
· 13.6 mi
Atlanta, Texas. It sits right on the Louisiana line, a town steeped in East Texas charm and surprisingly rich in notable figures. You might not expect it, but quite a few folks who walked these streets went on to do…
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Atlanta-Miller Grade School
· 13.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the former Atlanta-Miller Grade School. Built in 1936 with federal Works Progress Administration funds, this school originally served white students. For decades, Atlanta operated…
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Heard, John Robin
· 14.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the John Robin Heard Cemetery, a place he himself donated land for back in 1861. Heard was a Georgia native who arrived in Texas in 1853, quickly becoming a key figure. He founded the…
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The Diamond Bessie Murder
· 14.3 mi · Things to Do
On a winter day in 1877 a well-dressed couple crossed the bridge over Cypress Bayou carrying a picnic basket. He was Abraham Rothschild heir to a jewelry…
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United Methodist Church of Atlanta
· 14.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Atlanta's United Methodist Church. Organized in 1873 under a brush arbor, the congregation built its first structure here in 1875. Over the years, the church saw several buildings, with…
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Liberty Cemetery, Old, and Site of Enon Primitive Baptist Church
· 14.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Old Liberty Cemetery, a resting place for folks dating back to 1850. It's also the site of the original Enon Primitive Baptist Church, organized way back in 1845. In 1861, church trustees got four…
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Cornett Cemetery
· 14.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Cornett Cemetery, a final resting place with roots going back to the 1850s. While the earliest burials happened then, the oldest headstone you can still read marks the grave of Mary Frances Hampton,…
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Stockade Case
· 14.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Marion County, and right here, in late 1868, a shocking act of violence unfolded. It started with the shooting of George W. Smith, a delegate to the Constitutional Convention, after a Republican…
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Ames, Harriet A. Moore Page Potter
· 14.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, maybe near Caddo Lake, and right here is the site of a remarkable woman's life. Harriet Ames arrived in Texas before the revolution, abandoned by her first husband. She survived on…
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Clarke, Edward A.
· 14.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, you're passing through the territory where two of the very first American-born Catholic priests began their ministry. Edward A. Clarke and his friend George W. Haydon…
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Ferry Lake
· 14.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past what we know today as Caddo Lake, but back in the Republic of Texas days, it was often called Ferry Lake. Imagine this: in the spring of 1800, a massive logjam on the Red River, known as the Great…
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Kellyville, TX
· 14.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Marion County, near Jefferson, and you're passing through the site of Kellyville. Back in the 1840s, this was known as Four-Mile Branch, a popular campsite for wagoners. But in 1848, Zachariah…
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Mims Chapel, TX (Marion County)
· 14.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Marion County, not far from Jefferson. Right here, back in 1847, you're looking at the site of the very first iron furnace in Texas! It was built by Jefferson S. Nash near what would become Mims…
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Nash's Iron Foundry
· 14.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Marion County, not far from where you are now, the first iron furnace and foundry in Texas once stood. Built in 1847 by Jefferson S. Nash, this ambitious venture aimed to tap into the region's…
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Whelan Site
· 14.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Marion County, not far from Jefferson, but the history here is now submerged beneath the waters of Lake O' the Pines. This was once the Whelan Site, a ceremonial center for Caddoan peoples dating…
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Lassater, TX
· 14.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Lassater, a community named for early settler Joe Lassater. This spot really got going around 1877 when the East Line and Red River Railroad arrived, bringing a post office. The town's name wasn't…
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Smithland, TX
· 14.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Marion County, heading northeast of Jefferson. Right here is Smithland, named for John Frank Smith, who settled this spot back in 1842. It started as a new site, with an earlier settlement nearby.…
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Savannah Cemetery
· 15.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Savannah Cemetery, which began as the family burial ground for Sofia Smith Whatley and her descendants. She moved to this area in the late 1800s to join her sons. The oldest marked grave here is an…
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Hughes Springs, TX
· 15.4 mi
Hughes Springs, Texas. It's a small town, nestled in the piney woods of northeast Texas, but its history is bigger than you might think. You wouldn't guess it driving through today, but this place has produced some real…
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Hughes Springs, TX
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Cass County, and right here is Hughes Springs, a town with a story shaped by nature's bounty and industry's ambition. It all started back in 1839 when Reese Hughes built his cabin near some…
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Hughes, Reece
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Cass County, not far from Hughes Springs. Right here, Reece Hughes built a life that defied expectations. He arrived in Texas in the late 1830s, becoming a major cotton planter and slaveholder.…
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Turner, Babe Kyro Lemon [Black Ace]
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, maybe near Hughes Springs, where a blues legend was born. Babe Kyro Lemon Turner, known as Black Ace, was born in 1905. He taught himself guitar, inspired by church music and…
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Patman, John William Wright
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, not far from where Wright Patman began his long career in public service. Born near Hughes Springs in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1893</say-as>, Patman went from local…
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Wooten, Mattie Lloyd Irvin
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Cass County, near Hughes Springs, the birthplace of Mattie Lloyd Irvin Wooten. Born in 1894, she became a groundbreaking scholar of Texas women's history. After earning her master's degree from…
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Queen City, TX
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Queen City, Texas, a town born from the railroad in 1877. It quickly became a hub, boasting sawmills, a gristmill, and even an iron foundry hoping to tap into local ore. That foundry didn't last,…
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Mathews - Powell House
· 15.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past a grand Victorian home, built in 1878 by William Franklin Mathews. Mathews was a Confederate veteran who came to Queen City right when it was founded, becoming a successful merchant. The house saw…
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Jefferson
· 16.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Jefferson, Texas, a town that was once the bustling river port of the entire state. Founded way back in 1836 and named for President Thomas Jefferson, this city hit its peak between 1846 and…
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Bell Factory
· 16.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Jefferson, where a simple log blacksmith shop in 1854 sparked a Texas innovation. This became the G. A. Kelly foundry, famous for making cowbells that jingled across the frontier with ox-team…
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Waterhouse, Richard
· 17.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Jefferson area, home to Richard Waterhouse, a man who saw action in two major American wars. Born in Tennessee in 1833, Waterhouse fought in the Mexican-American War before heading to Texas. When…
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Vines, John M.
· 17.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Jefferson, where John M. Vines once served as sheriff. But his most daring duty came in April of 1877. Vines was sent by the state of Texas all the way to Ohio to bring back Abe Rothschild.…
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Brantley, Hattie Rilla [H.R.]
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, near Jefferson, where Hattie Rilla Brantley was born. She dreamed of seeing the world, and in 1939, she joined the U.S. Army Nurse Corps. Just months before Pearl Harbor, Lieutenant…
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Jefferson, TX (Marion County)
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Jefferson, Texas, a town that owes its very existence to the water. Founded in the early 1840s, Jefferson became a booming riverport thanks to Big Cypress Creek and Caddo Lake. In fact, the first…
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Mabry, Hinche Parham Jr.
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Marion County, and right here in Jefferson, you're passing through the hometown of Hinche Parham Mabry Jr. He came to Texas as a young lawyer, but when the Civil War broke out, he answered the…
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Mittie Stephens
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near the Texas-Louisiana border, and right here on Caddo Lake, a terrible tragedy unfolded on the night of February 12th, 1869. The sidewheel steamboat Mittie Stephens, carrying 107 passengers and crew,…
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Slaughter, Marion Try II [Vernon Dalhart]
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, near Jefferson, the hometown of Vernon Dalhart. Born Marion Try Slaughter II, he grew up on a ranch and learned to ride and shoot. But his real talent was singing. After moving to…
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Smith, George Washington
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Jefferson, Texas, a town with a dark chapter in its past. Right here, George Washington Smith, a Union soldier turned merchant and politician, found himself at the center of a violent storm after…
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Freeman Plantation
· 17.2 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Prepare to step back in time to the Freeman Plantation, a grand reminder of a bygone era. Construction on this impressive Greek Revival mansion finished around 1850. It became the heart of a working plantation. The…
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Andrews, Julius A.
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, not far from Jefferson, where a young man named Julius Andrews arrived before the Civil War. Born in Georgia, he moved to Louisiana and then here to Texas, enlisting in the Confederate…
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Armistead, William Thomas
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Jefferson, Texas, and right here is where one of the most notorious murder trials in Texas history unfolded. In 1878, William Thomas Armistead, a rising Texas politician and lawyer, was one of the…
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Big Cypress Creek (Franklin County)
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Jefferson, Texas, a town that owes its very existence to the waters of Big Cypress Bayou. For decades, this waterway was the lifeblood of North and East Texas, forming the final link in a chain of…
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Black, Harvey H.
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, near Jefferson, the home of Captain Harvey Black's "Marion Rifles." These were the very first troops from Texas to join the Confederate army, mustering in May of <say-as…
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Crump, Richard Phillip
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Marion County, maybe near Jefferson, and right here is a place tied to the dramatic life of Richard Phillip Crump. He was a soldier for Texas, fighting in the Republic's Snively Expedition in…
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Davidson, James
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas right now, and back in the early 1870s, this area was under strict military rule. James Davidson, the Adjutant General of Texas, was tasked with bringing order. He organized the State…
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Kelly Plow Company
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, a region that once forged the very tools that tilled this land. Right here, near Jefferson, you're passing through the heart of where the Kelly Plow Company got its start. Back in…
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Kelly, George Addison
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Marion County, and right here in Jefferson is where George Addison Kelly arrived in 1852, fresh off a steamship. He quickly found work at a small iron foundry, making crude plows. But Kelly saw a…
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Mabry, Woodford Haywood
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Jefferson, Texas, a town that was home to Woodford Haywood Mabry. Born here in 1856, Mabry became a key figure in the Texas military. As Adjutant General, he whipped the Frontier Battalion of the…
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Marion County
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Marion County, and right here is Jefferson, a town that owes its very existence to a giant mess of logs. Before the 1840s, the Red River was choked by a massive logjam known as the Red River Raft.…
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McReynolds, James Harris, Jr. [Harry]
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, maybe near Jefferson, where you'll find the resting place of Major James Harris McReynolds. He was a key leader of the Ninth Texas Infantry, a regiment that saw some of the fiercest…
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Nelson, Steady
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, maybe near Jefferson, the birthplace of Horace "Steady" Nelson. Born in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1913</say-as>, Nelson became a jazz trumpeter who found fame with the…
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Nineteenth Texas Infantry
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Northeast Texas, a region that sent its sons to fight for the Confederacy. Right here, in the spring of 1862, men from ten counties, including Marion and Cass, gathered to form the Nineteenth…
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Rogers, James Harrison
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, maybe near Jefferson, where James Harrison Rogers settled back in 1843. He wasn't just any lawyer; Rogers was a brigadier general in the Texas militia, a judge on the Texas Supreme…
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Saufley, William Patton
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, maybe near Jefferson, where William Patton Saufley made his mark. He was a merchant, a state senator, and a Confederate officer. Saufley's unit, known as 'Saufley's Scouting…
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Taylor, Marion Dekalb
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, perhaps near Jefferson, where a prominent doctor and politician named Marion Dekalb Taylor made his mark. He arrived here in 1847, eventually serving an incredible twenty-four years in…
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Culberson, David Browning
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Northeast Texas, not far from Jefferson, the town where David Browning Culberson made his home and built a long career. Born in Georgia, Culberson moved to Texas in 1856, eventually settling in…
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Eighteenth Texas Infantry
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, near Jefferson, where the Eighteenth Texas Infantry was organized in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1862</say-as>. This unit, also known as Ochiltree's regiment, spent its…
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Epperson, Benjamin Holland
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, perhaps near Jefferson, and you might be passing the House of the Seasons. This unique Italian villa-style home was built in 1872 by Benjamin Holland Epperson, a prominent lawyer and…
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Foscue, Benjamin Daniel
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Jackson County, Texas, a place that saw Benjamin Daniel Foscue serve in the Ninth Texas Legislature starting in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1861</say-as>. But Foscue didn't…
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Loughery, Robert W.
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, and right here in Jefferson, you're passing through the stomping grounds of Robert W. Loughery, a newspaperman who made a big impact in the late 1800s. He started his Texas career in…
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Maxey, Thomas Sheldon
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Jefferson, Texas, a town that once hosted a significant figure in Texas legal history: Thomas Sheldon Maxey. After serving in the Confederate Army and earning law degrees, Maxey settled here in…
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Penn, William Evander
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Jefferson, Texas, a town that became home to William Evander Penn, a man known as the 'Texas Evangelist.' Penn served as a Confederate soldier, even being captured in 1864. After the war, he…
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Taylor, Ennis Ward
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, maybe near Fort Worth, and you're passing through the territory of Ennis Ward Taylor. Born in Alabama in 1839, Taylor came to Texas as a child and settled in Jefferson. He was a…
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Todd, George T.
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas now, near Jefferson, where a Confederate soldier named George T. Todd fought with Hood's Texas Brigade. He signed up as a private in May of <say-as interpret-as="date"…
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Duncan, John Martin
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, maybe near Jefferson or Longview, where lawyer and statesman John Martin Duncan made his mark. He arrived in Marion County back in 1858, working in an iron foundry during the Civil…
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Jefferson and Northwestern Railway
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, and right here, the story of the Jefferson and Northwestern Railway unfolds. Chartered in 1899, this railroad aimed to connect Jefferson with towns like Linden and Naples. For decades,…
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Ochiltree, William Beck
· 17.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, maybe near Jefferson. You're passing through a place that was home to William Beck Ochiltree, a man who wore many hats in 19th-century Texas. He arrived in Nacogdoches in 1839,…
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Confederate Civil War Meat Packing Plant
· 17.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Jefferson, Texas, where during the Civil War, a meat packing plant played a crucial role for the Confederacy. Located about two miles southwest of here, J. B. Dunn's operation dressed, packed, and…
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Magnolias
· 17.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Magnolias, a house built in 1867 by Lucy Ann Alley. She was married to Dan Alley, who donated half of Jefferson's townsite! This grand home still stands, boasting handmade columns, massive hewn…
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Jefferson Historic District (Jefferson, Texas)
· 17.4 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Step back in time as you enter the Jefferson Historic District, a living testament to Texas history! This area, encompassing 107 acres in central Jefferson, earned its place on the National Register of Historic Places…
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Perry, William
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former home of Captain William Perry, built in the 1850s. Perry commanded riverboats when Jefferson was the largest inland port in Texas. Imagine the steamboats lining the docks, bringing goods…
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Perry, Captain William
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, a town that owes a lot to Captain William Perry. He arrived around 1840 and became a key player in making this an inland port. Perry dredged the Big Cypress Bayou, boosting shipping and…
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Sagamore
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Jefferson, and right here is the Sagamore cottage, built way back in 1852. This frontier home has a cool connection to Texas innovation. Its owner, Henry Scott, wasn't just living the pioneer…
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Rowell Family Home
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Rowell Family Home in Jefferson, a clapboard cottage with some really ornate trim. It’s seen a lot of history, starting out as a tavern before Dr. R. E. Rowell’s family bought it in 1856. It’s…
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First Baptist Church of Jefferson
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, a town with a rich past. Look to your right for the site of the First Baptist Church. Organized way back in 1855 as the Missionary Baptist Church, this congregation held services in all…
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Preston Home
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Jefferson, and right here stands the Preston Home, built in the mid-1800s by J. C. Preston, a pioneer druggist. This house later became home to Judge Seborn Moseley and his family, who lived here…
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Capt. William E. Singleton House
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Capt. William E. Singleton House in Jefferson, built in the 1860s. Notice its unique cruciform, or cross-shaped, plan, a design that evolved back in 17th century Virginia. This impressive home…
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Torrans-Clopton-Spellings House
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, a town with a rich past. Look to your right, and you'll see the Torrans-Clopton-Spellings House. Built in the 1860s by William P. Torrans, this Greek Revival home has seen a lot of…
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Walker, R.B.
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former home of R.B. Walker, a prominent Jefferson merchant and former mayor. Walker had this impressive Classical Revival style house built for his family in <say-as interpret-as="date"…
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Knightwood
· 17.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Knightwood, a grand house built in 1852 by Colonel Henry Mimms as a wedding gift for his daughter. This wasn't just a home; it was a hub of local culture. Imagine the scene: the Men's Harmony Club…
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Terry, W.S.
· 17.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, and you're passing the former home of one of Texas's most important Masons. This house was built before 1850 for B. J. Terry, who served as the Grand Master of the Masonic Lodge of…
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Jefferson - The Town That Lost Everything
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
In the 1870s, Jefferson was the biggest city in Texas. Steamboats lined its riverfront on Big Cypress Bayou, which connected to the Red River and from there to the Mississippi and New Orleans. Cotton, iron, and timber…
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The Great Raft That Built a City
· 17.6 mi · Things to Do
For centuries an 80-mile logjam called the Great Raft choked the Red River so completely that it backed water all the way up into Caddo Lake. That accidental…
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Diamond Bessie Murder Trial - Jefferson
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
In January 1877, a well-dressed couple checked into the Brooks House hotel in Jefferson. He signed the register as A. Monroe. She wore diamonds on every finger and was known on the circuit as Diamond Bessie. They…
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Brooks House
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Jefferson, and you might just catch a glimpse of the Brooks House, built back in 1872. This Victorian beauty, with its long galleries and four gables, wasn't just a house – it was a hotel. It…
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Jefferson Ordnance Magazine
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Jefferson Ordnance Magazine, a relic from the Civil War. Built to safely store gunpowder and munitions, this single-room brick structure was designed with security and ventilation in mind. It…
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Texas Second City on the Bayou
· 17.6 mi · Things to Do
Picture this: its 1850 and youre standing on the banks of Big Cypress Bayou watching a parade of steamboats stacked high with cotton bales. Jefferson was no…
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Mardi Gras Upriver Since 1871
· 17.6 mi · Things to Do
Jeffersons bond with New Orleans ran deeper than just cotton money. Those steamboat captains carried the spirit of the French Quarter right up the bayou and in…
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Austin Street Mercantile
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Jefferson, a town that was once the greatest inland port in the Southwest! Look for the Austin Street Mercantile building, likely erected before 1866. This place was a hub, housing offices, a…
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First National Bank of Jefferson
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, a town with a banking history that weathered the Great Depression. Look around this block – it’s seen a lot of financial comings and goings! Thomas J. Rogers, a Civil War captain,…
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Rosebud Saloon, Old
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, a town that remembers its wilder days. Back in 1854, this spot was home to the Rosebud Saloon. It wasn't just a place to wet your whistle; it was the notorious rendezvous for judges,…
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Texas First Ice Factory
· 17.6 mi · Things to Do
Imagine living in the sweltering East Texas heat of the 1860s where the only ice you ever saw came on a ship from New England — if it arrived at all. Then…
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Alley-McKay House
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, a town founded by Daniel Nelson Alley. About 1851, Alley built this very home, a classic example of Greek Revival architecture. It features a central hall plan with four rooms. Later,…
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Beard House
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Beard House, built in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1860</say-as>. Notice how the kitchen is detached? That was the custom in the Old South, a way to keep the heat and the smells of…
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Clark, William
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, and right here is the home of William Clark, a prominent local figure. The original back rooms of this house are thought to have been built even before 1852, possibly by Jefferson's…
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Federal Building
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, and right here is a building that served a vital role in the post-Civil War era. Erected in 1869, this was the very first Federal Court and Custom House in the region. It wasn't just…
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Rowell Home
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Rowell Home in Jefferson, built around 1862 by civic leader Q. Bateman. Imagine this place lit by gaslight – it still has original fixtures! A. H. Rowell bought the home in 1884. It's a rare…
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Rainey, S. D.
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the S. D. Rainey House in Jefferson, built in 1880. This place showcases a unique midwestern rococo architectural style. It became a hub of social life in 1886 when it became known as the R. S. Terry…
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Jefferson Turn Basin
· 17.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, and right here is the historic Turn Basin. Imagine this wide lagoon in Cypress Bayou as the bustling heart of the southwest's greatest inland port! Back in 1844, the steamer 'Lama' was…
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Spielberg Fled the Excelsior House
· 17.7 mi · Things to Do
The Excelsior House has been hosting guests since the 1850s and most of them sleep just fine. Steven Spielberg was not one of them. The story goes that the…
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The Grove — Americas Most Haunted House
· 17.7 mi · Things to Do
Built in 1861 in the middle of Jeffersons boom years The Grove looks like any other graceful Southern home from the outside. Inside is another story entirely.…
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Last Confederate Powder Magazine in Texas
· 17.7 mi · Things to Do
In 1863 with the Civil War grinding on the Confederacy needed a safe place to store gunpowder and ammunition deep in the Texas interior. They built an ordnance…
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The Jefferson Hotel
· 17.7 mi · Things to Do
One of the most haunted hotels in the South. Built in the 1850s in the once-booming riverport of Jefferson. Guests report phantom footsteps slamming doors and…
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First Artificial Gas Lights in Texas
· 17.7 mi · Things to Do
In 1867 while most Texas towns were still stumbling around by candlelight Jefferson decided it deserved better. Workers built a gas works where they stuffed…
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Planters Bank
· 17.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, a town that was once a major hub for Texas commerce. Look around for remnants of its past glory. Right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1852</say-as>, stood the warehouse…
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Todd-Terhune Residence
· 17.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, past a house that's seen a lot of history. Built in 1856 or 1857 by C.S. Sabine, it's a classic Greek Revival design. Just a year later, it was bought by District Judge William S. Todd,…
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Falling Leaves, 1855
· 17.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Jefferson, and right here is the site of Falling Leaves, a home with a long history. The original four rooms and a hall were built in 1855. Over the years, it saw additions, including a long ell…
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Jay Goulds Curse on Jefferson
· 17.8 mi · Things to Do
When railroad baron Jay Gould rolled into Jefferson in the 1870s he had a simple proposition: let me bring my railroad through town. The city fathers flush…
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George Webster Smith
· 17.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, a town still feeling the heat of Reconstruction. Look to your right, and you're passing the site of the old calaboose, the city jail. It was here, on October 4th, <say-as…
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Old United States Post Office and Courts Building (Jefferson, Texas)
· 17.8 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Pull over here – this spot was once at the heart of a bustling riverport! The Old U.S. Post Office and Courts Building, now the Jefferson Historical Museum, stands as a reminder of Jefferson's boomtown days.…
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Stilley-Young House
· 17.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Stilley-Young House in Jefferson, a beautiful example of Greek Revival architecture. Built for cotton broker Frank Stilley and his wife Minerva in 1860, this home has a fascinating second act. By…
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Schluter Home
· 17.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Schluter Home, a colonial-style house built way back in 1856. F.A. Schluter was one of the very first six settlers to call Jefferson home. Imagine this place back then, with its spacious halls…
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Benefield, Barry
· 17.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former home of Barry Benefield, a writer who captured the spirit of East Texas. Born in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1877</say-as>, Benefield grew up around his father's wagon yard in…
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Gay 90's House
· 18.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Jefferson, a town that once buzzed as a major Texas port. Look for the J. M. Benefield Home, once known as the Gay 90's House. This place was the heart of social life back in the day, hosting all…
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Bower, Doyle
· 18.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past a survivor from Jefferson's past, built way back in 1858. This house, constructed by Haye Zolley, is a prime example of early Texas architecture. Look closely at the details – it was built using…
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Urquhart, A.M.
· 18.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, and right here is the former site of the A.M. Urquhart cottage. Built around the turn of the 20th century, this home was for Angus Mezappa Urquhart and his wife, Mary Jane. Angus was…
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Houston Street Victorian Cottage
· 18.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Jefferson, a town built on the riches brought by its early ferry. Look around, and you might spot this charming Victorian Cottage. It dates back to at least 1851, when John M. and Nancy Dollehite…
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Hudgins-Blake House
· 18.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Hudgins-Blake House in Jefferson, a testament to architectural style and enduring family legacy. Built between 1855 and 1867 by William P. Hudgins, this grand residence boasts 13-foot ceilings…
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Caddo Trace
· 18.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving along a path with a history as old as Texas itself! This is the Caddo Trace, originally a vital hunting and trade route for the Caddo Indians who lived in this northeast corner of the state. After 1840,…
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Trammel's Trace
· 18.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Cass County, and right here is a spot where history was made on the move. This field was once a critical junction on Trammel's Trace, one of the most important immigration routes into Texas. In…
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Trammel's Trace
· 19.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Marion County, following a route that was once a vital artery for Texas immigration: Trammel's Trace. This path started as Indian trails, but in 1824, government scout Nicholas Trammel began…
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Mims Chapel Methodist Church and Cemetery
· 19.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Mims Chapel Methodist Church and Cemetery near Jefferson. Organized before the Civil War, early meetings were held at a log structure known as the Rock Church. The church was later named…
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Nash Iron Works
· 19.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the very first iron furnace in Texas! <break time="400ms"/> It was built by Jefferson S. Nash, a man who arrived here in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1846</say-as>. <break…
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Jefferson
· 19.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Jefferson, a town that boomed thanks to its unique geography. Founded in 1839, Jefferson was laid out with two different street grids – one north-south, the other diagonal to Big Cypress Bayou.…
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Bloomburg, TX
· 19.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through northeastern Cass County, not far from the Arkansas border. Right here is Bloomburg, a town that owes its existence to the railroad. Before 1895, this was just an area with scattered settlement.…