1439 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
-
Regina Kay Walters and the Truck Stop Killer
· Biographical
In early 1990, 14-year-old Regina Kay Walters left Pasadena, Texas with her 18-year-old boyfriend Ricky Lee Jones, hitchhiking toward Mexico. The pair were picked up by long-haul truck driver Robert Ben Rhoades — a…
-
Pasadena, TX
Pasadena, Texas, is more than just a stop along the Gulf Freeway. It's a place where hard work and Texas pride run deep. Back when rice paddies stretched across the landscape, this area was starting to make a name for…
-
Pasadena Independent School District
· 1.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Pasadena, where a community's dream of a good education started small, in a chicken coop! Back in 1893, local families gathered to create a school for their kids. They converted a chicken coop…
-
Pasadena
· 1.4 mi · Historical Marker
This area has progressed from Indian territory to pioneer ranch land to space-age Pasadena. Known at one time for its strawberry patches, it is now acclaimed for its oil and chemical industries. The Vince brothers,…
-
Allen Ranch
· 1.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Pasadena, a busy commercial area today. But this was once the heart of the Allen Ranch, one of Southeast Texas's oldest and largest cattle operations. The story starts way back in 1824, when land…
-
The Burned Bridge That Trapped Santa Anna
· 1.8 mi
A decisive piece of the San Jacinto story sits inside Pasadena city limits. William Vince built a wooden bridge over Vince's Bayou on the Harrisburg road, the only practical crossing on the route between the San Jacinto…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Sam Rayburn (Pasadena)
· 1.9 mi
Sam Rayburn (Pasadena, TX) placed on the 6A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Aiden Englishbee (0.410 avg).
-
Crown Hill Cemetery
· 2.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Crown Hill Cemetery, a final resting place for Pasadena's pioneers. Permanent settlement here began way back in 1891. Lot sales kicked off in 1893, and the town was officially platted just three…
-
First Airplane Flight Over Texas
· 2.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past South Houston, and right here, on February 18th, 1910, Texas saw its very first airplane fly! <break time="400ms"/> French aviator Louis Paulhan, on a national tour, was hired by land promoters to…
-
The Asylum Ground of South Houston
· 2.4 mi
This patch of South Houston has worn a lot of grim hats. In nineteen-oh-eight, Doctor J.L. Dickerson opened the Asgard College for Girls in a two-story brick building here. It lasted about four years before a contract…
-
South Houston, TX
· 2.4 mi
South Houston started life under a different name entirely. When C. S. Woods of the Western Land Company laid out the townsite in 1907, he called it Dumont, and why he picked that name is anyone's guess. No record…
-
South Houston, TX
· 2.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through South Houston, a community that started life as Dumont in 1907. It was founded by C.S. Woods and quickly established a post office. But its early days were all about agriculture, with local…
-
Gilley's: The World's Largest Honky-Tonk and the Birth of Urban Cowboy
· 2.6 mi
On Spencer Highway in Pasadena stood Gilley's, the self-proclaimed (and Guinness-listed) world's largest honky-tonk. Club owner Sherwood Cryer rebranded his existing club around 1970-71 in partnership with singer Mickey…
-
The House Band That Topped the Charts
· 2.6 mi
Mickey Gilley grew up in Ferriday, Louisiana alongside his cousins Jerry Lee Lewis and Jimmy Swaggart, and was the namesake headliner of Gilley's in Pasadena from the start; partner Sherwood Cryer insisted the club…
-
South Houston: The Strawberry Town First Called Dumont
· 2.7 mi
You're in South Houston, which started life in 1907 under a different name: Dumont, platted by C.S. Woods of the Western Land Company along the Galveston, Houston and Henderson Railroad. The town incorporated as South…
-
Dean Corll and the Houston Mass Murders — Pasadena, Texas, 1973
· 2.8 mi
In August of nineteen seventy-three, a seventeen-year-old named Elmer Wayne Henley shot and killed his thirty-three-year-old associate Dean Corll in a house in Pasadena and then called the police. What officers found…
-
The First Airplane Flight in Texas Was a Land-Sales Stunt
· 2.9 mi
On February 18, 1910, French aviator Louis Paulhan made the first documented heavier-than-air flight in Texas at 'Aviation Camp' in South Houston, in a Farman biplane held together by wooden struts and wire with a…
-
First United Methodist Church of Pasadena
· 2.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the First United Methodist Church of Pasadena. A Methodist society first formed nearby in 1896, and a congregation organized in Pasadena in 1898, meeting in the town's one-room…
-
Galena Park: The Port Town Called Clinton That Beat Houston to the Sea
· 3.4 mi
You're in Galena Park, one of the oldest settled spots in Harris County. Ezekiel Thomas took a Mexican land grant on Buffalo Bayou here in 1824; after his death, Isaac Batterson bought the land in 1835 and the…
-
Batterson, Isaac, Near Site of, Home
· 3.4 mi · Historical Marker
Famed for its part in winning the War for Texas Independence, the flooring of this house was, on April 19, 1836, appropriated by General Sam Houston to build rafts to ferry his army across rain-swollen Buffalo Bayou.…
-
Galena Park, TX
· 3.8 mi
The name Galena Park has a direct connection to the industrial history of the area. Originally settled as Clinton, the community sought to establish a post office in 1935. However, the name Clinton was already in use…
-
Galena Park, TX
· 4.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Galena Park, a community with roots stretching back to Texas's earliest days. It started in 1824 as a land grant settlement by Ezekiel Thomas. Later, it became known as Clinton, a small farming…
-
Gilley's - World's Largest Honky-Tonk
· 4.1 mi · Historical Marker
Pasadena honky-tonk co-owned by Mickey Gilley, made internationally famous by the 1980 film Urban Cowboy. Billed as the world's largest honky-tonk. Destroyed by fire in 1990.
-
Lubbock Ranch
· 4.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Lubbock Ranch, home to a true Texas statesman, Francis Richard Lubbock. He arrived in Houston in 1837, and by 1846, he and his wife were living on this 1300-acre spread. Lubbock built…
-
Gilley's
· 4.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
Gilley's was a nightclub located in Pasadena, Texas, from 1970 to 1990. The club, owned by Sherwood Cryer, had been previously called Shelly's. Cryer decided to reopen it in 1970 under the name Gilley's, with budding…
-
Morales, Felix Hessbrook
· 4.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing by the birthplace of a Texas broadcasting legend. Felix H. Morales, born in New Braunfels, built a life in Houston, overcoming the Great Depression to open…
-
Gilley, Mickey Leroy
· 4.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Pasadena, home of the legendary Gilley's nightclub. Right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1970</say-as>, Mickey Gilley and Sherwood Cryer opened this honky-tonk, billed as the…
-
Pratt Truss Bridge
· 4.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the last Pratt truss bridge ever built in Texas by the Clinton Bridge and Iron Company. Opened in 1891 on the Leon River, it served as a gateway to what would become Mother Neff State Park. Decades…
-
Pasadena, TX
· 4.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past Pasadena, a town that owes its name to a bit of West Coast envy. Back in 1893, John H. Burnett founded this community and, charmed by the lush vegetation, decided to name it after its Californian…
-
Spencer, Thomas Morris, Sr.
· 4.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, near Pasadena, and right here is the story of Thomas Morris Spencer, Sr., the man often called the 'father of the community college movement in Texas.' Spencer arrived at Blinn…
-
San Jacinto College
· 4.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past San Jacinto College in Pasadena, a place that opened its doors in 1961. <break time="400ms"/> What's really cool is that this campus is actually within sight of the historic San Jacinto battleground.…
-
Duke, Alan Robert
· 4.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the Houston area, maybe near Pasadena, and you might be passing by the legacy of Alan Duke. He wasn't a native Texan, but this chemical engineer found a passion for Texas history and prehistory…
-
The Twin Sisters: Texas's Most Famous Lost Cannons May Still Be Under Harrisburg
· 4.4 mi
Citizens of Cincinnati raised funds in 1835-36 to cast two iron cannons for the Texas Revolution; nicknamed the 'Twin Sisters,' they reached Sam Houston's army on April 11, 1836 and were the Texans' only artillery at…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Milby (Houston)
· 4.4 mi
Milby (Houston, TX) placed on the 5A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Rogelio Ontiveros (0.486 avg, 2 HR).
-
Glendale Cemetery
· 4.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Glendale Cemetery, a final resting place for Texas heroes and pioneers. It started as a private family plot for John R. Harris, the founder of Harrisburg. The very first burial here, back on July…
-
Harrisburg
· 4.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the historic Harrisburg, a place that was once a vital port and trading post for early Texas. Founded in 1826 by John R. Harris, the first settler here in 1823, this was the site of Texas's first…
-
Harrisburg: Where Texas's First Railroad Began
· 4.6 mi
The Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railway (BBB&C), which began operating from Harrisburg in 1853, was the first railroad to operate in Texas and the second west of the Mississippi River. It ran west from Harrisburg…
-
Buffalo Bayou, Brazos & Colorado Railroad
· 4.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the birthplace of Texas railroads! Back in 1850, a group of Bostonians and Texans, including San Jacinto hero General Sidney Sherman, chartered the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos & Colorado Railway. Their…
-
Tod-Milby Home Site
· 4.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Tod-Milby Home, a place with deep ties to Texas naval history. John Grant Tod came to Texas in 1837 and served in the Republic Navy for eight years, buying and outfitting ships. He…
-
Harrisburg-Jackson Cemetery
· 4.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Harrisburg-Jackson Cemetery, a resting place with roots stretching back to the 1840s and 50s, when Harrisburg was growing with the cattle industry and railroads. By the 1870s, a strong African…
-
Holy Cross Mission (Episcopal)
· 4.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Houston's Holy Cross Mission. It started way back in 1865 as a small mission called Nativity, with just 24 members. By 1875, it was known as Holy Cross, and its numbers fluctuated between…
-
The Orange Show Center for Visionary Art
· 4.9 mi · Historical Marker
Jeff McKissack was a Houston postal worker who believed the orange was the perfect food, the key to human health and longevity, and worthy of a monument. Starting in 1956, he began building that monument in his backyard…
-
Asbury Memorial United Methodist Church
· 4.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Asbury Memorial United Methodist Church, a place with deep roots in Houston's African-American history. It all began in 1866 when William Burley, a former slave, came to Harrisburg to…
-
Patrick's Cabin: Where Texas Negotiated Its Independence
· 5.1 mi
Deer Park trademarked 'Birthplace of Texas' in 2007, and the claim traces to Dr. George Moffitt Patrick, a Virginia-born physician who came to Texas around 1828 and signed the November 1835 articles creating Texas's…
-
Deer Park
· 5.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Deer Park, a town born from a Northerner's dream. In 1892, Simeon West arrived from Illinois, envisioning a farming and trading hub. He bought land, laid out the town, and named it for the…
-
Deer Park High School (Andy Pettitte)
· 5.2 mi
Deer Park High School (402 Ivy Ave., Deer Park, TX) is where Andy Pettitte pitched before his Yankees career. As a senior in 1990 he was named All-State and Houston Area Player of the Year and led Deer Park to the Texas…
-
Deer Park, TX
· 5.2 mi
Deer Park, Texas, owes its name to a very literal observation made back in 1892. Simeon West, the city's founder, set aside a large plot of land as a recreational park. This wasn't just any park, though; it was…
-
Ken's Restaurant: Deer Park's Homestyle Diner Since 1970
· 5.2 mi
You're in Deer Park, home of Ken's Restaurant on Center Street, the family-owned homestyle diner that has been serving the city since 1970. Through more than five decades of refinery shifts, ballgames, and Sunday…
-
Four Houses and a Refinery: Shell Bets on Deer Park, 1929
· 5.3 mi
Shell began operating its Deer Park refinery on August 13, 1929, on an 800-acre Ship Channel site, weeks before the stock-market crash. At the time the whole area held about four houses, a small school, an old hotel and…
-
The Two Months Houston's Airport Was Named Howard Hughes
· 5.5 mi
In July 1938, Houston-born Howard Hughes flew around the world in 91 hours, 3 days and 19 hours, with a crew of four, smashing the record. New York gave him a ticker-tape parade up Broadway on July 15; when he came…
-
Jacinto City, TX
· 5.5 mi
Jacinto City is named for the most famous patch of ground in Texas, the San Jacinto battlefield, where Texas won its independence in April 1836, just a few miles from here. But the city itself is a child of a different…
-
TNT on the Prairie: Deer Park Goes to War
· 5.5 mi
During World War II, Shell's Deer Park works became a TNT lifeline, producing roughly ten million gallons of toluol (toluene, the 'T' in TNT) a year. Across 1940-45 the plant turned out 72,735,000 gallons, about 15…
-
Simeon West's Doomed Prairie Colony
· 5.5 mi
Deer Park exists because an Illinois farmer refused to quit. Simeon Henry West (1827-1920), a retired legislator and serial adventurer, filed Deer Park's original plat on December 20, 1892, betting the mild coastal…
-
Jacinto City, TX
· 5.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Jacinto City, a community that sprang to life during World War II. In 1941, Frank Sharp laid out the first subdivision, and it quickly filled with workers from local shipyards, steel mills, and…
-
Patrick, George Moffitt
· 5.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Deer Park, Texas, a community that owes its existence, in part, to George Moffitt Patrick. Patrick, a physician, was a key figure in the Texas Revolution. In July 1835, he was among…
-
Deer Park, TX
· 5.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Deer Park, a community named for the private deer park that once occupied this land. It was established as a railroad stop in 1893, but it wasn't until after World War II that this area truly…
-
Casa Olé: The Tex-Mex Chain Born in Pasadena
· 5.7 mi
You're in Pasadena, birthplace of Casa Olé. Larry Forehand, a Pasadena kid who got his start as a busboy at a Monterey House Tex-Mex restaurant, opened the first Casa Olé here on December 1, 1973. The first month's…
-
Jacinto City: Frank Sharp's Instant Suburb for the War Effort
· 5.7 mi
You're in Jacinto City, a town that appeared almost overnight for World War II. Developer Frank Sharp launched the subdivision in 1941, and it filled immediately with workers from the shipyards, steel mills, and defense…
-
Lorenzo de Zavala
· 5.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving near the San Jacinto Battleground, and right around here is the homesite and grave of Lorenzo de Zavala. Born in Mexico, he was an illustrious statesman who served his native country in high office, even…
-
Magnolia Park City Hall and Central Fire Station
· 6.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston, and right here is a building that once served as the heart of a whole separate city! This was the City Hall and Central Fire Station for Magnolia Park, incorporated in 1913. For ten…
-
Immaculate Conception Catholic Church
· 6.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, a place that's been a cornerstone of Houston's Magnolia Park community for over a century. In October 1911, the Oblates of Mary Immaculate chose…
-
San Jacinto Community College District
· 6.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of San Jacinto College, born from the booming industrial growth along the Houston Ship Channel after World War II. The area exploded with people, and leaders saw a need for education to…
-
Ellington Field
· 6.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Ellington Field, a place with a long history tied to American air power. It started way back in 1917, during World War I, as a response to a push from Houston's Chamber of Commerce. Named for Lt.…
-
Clara Barton's Strawberries and the World's Largest Shortcake
· 6.4 mi
Pasadena throws a strawberry festival because of a hurricane. After the 1900 Galveston storm wiped out the mainland strawberry farms south of Houston, 78-year-old Clara Barton's American Red Cross arranged for a million…
-
Constitution Bend
· 6.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past Constitution Bend, a sharp curve in Buffalo Bayou that tells a story about Houston's very beginnings. Back in June of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1837</say-as>, this bend was named for…
-
Ball, Thomas H., Jr.
· 6.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the story of Thomas H. Ball, Jr., the man they called the 'Father of the Port.' Born in Huntsville in 1859, Ball started his career as a lawyer and even served three…
-
Hidalgo Park Quiosco
· 6.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston's Magnolia Park, and right here is the Hidalgo Park Quiosco. This isn't just any park structure; it's a work of art commissioned by the Mexican American community in 1934. Designed and…
-
Hidalgo Park Quiosco, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 6.5 mi
Hidalgo Park Quiosco, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Site of the Home in 1836 of Dr. George Moffit Patrick
· 6.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Dr. George Moffit Patrick's home, right here in Deer Park. This wasn't just any pioneer's house in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1836</say-as>. After the Texas army won the…
-
Angelo and Lillian Minella House
· 6.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston, and just ahead is the Angelo and Lillian Minella House, built in 1950. Angelo ran a plumbing and heating supply company here. The couple hired architect Allen R. Williams, Jr. to design…
-
The Orange Show
· 7.0 mi · Historical Marker
Jeff McKissack was a Houston mailman who believed the orange was the perfect food and spent 26 years building a monument to prove it. Starting in 1956, McKissack single-handedly constructed an elaborate outdoor…
-
Cloverleaf, TX
· 7.1 mi
Cloverleaf grew up without anyone writing down why it is called Cloverleaf. The community began as a stop on the Beaumont, Sour Lake and Western Railway in the early 1900s, and on the 1936 county highway map it was just…
-
The Orange Show
· 7.2 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Get ready for a slice of pure Houston weirdness! You're approaching The Orange Show, a folk art environment dedicated to the humble orange. Jeff McKissack, a local mail carrier, spent decades building this quirky…
-
The Orange Show: A Mailman's Monument That Spawned the World's Largest Art Car Parade
· 7.2 mi
Jeff Davis McKissack (1902-1980), a retired U.S. mail carrier, hand-built The Orange Show monument at 2401 Munger Street in Houston's Eastwood neighborhood starting around 1956: a folk-art maze of scavenged tile, brick,…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Dobie (Houston)
· 7.3 mi
Dobie (Houston, TX) placed on the 6A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Maximilian Torres (0.410 avg).
-
Battle of San Jacinto
· 7.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Battle of San Jacinto, the decisive battle of the Texas Revolution! On April 21, 1836, just two miles north of here, General Sam Houston led about a thousand Texans against Santa…
-
Texas Army Attacked in Four Divisions
· 7.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here, Texas history was written in four divisions! Imagine the scene: on the right, the cavalry charged, led by the brilliant Mirabeau B. Lamar. Next to them, the infantry, with…
-
Mexican Cavalry, Battle of San Jacinto
· 7.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Battle of San Jacinto, the final showdown of the Texas Revolution. On April 21, 1836, the Texian army launched a surprise attack. The Mexican forces were deployed with their cavalry…
-
Hughes Tool Company Site
· 7.6 mi · Historical Marker
Every oil well drilled in the twentieth century owes something to a piece of steel invented in a Houston machine shop. In 1909, Howard Robard Hughes Sr. patented the roller-cone drill bit, a device with two interlocking…
-
San Jacinto, Battle of
· 7.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Battle of San Jacinto, the decisive clash that secured Texas independence! On the afternoon of April 21, 1836, General Sam Houston's Texas army faced off against General Antonio Lopez…
-
Battle of San Jacinto
· 7.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Battle of San Jacinto, the final, decisive clash of the Texas Revolution. On April 21st, 1836, under the tune 'Will You Come to the Bower,' Texan soldiers advanced. Their battle cry?…
-
Sterling High School (Clyde Drexler)
· 7.8 mi
Ross S. Sterling High School (11625 Martindale Rd., Houston, TX) — in HISD, not the like-named Baytown school — is where Clyde Drexler bloomed late. Born in New Orleans and raised in Houston, Drexler was cut from the…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Austin (Houston)
· 7.8 mi
Austin (Houston, TX) placed on the 5A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Sam Moreno (0.488 avg); Aaron Mejia (0.471 avg).
-
San Jacinto, Battle of
· 7.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Battle of San Jacinto, the decisive clash that won Texas its independence. In less than 20 minutes, the Texan army routed Santa Anna's forces. General Houston reported over 600…
-
Eastwood, TX
· 8.0 mi
Eastwood, Texas, sits right on the edge of Houston’s East End, a place that’s quietly punched above its weight for decades. You wouldn’t necessarily know it driving through, but some seriously talented folks got their…
-
The Pom-Pom Mom
· 8.1 mi
Channelview made national headlines in nineteen-ninety-one for one of the strangest crimes Texas ever produced. A local mother, Wanda Holloway, wanted her daughter to make the junior-high cheerleading squad so badly…
-
Jesse H. Jones High School (Darrell Green)
· 8.1 mi
Jesse H. Jones High School (7414 Saint Lo Rd., Houston, TX; now Jones Futures Academy) is where Darrell Green's blazing speed first stood out — an All-State track athlete and All-City football player. He went to Texas…
-
Zavala Point: The Republic's First Vice President Lived in Channelview
· 8.2 mi
You're in Channelview, where Lorenzo de Zavala, first Vice President of the Republic of Texas, made his home. A signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence and a veteran statesman of two republics, de Zavala built…
-
KUHT-TV, Channel 8
· 8.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing the birthplace of a broadcast revolution! On May 25th, 1953, KUHT-TV, Channel 8, sent out its very first signal. This wasn't just another TV station; it was…
-
UIL 6A Football State Champions — 4 titles
· 8.3 mi
North Shore Senior High (Houston, TX): Most recent: 10-7 over Duncanville · 2025 6A Division 1 final.
-
Battleship Texas
· 8.3 mi · Historical Marker
The USS Texas is the last dreadnought-class battleship left on Earth. Commissioned in 1914, she was already obsolete by the standards of the next war, but she fought in both of them anyway. In World War I, she escorted…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: North Shore (Houston)
· 8.3 mi
North Shore (Houston, TX) placed on the 6A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Zion Ashford (0.409 avg).
-
Channelview, TX
· 8.3 mi
Channelview is one of the most literal names in Texas. The community sits on the northeastern curve of the Houston Ship Channel, with a view of the water that built it. Oil and ship-channel work drew settlers here after…
-
Zavala Point: A Republic Founder's Home Became Channelview
· 8.3 mi
Lorenzo de Zavala, Yucatan-born statesman, empresario, signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence and first interim Vice President of the Republic of Texas, bought a home at 'Zavala Point' on Buffalo Bayou in 1835,…
-
Dora B. Lantrip Elementary School
· 8.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Dora B. Lantrip Elementary School in Houston. This building, originally Eastwood Elementary, opened in 1916. It was the first Houston school designed with a 'cottage plan' – classrooms in…
-
de Zavala Plaza
· 8.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past de Zavala Plaza, named for a true Texas hero, Lorenzo de Zavala. Born in Mexico, he was a doctor, a governor, and a fierce advocate for democracy. He was even jailed for his liberal politics,…
-
Duncan, Peter Jefferson
· 8.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the San Jacinto area, and right here is the story of Peter Jefferson Duncan. Born a New Yorker in 1799, Duncan came to Texas and jumped right into the fight for independence. He participated in the…
-
Jaques, Isaac L.
· 8.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Lynchburg, Texas, a place where history happened fast. Back in October of 1835, Isaac L. Jaques arrived in Texas, ready to fight. He joined Captain Thomas H. McIntire's company and fought bravely at…
-
Wilkinson, Freeman
· 8.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Lynchburg area, where Freeman Wilkinson drew his last breath. He fought with Captain McIntire's company at the decisive Battle of San Jacinto in 1836, helping to secure Texas independence. Though…
-
Battleship Texas
· 8.5 mi · Things to Do
The last surviving WWI-era dreadnought. Fought at D-Day and Iwo Jima.
-
The Empty Slip: Where the Battleship Texas Waited 74 Years
· 8.5 mi
Beside the San Jacinto Monument is a slip that held a battleship for 74 years. USS Texas (BB-35), commissioned 1914, is the last surviving dreadnought-era battleship and the only remaining U.S. ship that served in both…
-
McCormick, Margaret
· 8.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a tragic end for Margaret McCormick. Her husband Arthur died way back in 1825. But Margaret herself lost her life right here in 1854 when her home burned down. She was living on this very…
-
University of Houston (Hakeem Olajuwon)
· 8.6 mi
The University of Houston (Hofheinz Pavilion, now the Fertitta Center, 3875 Holman St., Houston, TX) is where Hakeem Olajuwon became a legend — and his story is not a Texas high school story at all. Born in Lagos,…
-
Lorenzo de Zavala
· 8.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a truly historic home, folks. This was the first plank-covered log house in the Harrisburg municipality, built way back in 1829 by Lorenzo de Zavala. He was a big deal: a signer of the…
-
San Jacinto Battleground
· 8.7 mi · Historical Marker
This is where Texas became a nation. On the afternoon of April 21, 1836, General Sam Houston ordered his outnumbered army to charge across this open prairie toward the Mexican camp. Santa Anna's troops were napping.…
-
The Original Ninfa's on Navigation
· 8.7 mi · Things to Do
Ninfa Laurenzo was a widow with five kids when she opened a little restaurant in her late husbands failing tortilla factory on Navigation Boulevard in 1973.…
-
Sam Houston's San Jacinto Wound
· 8.7 mi
On April twenty-first, eighteen thirty-six, at the Battle of San Jacinto, Sam Houston led the Texians to the victory that won Texas its independence — and took a musket ball to the ankle in the fight. Here's the strange…
-
The Unburied Dead of San Jacinto
· 8.7 mi
On the afternoon of April twenty-first, eighteen-thirty-six, Sam Houston's army crossed this prairie and won Texas its independence in about eighteen minutes. The Texians buried their nine dead. But the roughly…
-
San Jacinto Monument
· 8.7 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Stand in awe of the San Jacinto Monument, commemorating the decisive battle that secured Texas independence from Mexico. On April 21, 1836, General Sam Houston led Texan forces to a swift and stunning victory against…
-
San Jacinto Battleground State Historic Site
· 8.7 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine a desperate fight for freedom, right here where you're standing. This is the San Jacinto Battleground, where Texas won its independence. On April 21, 1836, General Sam Houston led the Texan army against General…
-
San Jacinto Monument
· 8.7 mi · Things to Do
Taller than the Washington Monument. Where Texas won independence in 18 minutes.
-
San Jacinto Monument
· 8.7 mi · Things to Do
On April 21 1836 Sam Houston and nine hundred Texans caught Santa Annas army napping at San Jacinto and won Texas independence in eighteen minutes. Six hundred…
-
Channelview High School (Jalen Hurts)
· 8.7 mi
Channelview High School (1100 Sheldon Rd., Channelview, TX) is where Jalen Hurts played quarterback for his own father — Averion Hurts Sr. was the head football coach. As a senior, Hurts passed for 2,384 yards and 26…
-
The Tower They Promised Wouldn't Beat Washington's
· 8.7 mi
The San Jacinto Monument is a Depression-era engineering story. Ground broke in March 1936 for the Texas Centennial; the cornerstone was set April 21, 1937 and construction finished April 21, 1939, both on San Jacinto…
-
Yellow Rose of Texas - Emily D. West
· 8.7 mi · Historical Marker
The most famous song about Texas may be about a real woman whose actual life was almost entirely scrubbed from the record. Emily D. West was a free woman of mixed race who came to Texas from New York in 1835 to work as…
-
The Jazz Crusaders: Four Wheatley Classmates Who Took the Gulf Coast Sound to the World
· 8.7 mi
The Crusaders began in 1954 as the Swingsters, formed by Fifth Ward classmates at Phillis Wheatley High School (after meeting even earlier at Smith Junior High): Joe Sample (piano), Wilton Felder (sax), Nesbert 'Stix'…
-
Galena Park North Shore - 2025 Texas 6A Division I state football champion
· 8.7 mi · Sports News
You're near Galena Park North Shore High School in Houston. Last December, they took down Duncanville ten to seven to win the Texas 6A Division I state football championship. They wear that crown until this December,…
-
Frenchy's: The Creole Stand That Became Third Ward's Fried Chicken Institution
· 8.8 mi
Frenchy's Chicken opened July 3, 1969 at 3919 Scott Street in Houston's Third Ward, near the University of Houston and Texas Southern campuses. Founder Percy 'Frenchy' Creuzot Jr., a New Orleans native, and his wife…
-
Screwed Up Records & Tapes: Where Houston Bought the Sound DJ Screw Invented
· 8.9 mi
7717 Cullen Boulevard was the original home of Screwed Up Records & Tapes, the storefront DJ Screw (Robert Earl Davis Jr., born July 20, 1971 in Bastrop, Texas) opened in January 1998 because the lines of customers…
-
Jalen Hurts at Channelview High School
· 8.9 mi · Sports Alumni
Jalen Hurts grew up inside the Channelview football program, coached by his own father. Averion Hurts had run the Falcons since 2006, and his son became the centerpiece. As a senior in 2015, Jalen threw for two thousand…
-
Crestmont Park, TX
· 8.9 mi
Crestmont Park sits right on the edge of Fort Worth, a little pocket of green and quiet that's seen more than its fair share of interesting folks. You might not think much of it driving through, but this place has a…
-
The Cheerleader Plot That Put Channelview on Every TV Screen
· 9.0 mi
In January 1991, Channelview mother Wanda Holloway was arrested for trying to hire a hitman to kill Verna Heath, mother of her daughter's junior-high cheerleading rival; the theory was that a grieving daughter would…
-
Mount Pleasant Baptist Church
· 9.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston's historic Fifth Ward, a neighborhood that really took shape after the Civil War. Right here, you're passing the site of Mount Pleasant Baptist Church, a community cornerstone founded in…
-
Kellum-Noble House, Sam Houston Park, 212 Dallas Avenue, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 9.0 mi
Kellum-Noble House, Sam Houston Park, 212 Dallas Avenue, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Channelview, TX
· 9.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Channelview, a Houston suburb that owes its existence to the booming oil industry. After oil was discovered in the area in 1916, blue-collar workers and their families flocked here to work the…
-
Buffalo Bayou and the Founding of Houston
· 9.1 mi · Historical Marker
Houston was founded on a real estate scam. In August 1836, brothers Augustus Chapman Allen and John Kirby Allen bought 6,642 acres of muddy, mosquito-infested bottomland at the head of navigation on Buffalo Bayou. They…
-
Monument Inn: The Seafood House by the Monument That Would Not Stay Down
· 9.1 mi
You're near the Monument Inn, the seafood restaurant beside the Lynchburg Ferry in the shadow of the San Jacinto Monument, serving since 1974. Bob and Ann Laws bought it in June 1990, and six months later it burned to…
-
First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church
· 9.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, past the site of the First Shiloh Missionary Baptist Church. This isn't just any church; it's one of the oldest African American Baptist congregations in the area, established way back in…
-
The Original Ninfa's: Where the Fajita Conquered America
· 9.2 mi
The Original Ninfa's on Navigation (2704 Navigation Blvd, Second Ward) opened in July 1973. Ninfa Rodriguez Laurenzo ('Mama Ninfa'), widowed in 1969 with five children and a money-losing tortilla factory (Rio Grande…
-
Original Ninfa's on Navigation
· 9.2 mi · Biographical
Maria Ninfa Rodriguez Laurenzo (1924-2001) opened Ninfa's restaurant at 2704 Navigation Boulevard in Houston in 1973, serving grilled skirt-steak tacos al carbon that would become widely known as fajitas. The dish…
-
The Lynchburg Ferry: A Free Ride Across 200 Years of Texas
· 9.2 mi
Nathaniel Lynch established his ferry in 1822 just below the confluence of the San Jacinto River and Buffalo Bayou; a ferry has run here ever since, the oldest operating ferry service in Texas. During the Runaway Scrape…
-
Old Settler's Cemetery
· 9.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Old Settlers Cemetery, the final resting place for many of Pearland's earliest residents. The town itself got its start in 1894, named for the pear orchards that flourished here. But the first…
-
Greater Zion Missionary Baptist Church
· 9.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston's Greater Third Ward, a neighborhood Greater Zion Missionary Baptist Church has served since the late 1800s. Tradition says it started under a brush arbor right here, with Reverend Gilbert…
-
Peacock Records: The Houston Label That Released 'Hound Dog' First
· 9.3 mi
At 2809 Erastus Street in Houston's Fifth Ward, Don Robey opened the Bronze Peacock Dinner Club in 1945, one of the finest supper clubs in the South (it launched Clarence 'Gatemouth' Brown's career). In 1949 Robey…
-
Houston Third Ward - Birthplace of Chopped and Screwed
· 9.3 mi · Historical Marker
Houston's Third Ward is one of the oldest Black neighborhoods in Texas, and in the 1990s it became the laboratory for a sound that defined an entire city. Robert Earl Davis Jr., known as DJ Screw, started slowing down…
-
Texas Southern University (Michael Strahan)
· 9.3 mi
Texas Southern University (3100 Cleburne St., Houston, TX) is where Michael Strahan's football story truly began. Raised largely on a U.S. Army base in Mannheim, Germany, Strahan played only one season of American high…
-
Megan Thee Stallion: A Grammy Winner Walks the Stage at TSU
· 9.3 mi
Megan Thee Stallion (Megan Pete, born February 15, 1995 in San Antonio) was raised in Houston's South Park neighborhood until about 14, then Pearland (Pearland HS class of 2013). Her mother, Holly Thomas, rapped as…
-
Peacock Records
· 9.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of Peacock Records, a pioneering force in African American music. In 1949, nightclub owner Don D. Robey, fed up with the limitations of "race music" marketing,…
-
Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church
· 9.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing the site of Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church. Back in 1911, as refugees fled the Mexican Revolution, Houston's Spanish-speaking community was booming. Four priests from the…
-
Blue Triangle Branch, Y. W. C. A. Building
· 9.4 mi · Historical Marker
As you drive through Houston, look for the Blue Triangle Branch building, a testament to community spirit. Back in 1917, during World War I, African American soldiers were stationed at Camp Logan, and the community…
-
Sloan Memorial United Methodist Church
· 9.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past one of Houston's oldest Black Methodist churches. Sloan Memorial United Methodist Church started in 1880, right here under a tent, led by Reverend Ed Roscoe. They bought this land in 1881, and the…
-
Samuel Paschall
· 9.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the final resting place of Samuel Paschall, a Tennessee native who came to Texas and fought for its independence. He was just a private, but he served in Captain Amasa Turner's company at the…
-
Johnny Nash: The Hermann Park Singing Caddy Who Bankrolled Reggae
· 9.5 mi
Johnny Nash (John Lester Nash Jr., born Houston August 19, 1940; died at his Houston home October 6, 2020) grew up in the Third Ward, son of a chauffeur, singing from age four in the choir at Progressive New Hope…
-
Lynchburg Town Ferry
· 9.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past what's left of Lynchburg, a town that's been a vital crossing point since 1822. That's when Nathaniel Lynch started a ferry service, right here, connecting folks across what's now the Houston Ship…
-
Fourth Missionary Baptist Church
· 9.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, past a church that made history. Fourth Missionary Baptist Church started as Watts Chapel way back in 1877, founded by the Rev. Henry Watts. It moved and changed its name, facing storms…
-
Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist Church
· 9.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing a landmark that represents hope and resilience. Right here, in 1866, just a year after the Civil War, Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist Church was founded. It was one of the very first…
-
St. Nicholas Catholic Church
· 9.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and you're passing the site of St. Nicholas Catholic Church. Founded way back in 1887, this was the very first Catholic church for Black parishioners in all of Houston. The building you…
-
Robert L. and Julia Martin Hunter
· 9.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Pearland, a town with roots stretching back to the 1890s, known then as Mark Belt. This marker honors Robert Lee Hunter and Julia Martin Hunter, a couple whose family history is deeply woven into…
-
Rap-A-Lot Records: From a Fifth Ward Car Lot to the Greatest Rap Songs Ever
· 9.6 mi
James Prince (born James Andre Smith, 1964) grew up around the Coke Apartments in Houston's Fifth Ward, the 'Bloody Nickel.' Working as a bank teller from 1985, he bought an abandoned building and ran it as Smith Auto…
-
'Tighten Up': The #1 Hit Archie Bell Heard From an Army Hospital Bed
· 9.6 mi
Archie Bell (born Henderson, Texas, September 1, 1944; moved to Houston as a child) formed the Drells as a vocal quartet (with Billy Butler, Joe Cross, James Wise) at E.O. Smith Junior High in the Fifth Ward, winning…
-
Houston's Fifth Ward (George Foreman)
· 9.6 mi
Houston's Fifth Ward — once nicknamed 'The Bloody Fifth' — is where two-time heavyweight champion and Olympic gold medalist George Foreman grew up, one of seven children, attending E. O. Smith Junior High before…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Mickey Leland College Prep (Houston)
· 9.6 mi
Mickey Leland College Prep (Houston, TX) placed on the 4A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: C Yancy (0.538 avg); D Yancy (0.500 avg).
-
Myers-Spalti Manufacturing Plant
· 9.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Myers-Spalti Manufacturing Plant, a key piece of Houston's industrial past. This area, east of Main Street along Buffalo Bayou, became the city's warehouse district thanks to its…
-
Killen's Barbecue
· 9.7 mi
Ronnie Killen trained as a classical chef, cooked in fine dining kitchens, and then did something nobody expected — he opened a BBQ joint in Pearland, Texas in 2013. Within a year, Texas Monthly named it one of the best…
-
Covington, Dr. Benjamin Jesse
· 9.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing the site of a remarkable home. This was the residence of Dr. Benjamin Jesse Covington and his wife Jennie Belle Murphy. Dr. Covington, who practiced medicine here for 58 years,…
-
Enoch Brinson & Pecan Grove Plantation
· 9.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Pecan Grove Plantation, the home of Enoch and Eliza Brinson, two of Stephen F. Austin's Old Three Hundred colonists. They settled here in August of 1824, building a cabin while their main…
-
Hunter, Mary Evelyn V. Edwards
· 9.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through La Porte, Texas, and right here is where Mary Evelyn Edwards Hunter made her mark. Born in Alabama in 1885, she came to La Porte with her husband and raised a family. After his death, she became…
-
La Porte, TX
· 9.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through La Porte, a town that got hit with a double dose of disaster back in 1915. <break time="400ms"/> First, a massive fire ripped through the entire downtown business district, leveling everything.…
-
St. Mary's Seminary
· 9.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through La Porte, a community with deep roots in Catholic education. Right here, in 1901, Bishop Nicholas Gallagher founded St. Mary's Seminary, the longest-running Catholic theology school in the South.…
-
Zychlinski Park
· 9.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Pearland, Texas, a town named by a Polish nobleman! Captain Wilhelm Zychlinski arrived in the late 1880s, fell in love with the pear trees here, and bought nearly 6,000 acres. He called this place…
-
Chataignon, Marius Stephen
· 9.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through La Porte, Texas, a place that once hosted a remarkable military chaplain. Marius Stephen Chataignon, known affectionately as Father Chat, studied for the priesthood right here at St. Mary's…
-
Jordan Grove Missionary Baptist Church
· 9.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston's Third Ward, passing the site of a church that's been a cornerstone of the African American community for over a century. Back in 1879, folks were moving into this neighborhood, and they…
-
Sam (Lightnin') Hopkins
· 9.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston, and right around here is where the legendary bluesman, Lightnin' Hopkins, made his home base. Born in Centerville in 1912, Sam learned guitar from his brothers and honed his craft with…
-
Worthing High School (Mike Singletary)
· 9.8 mi
Evan E. Worthing High School (9215 Scott St., Houston, TX), in the Sunnyside neighborhood, is where Mike Singletary willed himself into a football player. The youngest of ten children of a Houston street preacher, he…
-
Trinity United Methodist Church
· 9.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here is Trinity United Methodist Church, a cornerstone of the city's African American community. It started way back in 1848 as a mission for enslaved people. Just a few years…
-
El Barrio del Alacrán
· 9.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston's Second Ward, the historic heart of a community that called itself El Barrio del Alacrán – The Scorpion's Neighborhood. Between 1910 and 1920, Mexican immigrants and Mexican Americans…
-
Mount Vernon United Methodist Church
· 9.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past a piece of Houston history, folks! Right here is Mount Vernon United Methodist Church, a congregation that got its start way back in 1865. Imagine: freed slaves, led by the Rev. Emanuel Toby, cutting…
-
The 1937 Pearland High School
· 9.8 mi · Historical Marker
Driving through Pearland, you're passing the site of a school that rose from the ashes of a devastating 1915 storm. That storm wiped out the original high school, forcing local teens to commute 22 miles to Webster for…
-
E. Longcope House, 102 Chenevert Street, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 9.8 mi
E. Longcope House, 102 Chenevert Street, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
M-K-T Freight Terminal, 1811 Ruiz Street, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 9.8 mi
M-K-T Freight Terminal, 1811 Ruiz Street, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
First United Methodist Church of Pearland
· 9.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the First United Methodist Church of Pearland. Methodists have been gathering here since 1894, but this specific congregation officially formed in 1898 as the Methodist Episcopal Church. Their first…
-
The Old Train Station Inside the Ballpark
· 9.9 mi
The handsome stone building at the corner of the downtown ballpark is Union Station, opened in 1911 as Houston's grand railroad terminal. It was designed by the New York firm Warren and Wetmore, the same architects who…
-
Shelter in the Flood: The George R. Brown in Harvey
· 9.9 mi
In late August 2017, Hurricane Harvey stalled over Houston for days and dropped record-breaking rain, flooding much of the city in one of the worst disasters in its history. As the water rose, downtown's enormous George…
-
The Eldorado Ballroom: Houston's Home of Happy Feet
· 9.9 mi
The Eldorado Ballroom at 2310 Elgin Street (at Emancipation Avenue, formerly Dowling Street) opened in 1939 on the second floor of the Eldorado Building, built by Third Ward entrepreneurs Anna Johnson Dupree, a…
-
Pearland, TX
· 9.9 mi
Pearland, Texas. It's easy to drive through on 288 and think it's just another suburb of Houston. But the land here has stories to tell. Though it may not be widely known, this town has quietly nurtured some remarkable…
-
Eldorado Ballroom
· 9.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston's historic Third Ward, past the site of the Eldorado Ballroom. Opened in 1939, this wasn't just any dance hall. It was a symbol of success and sophistication for Houston's Black middle and…
-
Pearland: No Pearls, Just Pears
· 9.9 mi
Pearland sounds like it ought to be about pearls, something glamorous dredged out of the Gulf. Nope. It's about fruit. The spot started as a railroad siding in the eighteen eighties. In eighteen ninety-four a man of…
-
Frost Town
· 9.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Frost Town, one of Houston's earliest neighborhoods. It all started with Jonathan Benson Frost, a Texas Independence veteran who settled here after the Battle of San Jacinto. He even…
-
Arthur B. Cohn House
· 9.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past the former home of Arthur B. Cohn, a key player in Houston's educational history. Cohn, originally from Arkansas, bought this property and built this beautiful Queen Anne style house in 1905. He was…
-
Jerusalem Missionary Baptist Church
· 9.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston's historic Third Ward, and right here is where Jerusalem Missionary Baptist Church began. Back in 1879, Rev. James Makey gathered neighbors in his own home to start the congregation. With…
-
The Oldest Church in Houston, Built From Courthouse Bricks
· 10.0 mi
The Church of the Annunciation at Texas Avenue and Crawford is the oldest church building still standing in Houston. The Catholic parish bought the land in 1866, laid the cornerstone in 1869, and dedicated the finished…
-
Schrimpf Alley: Houston's Neighborhood of the Scorpion
· 10.0 mi
You're on the ground of Frost Town, Houston's first residential suburb -- a neighborhood that sat in a bend on the south bank of Buffalo Bayou, about half a mile downriver from downtown. It was started in the late 1830s…
-
Long View, TX
· 10.0 mi
Longview, Texas, isn't just another East Texas town. It's a place that's quietly nurtured some remarkable talent. You might be driving down Hawkins Boulevard, past the LeTourneau University campus, and not realize that…
-
Site of Academy of the Incarnate Word
· 10.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Houston's very first permanent Catholic school, the Academy of the Incarnate Word. <break time="400ms"/> In 1873, Mother M. Gabriel Dillon and two sisters arrived in Houston to teach…
-
Annunciation Church
· 10.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Annunciation Church in Houston, a stunning example of European church architecture right here in Texas. It was the vision of Father Joseph Querat, a missionary from France who served Texas from 1852…
-
Texas Railroads, C.S.A.
· 10.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Tomball, and right here, you're passing through a key hub for Texas railroads during the Civil War. Back in 1861, Harris County alone was the center for nearly 500 miles of track, connecting…
-
Daughters of the Republic of Texas
· 10.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where a group of seventeen women gathered on November 6, 1891, right here in Houston. Their mission? To form an auxiliary for the Texas Veterans Association. They called themselves the…
-
McKee Street Bridge, Spanning Buffalo Bayou, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 10.0 mi
McKee Street Bridge, Spanning Buffalo Bayou, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Union Station (1911)
· 10.0 mi
Union Station, Houston. Historical photograph, 1911. Source: Wikimedia Commons (Public domain).
-
Texas's Oldest Jewish Congregation
· 10.1 mi
Congregation Beth Israel, organized in Houston in 1854, is the oldest Jewish congregation in Texas. Its roots reach back to 1844, when Houston's small Jewish community founded a burial ground on West Dallas Street and…
-
Webster, TX
· 10.1 mi · Local history
This community began its journey in 1879, initially known as "Gardentown." It served as a crucial stopover for travelers journeying between major hubs like Houston and Galveston. The arrival of railroads, including the…
-
Anderson, M. D.
· 10.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing the site of a major business empire. Monroe Dunaway Anderson, known as M.D., started in cotton merchandising in Oklahoma in 1904. By 1916, he’d moved the main offices of Anderson,…
-
The Frenchtown Community
· 10.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, past the historic Frenchtown community. This unique neighborhood was settled by "Creoles of Color," people with French, Spanish, African, and Native American roots, many fleeing the…
-
Anderson, Clayton & Co.
· 10.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a cotton empire built right here in Houston. It all started in 1904 when Frank and Monroe Anderson, along with the Clayton brothers, formed Anderson, Clayton & Company. They moved their…
-
KIPP Sunnyside - 2025 Texas 11-Man TCSAAL state football champion
· 10.1 mi · Sports News
You're near KIPP Sunnyside High School in Houston. Last December, they took down Dallas UME Prep sixty-one to eight to win the Texas 11-Man TCSAAL state football championship. They wear that crown until this December,…
-
Pearland and the Santa Fe Railroad
· 10.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Pearland, a town that owes its very existence to a railroad line. Back in 1883, the Santa Fe Railroad built a simple siding switch called 'Mark Belt' right here. It wasn't much, but it was the…
-
The Day the River Caught Fire: October 1994
· 10.2 mi
In mid-October 1994, remnants of Hurricane Rosa plus a stalled low dumped 8 to 28 inches of rain across 38 southeast Texas counties, with the worst flooding in the San Jacinto River basin. The river rose from about 2.5…
-
Old Houston After Dark
· 10.2 mi · Historical
Here is a story about Houston after dark, from eighteen thirty-nine. A man named C. C. Cox kept a diary that was later quoted in the Southwestern Historical Quarterly. Cox wrote, and I quote: The fleas were as thick as…
-
St. Joseph Hospital
· 10.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing the site of Texas's first general hospital, St. Joseph's. It opened its doors in 1887 as St. Joseph's Infirmary, founded by six sisters dedicated to caring for the sick. Just a…
-
Houston Academy
· 10.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Houston Academy, founded way back in 1856. This place saw a lot of history, especially during the Civil War. Most of its young male students marched off to fight for the Confederacy.…
-
Thomas William House, Jr.
· 10.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through downtown Houston, right where a prominent banking family once made their mark. Thomas William House Jr. was born in 1846, the son of an English immigrant who founded the T.W. House Bank way back…
-
Nashville, TX
· 10.2 mi
Nashville, Texas, wasn't always the quiet, peaceful place it is today. Back in 1835, folks named it for General Francis Nash, a hero of the American Revolution. Just two years later, it became the county seat, a hub for…
-
Allen's Landing: Where a Tiny Steamboat Proved Houston Was Real
· 10.3 mi
You're at Allen's Landing, the muddy bank where Buffalo Bayou meets White Oak Bayou and the city of Houston was born -- on a promise, a few fibs, and a woman's inheritance. In August 1836, just after the Battle of San…
-
The Beer That Beat the World, and the Bridge That Drowned Downtown
· 10.3 mi
The Magnolia Ballroom at 715 Franklin is the last grand piece of the old Houston Ice and Brewing Company, the 'Magnolia Brewery' that once sprawled across both banks of Buffalo Bayou. Its brewmaster, Frantz Brogniez,…
-
Houston's Oldest Congregation, Still on Its First Corner
· 10.3 mi
At Texas Avenue and Fannin stands Christ Church Cathedral, home to the oldest congregation in Houston and the only one still worshipping on the very lot it claimed in the city's earliest days. The parish was chartered…
-
The Oldest Storefront, Rebuilt as Its Own Ghost
· 10.3 mi
The building at 1006 Congress was long called the oldest commercial building in Houston, raised around 1858 by the French-born merchant Eugene Pillot, with a cast-iron storefront said to be the first of its kind west of…
-
The Stargazer the Bayou Is Named For
· 10.3 mi
Armand Bayou used to be Middle Bayou. Armand Yramategui, born in Houston in 1923 to a father from Spain and a mother from Monterrey, trained as an electrical engineer at Rice and became curator of the Burke Baker…
-
The Last Industrial Survivor at Allen's Landing
· 10.3 mi
At Allen's Landing, the very spot where Houston was founded, the brick building at the foot of Main Street is the Sunset Coffee Building, built in 1910. It went up as an annex to a wholesale grocery house, taking in…
-
Sweeney, Coombs, and Fredericks Building
· 10.3 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Check out that corner building! It's a survivor from Houston's Victorian past. Designed by George E. Dickey, the Sweeney, Coombs, and Fredericks Building went up in 1889. It was built to house commercial businesses at…
-
Fire Engine House No. 9
· 10.3 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Built in 1899, this firehouse stands as a reminder of Houston's early firefighting efforts. Fire Engine House No. 9 was designed by architect William A. McMillen. Besides his own house, it's the only known surviving…
-
Christ Church Cathedral (Houston)
· 10.3 mi · Scraped Hmdb
This spot matters because it's home to Houston's oldest church! Christ Church Cathedral's story starts way back in 1839, when Texas was its own independent republic. That's when a small group of Episcopalians gathered…
-
Barbara Jordan Memorial Parkway
· 10.3 mi · Historical Marker
Honors Barbara Jordan, first African-American woman elected to the Texas Senate and to Congress from the South. Born Houston Fifth Ward 1936; died 1996. Parkway runs SH-288 through Third Ward.
-
The Newspaper Ad That Sold Houston Before It Existed
· 10.4 mi
All of downtown Houston grew from a sales pitch. On August 30, 1836, days after buying the land, the Allen brothers ran an advertisement in the Telegraph and Texas Register promoting their brand-new town. They called…
-
The Newcomer Who Saw Three Men Shot and Caught the Next Boat Out
· 10.4 mi
Future Texas governor Francis Lubbock lived in raw young Houston and left a firsthand account of how wild Main Street could be. When the Republic disbanded much of its army in the winter of 1837 to 1838, idle, armed…
-
From the Capitol of Texas to JFK's Last Full Day: The Rice Hotel
· 10.4 mi
The corner of Texas Avenue and Main is some of the most layered ground in Houston. The Allen brothers built the Republic of Texas Capitol here, a two-story wooden building that housed the government from 1837 to 1839.…
-
A Widow's Marble Monument to Her Wildcatter Husband
· 10.4 mi
The ornate tower at 808 Travis is a love story written in stone. Niels Esperson, a Danish immigrant, became a pioneering developer of the Humble oil field and made a fortune; he died of a heart attack in 1922 while…
-
Suite 8F: The Secret Capital of Texas
· 10.4 mi
At Main and Lamar once stood the Lamar Hotel, built in the late 1920s by Jesse Jones, the developer who put up much of downtown's skyline and owned the Houston Chronicle. On the eighth floor was a suite, number 8F,…
-
The Storm That Handed Houston the Crown
· 10.4 mi
Much of why downtown Houston is here at all traces to a catastrophe fifty miles away. On September 8, 1900, a hurricane destroyed Galveston and killed somewhere between six thousand and twelve thousand people, the…
-
Houston's First Skyscraper Was Six Stories Tall
· 10.4 mi
At Main and Texas, the Binz Building of 1895 is remembered as Houston's first skyscraper, and it stood all of six stories tall. To a town of low brick storefronts that was astonishing height. Built by German immigrant…
-
Barbara Jordan Birthplace - Houston Fifth Ward
· 10.4 mi · Historical Marker
Barbara Charline Jordan was born in Houston's Fifth Ward in 1936, the daughter of a Baptist minister who raised her to believe that ordinary was not good enough. She attended Texas Southern University because the…
-
"Sickness, Sickness All Around": The Fever That Haunted the Bayou
· 10.4 mi
For all the Allen brothers' promises of a 'salubrious' climate, the swampy young capital turned out to be one of the unhealthiest spots in Texas. The writer Mary Austin Holley, visiting in the late 1830s, noted bluntly…
-
Market Square: The Block That Was City Hall Four Times Over
· 10.4 mi
This green block, Market Square, was the beating civic heart of Houston for a century. Surveyors laid it out in 1836 as 'Congress Square,' and the Allen brothers first meant to put the permanent Capitol here. Instead it…
-
Houston's Oldest Storefront: A Bakery, an Arsenal, and a Candlelit Bar
· 10.4 mi
The narrow brick building at 813 Congress is generally called the oldest commercial building in Houston still standing on its original site. It went up around 1860 for John Kennedy, an Irish-born baker who had arrived…
-
"Carter's Folly": The Tower Everyone Was Sure Would Fall Down
· 10.4 mi
When the lumber and banking magnate Samuel Fain Carter finished his 16-story tower at 806 Main in 1910, plenty of Houstonians were sure it was a mistake. At sixteen stories it was the tallest building in Houston and in…
-
The Art Deco Giant With a Beacon That Could See Galveston
· 10.4 mi
The soaring Art Deco tower at 712 Main was the work of Jesse Jones -- banker, developer, and one of the men who built modern Houston. Completed in 1929, the Gulf Building rose 36 stories and was the tallest building in…
-
The Red-Coated Drill Team That Won a Fortune in Silver Cups
· 10.4 mi
Near Texas Avenue and Fannin once stood the armory of the Houston Light Guard, a volunteer militia organized by veterans in 1872 and 1873 that became, of all things, a championship precision-drill team. In their red…
-
Frontier Justice: Court Under the Trees and a Log-Jail Fortress
· 10.4 mi
You're at Courthouse Square, the block bounded by Fannin, Congress, San Jacinto, and Preston that has been the seat of Harris County government since 1837. The county's first district court met right here in the open…
-
The Fancy Fruit House That Became the Spaghetti Warehouse
· 10.4 mi
This brick building at 901 Commerce Street, beside Market Square in downtown Houston, was built in 1912 for the Desel-Boettcher Company, the largest fruit and produce wholesaler in Texas, which billed itself as 'The…
-
The Air-Conditioned City Under the Streets
· 10.4 mi
Beneath downtown Houston runs a climate-controlled secret: more than six miles of pedestrian tunnels linking some eighty buildings, the largest such underground network in the country. It began in the 1930s, when the…
-
The Theater With a Sky Full of Stars
· 10.4 mi
On Rusk Avenue once stood the Majestic Theatre, opened in 1923 and the very first of a brand-new kind of movie palace. Its architect, John Eberson, designed it as an indoor Italian garden under a make-believe…
-
The Windowless Marvel That Vanished in Seconds
· 10.4 mi
When the Foley's flagship store opened on Main Street in 1947, the press called it the most modern department store in the country: a windowless monolith faced in pale Minnesota limestone, designed by Kenneth Franzheim,…
-
The Day Forty Blocks Burned on Main Street
· 10.4 mi
On May 19, 1912, fire swept through downtown Houston in one of the worst blazes the young city had seen, racing across as many as forty blocks and causing what newspapers tallied at up to seven million dollars in…
-
The Church Born in the Capitol on Easter Sunday
· 10.4 mi
First Presbyterian, organized on Easter Sunday in 1839, was born inside the government itself: the founding members gathered in the Senate chamber of the Republic of Texas Capitol, here at Main and Texas. The Allen…
-
The German Clerk Who Wrote Down Wild Young Houston
· 10.4 mi
Some of the liveliest glimpses of boomtown Houston come from a young German named Gustav Dresel, who managed a warehouse on Buffalo Bayou in the late 1830s and kept a journal of what he saw between 1837 and 1841. His…
-
Main Street Market Square Historic District
· 10.4 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Pull over for a second – this spot marks the very heart of Houston's origins! Market Square has been the city's central gathering place since Houston was founded in 1836. For decades, this was *the* place for commerce,…
-
Allen's Landing
· 10.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Allen's Landing, the original port of Houston! Back on January 26, 1837, the steamer 'Laura' was the first ocean-going vessel to dock right here. The Allen brothers, Augustus and John, chose this…
-
James Coney Island: The Coin Flip That Named a Hot Dog Empire
· 10.4 mi
James Coney Island was founded in 1923 by Greek immigrant brothers James and Tom Papadakis (from Kastelli, Greece, via New York), who opened a hot dog stand in the Beatty-West Building at Walker and Main in downtown…
-
A Lumber Baron's Hidden Movie House
· 10.4 mi
The eleven-story building at 917 Main was built in 1927 for John Henry Kirby, the East Texas lumber baron, and it hid a secret. Behind a long, narrow entrance off Main Street, at the rear of the office tower, sat a full…
-
From Armory to the Birthplace of Foley's
· 10.4 mi
The building on Travis Street was first put up in 1860 by John Kennedy, the same Irish trader behind the old Kennedy Bakery, and during the Civil War it served as an armory. After fire took half of it, the merchant W.L.…
-
The Rice (Houston)
· 10.4 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Pull over here for a second; you're looking at a spot steeped in Texas history. The Rice, now a luxury apartment building, stands on the very ground where the Republic of Texas once had its capitol. Before this elegant…
-
JPMorgan Chase Building (Houston)
· 10.4 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Check out that skyscraper! Once the tallest building in Houston, this Art Deco beauty offers a glimpse into the city's early 20th-century ambitions. Completed in 1929, the building was originally known as the Gulf…
-
Site of Confederate Prison Compound
· 10.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a former warehouse that, before the Civil War, served the busy shipping lanes of Buffalo Bayou. But during the war, from 1861 to 1865, this building took on a different role: housing…
-
Merchants and Manufacturers Building
· 10.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston, and right here is the M&M Building, a testament to the city's post-World War I economic surge. Completed in 1930, this place was built to be the hub for Houston's merchants and…
-
Benjamin Apartments
· 10.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Benjamin Apartments, a Houston landmark completed way back in 1924. This building was a prime example of the new multi-family housing popping up downtown after World War I. Successful businessman…
-
Gulf Building, Houston, Texas
· 10.4 mi
Gulf Building, Houston, Texas. Photograph, [1929]. Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Rice Hotel (1912)
· 10.4 mi
Rice Hotel, Houston. Historical photograph, 1912. Source: Wikimedia Commons (Public domain).
-
Houston Cotton Exchange (1891)
· 10.4 mi
Houston Cotton Exchange, Houston. Historical photograph, 1891. Source: Wikimedia Commons (Public domain).
-
Market Square (1895)
· 10.4 mi
Market Square, Houston. Historical photograph, 1895. Source: Wikimedia Commons (Public domain).
-
Third Church of Christ, Scientist
· 10.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Houston's Third Church of Christ, Scientist. Organized in 1922 as an offshoot of the First Church, this building was completed in 1928. Designed by J. Rodney Tabor, it's one of the last…
-
The Day Houston Enlisted a Thousand
· 10.5 mi
On Memorial Day in 1942, one of the most extraordinary wartime scenes in Texas history unfolded in downtown Houston: 1,000 Houston men enlisted in the U.S. Navy in a single mass ceremony. It was staged as both a…
-
The Night It Rained Glass Downtown: Hurricane Alicia, 1983
· 10.5 mi
Hurricane Alicia made landfall at San Luis Pass on August 18, 1983 as a Category 3 with 115 mph winds, killing 21 and causing roughly $2-3 billion in damage. Downtown, the skyscraper canyons funneled the wind, which…
-
The Day Audubon Waded Into the Capital of Texas
· 10.5 mi
In May 1837, the famous bird painter John James Audubon came up Buffalo Bayou to see the brand-new capital of the Republic of Texas, and he was not impressed. The bayou had risen about six feet over its banks; Audubon…
-
The Murder Plot That Founded a University
· 10.5 mi
Before there was a Rice University, there was a Main Street store. William Marsh Rice came to Houston in the early days and built a fortune as a cotton merchant, with a general store on the east side of Main between…
-
The Showman Who Played Santa for the Whole City
· 10.5 mi
Will Horwitz ran a little empire of downtown movie houses, the Iris, the Texan, and the Uptown, and tunneled between them under Capitol Avenue. But Houston loved him for more than movies. Every year he threw a Christmas…
-
The Frontier Ball Under Wax-Dripping Chandeliers
· 10.5 mi
One year after the Battle of San Jacinto, raw young Houston threw itself a grand ball. Guests came from Brazoria, Columbia, and beyond, riding fifty and sixty miles on horseback or rowing in by boat. General Sam Houston…
-
The Cottonclad That Recaptured Galveston
· 10.5 mi
Right here on the banks of Buffalo Bayou, Confederate forces staged one of the boldest naval operations of the entire Civil War. The star of that story was the CS Bayou City, a 165-foot side-wheel steamboat that had…
-
Houston, TX
· 10.5 mi · Local history
Houston. Even the name echoes with a certain Texan swagger, doesn't it? Named for Sam Houston, the city rose from the muddy banks of Buffalo Bayou, that sluggish waterway that was, and still is, the lifeblood of the…
-
A Town of Tents With a Round Tent Saloon and 47 Bars
· 10.5 mi
When the first settlers stepped off the steamboat at early Houston, one of the very first buildings to greet them was a big round tent -- and it was a saloon. The brand-new town was mostly canvas and raw lumber, but it…
-
King Cotton Ran the City Upstairs, and a Plush Saloon Ran the Basement
· 10.5 mi
Before oil, Houston ran on cotton, and this ornate Victorian building at 202 Travis was where the money moved. Built in 1884 and 1885 to designs by the city's leading architect Eugene Heiner, the Houston Cotton Exchange…
-
The Long Row: Houston's First Block of Shops
· 10.5 mi
On Main Street facing Market Square once stood the Long Row, the young capital's first block of shops. In early 1837 the builder Thomas William Ward put it up for Augustus Allen as a single long frame building divided…
-
The Republic's Newspaper Sailed In on the Yellow Stone
· 10.5 mi
Texas's first lasting newspaper followed the government to Houston in its earliest days. The Telegraph and Texas Register had been founded at San Felipe de Austin in 1835 by Gail Borden Junior and his partners; on April…
-
The Egyptian Picture Palace on Main
· 10.5 mi
On Main Street, the Metropolitan Theatre opened on Christmas Day, 1926, a two-million-dollar movie palace built by Jesse Jones and designed by Alfred Finn. Its theme was ancient Egypt: millions of ceramic tiles formed…
-
The Tower Seven Daughters Built for Their Father
· 10.5 mi
The Scanlan Building at 405 Main went up in 1909 as a tribute. Thomas Howe Scanlan, an Irish immigrant who became mayor of Houston, had died in 1906, and his seven daughters built this eleven-story office tower as a…
-
The Giant Merchandise Mart Turned University on the Bayou
· 10.5 mi
Right over Allen's Landing, where Houston was founded, sprawls a massive Art Deco building from 1930, the Merchants and Manufacturers Building, the largest building in the city when it was new, with some six hundred…
-
Building of the Decade, With a Ten-Foot Gap
· 10.5 mi
Pennzoil Place, completed in 1976, broke the boxy mold of the glass skyscraper. Architects Philip Johnson and John Burgee designed two identical bronze-glass towers, each sliced off at a sharp angle and set just ten…
-
The Tallest Tower in Texas, and a Giant Miro
· 10.5 mi
The pale, five-sided tower at 600 Travis, finished in 1981 and designed by the celebrated architect I.M. Pei, rises seventy-five stories and just past a thousand feet. For more than forty years it was the tallest…
-
Bottomless Mud: A Geologist's Houston, 1846
· 10.5 mi
Ten years after Houston was founded, it was still a mud pit, and we have a firsthand witness to prove it. In 1846 the German geologist Ferdinand Roemer passed through on a scientific tour of Texas. The streets, he…
-
Johnny Dang by That Mexican OT, Paul Wall & DRODi
· 10.5 mi · Manual
This song is a tribute to Johnny Dang (born Đặng Anh Tuấn in 1973 in Đắk Lắk Province, Vietnam), the legendary Houston jeweler who built an empire making custom diamond grillz. Dang immigrated to Houston in 1996 and…
-
Zydeco Music in Frenchtown
· 10.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through what used to be Houston's Frenchtown, a neighborhood with a sound all its own. Back in the 1920s, Creole families from Louisiana brought their culture and their music here. At first, it was…
-
The Victorian Jewelers' Turret on Main Street
· 10.5 mi
The eye-catching building with the three-story corner turret at Main and Congress is the Sweeney, Coombs and Fredericks Building, one of the few true Victorian commercial buildings left in Houston. It was completed in…
-
Humble Oil Building
· 10.5 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Feast your eyes on the Humble Oil Building, a monument to Houston's gusher of black gold! This Italian Renaissance beauty whispers tales of an era when oil transformed this city. Humble Oil and Refining Company, later…
-
Auditorium Hotel
· 10.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through downtown Houston, and right here is the Auditorium Hotel. Built in 1926, this place was designed by Joseph Finger, and you can see that Italian Renaissance style in the upper floors. It was the…
-
San Jacinto High School
· 10.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of San Jacinto High School, a Houston landmark that's seen a lot of history. It opened in 1914 as South End Junior High, in a grand classical revival building erected right here in 1913. By…
-
First Evangelical Church
· 10.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing the site of the First Evangelical Church. Back on July 1, 1851, a group led by Reverend Caspar Messon Braun founded what would become this church, originally called the First…
-
Magnolia Brewery Building
· 10.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past a piece of Houston's brewing history! This is the Magnolia Brewery Building, a survivor from the late 1800s when the Houston Ice and Brewing Company churned out popular brands like Magnolia,…
-
The "Rock Eater" Drill Bit That Built the Hughes Dynasty
· 10.6 mi
On the eastern edge of downtown, where the University of Houston-Downtown now stands near 2nd and Girard, the Hughes empire began with a chunk of steel. In 1908 and 1909 Howard Hughes Sr. and his partner Walter Sharp…
-
The Houston Light Guard
· 10.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the historic home of the Houston Light Guard, a Texas militia unit with a century of service! Organized way back in 1873, these guys started out with parades and drills, even serving as honor guard…
-
Horace Dickinson Taylor
· 10.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing the old stomping grounds of Horace Dickinson Taylor. He arrived in Texas as a teenager, orphaned and looking for a new start. By 1848, he and his brother were in Houston, starting…
-
Mandell, Edward
· 10.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the birthplace of Edward Mandell House, better known as Colonel House. Born right here in Houston in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1858</say-as>, he became one of America's most powerful…
-
The Spanish-Renaissance Library and Its Violin-Playing Ghost
· 10.7 mi
The richly detailed Spanish Renaissance building at 550 McKinney is the Julia Ideson Building, opened in 1926 as Houston's main public library, replacing the city's first Carnegie library of 1904. The architect, Ralph…
-
The Theater District's 1926 Cornerstone
· 10.7 mi
At Texas Avenue and Louisiana stands the Lancaster Hotel, opened in 1926 as the Auditorium Hotel, next door to the old City Auditorium. The architect Joseph Finger gave it twelve fireproof stories of Italian Renaissance…
-
Houston Fire Museum
· 10.7 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine Houston without a dedicated fire station. It's hard to believe, but that was the reality before Fire Station No. 7 was built in 1903! Constructed to serve the growing needs of the city, Fire Station No. 7 housed…
-
House, Thomas William
· 10.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of the former home of Thomas William House. Born in England in 1814, House came to Texas in 1838 and started as a baker. But he didn't stop there! He became one…
-
Trinity Episcopal Church
· 10.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Trinity Episcopal Church in Houston, a landmark of Gothic Revival architecture. Established way back in 1893, the parish acquired this very site in 1910. Construction on this impressive sanctuary,…
-
Houston Public Library
· 10.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, a city that's been a hub of ideas since its early days. Back in the 1840s, professionals here formed debating societies, and to support their discussions, they created the Houston…
-
Houston City Hall, 901 Bagby Street, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 10.7 mi
Houston City Hall, 901 Bagby Street, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Salt Grass Trail Ride — Houston Finish
· 10.8 mi
Downtown Houston is the finish line of the Salt Grass Trail Ride: after roughly 70 miles over seven days, the wagons roll into the city for the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo parade. The ride's stated purpose is to…
-
The Neighborhood That Sank: Brownwood
· 10.8 mi
Brownwood was platted in 1937 by Humble Oil executives as an exclusive waterfront enclave on a peninsula between Burnet, Crystal and Scott Bays, nicknamed the 'River Oaks of Baytown,' home to oil executives, doctors and…
-
The Park Where Houston Met the Moon
· 10.8 mi
Tranquillity Park, the downtown block between City Hall and the federal courthouse, is Houston's monument to the Moon landing. It was dedicated on July 20, 1979, the tenth anniversary of Apollo 11, and is named for the…
-
The Peanut-Lunch Millionaire of Hermann Square
· 10.8 mi
The green square in front of City Hall is named for George Hermann, born in Houston in 1843, who made a fortune in real estate, cattle, and oil after the Humble field came in around 1903, but never acted rich. Stocky…
-
The Oldest House in Houston, Built From Bayou Mud
· 10.8 mi
In Sam Houston Park, on the western edge of downtown, sits the Kellum-Noble House -- built in 1847 and the oldest building in Houston still resting on its original foundation. Nathaniel Kellum, who reached Houston in…
-
The Old Place: Harris County's Oldest Roof
· 10.8 mi
In Sam Houston Park stands a rough cedar-log cabin called the Old Place, built around 1823 and thought to be the oldest surviving structure in all of Harris County. It was probably raised by John R. Williams, one of…
-
Antioch Missionary Baptist Church
· 10.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Antioch Missionary Baptist Church, a Houston landmark with a powerful story. Right after emancipation in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1865</say-as>, nine former slaves founded Houston's…
-
Houston City, Republic of Texas
· 10.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Houston's first claim to fame: it was chosen as the temporary capital of the Republic of Texas! Back in November of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1836</say-as>, this muddy…
-
The Art Deco City Hall That Left Market Square
· 10.8 mi
Houston's City Hall on Bagby Street, finished in 1939, is a sleek Art Deco landmark by architect Joseph Finger, with a richly patterned terrazzo lobby and stylized stonework. It marked a big move: for nearly a century,…
-
Kellum-Noble House
· 10.8 mi · Scraped Hmdb
You're near Houston's oldest standing house, a silent witness to the city's transformation. Built around 1847, the Kellum-Noble House offers a glimpse into Houston's earliest days. This Greek Revival-style home was…
-
Democratic National Convention, 1928
· 10.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a huge moment in American political history! Back in 1928, Houston landed the Democratic National Convention, thanks to businessman Jesse H. Jones. They built Sam Houston Hall in just 64…
-
Houston, Texas
· 10.8 mi
Houston, Texas. Photograph, [between 1980 and 2006]. From the Highsmith, Carol M., 1946- Carol M. Highsmith Archive. Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
University of Houston Collegium, Houston, Texas
· 10.8 mi
University of Houston Collegium, Houston, Texas. Photograph, [between 1980 and 2006]. From the Highsmith, Carol M., 1946- Carol M. Highsmith Archive. Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Art, Houston, Texas
· 10.8 mi
Art, Houston, Texas. Photograph, [between 1980 and 2006]. From the Highsmith, Carol M., 1946- Carol M. Highsmith Archive. Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Blockfront, Houston, Texas
· 10.8 mi
Blockfront, Houston, Texas. Photograph, 1977. From the Margolies, John John Margolies Roadside America photograph archive. Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Sam Houston Park, Davis Plantation, 1100 Bagby Street, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 10.8 mi
Sam Houston Park, Davis Plantation, 1100 Bagby Street, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Sam Houston Park, Yates House, 1100 Bagby Street, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 10.8 mi
Sam Houston Park, Yates House, 1100 Bagby Street, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Sam Houston Park, 809 Robin Street House, 1100 Bagby Street, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 10.8 mi
Sam Houston Park, 809 Robin Street House, 1100 Bagby Street, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Nichols-Rice-Cherry House, Sam Houston Park (moved from San Jacinto Street), Houston, Harris County, TX
· 10.8 mi
Nichols-Rice-Cherry House, Sam Houston Park (moved from San Jacinto Street), Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Buildings Survey (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints &…
-
A Buffalo on Buffalo Bayou: The Bison Who Started the Houston Zoo
· 10.9 mi
In March 1921 the federal government gave Houston a bison from the national herd at the Wichita Forest Reserve in Oklahoma, a young bull named Earl, not quite two years old. Earl was kept for a time in a pen at Sam…
-
The $25 Door That Bought a Mansion
· 10.9 mi
The graceful Greek Revival house in Sam Houston Park was built in 1850 by General Ebenezer Nichols at Courthouse Square, and soon sold to his business partner, the merchant William Marsh Rice, who would one day endow…
-
Maurice J. Sullivan
· 10.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing the legacy of Maurice J. Sullivan, a Michigan-born architect who found his architectural home right here. After teaching himself the craft, Sullivan moved to Houston in 1912 and…
-
Clayton House
· 10.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Clayton House, built between 1916 and 1917. This Georgian Revival home was the center of life for William L. Clayton, a titan of industry and public service. He founded Anderson, Clayton &…
-
San Felipe Cottage
· 10.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Houston's oldest surviving house! Built in 1837, this cottage stood on land owned by Mrs. Obedience Smith, one of the earliest settlers in this area. Imagine the stories these walls could…
-
Houston Infirmary
· 10.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing the site where a major medical facility once stood: the Houston Infirmary. Founded in 1874 by two former Confederate surgeons, Drs. David Stuart and Joshua Larendon, this hospital…
-
The Playhouse Theatre
· 10.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and you might have just passed the site of a theatrical revolution! Look to your right for the former location of The Playhouse Theatre, built in 1950. This wasn't just any theater; it…
-
Pillot House
· 10.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and just ahead is the site of the Pillot House, built way back in 1868. Eugene Pillot, a French immigrant, constructed this home for his family, and they lived here for nearly a hundred…
-
South Main Baptist Church
· 10.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, past the site of what became South Main Baptist Church. It all started in 1903 with a tent revival meeting held by evangelist Livingston T. Mays. Thirty-two Baptists formed a new…
-
The Hospital Built on Top of the Old City Cemetery
· 11.0 mi
On the western edge of downtown, near Buffalo Bayou, stands the old Jefferson Davis Hospital, completed in 1924 as Houston's first centralized hospital for the city's poor. It was built on unusual ground: the site had…
-
Dowling, Dick
· 11.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a legendary Civil War victory, right here in Texas. Dick Dowling, an Irish immigrant who’d already brought gas lighting to Houston and started the city's first oil company, commanded just…
-
Origins of Freedman's Town
· 11.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston's Fourth Ward, the historic heart of Freedman's Town. Right after the Civil War, in June of 1865, formerly enslaved people founded this settlement just west of downtown. It quickly became…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Northside (Houston)
· 11.0 mi
Northside (Houston, TX) placed on the 4A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Jeremy Castillo (0.604 avg); Anthony Azua (0.576 avg); Coco Hernandez (0.550 avg); Nicholas Juarez (0.545 avg);…
-
Terms of Endearment: The Best Picture Houston Played Itself In
· 11.0 mi
Terms of Endearment (1983), directed by James L. Brooks, won five Academy Awards including Best Picture and was filmed largely in Houston. Aurora Greenway's house is a private residence at 3060 Locke Lane (Avalon/River…
-
Be Someone: The Graffiti Houston Refuses to Let Die
· 11.0 mi
In the early 2010s, an anonymous artist painted 'Be Someone' on the Union Pacific railroad bridge over I-45 just north of downtown, facing hundreds of thousands of daily commuters. The artist has never been publicly…
-
Jefferson Davis Hospital
· 11.0 mi · Scraped Hmdb
This building wasn't always lofts for artists. For decades, it was Houston's first real public hospital. Built in 1924, Jefferson Davis Hospital served the city's poorest residents, offering medical care to those who…
-
Holcombe House
· 11.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Holcombe House in Houston, a stunning example of Tudor Revival architecture. Built in 1925 for Oscar Holcombe, a man who served eleven terms as Houston's mayor, this house was his final…
-
Bethany Baptist Church
· 11.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through northeast Houston, past a church that became a symbol of successful integration. Organized as Houston Garden Baptist in 1935, it changed its name to Bethany Baptist in 1946. The neighborhood…
-
Bethel Missionary Baptist Church
· 11.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Bethel Missionary Baptist Church, a congregation with roots stretching back to 1890. It started with a disagreement over renovation funds at another church, leading Rev. Jack Yates and…
-
Courtlandt Place
· 11.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Courtlandt Place, a neighborhood platted in 1907 on land once owned by pioneer Mrs. Obedience Smith. This was built as a private enclave for Houston's elite. It's a showcase for impressive homes…
-
Dorrance, John M.
· 11.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former home of John M. Dorrance, a big-time Houston cotton broker and civic leader. He had this beautiful house built in 1914. Take a look at that Mediterranean architecture – those arched…
-
F.C.L. and Emilie Neuhaus House
· 11.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the F.C.L. and Emilie Neuhaus House in Houston, a landmark built in 1909. Designed by architects Sanguinet and Staats, this Colonial Revival home showcases classical elements like a grand portico.…
-
Foster, Dr. John H., House
· 11.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and you might catch a glimpse of history in the architecture. This house, built in 1912, was home to Dr. John Hoskins Foster. Born in Austin County in 1876, he earned his medical degree…
-
Aviary at the Houston Zoo
· 11.1 mi · Scraped Hmdb
You're about to see something truly unique: a work of art disguised as nature, right here in the Houston Zoo. Back in 1926, the zoo commissioned Mexican artist Dionicio Rodriguez to create an aviary. But this wasn't…
-
The Garden Club of Houston
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right around here, a group of seven friends got together back in 1924. They lived near the new Museum of Fine Arts and wanted to study plants, try out new flowers, and make Houston…
-
Carroll, James Judson and Lena Carter
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past the former home of James Judson Carroll, a notable businessman and ornithologist, and his wife Lena. Built in 1912, this Classical Revival residence was designed with impressive two-story columns…
-
Donoghue, Thomas J. and Mary
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former home of Thomas J. Donoghue, a founder and executive of Texaco! He and his wife, Mary, built this stunning house right here between 1915 and 1916. It's a prime example of Georgian Revival…
-
Waldo Mansion
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former site of the Waldo Mansion in Houston. It was built in 1885 by J.P. Waldo, a Confederate veteran who became a successful railroad executive. Originally, this grand house had a Mansard roof…
-
Bryan-Chapman House
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston, and right here is the Bryan-Chapman House. Built in 1925, this wasn't just any home. It was envisioned as a thoroughly modern showplace by sisters Caroline and Johnelle Bryan, leaders in…
-
Sessums & Virginia Cleveland House
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Sessums and Virginia Cleveland House in Houston, a stunning example of early 20th-century architecture. Designed by the famous Sanguinet & Staats firm and built in 1911, this home was a hub for…
-
Harper House
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Harper House, a beautiful example of mail-order architecture. Built in 1905 from plans by Tennessee architect George Barber, this home was first occupied by Benjamin and Bertie Harper. Ben Harper…
-
Ezekial and Mary Jane Miller House
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the home of Ezekial and Mary Jane Miller. Ezekial arrived in Texas around 1900 and built a successful timber business. He became a prominent merchant and civic leader,…
-
St. Paul's United Methodist Church
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing the site of St. Paul's United Methodist Church. This congregation started in December of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1905</say-as>, with just 153 charter members. They…
-
Mt. Carmel Missionary Baptist Church
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston's historic Fourth Ward, the heart of Freedmen's Town. Look around – this area was built by former slaves after emancipation, and churches here were the absolute center of life. You're…
-
St. Joseph's Catholic Church
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of St. Joseph's Catholic Church in Houston. A school opened here in 1879, and the parish itself was founded in 1880 to serve the growing community. The impressive Romanesque Revival building…
-
Armand House, Albert M.
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Armand House in Houston. Albert Armand, a clerk for a plumbing supply company, bought this lot for two thousand dollars in 1911. He lived in this two-story Arts and Crafts style home for only two…
-
Edward & Katharine Jackson House
· 11.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Edward and Katharine Jackson house, a fine example of early 20th-century craftsman architecture. Originally built in 1913 by James Carroll, it was purchased by the Jacksons in 1918 and stayed in…
-
The Cathedral Under the Park: Houston's Forgotten Cistern
· 11.2 mi
Under a grassy rise in Buffalo Bayou Park hides the City of Houston's 1926 underground drinking-water reservoir, designed by engineer J.W. Turner: 15 million gallons at capacity across 87,500 square feet (about a…
-
Where a Co-Founder of Houston Lies
· 11.2 mi
Just west of downtown on West Dallas Street lies Founders Memorial Cemetery, opened in 1836 as the City Cemetery and the oldest burial ground in Houston. Among its graves is one of the two men who created the city…
-
Pearland High School — State Softball 2026
· 11.2 mi
Pearland High School in Pearland, Texas qualified for the 2026 UIL state softball championships, reaching the state tournament (final four) in Class six A, Division One.
-
Allen, John Kirby
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the heart of what was once a humid swamp, but John Kirby Allen saw a future metropolis. Born in New York, Allen and his brother Augustus arrived in Texas in 1832. Just four years later, immediately…
-
Collinsworth, James
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the final resting place of James Collinsworth, a true Texas hero. Born in Tennessee in 1806, he came to Texas and became a delegate to the Consultation in 1835 and a signer of the Texas Declaration…
-
Holland Lodge No. 1, A.F. & A.M. of Texas
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Texas's very first Masonic Lodge, Holland Lodge, organized way back in March of 1835. Imagine this: the lodge's charter, carried into the heat of battle by Dr. Anson Jones, survived the…
-
George and Cynthia Mitchell Memorial Causeway
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
This stretch of NASA Road One, running between State Highway 146 and Interstate 45, is named for George and Cynthia Mitchell. George Mitchell was the son of a Greek immigrant goat-herder from Galveston. He went into the…
-
Allen, George
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where George Allen, a New York native, helped build Houston. He arrived in the 1830s to join his brothers, Augustus and John Kirby Allen, in founding the city. George fought in the Texas War…
-
Barr, Robert
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the resting place of Robert Barr, a veteran of the Battle of San Jacinto. He came to Texas from Ohio, born in 1802, and served the Republic of Texas as Postmaster General under presidents Houston and…
-
Durham, William Daniel
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where William Daniel Durham died in Houston. Born in England in 1814, Durham came to Texas and jumped right into the fight for independence. He participated in the capture of Bexar in…
-
Edson, Amos B.
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where Amos B. Edson lived out his final days. He arrived in Texas on January 28, 1836, recruited in New Orleans for the Army of Texas. Edson served in Captain Amasa Turner's company at the…
-
Ehlinger, Joseph
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston, and right here is where Joseph Ehlinger lived out his days. Born in France in 1792, he came to Texas and fought in the decisive Battle of San Jacinto. After helping win Texas…
-
Homan, Harvey
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where Harvey Homan lived out his days in Houston. Homan arrived in Texas in January of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1836</say-as>, just in time to join Captain Richard Roman's…
-
Lamar, Mrs. Rebecca
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where Rebecca Lamar, widow of John Lamar and mother of Mirabeau B. Lamar, died. She passed away at her home, "Oak Grove," right here in Houston on July 26th, 1839. While her son would go on…
-
Lewis, Archibald S.
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the story of Archibald S. Lewis. He was a soldier in Captain Benjamin F. Bryant's company at the decisive Battle of San Jacinto in <say-as interpret-as="date"…
-
Swearingen, William C.
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where William C. Swearingen lived and died in Houston. Born in Kentucky, he arrived in Texas on January 28, 1836, ready to fight for independence. He served with Captain Amasa Turner's…
-
Thompson, Henry Livingston
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the final resting place of Henry Livingston Thompson, Commodore of the Texan Navy during the Republic. Thompson died right here in Houston on November 1st, 1837. His funeral was a massive event for…
-
Moreland, Major Isaac N.
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the final resting place of Major Isaac N. Moreland, a Georgia-born soldier who came to Texas in 1834. He fought in the Storming of Bexar in 1835 and commanded the artillery at the decisive Battle of…
-
Moore, John W.
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former site of a true Texas hero, John W. Moore. He was right in the thick of it, opposing Bradburn at Anahuac back in 1832. Then, he was a key member of the Consultation at San Felipe in 1835,…
-
Richardson, John
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the final resting place of John Richardson, a veteran of the Texas Revolution. He arrived in Texas in 1834, just two years before the fight for independence. He served in Captain James Gillaspie's…
-
Blue Bird Circle, The
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of The Blue Bird Circle, a remarkable women's organization founded right here in Houston back in January of 1923. They started out by creating a co-op home for young women, a day nursery,…
-
Yates, Rutherford B. H., Sr., House
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Rutherford B. H. Yates, Sr. House in Houston, a place that opened its doors to history. Rutherford Yates, son of a prominent civic and religious leader, grew up right next door. After college and…
-
Allen, John Kirby
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past where John Kirby Allen lived and died. Born in New York in 1810, Allen came to Texas in 1832. He served in the first Congress of the Republic of Texas, representing Nacogdoches County. But he's most…
-
Friendswood, TX
· 11.2 mi · Local history
Friendswood wasn't always the comfortable suburb it is today. It began as a Quaker settlement in the late 19th century, a small pocket of faith and community carved out of the coastal prairie. The name itself,…
-
Brown, Cecil and Frances
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former home of Cecil and Frances Brown, a house that was once the only brick residence in Friendswood. Built in 1938, it was designed by architect Henry A. Stubee. Cecil Brown was a major player…
-
Bancroft, Jethro Russell
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former home of Jethro Russell Bancroft, a veteran of the Texas Revolution. He arrived here in 1830, long before Texas was a republic. Bancroft fought with Captain Thomas H. McIntire's company at…
-
Brigham, Moses W.
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the final resting place of Moses W. Brigham, a veteran of the Battle of San Jacinto. He fought with Captain Amasa Turner's company in that decisive clash that won Texas its independence. Just two…
-
Cheevers, John
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the resting place of John Cheevers, a veteran of the Texas Revolution. He arrived in Texas way back in 1829, long before the fight for independence. Cheevers fought bravely at the Battle of San…
-
DePelchin Faith Home
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the DePelchin Faith Home in Houston. It started back in 1893, founded in memory of Kezia Payne DePelchin, a dedicated social worker, teacher, and nurse who served this city in the late 1800s. The…
-
Gammell, William
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the resting place of William Gammell, a Scot who fought for Texas liberty at the Battle of San Jacinto. He came all the way from Scotland to join Captain Wyly's company and help win Texas…
-
Garrow House
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Garrow House in Houston, a beautiful example of Italian Renaissance style. John W. Garrow, a big-time cotton broker, had this place built back in 1913. It was the seventh home in the fancy new…
-
Grieves, David
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the resting place of David Grieves, a Scotsman who fought for Texas freedom. He was a member of Captain Henry Teal's company at the decisive Battle of San Jacinto in 1836. Just a year later, Grieves…
-
Houston Light Guard Armory
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Houston Light Guard Armory, a building designed by the famous Houston architect Alfred C. Finn. Constructed in 1925, it replaced an older armory from 1892. Finn gave it a unique look, blending…
-
Baker-Jones House
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
Hey road-trippers, look to your right! You're passing the Baker-Jones House, a grand dame of early 20th-century Houston architecture. Completed in 1917, this was no ordinary home. Wealthy attorney James Addison Baker…
-
San Jacinto Chapter of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where a group of determined women set out to preserve Texas history. On November 9, 1891, eight Houston women founded the San Jacinto Chapter of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas. Their…
-
Secrest, Fielding G.
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where Fielding G. Secrest died in Houston on June 1st, 1840. Secrest was a veteran of the Texas Revolution, serving in Captain Henry W. Karnes' company of cavalry at the decisive Battle of…
-
Stilwell, William S.
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site where a San Jacinto veteran met his end. William S. Stilwell fought in the final battle of the Texas Revolution with Captain Moreland's artillery company. Just…
-
Viven, John
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the resting place of John Viven, a veteran of the Texas Revolution. He fought with Captain William Wood's company at the decisive Battle of San Jacinto. After the fight for Texas independence, Viven…
-
Montgomery, Robert W.
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where Robert W. Montgomery took his final breath. He was a soldier in Captain Henry Teal's company of Regulars, fighting bravely at the Battle of San Jacinto. Just a year after Texas won its…
-
Noland, Eli
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the final resting place of Eli Noland, a veteran of the Texas Revolution. Noland fought in Captain William S. Fisher's company at the decisive Battle of San Jacinto in 1836. Born in Ohio in 1804, he…
-
Reid, John R.
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where John R. Reid served as an Associate Justice on the Supreme Court of the Republic of Texas, starting in 1839. He also represented his constituents in Congress from 1840 to 1841. Sadly,…
-
Richardson, David Porter
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where David Porter Richardson died. He served as private secretary to none other than President Sam Houston during the Republic of Texas era. Richardson passed away right here in Houston on…
-
Pioneer Memorial Log House
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Pioneer Memorial Log House, a testament to Texas women's determination. Conceived by the Daughters of the Republic of Texas for the state's 1936 Centennial, this wasn't just any cabin. Despite…
-
Howard Hughes Birthplace
· 11.3 mi · Historical Marker
Howard Hughes was born in Houston in 1905 to a father who had patented a drill bit that revolutionized the oil industry. When both parents died by the time he was nineteen, Hughes inherited seventy-five percent of…
-
Eclectic Menagerie Park
· 11.3 mi · Things to Do
An outdoor display of giant welded-metal sculptures along the edge of the Texas Pipe and Supply pipe yard including a King Kong hanging from a crane a 20-foot…
-
Kenny Rogers: From the San Felipe Courts to American Bandstand
· 11.3 mi
Kenny Rogers (Kenneth Ray Rogers, born August 21, 1938 at St. Joseph's Infirmary, Houston; died 2020) grew up the fourth of eight children in the San Felipe Courts public housing project in Houston's Fourth Ward, the…
-
Lynch's Ferry
· 11.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past the site of Lynch's Ferry, established before 1824 by Nathaniel Lynch. He was one of Stephen F. Austin's very first colonists, settling land granted to him in 1824. By 1830, Lynch had earned the…
-
Roy and Lillie Cullen Building
· 11.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, heading towards the heart of the Texas Medical Center. Look around you, because you're passing the Roy and Lillie Cullen Building. This place is central to one of Texas's biggest success…
-
Nurture Nature Festival: A Party on a Peninsula With a Past
· 11.3 mi
You're near the Baytown Nature Center on Bayway Drive, which hosts the Nurture Nature Festival each October: a free family festival with live-animal demonstrations and hands-on education about Gulf Coast plants and…
-
Friendswood
· 11.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Friendswood, a community founded in 1895 by Quakers seeking a place to build their lives around faith and education. Their leaders, F. J. Brown and T. H. Lewis, bought the land and named it…
-
Mallalieu United Methodist Church
· 11.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Conroe, past a church with a history as resilient as the people who built it. In 1885, the First Ward Methodist Episcopal Church was organized right here. Imagine, just months later, they bought…
-
New Zion Temple Church
· 11.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston's historic Fourth Ward, past the site of the New Zion Temple Church. It started in March of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1933</say-as> as a small storefront church, known as The…
-
Settegast, TX
· 11.3 mi · Local history
Settegast, that little pocket on Houston's northeast side, it’s seen a lot. It started as mostly prairie, part of the larger landscape that defined Harris County. Folks came seeking land, and the railroads really shaped…
-
Rice University
· 11.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston, and right here is the site of Rice University, a place born from a fortune and a suspicious death. William Marsh Rice, a titan of Texas business, dreamed of a school. But he stipulated…
-
Howard Hughes Birthplace
· 11.4 mi · Historical Marker
Howard Robard Hughes Jr. was born in Houston in 1905 and grew up to become the most fascinating, tortured, and spectacularly wealthy recluse America has ever produced. His father invented a drill bit that revolutionized…
-
First Presbyterian Church of Houston
· 11.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing the site of the First Presbyterian Church of Houston. Organized on Easter Sunday, <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1839</say-as>, in the Senate…
-
Link-Lee House
· 11.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Link-Lee House in Houston, a grand dame built in 1912 for oilman John Wiley Link. He developed the Montrose subdivision and built this as his first home there. It's a stunning example of…
-
Twentieth-Century Development of Freedman's Town
· 11.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through what used to be Houston's Freedman's Town, the heart of the city's African American community. It sprang to life right after emancipation on June 19th, 1865. This neighborhood was packed with…
-
Wooster Community
· 11.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past what used to be the Wooster community, a town that grew up around the oil industry. It was founded in 1892 by families from Iowa, who bought up over a thousand acres. For a while, it was a quiet…
-
Autry House
· 11.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Autry House in Houston, a building that started life as a student center for Rice University. Built in 1921, it was designed to match the Italian Mediterranean style of the campus. Architects…
-
La Porte
· 11.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of La Porte, a town born from a grand land development scheme. In 1890, investors bought up over a thousand acres, laying out lots and advertising to folks back east. By 1892, a hotel,…
-
Hammer-McFaddin-Harris Cemetery
· 11.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Hammer-McFaddin-Harris Cemetery. Established way back in 1851, it was officially recognized as a Historic Texas Cemetery in 2010. This site holds the stories of early settlers in the Pasadena…
-
Brownwood: The Baytown Neighborhood That Sank Into the Bay
· 11.5 mi
You're at the Baytown Nature Center, which was once Brownwood -- Baytown's most prestigious neighborhood, built from 1937 on a peninsula between Burnet, Crystal, and Scott Bays and favored by Humble Oil executives;…
-
La Porte, TX
· 11.5 mi
La Porte, Texas, sits on the shores of Galveston Bay, and its name speaks directly to its location and history. "La Porte" is French for "the door" or "the gateway," and the city was named by its founder, a land…
-
Montrose, TX
· 11.5 mi · Local history
Montrose, that little triangle of Houston nestled between downtown and the Museum District, has always been a place for dreamers, artists, and folks who didn't quite fit in anywhere else. It's no surprise, then, that…
-
Homesite (Point Pleasant) of William Scott
· 11.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the historic homesite of William Scott, a key figure in early Texas settlement. Scott arrived in Texas in 1824 with Stephen F. Austin's original colonists, receiving land right here on the San…
-
Fondren Mansion
· 11.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Fondren Mansion in Houston, a stunning example of Prairie School architecture. Built in 1923 for Walter W. Fondren, a founder of Humble Oil & Refining Company, this home was a symbol of his…
-
Original site of the Houston Coca-Cola Bottling Company
· 11.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the original site of the Houston Coca-Cola Bottling Company. Back in 1902, this was the spot where Houstonians first got their bottled Coke, delivered by mule-drawn wagon! J.T. Lupton opened this…
-
Ned A. & Linda S. Eppes House
· 11.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Ned A. and Linda S. Eppes House in Houston, a real pioneer of concrete construction! <break time="400ms"/> Built in nineteen twenty-six, this home was one of the very first in Houston made…
-
Burnet, Hannah Este
· 11.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the marker for Hannah Este Burnet. Born in New Jersey in 1800, she moved to Texas and became the wife of David G. Burnet, who served as the ad interim president of the Republic of Texas in 1836.…
-
Annunciation Church (1907)
· 11.5 mi
Annunciation Church, Houston. Historical photograph, 1907. Source: Wikimedia Commons (Public domain).
-
Johnson Space Center - Mission Control
· 11.6 mi · Historical Marker
'Houston, we've had a problem.' Those words were spoken to this building. NASA's Johnson Space Center has been the nerve center of American human spaceflight since 1965. Every Apollo mission was controlled from these…
-
Space Center Houston
· 11.6 mi · Things to Do
Houston we have a problem. Every word spoken between Apollo astronauts and Earth came through Mission Control at NASAs Johnson Space Center in Houston. The…
-
Space Environment Simulation Laboratory
· 11.6 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Ever wonder how NASA ensures equipment can survive the vacuum of space? You're near the Space Environment Simulation Laboratory, or SESL, where they do just that. Built in 1965, the SESL was crucial for the Apollo…
-
Antone's Po' Boys: Houston's Own Sandwich, Born on Taft Street
· 11.6 mi
Antone's Famous Po' Boys began in 1962 at Jalal E. Antone's import company on Taft Street (the building, later home to The Pass & Provisions restaurant, still stands; street number 807 is a high-confidence inference).…
-
Pearland, TX
· 11.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Pearland, a town that owes its very name to a fruit that once flourished here. <break time="400ms"/> Back in 1893, this community was first called Mark Belt. <break time="400ms"/> But residents…
-
NASA Johnson Space Center, Building No. 32, Space Environment Simulation Laboratory, Chambers A & B, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 11.6 mi
NASA Johnson Space Center, Building No. 32, Space Environment Simulation Laboratory, Chambers A & B, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress).…
-
The Moon Rocket That Never Flew (and Nearly Rotted on the Lawn)
· 11.7 mi
The Saturn V lying at JSC's Rocket Park is one of only three real Saturn Vs displayed anywhere (Houston, Kennedy, Huntsville) and the only one assembled entirely from flight-certified stages actually intended to launch.…
-
Christopher C. Kraft Jr. Mission Control Center
· 11.7 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Right here, within eyeshot, history was made – some of humanity's greatest adventures were orchestrated from this very spot. This is the Christopher C. Kraft Jr. Mission Control Center, or as you might know it,…
-
The Room That Flies the Astronauts
· 11.7 mi
Johnson Space Center is NASA's home for human spaceflight, and the beating heart of it is Mission Control. From this room in Houston, flight controllers have directed crewed missions since 1965, when Gemini 4 became the…
-
Astronauts Aren't Weightless. They're Falling.
· 11.7 mi
Here's the misconception almost everyone carries: that astronauts float because they've escaped gravity. They haven't. Up at the space station's altitude, gravity is still about 90 percent as strong as it is on the…
-
Rothko Chapel
· 11.7 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Prepare to be moved. The Rothko Chapel isn't just a building; it's a sanctuary designed to evoke profound contemplation. In the 1960s, John and Dominique de Menil commissioned Mark Rothko to create paintings for a…
-
What Months of Falling Do to a Body
· 11.7 mi
Living in free fall reshapes the human body, and figuring out exactly how is one of the central jobs done here at Johnson Space Center. On the ground, gravity is always tugging on you, and your bones and muscles push…
-
Making Air and Water in the Void
· 11.7 mi
Out in space there's no air to breathe and no water to drink. Nothing. So a crewed spacecraft has to make and recycle its own, a job engineers call life support, and it's some of the most important work studied here.…
-
Tryon, The Rev. William M.
· 11.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Houston's First Baptist Church, founded by the Rev. William Tryon. Tryon arrived in Texas in 1841, a circuit rider for the American Baptist Home Mission Society. He revived the church at…
-
NASA Johnson Space Center, Apollo Mission Control, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 11.7 mi
NASA Johnson Space Center, Apollo Mission Control, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs…
-
NASA Johnson Space Center, Shuttle Mission Control Room, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 11.7 mi
NASA Johnson Space Center, Shuttle Mission Control Room, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints &…
-
NASA Johnson Space Center
· 11.8 mi · Things to Do
Houston we have a problem. Where Mission Control guided Apollo 11 to the moon.
-
Terry, Colonel Benjamin Franklin
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the resting place of Colonel Benjamin Franklin Terry, a man whose name still echoes in Texas history. Terry was a Fort Bend County planter who answered the call of the Confederacy in <say-as…
-
The Menil Collection
· 11.8 mi · Things to Do
World-class art museum that's completely free. Rothko Chapel next door.
-
The Billionaire's Grave You'd Walk Right Past
· 11.8 mi
Howard Hughes, once among the richest men alive, is buried at Glenwood Cemetery under simple ground markers in a small family plot with his mother and father, easy to miss unless you know where to look. He died April 5,…
-
Bailey, Mollie
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston, and right here is the story of Mollie Bailey, the 'Circus Queen of the Southwest.' Born in Alabama, Mollie married Gus Bailey in 1858. Together, they formed a traveling circus troupe,…
-
Seito and Kiyoaki Saibara
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of an ambitious agricultural experiment, led by a man who was once a top official in Japan. Seito Saibara, former president of Kyoto's Doshisha University and the first Christian in Japan's…
-
Edward R. and Ann Taylor
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, near where Edward Ruthven Taylor and Ann George built a life against the odds. Edward, born in 1845, fought for the Confederacy, was captured, and returned home sick with tuberculosis.…
-
Oakland
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Oakland, a place that was home to David G. Burnet. Burnet was the first president of the Republic of Texas! He brought his bride here in 1831, and together they worked the land. Burnet…
-
Braun, Caspar
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where Caspar Braun, a German immigrant, made his mark on Houston. Born in Germany and educated in Switzerland, Braun was a man of many talents: a physician, a teacher, and a Lutheran…
-
Edwin Fairfax Gray
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site where Edwin Fairfax Gray, a man who served Texas and the Confederacy, once lived. Gray started his military career as a Midshipman in the Texas Navy in <say-as interpret-as="date"…
-
Gregg, Darius
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a man who helped shape early Houston. Darius Gregg arrived in Texas in 1827, just a few years after Stephen F. Austin’s second colony opened. He fought in the Siege of Bexar, even…
-
Lord, Irvin Capers
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing the spot where Irvin Capers Lord, a machinist by trade, first arrived with his family way back in 1854. He quickly got involved in city politics, serving as an alderman, then city…
-
Fig Industry in Friendswood
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Friendswood, a town founded by Quakers way back in 1895. But did you know this place became a fig-farming powerhouse? It all started with Nereus Stout, a Kansas farmer who became the first to grow…
-
Kendall, Belle Sherman
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former home of Belle Sherman Kendall, a true Houston civic leader. Born in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1847</say-as>, she was the daughter of Texas revolutionary hero Sidney Sherman.…
-
Bering Memorial United Methodist Church
· 11.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and just a little ways back, you passed the site of the First German Methodist Church. Organized in 1848 by Reverend Charles Goldberg, most of its first members were German immigrants.…
-
Space Transportation System, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 11.8 mi
Space Transportation System, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints &…
-
Space Transportation System, External Tank, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 11.8 mi
Space Transportation System, External Tank, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress). Source: Library of…
-
Space Transportation System, Shuttle Carrier Aircraft, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 11.8 mi
Space Transportation System, Shuttle Carrier Aircraft, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress). Source: Library…
-
Space Transportation System, Solid Rocket Boosters, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 11.8 mi
Space Transportation System, Solid Rocket Boosters, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress). Source: Library of…
-
Space Transportation System, Space Shuttle Main Engine, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 11.8 mi
Space Transportation System, Space Shuttle Main Engine, Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress). Source: Library…
-
Space Transportation System, Orbiter Discovery (OV-103), Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 11.8 mi
Space Transportation System, Orbiter Discovery (OV-103), Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress). Source:…
-
Apollo 13: The Night Timber Cove Walked Lovell's Car Home by Torchlight
· 11.9 mi
Jim Lovell built a two-story house on Lazywood Lane in Timber Cove, four kids sharing one upstairs bathroom, the living room reserved for occasions like LIFE magazine photo shoots. During the April 1970 Apollo 13 crisis…
-
Astrodome
· 11.9 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Step back to the future at the world's first domed stadium, once hailed as the 'Eighth Wonder of the World'. Construction on the Astrodome began in 1963, more than a year after the ceremonial groundbreaking, and it…
-
Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center
· 11.9 mi · Historical Marker
When John F. Kennedy committed the nation to landing on the moon, the space program needed a new command center, and Vice President Lyndon Johnson made sure it went to Texas. The Manned Spacecraft Center opened in 1963…
-
The Astrodome: Eighth Wonder, AstroTurf, and the Movie Shot Inside
· 11.9 mi
The Astrodome opened April 9, 1965 as the Harris County Domed Stadium, the world's first multi-purpose domed sports stadium, nicknamed the 'Eighth Wonder of the World.' Glare through its Lucite skylight panels blinded…
-
Sheldon Lake: The Reservoir That Watered the War Effort
· 11.9 mi
You're at Sheldon Lake State Park and Environmental Learning Center in northeast Harris County, and this lake exists because of World War II. In 1943 the federal government dammed Carpenters Bayou and pumped in San…
-
Heiner, Eugene Thomas
· 11.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, passing the legacy of Eugene Thomas Heiner, a German immigrant who apprenticed as an architect at just thirteen. After training in Berlin and working in Indiana, Heiner won prize money at…
-
Woodland Heights Community
· 11.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, heading into the Woodland Heights neighborhood. This area was developed starting in 1907 by William A. Wilson and his financial partners, who saw it as the perfect spot for a streetcar…
-
Hollywood Cemetery
· 11.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Hollywood Cemetery, one of Houston's oldest and largest resting places, with over 30,000 graves. It started in the spring of 1895 when brothers William and Samuel Moore bought the first acres. The…
-
AstroWorld: The Park They Tore Down and the Album That Brought It Back
· 12.0 mi
Six Flags AstroWorld, the amusement park created by Judge Roy Hofheinz (the Astrodome impresario) as part of his 'Astrodomain,' opened June 1, 1968 between Kirby Drive and Fannin Street directly south of the I-610 South…
-
Taylor Lake Village, TX
· 12.0 mi
Taylor Lake Village is named for the lake it curls around, and the lake is named for a man whose actual homestead was not even here. Anson Taylor was one of the earliest settlers in the Clear Lake country, a frontier…
-
Harris County Boy's School Archeological Site
· 12.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past what's left of a prehistoric Indian campsite, right here on the Texas coast. It's called a 'shell midden' site because the ancient folks here loved their shellfish! They'd just toss the empty oyster…
-
Webster Presbyterian Church
· 12.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Webster Presbyterian Church in Seabrook, a building with a story as diverse as the Texas coast. It started in 1892 as a Union Sunday School, organized by Midwestern farmers. But listen to this: early…
-
Minchen House
· 12.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Minchen House, a rare example of Italian Renaissance architecture right here in Houston. Built in 1931, this home was designed by noted architect Joseph Finger for Simon Minchen, a pioneer in the…
-
Magnolia Cemetery
· 12.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Magnolia Cemetery in Houston, a place with a story that begins with a family tragedy. In 1884, Henrietta Steiner buried family members here, and just days later, the First German Methodist Church…
-
RodeoHouston: The Cattlemen's Lunch That Became the World's Biggest Rodeo
· 12.1 mi
The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo began in January 1932, when seven businessmen at a lunch at the Texas State Hotel founded the Houston Fat Stock Show (James W. Sartwelle of Port City Stockyards was its first…
-
The Outpost Tavern: NASA's 'Building 99' That Burned With Its Secrets
· 12.1 mi
The ramshackle wooden building started life as a WWII-era barracks at Ellington Field; in 1965 it was trucked to a lot near the new Manned Spacecraft Center and reopened as a barbecue joint called Fort Terry's Universal…
-
Silver Dollar Jim: The Oilman Whose Ranch Became NASA
· 12.1 mi
James Marion West Jr. (1903-1957), Houston oilman, was nicknamed 'Silver Dollar Jim' for flinging silver dollars to waiters, strangers and crowds; he had oversize pockets tailored into his trousers to hold up to eight…
-
The Astrodome - Eighth Wonder of the World
· 12.1 mi · Historical Marker
When Judge Roy Hofheinz opened the Harris County Domed Stadium on April 9, 1965, he solved a problem that had plagued Houston baseball since its founding: nobody wanted to sit outside in Houston in August. The Astrodome…
-
The Astrodome
· 12.1 mi · Things to Do
The Astrodome opened in 1965 as the worlds first fully enclosed air-conditioned stadium -- the Eighth Wonder of the World the Houston papers called it. Judge…
-
Sylvan Beach: The Dance Floor That Outlived Four Hurricanes
· 12.2 mi
La Porte's waterfront was reserved as Sylvan Grove when the town was platted in 1892 and became the Sylvan Beach resort by the late 1890s. In the summer of 1900, 'Moonlight Excursion' trains left Houston at 7 p.m. and…
-
The Neighborhood Pool Shaped Like a Mercury Space Capsule
· 12.2 mi
Timber Cove was platted in 1958; days after NASA picked Houston in 1961, advance scout Jack Kinzler (the NASA tech-services chief who later invented the flagpole that made the flag 'fly' on the Moon) found the oak-lined…
-
Morgan's Point, TX
· 12.2 mi
Morgan's Point is on its fourth name. This bayfront point was Rightor's Point in the 1820s, then Hunter's Point, then Clopper's Point, after the Clopper family, who planted orange and lemon seeds out here. Then, just…
-
The Highway Under the Ship Channel: Baytown's Vanished Tunnel
· 12.2 mi
From 1953 to 1995, Highway 146 traffic crossed the Houston Ship Channel by driving under it. The Baytown Tunnel, opened September 1953 at a cost of about $10 million, was a two-lane, 4,110-foot tube between Baytown and…
-
Morgan's Point: The Burned Town of New Washington and the Texas Gold Coast
· 12.2 mi
You're at Morgan's Point, where Col. James Morgan laid out the town of New Washington in the mid-1830s as agent for a group of New York financiers. In April 1836, Santa Anna's army swept through and nearly captured…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Friendswood (Friendswood)
· 12.2 mi
Friendswood (Friendswood, TX) placed on the 5A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Landon McGuire (3 HR); Caiden Wells (3 HR).
-
New Washington
· 12.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of New Washington, a town with a fiery past. Colonel James Morgan, a Philadelphia merchant, bought this land in 1835 and founded a settlement. But during the Texas Revolution, Mexican troops…
-
A Bathing-Beauty Contest That Never Stopped
· 12.2 mi
The Sylvan Beach Festival is one of the longest-running festival traditions on the Texas Gulf Coast: edition counting (52nd in 2008, 68th in 2024) places the first festival in 1957, the year after the new county…
-
St. Mark's United Methodist Church
· 12.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a historic church merger right here in Houston. This congregation started way back in 1875 as Emanuel German Methodist Episcopal Church, organized by Reverend Rudolph Brueck. Over the…
-
Saint Mary's Seminary
· 12.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Saint Mary's Seminary, a place that trained Texas priests right here in La Porte. Back in 1901, Bishop Nicholas Gallagher saw a need for local clergy and opened this school in the damaged…
-
Houston Astrodome, 8400 Kirby Drive, Houston, Harris County, TX
· 12.2 mi
Houston Astrodome, 8400 Kirby Drive, Houston, Harris County, TX. From the Historic American Engineering Record (Library of Congress). Source: Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division.
-
Saibara, Kiyoaki
· 12.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, near Webster, where the Texas rice industry got its start. In 1904, Kiyoaki Saibara arrived from Japan with his father, bringing 300 pounds of seed rice as a gift from the emperor.…
-
Saibara, Seito
· 12.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the Upper Gulf Coast, near Webster, where you're passing through a piece of Texas history. Back in 1903, a man named Seito Saibara arrived from Japan. He wasn't just any immigrant; he was a former…
-
Shipley Do-Nuts: A Nickel a Dozen Since 1936
· 12.3 mi
Shipley Do-Nuts began in Houston in 1936, when Lawrence Shipley Sr. started hand-cutting do-nuts at 1417 Crockett Street and selling them wholesale only, hot, at five cents a dozen, in the middle of the Depression. His…
-
Webster, TX
· 12.3 mi
Webster is named for James W. Webster, an Englishman who brought a colony of his countrymen to this coastal prairie in 1879. The settlers were market gardeners, and the colony's original name was actually Gardentown.…
-
Japanese
· 12.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, near Houston, and right here is where Japanese immigrants first put down roots in Texas. In 1903, Seito Saibara established a settlement near Webster, aiming to cultivate rice. This…
-
Webster, TX (Harris County)
· 12.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Webster, Texas, a community that started life as Gardentown back in 1879. It was founded by James W. Webster, who brought English colonists here. Later, this crossroads town attracted Japanese…
-
Brown Chapel A. M. E. Church
· 12.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston's Sixth Ward, and right here is the site of Brown Chapel A. M. E. Church.<break time="400ms"/> Organized way back in 1881, this church was founded to serve the West End and Chaneyville…
-
Damascus Missionary Baptist Church
· 12.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Damascus Missionary Baptist Church, a Houston institution with roots stretching back to 1866. Right after the Civil War, Reverend I. S. Campbell arrived, sent by the National Baptist…
-
The Waugh Bridge Bats: A Quarter Million Neighbors Who Never Leave
· 12.4 mi
Roughly 250,000 Mexican free-tailed bats (sources range 250,000-300,000) live in the expansion joints under the Waugh Drive bridge over Buffalo Bayou, less than two miles west of downtown Houston, emerging around dusk…
-
White Oak Bayou: The Ditch That Built Houston, Drowned It, and Got a Trail
· 12.4 mi
White Oak Bayou rises in northwest Harris County and winds roughly 25 miles southeast through Jersey Village and the Heights to join Buffalo Bayou downtown at Allen's Landing, the founding point of Houston. On August…
-
Sheldon, TX
· 12.4 mi
Sheldon is named for a man who likely never set foot here. When the Texas and New Orleans Railroad pushed through northeastern Harris County in the early 1860s, the new stop on the line needed a name, and it got one…
-
From Mudflats to Exxon's Flagship: The Baytown Refinery
· 12.4 mi
In February 1919, Houston-based Humble Oil & Refining sold half its stock to Standard Oil of New Jersey, and that money built Baytown. Construction began in 1919 on tidal flatland at Black Duck Bay near the Goose Creek…
-
Houston Yacht Club
· 12.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're cruising along Galveston Bay, and right here, in Shoreacres, is the home of the oldest yacht club in Texas. The Houston Yacht Club started way back in the summer of 1897. It wasn't just about racing sailboats;…
-
Nassau Bay, TX
· 12.4 mi
Nassau Bay, a quiet residential enclave, owes its very existence to the stars and the sea. The name itself tells the story. It’s a simple combination, really, reflecting the geography that defines the place: Nassau Bay.…
-
Highlands, TX
· 12.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Highlands, Texas, a community with a name that tells its own story. When this place was founded on the east bank of the San Jacinto River, it was named Highlands because that side of the river was…
-
Harris County Department of Education
· 12.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a system that started with a bang – the Texas Declaration of Independence! The founders said the lack of public education was a key reason to break away from Mexico. President Mirabeau…
-
Enron Corporation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a company that once symbolized American innovation: Enron. Formed in 1985 from a merger, Enron grew to become the nation's largest marketer of natural gas and…
-
Floyd, George Perry, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that shaped George Floyd, Jr. Known as 'Perry' to his family, he grew up in the Third Ward's Cuney Homes, a place of struggle but also of dreams. He was a standout athlete at…
-
Adair, Paul Neal [Red]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of one of the 20th century's most legendary figures in the oil industry: Paul Neal 'Red' Adair. Born in 1915, Adair grew up here, but it was his time in the Army, learning…
-
Allen, Augustus Chapman
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that Sam Houston himself might not have recognized if he saw it today. Back in 1836, this area was just Buffalo Bayou, bought by brothers Augustus and John Allen. They saw…
-
Anderson, Clayton and Company
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the heart of a global cotton empire. Right here, Anderson, Clayton and Company was founded in 1904. Starting as cotton merchants, these brothers-in-law built a company so massive, by 1945…
-
Cernan, Eugene Andrew [Gene]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that sent Gene Cernan to the Moon. Born in Chicago, Cernan grew up in the Midwest, but he made his home here in Houston after his legendary NASA career. He was the commander of…
-
Dean, Jay Hanna [Dizzy]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here is where a legend got his start. Jay Hanna 'Dizzy' Dean, the baseball Hall of Famer, claimed he was born all over the map, but he landed in Houston and became a star for the…
-
Eighth Texas Cavalry [Terry's Texas Rangers]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, maybe near Houston, where this story began. Back in August 1861, Benjamin Franklin Terry gathered volunteers for the Confederate Army, and they became known as Terry's Texas Rangers. Each…
-
Farnsworth & Chambers Building
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here on South Wayside Drive is a building that played a starring role in America's race to space. Built in the late 1950s as offices for a major construction firm, this…
-
Geto Boys
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a sound that blew up the hip-hop world. Right here, in the Fifth Ward, the Geto Boys were born in 1986. They weren't just another rap group; they pioneered what critics…
-
Heart Transplants
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that's been at the center of a medical revolution: heart transplantation. Right here, pioneering surgeons like Denton Cooley and Michael DeBakey pushed the boundaries of what was…
-
Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and you might be thinking about the city's namesake. But right here, we're talking about a ship – the USS Houston. Launched in 1929, this heavy cruiser was a symbol of American naval…
-
Houston Comets
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, the Houston Comets made history on the basketball court. In 1997, this expansion team, built around stars like Cynthia Cooper and Sheryl Swoopes, didn't just join the WNBA…
-
Houston Ship Channel
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the legendary Ship Channel! It all started back in 1836 when the Allen brothers founded this city, banking on Buffalo Bayou. The first steamboat, the Laura, arrived in…
-
Jordan, Barbara Charline
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that launched the career of Barbara Charline Jordan. Born right here in 1936, Jordan grew up in the Fifth Ward and overcame significant barriers to become a trailblazing…
-
Laurenzo, María Ninfa Rodríguez
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that Mama Ninfa put on the culinary map. María Ninfa Rodríguez Laurenzo arrived here with her family after a coin flip in 1948, and by 1973, after her husband's death, she faced…
-
Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the heart of America's space program! Right here is where it all happened: the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, originally the Manned Spacecraft Center. It all kicked off in 1957 when the…
-
Ninfa’s Mexican Restaurants
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the birthplace of an American food phenomenon: fajitas! In 1973, Ninfa Laurenzo, a Houston businesswoman, opened a small, ten-table restaurant. Unable to get a bank loan, she…
-
Preston, Billy
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Billy Preston, a keyboardist and songwriter who became a legend in rock and roll. By the time he was ten, Preston was already playing keyboards for the legendary Mahalia…
-
Resnik, Judith Arlene
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to astronaut Judith Resnik. She was a brilliant scientist and engineer, the second American woman to ever travel into space. In August 1984, she flew on the maiden…
-
SugarHill Recording Studios
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the legendary SugarHill Recording Studios. Established in 1941 as Quinn Recording, this place has been the birthplace of Texas music for over seventy years. Imagine,…
-
Texas Medical Center
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, home to one of the world's largest medical complexes: the Texas Medical Center. It all started in the early 1940s with the M.D. Anderson Foundation. They envisioned a place for health…
-
ZZ Top
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're cruising through Houston, the birthplace of a Texas rock and roll institution: ZZ Top! Formed right here in 1969, this iconic trio – Billy Gibbons, Dusty Hill, and Frank Beard – blended blues, boogie, and rock…
-
Texas Heart Institute
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, home to a world-changing medical marvel: the Texas Heart Institute. Right here, back in 1962, legendary heart surgeon Dr. Denton Cooley launched this ambitious project. It wasn't long…
-
Nash, John Lester, Jr. [Johnny]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Johnny Nash, Jr. He started right here, singing in churches and on local TV in the 1950s. By the time he was a teenager, he was hitting the Billboard charts and even…
-
Vetter, David Phillip [Bubble Boy]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that once held a boy known worldwide as the "Bubble Boy." David Phillip Vetter was born here in 1971 with a rare immune deficiency, meaning even the slightest germ could be fatal.…
-
Harris, Marcelite Cecile Jordan
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a true Texas trailblazer. Marcelite Jordan Harris, born right here in 1943, shattered glass ceilings and broke barriers in the U.S. Air Force. She wasn't just *an*…
-
Allen, Charlotte Marie Baldwin
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to Charlotte Marie Baldwin Allen. She was born in New York in 1805, but her inheritance helped her husband and his brother purchase land on Buffalo Bayou in 1836.…
-
Allen, John Kirby
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes its very existence to two brothers: John Kirby Allen and Augustus C. Allen. Back in 1836, they bought over 6,600 acres along Buffalo Bayou, and right here, they founded…
-
Alonzo, Ventura Martinez
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the heart of Tejano music history. Ventura Martinez Alonzo, known as the 'Queen of the Accordion,' was a true pioneer. In a time when the music…
-
Anderson Fair Retail Restaurant
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here in the Montrose section is a legendary music spot: Anderson Fair Retail Restaurant. Opened way back in January of 1970, it's been a haven for folk and original music for…
-
Anderson, Monroe Dunaway
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a significant part of its modern identity to Monroe Dunaway Anderson. Though born in Tennessee, Anderson arrived here around 1907, drawn by Houston's growing importance…
-
Astroworld
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of AstroWorld, a place that was once the 'wonderful world of fun.' Opened in 1968 by former Houston mayor Roy Hofheinz, this massive amusement park was a $25…
-
Aviation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, back in 1910, history took flight! On February 18th, a Frenchman named Louis Paulhan made the very first airplane landing in the state, right here in Houston. Just a few…
-
Baker Hughes
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here is where the oil industry got a serious upgrade! You're driving through the heart of Houston, a city forever changed by the invention of the rock drill bit. Back in 1909, Howard Robard Hughes, Sr. – yes,…
-
Ballas, George Charles, Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, where a dance instructor named George Ballas turned a lawn care annoyance into a household name. Ballas, who also ran a massive dance studio here, got the idea for the Weed Eater while…
-
Bayou Bend
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is Bayou Bend, the stunning former estate of Ima Hogg. Built between 1926 and 1928, this wasn't just a house; it was a statement. Ima Hogg, a pioneering philanthropist,…
-
Bell, John Brown
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city where John Brown Bell lived his remarkable life. Born enslaved in Georgia in 1858, Bell and his mother were brought to Texas when he was just an infant. He worked his way up from…
-
Bellows, Warren Sylvanus
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is a city built on the vision of men like Warren Sylvanus Bellows. A civil engineer by training, Bellows established his construction firm in Houston back in 1921. His…
-
Bertner, Ernst William
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its modern identity to the vision of one man: Dr. Ernst William Bertner. Born in Colorado City back in 1889, Bertner eventually landed in Houston, becoming a…
-
Binz Building
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here at Main Street and Texas Avenue, you're passing the site of what was called Houston's first skyscraper: the Binz Building. Opened in 1895, this six-story brick office…
-
Booker, Luther Malachi
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that remembers Coach Luther Booker. For eighteen seasons starting in 1971, he led the Jack Yates High School Lions football team. He wasn't just winning games; he was building…
-
Briggs, Collin
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Collin Briggs made history on the basketball court. After serving in World War II, Briggs returned to his hometown to coach at Phillis Wheatley High School. From…
-
Campbell, Israel S.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, you're passing through the heart of a story that helped build Black Baptist faith in the Lone Star State. Israel S. Campbell, known as the father of Black Baptists in Texas,…
-
Castillo, Leonel Jabier
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that made history thanks to Leonel Castillo. In the early 1970s, Houston's schools were ordered to integrate. The district's plan, however, tried to classify Mexican American…
-
Chase, John Saunders
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the legacy of John Saunders Chase. In 1952, Chase became the first African American licensed to practice architecture in the entire state of Texas.…
-
Clayton, William Lockhart
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on big business. Right here, you're passing through the territory of William Lockhart Clayton, a cotton merchant who became a titan of industry. Starting his own cotton…
-
Cobb, Arnett Cleophus
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a jazz legend: Arnett Cobb. Known as the 'Wild Man of the Tenor Sax,' Cobb developed a powerful, 'open prairie' sound that influenced generations of musicians. He even…
-
Cocke, James Decatur
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, perhaps near Houston, and you might be passing the area where James Decatur Cocke, a journalist known as 'Fighting Cock,' made his mark. Born in Virginia, Cocke came to Texas in 1837,…
-
Cole, Criss
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is a story of incredible resilience. Criss Cole, a Texas legislator and judge, was serving as a Marine in 1943 when a Japanese grenade attack at Tarawa cost him his sight.…
-
Compaq Computer Corporation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was once defined by oil. But in the early 1980s, a new kind of gold rush was on – the personal computer. Right here, in 1982, three engineers met at a House of Pies and…
-
Conferencia de Mujeres Por La Raza
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, at the Magnolia Park YWCA, something historic happened in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1971</say-as>. It was the Conferencia de Mujeres por la Raza – the first…
-
Congregation Beth Israel, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of Texas's oldest Jewish house of worship, Congregation Beth Israel. Its story begins way back in 1844 with the founding of a Jewish cemetery. The congregation…
-
Copeland, Johnny [Clyde]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a Texas blues legend: Johnny Copeland. Born in Louisiana, Copeland moved to Houston as a teen and was instantly hooked by the blues after seeing T-Bone Walker. He formed…
-
Crespo, Manuel
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the legacy of Manuel Crespo. Born in Spain, he arrived in Houston in 1923 and built a life from humble beginnings, sharpening knives and later…
-
Creuzot, Percy Pennington, Jr. [Frenchy]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston right now, and you might just be passing one of the most iconic fried chicken joints in Texas. Back in 1969, Percy Pennington Creuzot, Jr., known to everyone as 'Frenchy,' opened Frenchy's…
-
Cullen, Hugh Roy
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that oilman Hugh Roy Cullen helped build. Born in Denton County in 1881, Cullen moved to Houston in 1911 and struck black gold in 1918. His risky deep-drilling policy earned him…
-
D Records
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're cruising through Houston, and right here is where a little label called D Records got its start in the late 1950s. Founded by Pappy Daily, it was an experimental 'look-see' label. If a song did well in Texas,…
-
D'asti, Bartholomew [Rev. Augustine]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is a story about a beloved priest who walked these very streets. Father Bartholomew D'Asti, an Italian Franciscan, arrived in <say-as interpret-as="date"…
-
De Luxe Show
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here in the Fifth Ward, you're passing the site of a groundbreaking moment in American art history. In <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1971</say-as>, the old De Luxe…
-
Dellschau, Charles A. A.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city known for many things, but maybe not for its secret aeronautical society. In the late 1800s, C.A.A. Dellschau arrived here after a mysterious past that some say included Civil War…
-
Demaret, Jimmie Newton
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Jimmie Demaret, a man who brought color and charisma to professional golf. Born in 1910, Demaret started caddying right here in Houston as a kid. He learned the game,…
-
Democratic National Convention of 1928
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1928</say-as>, this city hosted the Democratic National Convention. It was a bold move for Houston, then a city of only 300,000,…
-
DePelchin, Kezia Payne
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Kezia Payne DePelchin made her mark. Orphaned as a child and surviving a yellow fever epidemic, Kezia developed a fierce immunity and a deep compassion. She nursed…
-
Dorian, Louis
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston's Fifth Ward, a place where a humble shoe repair shop became a launchpad for champions. Right here, Louis 'Papa Lou' Dorian didn't just fix shoes; he fixed futures. For over 47 years, he…
-
Duke-Peacock Records
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the legacy of Don Robey, a man who built the largest African American-owned record conglomerate in the world during the 1950s and 60s. Starting with Peacock Records in 1949,…
-
Dupree, Anna Johnson
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is a place that Anna Johnson Dupree helped build. Born in Carthage in 1891, she heard stories of slavery and dedicated her life to improving the lives of Black Texans.…
-
Dupree, Clarence A.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is a place that tells the story of Clarence and Anna Dupree. They came from humble beginnings, but through hard work and smart investments, they built a business empire in…
-
Duty, Margie Annette Hawkins
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that made history back in 1953. Right here, Margie Annette Hawkins Duty became the very first African American woman hired as a police officer for the Houston Police Department.…
-
Eldorado Ballroom
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, near the intersection of Elgin and Dowling Streets, right by historic Emancipation Park. You're passing the site of the Eldorado Ballroom, once the premier showcase for Black secular…
-
Ennis, Cornelius
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to Cornelius Ennis. He arrived here in 1839, starting as a drugstore owner and quickly expanding into merchandising. Ennis was a true entrepreneur, involved in…
-
Erichson, Alexander
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here on Main Street, back in 1877, a Wild West shootout went down between city marshal Alexander Erichson and notorious outlaw Matt Woodlief. Woodlief, the son of a prominent…
-
Esperson, Mellie Keenan
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through downtown Houston right now, and you're surrounded by the legacy of Mellie Keenan Esperson. She wasn't just a businesswoman; she was a visionary who shaped this city's skyline. After her husband…
-
Evergreen Negro Cemetery
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston's Fifth Ward, and right here is Evergreen Negro Cemetery. Established around 1887, it's believed to be the third oldest African American cemetery in the city. It served as the final…
-
Ewing, Alexander Wray
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, you're passing through the territory where a pivotal moment in Texas history unfolded. On April 6, 1836, Alexander Wray Ewing was appointed surgeon general of the Texas…
-
Fifth Ward, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston's historic Fifth Ward, a neighborhood born from freedom after the Civil War. Settled by freedmen in 1866, it quickly became a vibrant center for African American life. Imagine Lyons Avenue…
-
Flood, Curtis Charles
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Curt Flood, a name you might know from baseball, but his real legacy is far bigger. Flood was a three-time All-Star and Gold Glove winner for the St. Louis Cardinals.…
-
Fondren, Walter William
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on oil. Right here, Walter William Fondren learned to drill water wells as a boy in Tennessee, a skill he'd adapt for Texas crude. By 1901, he was a skilled driller, and soon…
-
Foster, Marcellus Elliot
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city forever shaped by the vision of Marcellus Elliot Foster. Back in 1901, he took a gamble, investing $25,000 – some from the Spindletop oil boom – to launch the Houston Chronicle. He…
-
Founders Memorial Cemetery
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the Bayou City's oldest cemetery, Founders Memorial Cemetery. Opened in 1836 as the City Cemetery, it was once a mile from the city's edge. This two-acre site became the…
-
Fourth Ward, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the historic Fourth Ward, also known as Freedmen's Town. After the Civil War, thousands of newly freed slaves flooded into Houston, and this area became their hub. It…
-
Franklin Beauty School
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing a landmark of Black entrepreneurship and culture: the Franklin Beauty School. Founded in 1917 by Nobia Franklin, this school wasn't just about hairstyles;…
-
Fulbright and Jaworski
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the birthplace of a legal giant. It all started back in 1919, not with a courtroom drama, but with a cotton company. Anderson, Clayton and Company, the world's biggest…
-
Glassell, Alfred Curry, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is a story about a man who made his mark far from Texas soil, but ended up a major benefactor to this city. Alfred Glassell Jr. was a successful oilman, but he's also…
-
Gulf Building, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through downtown Houston, and right here stands the mighty Gulf Building. Completed in 1929, this Art Deco masterpiece held the title of the tallest building west of the Mississippi River for two years.…
-
Happy Hollow, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through downtown Houston, and right here, between Prairie and Capitol Avenues, was once a notorious district known as Happy Hollow. Starting in 1874, this area, carved out by a spring-fed gully, became…
-
Hawkins, John Edward [Big Hawk]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a legend in Texas hip-hop: Big Hawk. Born John Edward Hawkins in 1969, he was a pioneer, an original member of the iconic Screwed Up Click. He started his career in 1994…
-
Hawkins, Patrick Lamont [Fat Pat]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a sound that changed hip-hop forever. Right here, in the early 90s, Patrick Lamont Hawkins, better known as Fat Pat, was a pioneer of the 'Screwed and Chopped'…
-
Historic Hollywood Cemetery
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is Historic Hollywood Cemetery. Founded in 1895 by Confederate veterans, this fifty-five-acre resting place was named for the admired Hollywood family. It started with…
-
Hofheinz, Roy Mark
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that Roy Hofheinz helped shape, not just as a politician, but as a visionary developer. He served as mayor and county judge, but his most lasting legacy is the Astrodome. He…
-
Holcombe, Oscar Fitzallen
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that grew exponentially thanks to its long-serving mayor, Oscar Holcombe. Nicknamed the "Old Gray Fox," Holcombe served eleven nonconsecutive terms, spanning over twenty-two years.…
-
Holman, James Sanders
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that wouldn't exist without folks like James Sanders Holman. He wasn't just an early settler; he was the very first mayor of this sprawling metropolis! Back in 1836, Holman was…
-
Horwitz, Will
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that remembers Will Horwitz, a showman who knew how to put on a spectacle. In the 1920s and 30s, Horwitz owned radio stations and theaters, and he wasn't afraid to get creative.…
-
House, Thomas William
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built in large part by the vision of one man: Thomas William House. Arriving from England in 1835, House started as a baker, first in New York, then New Orleans. By 1838, he'd…
-
Houston Aeros
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a legendary hockey team once played: the Houston Aeros. From 1972 to 1978, this World Hockey Association team wasn't just good, they were dominant. They made the…
-
Houston Chronicle
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a newspaper was born out of a gamble on Spindletop's first oil gusher. In 1901, reporter Marcellus Foster bet his week's pay on an option for the well, sold it for…
-
Houston Colt .45s
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that brought Texas its first taste of major league baseball! Back in 1960, Houston businessmen wanted a team so badly, they tried to start their own league when Major League…
-
Houston Flood of 1935
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that knows a thing or two about floods. But back on December 7th, <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1935</say-as>, the bayous overflowed like never before. The worst culprit?…
-
Houston Oilers
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that was once home to the Oilers, a professional football team that made history. Back in 1960, they were one of the original franchises in the American Football League. Their…
-
Houston Texans
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that knows a thing or two about bouncing back. Back in 1997, the beloved Houston Oilers packed up and left for Nashville, breaking the hearts of Texas football fans. But Houston…
-
Houston, TX
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that started with a bang... and a bit of a boast. Back in 1836, brothers Augustus and John Allen advertised their new townsite, claiming ships could sail right up Buffalo Bayou to…
-
Hughes, Howard Robard, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a man who became a legend: Howard Hughes Jr. Born on Christmas Eve 1905, young Sonny Hughes grew up in this city, a bit of a loner, fascinated by mechanics and aviation.…
-
Ideson, Julia Bedford
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is a building that stands as a monument to a Texas pioneer. Julia Ideson arrived in Houston in 1892, and after studying library science at UT, she took charge of the city's…
-
Institute For Immunological Disorders
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that, for a brief but crucial period, was home to the nation's first hospital dedicated solely to the fight against AIDS. Opened in 1986, the Institute for Immunological Disorders…
-
Irene’s Café
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here in the Sixth Ward is where zydeco music first hit the public stage. Before this, zydeco was a house party secret, especially in the neighborhood known as Frenchtown. But on…
-
Jacquet, Jean-Baptiste [Illinois ]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a jazz legend: Illinois Jacquet. Born Jean-Baptiste Jacquet in Louisiana, he moved here as a baby and was playing music by his teens. In 1942, while with Lionel…
-
Jefferson, Andrew Leon, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, and right here in Houston, a legal pioneer made history. Andrew Leon Jefferson Jr. became the first Black judge in Texas above the municipal level when Governor Preston Smith…
-
Johnson, Conrad O. [Prof]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a legend taught music. Conrad O. Johnson, known affectionately as 'Prof,' transformed the Kashmere Junior-Senior High School stage band into a national powerhouse.…
-
Jones, Jesse Holman
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, but you might be passing through the heart of the Great Depression's recovery. Right here, Jesse Holman Jones, a Texas businessman, became one of the most powerful men in America. From 1933…
-
Kashmere Stage Band
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here in the Kashmere Gardens neighborhood, a legendary sound was born. In the late 1960s, Conrad 'Prof' Johnson transformed the Kashmere High School band into the Kashmere Stage…
-
Kelley, John Dickson [Peck]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of one of America's greatest jazz pianists, John "Peck" Kelley. Born in 1898, Kelley became a legend in jazz circles, known for his incredible talent and his stubborn…
-
Kinkaid, Margaret Hunter
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the birthplace of a Texas educational institution that started because of a rule! Margaret Hunter Kinkaid was a teacher in Houston, but when she married, the public…
-
Law, Thelma Adele Patten
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to Dr. Thelma Patten Law. Born in Huntsville, she returned to Houston in 1924 to become the city's very first African-American female physician. In a time when…
-
Leland, George Thomas [Mickey]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, we remember Mickey Leland. Born in Lubbock in 1944, Leland became a force for good in Houston's Fifth Ward, pushing for community health clinics. He was elected to the…
-
Lewis, Joseph Vance
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city where Joseph Vance Lewis made his mark. Born into slavery, Lewis rose to become an attorney, and in 1904, he achieved a major victory: becoming the first African-American lawyer…
-
Lieberman, Harry A. [Larry Kane]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the birthplace of a Texas television legend. Harry Lieberman, known to the world as Larry Kane, was dubbed 'Mr. Music' while still in high school for his work on Houston radio.…
-
Love Street Light Circus Feel Good Machine
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right now, you're driving through Houston, not far from Buffalo Bayou, where you can still see a historic tile building near Allen's Landing. Back in the late 1960s, this place was known as the Love Street Light Circus…
-
M. D. Anderson Foundation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes so much of its modern identity to the vision of one man: Monroe D. Anderson. In 1936, facing his own mortality, Anderson decided to use his vast fortune for the good of…
-
Mahoney, Emily Marie [Red]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Emily Marie "Red" Mahoney. She was one of only three Texans to play in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League. In 1947, Mahoney left Houston for tryouts in…
-
Mann, Pamelia Dickinson
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Pamelia Mann made her mark. She arrived in Texas in 1834, a businesswoman who wasn't afraid to bend the rules. During the Runaway Scrape, she reportedly chased…
-
McAfee, Carrie Rochon
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Carrie Rochon McAfee made history. In 1974, she became the first African-American female principal of a comprehensive senior high school in the entire state of…
-
McAuliffe, Leon
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the heart of Texas music history, and right here, you're passing through the hometown of Leon McAuliffe, the steel guitar wizard who gave western swing its signature sound. Born in Houston in…
-
McElroy, Hugh
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past Houston, and right here is the story of Hugh McElroy, a man who was 'always crazy about soldiering.' Born in Kentucky in 1884, he lied about his age to enlist in the cavalry at just fourteen. He…
-
McKissack, Jefferson Davis
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the legacy of Jeff McKissack, a man who built a monument to the orange. After working as a postman, McKissack's nursery failed, so he decided to build a beauty parlor.…
-
Mendoza, Lydia
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Lydia Mendoza, known as 'La Alondra de la Frontera,' or 'The Lark of the Border.' Born in 1916, this Tejano music legend crafted her first guitar at age four from scrap…
-
Menil, Dominique Isaline Schlumberger de
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city forever changed by Dominique de Menil. Arriving here in 1941, fleeing war-torn France, she and her husband, John, became art patrons unlike any other. They commissioned Philip…
-
Merchants and Planters Oil Company
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where the Merchants and Planters Oil Company once stood. Incorporated in 1889, this cottonseed oil mill was a major player, even experimenting with feeding cattle…
-
Milburn, Amos
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the birthplace of Amos Milburn, a giant of rhythm and blues piano. Born in 1927, Milburn taught himself to play by listening outside local taverns. After serving in the Navy…
-
Moore, Kenneth [Big Moe]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a unique Texas sound. Right here is where Kenneth Moore, known to the world as Big Moe, forged his style. He called it 'rapsinging' – a smooth blend of rapping and…
-
Nation, Carry Amelia Moore
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Grayson County, Texas, a place that saw a brief, but formative, stop in the life of Carry Nation. Born in Kentucky in 1846, Nation moved with her family to Grayson County in the…
-
National Women's Conference, 1977
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the site of a historic moment in American women's history. In <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1977<say-as>, this city hosted the National Women's Conference. It was the first…
-
Nelms, Agnese Carter
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was once at the forefront of a quiet revolution. Right here, in January of 1936, Agnese Carter Nelms opened the Maternal Health Center. Facing down societal taboos and harsh…
-
Newbury, Milton Sims, Jr. [Mickey]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Mickey Newbury, a songwriter whose words and music have echoed across the globe. Born Milton Sims Newbury, Jr. in 1940, he learned his craft absorbing the diverse sounds…
-
Nino, Primitivo Leijo
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that's home to a significant milestone in Texas education. Right here, Primitivo Leijo Niño became the first Mexican American to graduate from Rice University, earning his…
-
Orange Show
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston right now, and you might be passing the site of one of the most unique roadside attractions ever conceived: The Orange Show. For twenty-five years, a Houston postman named Jefferson…
-
O’Leary, Thomas Andrew
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to its early firefighters. Right here, you're passing through the area where Thomas Andrew O'Leary, a British immigrant, became a hero. He arrived in Houston in…
-
Phillips, Oail Andrew, Jr. [Bum]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving through the heart of the 'Luv ya Blue!' era. This is where Bum Phillips coached the Houston Oilers from 1975 to 1980. Known for his cowboy hat, boots, and folksy sayings, Phillips…
-
Poindexter, Zeb Ferdinand, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston right now, and you're passing through a neighborhood where history was made, thanks to Dr. Zeb Ferdinand Poindexter Jr. Born and raised right here in Texas, Poindexter broke barriers in…
-
Prince’s Hamburgers
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that once had a hamburger king named Doug Prince. In 1928, he got the idea at the Texas State Fair, and by 1936, he opened his first drive-in here on South Main Street. Prince…
-
Quinn, William Russell [Bill]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing the birthplace of the Texas recording industry. Bill Quinn, originally from Massachusetts, settled here in 1939. By 1941, he opened Quinn Recording Company,…
-
Railroads
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, a state that once struggled with transportation. Roads were often impassable, and rivers weren't reliable. But right here, a revolution was brewing. In <say-as interpret-as="date"…
-
Rice University
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is Rice University. But did you know its fortune was built on a murder? The university's founder, William Marsh Rice, was supposed to leave his millions to the institute.…
-
Rice, William Marsh
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city built in large part by the fortune of William Marsh Rice. He arrived here in the late 1830s, starting with a deal to serve liquor at the Milam Hotel. By 1860, he might have been…
-
Riverside General Hospital
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of a groundbreaking medical institution: Riverside General Hospital. Originally founded in 1927 as the Houston Negro Hospital, it was a beacon of hope for the…
-
Robey, Don Deadric
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a music empire was built. Don Robey, born in this city in 1903, started by promoting dances. Then, in 1945, he opened the legendary Bronze Peacock Dinner Club,…
-
Roett-Reid, Catherine Juanita Elizabeth
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city with a rich medical history. Right here, Catherine Roett-Reid broke barriers. In 1951, she became the first African American pediatrician in Houston. She also broke ground as one…
-
Saunders, Edna Dee Woolford
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city's cultural heart for over forty years. Right here, Edna Dee Woolford Saunders, a musician turned impresario, was changing the face of live performance. In 1918, she took over…
-
Shady’s Playhouse
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here in the historic Third Ward, you're passing by the site of a legendary blues club: Shady's Playhouse. From the 1950s to the late 1960s, this was the place where some of…
-
Shamrock Hotel
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of the legendary Shamrock Hotel. Built by oilman Glenn McCarthy, it opened on St. Patrick's Day in 1949 with a dedication so wild, a live radio broadcast had to…
-
Shepard, Beulah Ann
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here in Acres Homes, you're passing through the heart of Beulah Ann Shepard's world. She arrived in 1948, a self-taught woman who got her first poll tax for a dollar fifty. From…
-
Siff, Iris Futor
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became the stage for a remarkable career in theater. Iris Siff arrived in town in 1948, joining the fledgling Alley Theatre as an actress. She acted in the last show at its…
-
Smith, Anna Nicole
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Anna Nicole Smith, born Vickie Lynn Hogan. She went from financial insecurity and jobs like a Walmart cashier to international stardom. A Guess jeans ad campaign in 1992…
-
Smith, Clifford Farrell, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a pioneer in electrical work made his mark. Clifford Farrell Smith, Jr. was born in the Fifth Ward in 1916. Many homes in his neighborhood lacked basic wiring.…
-
Smith, Ernest Ollington
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to educators like Ernest "Professor" Smith. When he first arrived in 1906, he was denied a library card simply because of his race. But instead of giving up, Smith…
-
Smith, Obedience Fort
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, in what is now the heart of the city, you're passing over land once owned by Obedience Fort Smith. This pioneer arrived in Texas in February 1836, fleeing the Runaway…
-
Spivey, Victoria Regina
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Victoria Regina Spivey, a blues legend known as Queen Victoria. Born in 1906, she wasn't just a singer; she was a songwriter, a performer, and a pioneer. She cut her…
-
Swayze, Patrick Wayne
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Patrick Swayze. Born in 1952, Swayze grew up in the Oak Forest neighborhood, training in dance at his mother's studio from a young age. Despite early taunts and beatings…
-
Taub, Ben
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city forever marked by the generosity of Ben Taub. Born right here in 1889, Taub wasn't just a businessman and real estate developer; he was a major benefactor. In 1936, he donated land…
-
Taylor, Harvey Grant
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became home to a true pioneer in pediatric cancer care, Dr. Harvey Grant Taylor. Arriving in 1954, he transformed M.D. Anderson Hospital. Dr. Taylor created groundbreaking…
-
Teal Portrait Studio
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, where the Teal Portrait Studio captured the dignity and beauty of African Americans for over forty years. Established in 1919 by Elnora and Arthur Chester Teal, this studio was a rarity.…
-
Texas Children's Hospital
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, home to Texas Children's Hospital, a place that's been a national leader in pediatric care since it opened its doors in 1954. Right here, they were the first in the nation to offer…
-
Thomas, George Washington, Jr. [Clay Custer]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the stomping grounds of George Washington Thomas Jr., a legendary blues composer and pianist, also known as Clay Custer. He grew up in this city, learning piano at an early age…
-
Thomas, Hersal
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Hersal Thomas, a child piano prodigy who became a legend in the 1920s blues scene. Born in 1910, Hersal learned from his older brother but quickly surpassed him. He…
-
Thornton, Willie Mae [Big Mama]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that left a big mark on a legendary blues singer. Willie Mae Thornton, known as 'Big Mama,' moved here in 1948. She sang and wrote songs in local clubs, contributing to the Texas…
-
University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, home to a world-renowned cancer center. It all started back in 1941 when the Texas Legislature approved funding for a state cancer hospital. The M. D. Anderson Foundation stepped in,…
-
Vance, Nina Eloise Whittington
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its cultural landscape to the pioneering spirit of Nina Vance. Born in Yoakum, Vance moved to Houston in 1939 and began teaching drama. By 1947, after a local…
-
Vinegar Hill, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, not far from downtown, and you might be passing over what was once known as Vinegar Hill. Established by the late 1860s, this wedge-shaped block near Buffalo Bayou was a notorious…
-
Wallace, Beulah Thomas [Sippie]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of the legendary blues singer Sippie Wallace, the Texas Nightingale. Born Beulah Thomas in 1898, she was captivated by the blues as a child, sneaking out to listen to…
-
Ward, Hortense Sparks
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to Hortense Sparks Ward, a true trailblazer for women in Texas. In 1910, after passing the bar, she became one of the first women licensed to practice law in the…
-
Watson, Johnny [Guitar]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a true musical innovator, Johnny "Guitar" Watson! Born right here in 1935, Watson learned piano from his dad and guitar from his grandma, but it was seeing Gatemouth…
-
Webster, Kathryn Jewel Thorne [Katie]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Kathryn Jewel Thorne, better known as Katie "Swamp Boogie Queen" Webster. Born in 1936, her parents tried to steer her toward classical piano, but young Katie couldn't…
-
Welch, Robert Alonzo
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on fortunes like that of Robert Alonzo Welch. He arrived in Texas at just fourteen, with fifty dollars borrowed from a friend. After working for a paint company, Welch caught…
-
Westheimer, Mitchell Louis
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston right now, and that major road you're on, Westheimer Road, is named after a guy who really shaped this city. Mitchell Louis Westheimer arrived from Germany in the 1850s and bought a huge…
-
William P. Hobby Airport
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past William P. Hobby Airport, but did you know it started as a private venture? Back in 1927, businessman W. T. Carter, Jr. bought this land and built an airfield called W. T. Carter Field when the city…
-
Yates, John Henry [Jack]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the legacy of John Henry "Jack" Yates. Born enslaved, Yates taught himself to read in secret, a dangerous act for any slave. After emancipation in 1865, he moved to…
-
Zindler, Marvin Harold
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Marvin Zindler made his name. For decades, this legendary consumer advocate and TV reporter used his platform at KTRK-TV to fight for the little guy. He's famous…
-
Zydeco
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Southeast Texas, the birthplace of a sound you might know: Zydeco! It started in the late 1940s and 50s, when Creole immigrants in places like Houston and Beaumont fused old Louisiana French folk…
-
Sessums, John, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, where a truly unique figure named John Sessums, Jr. made his mark. Born likely into slavery, Sessums became a renowned militia drummer and drill instructor, a pivotal figure in Houston's…
-
Jones, Edith Mae Irby
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the legacy of Dr. Edith Irby Jones. In 1948, she shattered barriers by becoming the first African American student admitted to the University of Arkansas Medical School, the…
-
Yeoman, William Frank [Bill]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, where for twenty-five seasons, Bill Yeoman coached the University of Houston Cougars football team. Arriving in 1962, Yeoman inherited a struggling program. He turned things around by…
-
Roberts, Josephine K. Mooring [Josie]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing by the legacy of Josephine K. "Josie" Roberts. She wasn't a doctor, but this determined woman took charge of Methodist Hospital in 1924 when it was a…
-
McKaughan, Richard Earl, Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, you're passing through the legacy of Richard Earl McKaughan, Sr. He wasn't just an aviation pioneer; he founded Trans-Texas Airways. McKaughan started in his father's…
-
Muse, Marion Lamar
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, maybe heading to Houston or Dallas, and you're probably listening to music. Well, right here, in the story of M. Lamar Muse, you've got a soundtrack to the birth of modern Texas air travel.…
-
Hines, Gerald Douglas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city whose skyline was dramatically shaped by Gerald Hines. He arrived here after World War II as a mechanical engineer, but soon found his true calling in real estate development. In…
-
Collier, Johnnie Lucille [Ann Miller]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Ann Miller, the legendary tap dancer and Hollywood star. Born Johnnie Lucille Collier in 1923, she started ballet at age five to treat rickets. But it was seeing Bill…
-
Torres, Joe Campos
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city forever changed by the brutal murder of Joe Campos Torres. Back on May 5th, <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1977</say-as>, Torres was arrested after a bar dispute. Instead…
-
Voss, Janice Elaine
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the home of Janice Voss, a woman who soared higher than most of us can imagine. She was an astronaut, a scientist who studied fire and plants in space, and one of only six…
-
Legacy Community Health [Montrose Clinic]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the birthplace of a vital community resource. In 1978, the Montrose Clinic opened its doors, initially to screen and treat sexually transmitted diseases for gay men. But…
-
Vallone, Anthony Vincent, Jr. [Tony]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the legacy of Tony Vallone, a name synonymous with elegant dining in this city. Vallone's restaurant, 'Tony's', opened in 1965, quickly becoming *the* place for…
-
Routh, Sylvia
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the land once owned by Sylvia Routh. Born enslaved around 1806, Routh became one of the first free Black women landowners in Houston before the…
-
Awe, Robert James
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became a frontline in the fight against AIDS in the 1980s. Right here, Dr. Robert Awe was a pioneer. He led Houston's first AIDS clinic at Jefferson Davis Hospital, treating…
-
Hain, Samuel Lewis Williams
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the birthplace of professional baseball in Texas. Samuel Lewis Williams Hain, a railroad man with a passion for the game, organized the first Texas…
-
Graham, Noma Hallowell [Ma]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot of its cultural vibrancy to one remarkable woman: Noma Hallowell Graham, known affectionately as "Ma." Arriving in Houston in 1910, she quickly became a fixture,…
-
George, Johnny Fae Nelson
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, back in the 1950s, a true theater visionary named Johnny Fae Nelson George was making magic. She founded Theatre, Incorporated, a non-profit, all-volunteer enterprise…
-
African Americans and Politics
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Racial conflict is a basic feature of Texas history. From 1865 onward its primary political manifestation has been the struggle of African Americans to vote, have their ballots fairly counted, elect their preferred…
-
Allen, Richard
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Richard Allen, political and civic leader, was born a slave in Richmond, Virginia, on June 10, 1830. (Some sources give the year as 1831.) He was brought to Texas in 1837 and ultimately to Harris County, where he was…
-
Beal, Anthony Wayne
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Anthony Wayne Beal, physician, was born on May 13, 1916, in Hammond, Texas. He was born to Perry W. and Edna (Handy) Beal and had twelve siblings. Beal graduated from Calvert Colored School in Calvert, Texas, in 1934.…
-
Codwell, John Elihue, Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
John Elihue Codwell, Sr., educator, scholar, and philanthropist, was born in Houston in 1905 to migrant James Marshall Codwell (of Navasota, Texas) and the former Pearl E. Cooper, possibly from Walker County. Formerly a…
-
Eusan, Lynn Cecelia
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Lynn Cecelia Eusan, community activist, journalist, and University of Houston's first Black homecoming queen, was born in Galveston County, Texas, on October 11, 1948, to Ida Mae (Boudreaux) Eusan and Wilbur Thirkield…
-
Henry, Christopher Columbus, Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Christopher Columbus Henry, labor leader, was born on May 17, 1907, in Lyles, Louisiana, to John and Mittie Henry. He spent his first nineteen years there and completed eight years of formal education before eventually…
-
Jemison, James Hudson
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
James Hudson Jemison, African American beauty school president and business and community leader, was born on July 26, 1906, in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, to Hudson Jemison and Anna (Pierce) Jemison. Jemison was one of…
-
Nabrit, Samuel Milton
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Samuel Milton Nabrit, academician, marine biologist, and second president of Texas Southern University (TSU), was born on February 21, 1905, in Macon, Georgia, to James M. Nabrit and Augusta G. West. He was one of eight…
-
Simpson, Lee Haywood
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Lee Haywood (L. H.) Simpson, Black minister and political leader, was born in Calvert, Texas, in 1884, moved to Houston in the early 1900s, and worked for a short time in a sawmill before entering the ministry. He…
-
Texas Southern University
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Texas Southern University was established by the Fiftieth Texas Legislature on March 3, 1947, under the provisions of Senate Bill 140 as a state-supported institution of higher education to be located in Houston. The…
-
Wesley, Carter Walker
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Carter Walker Wesley, newspaperman and lawyer, was born in Houston, Texas, on April 29, 1892, to Mabel (Green) and Harry Wesley. Educated at Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee, where he graduated magna cum laude…
-
White, Hattie Mae Whiting
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Hattie Mae Whiting White, first Black elected to public office in Houston in the twentieth century, daughter of David Wendell and Hattie (Gooden) Whiting, was born at Huntsville, Texas, on May 22, 1916. When she was…
-
Houston Colored Carnegie Library
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Texas had only a few public libraries when steel magnate Andrew Carnegie established a philanthropic program that ultimately funded 1,687 public libraries and 108 academic libraries in the United States and 2,509…
-
Gay Chicano Caucus
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
The Gay Chicano Caucus was a social, cultural, and educational organization founded in 1978 in Houston. The organization was the first in Texas to identify and speak to issues directly related to Mexican American gay…
-
Highlands: The Town That Watered the War
· 12.6 mi
You're in Highlands, named for sitting on the high east bank of the San Jacinto River, a rail-stop town since about 1908. Its hidden claim to fame flows in ditches: in the early 1940s the Federal Works Agency built a…
-
Acres Homes, TX
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, and right here is Acres Homes, a community with a name that tells its own story. <break time="400ms"/> It started around World War I, when land was sold by the acre, not by the lot,…
-
Allen's Landing, TX
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, right where it all began. This is Allen's Landing, the spot where the Allen brothers envisioned their city. Back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1837</say-as>, the steamer Laura…
-
Alley Theatre
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the home of the Alley Theatre. It started in 1947, not in a fancy building, but in a former dance studio. The name 'Alley' came from the narrow corridor that led to its…
-
Ancient Order of Pilgrims
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing the site of a remarkable piece of African American history. Back in 1882, Henry Cohen Hardy saw that Black residents were often denied basic services like…
-
Anderson, Ralph Alexander, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston right now, passing by buildings that might look familiar. Ralph Anderson Jr., born right here in Houston in 1923, was the architect behind some of this city's most iconic structures. After…
-
Andrews, John Day
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the legacy of John Day Andrews. Born in Virginia, he arrived in Houston by 1838 and quickly became a driving force in the young city. He built…
-
Andrews, Robert Lee
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city with a rich history of Black entrepreneurship. Right here, Robert Lee Andrews made his fortune, earning the nickname the 'sweet potato king.' He cornered the market on sweet…
-
Andrews, Stephen Pearl
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past Houston, and right here, back in 1839, Stephen Pearl Andrews settled with his family. He was a lawyer and an abolitionist who came up with a plan to end slavery in the Republic of Texas by buying the…
-
Annunciation Greek Orthodox Cathedral
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the site of Texas's first Greek Orthodox Church. In 1914, Greek immigrants formed the Panhellenic Benevolent Brotherhood with one goal: to build their own place of worship.…
-
Antoine, George Washington
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once northeastern Brazoria County, near Chenango. Right here, Dr. George Washington Antoine, a physician born in 1877, began his journey. After studying and graduating from Meharry…
-
Association for the Advancement of Mexican Americans
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city with a rich history of community activism. Right here, in the 1970s, the Association for the Advancement of Mexican Americans, or AAMA, was founded by students, teachers, and…
-
Auditorium Hotel [Lancaster Hotel]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through downtown Houston, and right here at 701 Texas Avenue stands the historic Lancaster Hotel, originally known as the Auditorium Hotel. It opened its doors in 1926, a symbol of Houston's booming…
-
Baker, Alice Graham
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes so much to the drive and compassion of Alice Graham Baker. Back in 1907, she saw immigrant families struggling in the Second Ward, facing crowded conditions and language…
-
Barnett, Marguerite Ross
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that Marguerite Ross Barnett aimed to transform into the nation's best public urban university. She was the first Black president of the University of Houston, taking the helm in…
-
Barziza, Decimus et Ultimus
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, you might be passing near the story of Decimus et Ultimus Barziza. He was a lawyer, a politician, and a Confederate soldier. During the Battle of Gettysburg in <say-as…
-
Bettis, Valerie Elizabeth
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Valerie Bettis, a groundbreaking modern dancer and choreographer. Born in 1919, Bettis trained right here before heading to New York. She made history in 1947, becoming…
-
Bigelow, Charles Grafton
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, in what was once the Republic of Texas's capital, you're passing the legacy of Charles Grafton Bigelow. He wasn't born a Texan, but this Massachusetts businessman arrived…
-
Biggers, John Thomas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that became home to John Thomas Biggers, a groundbreaking African-American artist and educator. In 1949, Biggers arrived here to found the art department at Texas Southern…
-
Black Filmmaking
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas history, a history of Black filmmaking! Back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1921</say-as>, Houston was home to Superior Art Productions, one of the state's first Black film…
-
Boney, Jew Don, Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1971</say-as> and <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1972</say-as>, Jew Don Boney, Sr. made history. He became the first…
-
Borden, John Pettit
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the heart of Texas history, and right here is where a monumental task began. John P. Borden, a veteran of the Texas Revolution, was appointed the very first Land Commissioner of the Republic of…
-
Borden, Thomas Henry
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what's now Fort Bend County, and you might be passing by Richmond, a town T.H. Borden helped found. But Thomas Henry Borden was more than just a founder. He was an inventor, arriving in Texas in…
-
Brady, John Thomas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, John Thomas Brady saw some of the fiercest fighting of the Civil War. On January 1st, <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1863</say-as>, Brady served as a volunteer…
-
Bremond, Paul
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, you're passing through the legacy of Paul Bremond. He wasn't born here, but this New York City native came to Texas in 1839, landing in Galveston before settling in Houston.…
-
Brown, Alice Nelson Pratt
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by incredible wealth and philanthropy. Right here, Alice Nelson Pratt Brown played a huge role. After marrying George Brown, whose company became the construction giant…
-
Bryan, Louis A.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the Houston area, and right here, you're passing through the stomping grounds of Dr. Louis A. Bryan. He wasn't just any doctor; Bryan was a Confederate surgeon, serving as the lead surgeon at the…
-
Burgess, George Olympus
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, perhaps even through Independence Heights. Back in 1915, this community was a burgeoning, virtually all-Black town. George Olympus Burgess, an African American attorney, was elected its very…
-
Burt, Marie Anita
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of a college that started with a very specific dream. In 1945, Sister Marie Anita Burt founded a junior college, initially intended just for the education of…
-
Campbell, Benjamin
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston right now, and you might be passing by some of the city's earliest parks, like Hermann Park. These green spaces, along with a revolutionary sewage disposal plant and the city's first civil…
-
Car-Stable Convention
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston right now, and back in 1892, this city hosted one of the wildest political conventions in Texas history. Imagine this: the Texas Democratic gubernatorial nominating convention, held not in…
-
Carper, William M.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes some of its early medical history to Dr. William M. Carper. He arrived in Texas just in time for the Revolution, serving as a surgeon at the pivotal Battle of San Jacinto…
-
Carroll, James Judson
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Burleson County, but your journey today takes you past a place with a unique legacy, thanks to James Judson Carroll. Born here in 1876, Carroll wasn't just a lumber executive; he was a…
-
Catacombs
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you might have been looking for a place to hear some of the biggest names in rock and roll back in the late 1960s. This was the site of The Catacombs, a legendary music…
-
Cave, Eber Worthington
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Eber Worthington Cave spent the latter part of his life, becoming a key player in the city's growth. Cave, a newspaper editor and politician, became fascinated…
-
Cerracchio, Enrico Filiberto
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing near the work of Enrico Cerracchio, an Italian sculptor who made this city his home for over forty years. He arrived in 1900 and quickly became known for…
-
Chapman, Robert Martin
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the very place where Texas's second Episcopal church got its start. Back in 1838, a missionary named Robert Martin Chapman arrived from Massachusetts with a dream to establish an academy.…
-
Cherry, Emma Richardson
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a pioneering artist fought to save a piece of history. Emma Richardson Cherry, a talented painter who studied in Paris, moved to Houston around 1893. She saw the…
-
Christian, Samuel Patrick
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city where Samuel Patrick Christian made his home. Before the Civil War, Christian piloted steamboats on these very waters. When war broke out, he joined Terry's Texas Rangers, rising…
-
Church of the Annunciation, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here stands the Church of the Annunciation, the city's oldest surviving Catholic church. It was built back in 1866, when Bishop Claude M. Dubuis and Father Joseph Querat saw the…
-
Coleman, John Brady
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the legacy of Dr. John Brady Coleman. Born in the Third Ward in 1929, Coleman wasn't just a doctor, specializing in obstetrics and gynecology. He was a true Houston…
-
Colored Farmers' Alliance
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston County, Texas, where in 1886, Black farmers facing economic hardship organized something new: the Colored Farmers' National Alliance and Cooperative Union. Since the existing Southern…
-
Contemporary Arts Museum
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the Contemporary Arts Museum, one of the oldest institutions of its kind in Texas. It started back in 1948 as an alliance of artists, architects, and business folks who…
-
Continental Zydeco Ballroom
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you might have passed the spot where the Continental Zydeco Ballroom once stood. For decades, this was the heart of zydeco music in Texas. It started as Johnson's Lounge…
-
Covington, Benjamin Jesse
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became home to Dr. Benjamin Jesse Covington for over fifty years. Born near Marlin in 1869, Covington overcame the challenges of his time as a Black physician, graduating from…
-
Cummins, Robert James
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city whose port facilities owe a huge debt to Robert James Cummins. Born in Ireland in 1881, Cummins came to the US and worked in Detroit before moving to Houston in 1910. For the next…
-
Cushing, Edward Hopkins
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city Edward Hopkins Cushing helped build with his words. For thirteen years, he was the editor and publisher of the Houston Telegraph, a tireless booster for everything Texas. He…
-
Cutrer, Lewis Wesley
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that grew thanks to leaders like Lewis Wesley Cutrer. Cutrer, an attorney by trade, became mayor of Houston in 1957. During his six years in office, he pushed through a bond issue,…
-
Daffan, Theron Eugene [Ted]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a sound that still echoes on highways today. Right here, in the 1930s, a young musician named Ted Daffan was tinkering with electronics. He wasn't just fixing radios; he…
-
Daniels, Joseph
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the wild Texas frontier, and right here, in 1838, Joseph Daniels was taking command of Fort Houston, near modern-day Palestine. He was tasked with protecting settlers from Indian…
-
Dawson Lunnon Cemetery
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston's East End, and right here is the Dawson Lunnon Cemetery. What started as seven and a half acres, bought in 1870 by Mike Lunnon, a freedman, became a community hub. The Lunnon family lived…
-
Degeorge Hotel
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, past the DeGeorge Hotel, built in 1913 and opened the next year. It was one of the city's first fireproof buildings, made of concrete and steel. The lobby was a convention hall, and…
-
DeGeorge, Michele
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its early development to immigrants like Michele DeGeorge. Born Michele Di Giorgio in Sicily in 1850, he came to Texas in 1882, initially working in lumber mills.…
-
Dent, Ernestine Jessie Covington
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Ernestine Jessie Covington Dent, a pianist and educator who became one of the most sought-after concert artists on Black college campuses in the 1920s and 30s. Born in…
-
Domain Privee
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving just south of Houston, near where Main Street meets Old Main Street Loop Road. Right here, back in the day, stood the Domain Privee, an illegal gambling casino and home owned by Jake 'Jakie' Freedman.…
-
Dreyer, Margaret Webb
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Margaret Webb Dreyer made her mark on the city's art scene. From 1961 to 1975, she ran Dreyer Galleries out of her home, a time when few galleries showcased local…
-
Drinking and Beverages in Nineteenth-Century Texas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, a place that in the 1800s was known for its... spirited culture. Forget churches, Francis Sheridan noted in 1840, Texans were building more grog shops than temples! Life was hard, water was…
-
Dyer, Edwin Hawley
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that knows its baseball. Right here, Edwin Hawley Dyer was building a legacy. After playing ball at Rice Institute, Dyer became manager of the Houston team in the Texas League. He…
-
Ellington Field
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, and right here is Ellington Field, a place that's seen nearly every kind of U.S. Air Force plane since it first opened in 1917. Named for Lt. Eric L. Ellington, who died in a crash years…
-
Ellis, Seger P.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city where Seger P. Ellis was born on July 4th, 1904. He became a piano prodigy, teaching himself by watching other Houston musicians. By 1921, he was playing solo piano on local…
-
Epsom Downs
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the site of Epsom Downs, a glitzy horseracing track that opened on Thanksgiving Day, November 30, 1933. It was the very first new track in Texas to host pari-mutuel betting,…
-
Erichson, Albert
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the heart of Harris County, where Sheriff Albert Erichson served. He was a popular lawman, even honored with a custom-made Colt pistol by his men. But his career wasn't just about routine…
-
Fain, Elizabeth Finnigan
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Bessie Finnigan Fain helped ignite a movement. Born in this city in 1875, Bessie, along with her sisters, founded new suffrage leagues in Houston and Galveston in…
-
Ferguson, Keith
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Keith Ferguson, a legendary blues and rock bassist. Born in '46, Ferguson cut his teeth in the Sixth Ward, soaking up the diverse sounds of this city. He even learned…
-
Finger, Joseph
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by the vision of architect Joseph Finger. Born in Austria, Finger arrived in Houston in 1908 and quickly became a leading designer, known for his exuberant, modernistic…
-
Finn, Alfred Charles
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by the vision of architect Alfred Charles Finn. Born in Bellville, Finn came to Houston in 1900 and began a lifelong association with developer Jesse H. Jones. By the 1920s,…
-
Finnigan, Annette
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that Annette Finnigan helped shape, not with industry, but with art and activism. Born in West Columbia in 1873, she moved to Houston as a child and later attended Wellesley…
-
Fisher, Henry Francis
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the Republic of Texas, and right here in Houston, Henry Francis Fisher arrived in 1837 or '38. He wasn't just any traveler; he was the consul for the Hanseatic League, representing…
-
Fonde, Corinne
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot of its vibrant community life to Corinne Fonde. Back in 1919, Fonde was put in charge of the city's brand new Department of Recreation. She had a vision: use…
-
Franzheim, Kenneth
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by the vision of architect Kenneth Franzheim. He arrived here in the late 1930s, already a seasoned designer of skyscrapers and airports. His big break in Houston came in…
-
Freeman, John Henry
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the birthplace of a medical revolution. John Henry Freeman, a local attorney, was instrumental in establishing the M.D. Anderson Foundation in 1936.…
-
Garcia, Isidro
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its cultural vibrancy to leaders like Isidro García. Born in Laredo in 1906, García moved to Houston as a young man, seeking work and a better future. He didn't…
-
Garrett, Daniel Edward
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a bit of its military history to Daniel Edward Garrett. A lawyer and politician, Garrett served in the Texas legislature and later as a U.S. Congressman. While on the…
-
Gittings, Paul Linwood
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became the backdrop for one of Texas's most famous photographers. Paul Linwood Gittings arrived here in 1928, bringing a unique approach to portraiture learned from a famous…
-
Goldsmith, Eva
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to Eva Goldsmith, a fierce advocate for working women in the early 1900s. A garment worker herself, Goldsmith rose through the ranks of the Houston Labor Council,…
-
Gordon, Meyer Morris
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became the home of a retail empire. Meyer Morris Gordon arrived in Texas from Lithuania around the turn of the century. After surviving the devastating 1900 Galveston…
-
Gray, William Fairfax
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city where William Fairfax Gray settled his family in 1837. Gray, a Virginia native and veteran of the War of 1812, came to Texas in 1835. Though he failed to become secretary at the…
-
Gulf Brewing Company
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of the Gulf Brewing Company, started by none other than Howard Hughes Jr. in 1933. It opened just after Prohibition ended, and its brewmaster, Frantz Hector…
-
Harrisburg, TX (Harris County)
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Harrisburg, a town established before 1825 by John Richardson Harris. It was named in honor of himself and his great-grandfather's hometown in Pennsylvania. Harrisburg was a…
-
Henderson Nathaniel Q.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the legacy of Nat Q. Henderson. He wasn't just a principal; he was known as the 'Mayor of Fifth Ward.' From 1909 to 1942, he led Bruce Elementary…
-
Henderson, James Wilson
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, right where James Wilson Henderson made his mark. He came to Texas in 1836, just missing the fight for independence, but he stayed. Henderson served in the Texas House, even…
-
Hermann Hospital
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is Hermann Hospital. It opened its doors in 1925, not as a fancy private clinic, but as a public charity hospital, all thanks to the vision of local entrepreneur George H.…
-
Hester, Julia Catherine Thomas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston's historic Fifth Ward, a place Julia Catherine Hester called home for over forty years. She wasn't just a teacher; she was a community pillar. Alongside her husband, she opened their home,…
-
Hogg, William Clifford
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the legacy of William Clifford Hogg, a man who poured his energy and fortune into shaping Texas. Born in Quitman, Will Hogg became a powerhouse businessman, involved with the…
-
Holland, William Sylvester [Babe]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a great deal to William Sylvester "Babe" Holland. He arrived here in 1927, not just as a football coach for Jack Yates High School, but as a fierce advocate for equality.…
-
Hollimon, Milton Howard Clarence
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Milton Howard Clarence Hollimon, a guitarist hailed as one of the greatest in blues, jazz, and R&B. Known as 'Gristle' to his friends, Hollimon's career spanned over…
-
Houston and Texas Central Railway
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the start of a railroad that would change Texas forever. It's 1853, and the Galveston and Red River Railway, soon to be renamed the Houston and Texas Central, breaks ground right here. By…
-
Houston Buffaloes
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is a place with a baseball legacy stretching back over 70 years! The Houston Buffaloes, or Buffs, played from 1896 all the way to 1961. But their story starts even earlier,…
-
Houston Cotton Exchange and Board of Trade
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a powerful force in Texas commerce once stood. The Houston Board of Trade and Cotton Exchange, chartered in 1874, was instrumental in promoting the city's welfare.…
-
Houston Eagles
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was briefly home to a legendary baseball team: the Houston Eagles. This wasn't just any team; they were a powerhouse of the Negro Leagues. In 1949, the Newark Eagles,…
-
Houston Grand Opera
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Texas's first permanent opera company, the Houston Grand Opera, incorporated way back in August of 1955. Under its early director, Walter Herbert, it brought opera to…
-
Houston Light Guards
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, home of the Houston Light Guards, one of the oldest National Guard units in Texas. Founded in 1873 by Confederate veterans, this wasn't just a military company; it was a social hub for…
-
Houston Museum of Natural Science
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the Houston Museum of Natural Science. It started way back in 1909, not as a building, but as an idea: to create a free institution for education and science. The city…
-
Houston Public Library
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, the story of the Houston Public Library began way back in 1854. It started as a private Lyceum with fewer than a hundred books, but it grew through debates, lectures, and…
-
Houston Rockets
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, home of the Rockets! This pro basketball team actually started life in San Diego back in 1967, named after the city's space-age industry. But in 1971, a group of Houston investors brought…
-
Houston Symphony Orchestra
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the birthplace of the Houston Symphony Orchestra. It all started back in 1913, thanks to a push from civic leader and art patron Ima Hogg. She marshaled her forces to…
-
Houston, TX (Anderson County)
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Anderson County, not far from Palestine, heading west on Highway 79. You're passing through the site of an early Texas settlement named Houston, also known as Fort Houston. It was platted in 1835…
-
Hughes, Joe [Guitar]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Joe "Guitar" Hughes, a blues legend who spent fifty years making music right here. Born in 1937, Hughes was just fifteen when he started playing professionally,…
-
Husk, Zilpha
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was once home to Zilpha Husk, a free Black woman who fought for her right to stay. In the late 1830s, Texas law demanded free Black people leave the state. Zilpha, a…
-
Incarnate Word Academy
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is Incarnate Word Academy, the city's oldest Catholic school, founded way back in 1873. <break time="400ms"/> The Sisters of the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament, who…
-
International Artists Producing Corporation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the heart of a short-lived but influential music label that defined late 1960s Texas rock. International Artists, active from 1965 to 1970, was the powerhouse behind the seminal…
-
Johnson, Evelyn Joyce
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, Evelyn Johnson was a behind-the-scenes force in one of the most successful African-American-owned music businesses of the mid-20th century. Starting in 1946, she managed…
-
Johnston, Ralph A.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot of its modern growth to men like Ralph A. Johnston. Born in Alabama in 1899, Johnston came to Texas and became a major player in the oil industry. But he wasn't…
-
Julia C. Hester House
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston's Fifth Ward, a neighborhood with a rich history. Right here, in 1943, the Julia C. Hester House opened its doors. It started as the Houston Negro Community Center, a place dedicated to…
-
Kamrath, Karl Fred
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its modern architectural look to Karl Kamrath. Kamrath, along with his partner Frederick MacKie, opened their firm here in 1937. They became pioneers of modernist…
-
Keane, John Joseph
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was once home to a man who almost became a priest, but found his calling on the baseball diamond. John Joseph Keane studied for the priesthood for six years, but his love for…
-
Kelley, A. K.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through a neighborhood named for A. K. Kelley. Kelley was born into slavery in Brazoria County around 1847. Despite limited formal education, he became a…
-
Kessler, Henry
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston right now, and back in the 1830s, this was the place to be if you wanted a drink, a newspaper, or to trade land scrip for a meal. Henry Kessler's Arcade, and the attached Round Tent Bar,…
-
Kinkaid School
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the Kinkaid School, the oldest independent school in the city. It all started back in 1904 with Margaret Hunter Kinkaid. She was a descendant of one of Stephen F.…
-
Kirby, John Henry
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, the land of towering pines. Right here, John Henry Kirby built an empire. Starting in 1887, he partnered with Boston investors to buy up millions of acres of timberland. He founded the…
-
Lanier, Ralphael O'Hara
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Ralphael O'Hara Lanier faced a storm of controversy as the first president of what's now Texas Southern University. He took the helm in 1948, tasked with building…
-
Lapham, Moses
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, a city that owes its very layout to Moses Lapham. He arrived in Texas in 1831, a surveyor from Ohio. After fighting in the Revolution and even helping destroy Vince's Bridge before San…
-
Lay, Kenneth Lee
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that became the headquarters for Enron Corporation. Born in Missouri to a Baptist preacher, Kenneth Lay rose to become chairman of Enron, a titan of the energy industry. He…
-
Le Grand, Alexander
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, you're passing through the story of Alexander Le Grand. Born around 1794, Le Grand was a surveyor, trader, and explorer who ended up in Texas during its revolution. In 1826,…
-
Longoria, Joseph Earl [Joey Long]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became home to a true Texas music pioneer. Joseph Earl Longoria, known as Joey Long, was a blues guitarist, singer, and songwriter who moved here in the mid-1950s. Born in…
-
Lord, Irvin Capers
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its growth to men like Irvin Capers Lord. He arrived here in 1854, fleeing yellow fever in South Carolina, and quickly became a fixture in public life. Lord…
-
Lubbock, Francis Richard
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Francis Lubbock's Texas, and right here, in Houston, he began his life in the Lone Star State. Lubbock wasn't just any Texan; he became governor during the Confederacy's darkest…
-
MacAgy, Jermayne Virginia
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became a hub for innovative art thanks to Jermayne MacAgy. In the late 1950s, she was the director of the Contemporary Arts Museum here. MacAgy wasn't afraid to push…
-
McCormick, Robert Burton [Mack]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes so much of its musical soul to one man: Robert "Mack" McCormick. Born in Pittsburgh, Mack landed here in 1946 and became obsessed with the sounds of Texas. He wasn't just…
-
McDavid, Percy H.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past a place that was once a beacon for jazz music in Texas. In the early 1930s, Percy McDavid was teaching music at Wheatley High School. He wasn't just teaching notes and scales;…
-
McGovern, John Philip [Jack]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became a hub for medical innovation thanks to Dr. John Philip "Jack" McGovern. He moved here in 1956, bringing his expertise in pediatrics and immunology. McGovern didn't just…
-
McKinney, Van H.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is a place that Van H. McKinney helped build. Back in 1892, he opened his printing business, becoming one of the very first African-American printers in Texas. For over…
-
Menil Collection
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, past a world-class art museum, the Menil Collection. But this isn't just any museum; it's the culmination of a lifelong passion. Dominique and John de Menil, a French couple who fled to…
-
Menil, John de
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its cultural landscape to John de Menil. Born in Paris, he came to Houston in 1942, fleeing war-torn Europe. His success in the oil industry, particularly with…
-
Methodist Hospital of Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of a hospital that became a world-renowned medical center. Methodist Hospital opened its doors in 1924, a successor to a smaller private hospital. It barely…
-
Meyer, Leopold Leopold
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes so much to the generosity of Leopold Meyer. Meyer was a successful businessman, but it was a personal tragedy that truly defined his legacy. In October of <say-as…
-
Miller Outdoor Theatre
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here in Hermann Park is the Miller Outdoor Theatre. It started back in 1923, named the Miller Memorial Theatre, after Jesse Wright Miller, whose estate provided the initial…
-
Minute Women of the U.S.A.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was once home to one of the most active chapters of the Minute Women of the U.S.A. Founded in 1949 to fight Communism, this organization established chapters across the…
-
Moore, Francis, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the heart of where Francis Moore, Jr. made his mark. He arrived in Texas in 1836, just in time to help win independence. But he's best known as the…
-
Moore, John W.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to pioneers like John W. Moore. He arrived from Tennessee in 1830, settling right here in the Harrisburg Municipality. Moore was a delegate to the Consultation and…
-
Morehouse, Edwin
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, perhaps near Houston, and you might be passing the final resting place of Edwin Morehouse. Born in New York in 1801, he came to Texas in 1826 and quickly rose through…
-
Moreland, Isaac N.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, Isaac Moreland made his mark. He was a key figure in the Texas Revolution, signing the Anahuac Resolutions protesting unfair taxes. Moreland then joined the Texas army,…
-
Morris, Joseph Robert
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes so much to figures like Joseph Robert Morris. This tinsmith, who arrived in Texas in the early 1840s, didn't just set up shop. He innovated, credited with inventing a…
-
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the Museum of Fine Arts, the oldest art museum in Texas. It all started back in 1900 with a group of women who wanted to bring art reproductions into public school…
-
Mydolls
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of the unique punk band Mydolls. Formed in 1978, their name itself is a nod to the over-the-counter medicine Midol. They weren't just another band; they played…
-
Nickerson, William N., Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where William N. Nickerson, Jr. helped launch a groundbreaking venture for Black Texans. In 1919, he co-founded the Houston Observer, a Black newspaper. Just a few years…
-
Oberholtzer, Edison Ellsworth
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a huge debt to Edison Ellsworth Oberholtzer. He arrived here in 1924, not to retire, but to build. For over two decades, he served as superintendent of Houston schools,…
-
Okasaki, Tsunekichi [Tom Brown]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to one of the first Japanese immigrants in Texas, Tsunekichi Okasaki. Arriving in the 1890s, he went by the name Tom Brown and opened a popular downtown restaurant…
-
Olivewood Cemetery
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, heading towards the end of Court Street. Right here, you're passing Olivewood Cemetery, founded way back in 1875. It's one of the oldest platted African-American cemeteries within the…
-
O’Connor, Maconda Brown
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Maconda Brown O'Connor dedicated her life to helping others. Even though she grew up surrounded by immense wealth from her father's company, Brown & Root, Maconda…
-
Pastoriza, Joseph Jay
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to Joseph Jay Pastoriza. He arrived here as a child in 1858, orphaned by a yellow fever epidemic. Pastoriza built a successful printing company, but he's most…
-
Patten, Mason Barnett
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Polk County, not far from where Mason Barnett Patten was born in 1871. Patten became an educator and a respected postal clerk, but his job on the railway mail cars could be…
-
Peddy, George Edwin Bailey
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a pivotal moment in Texas politics unfolded in 1922. George Peddy, a young attorney, found himself tapped by 'Independent Democrats' to run for the U.S. Senate.…
-
Pemberton, Charles Whittaker
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its public health infrastructure to Dr. Charles Whittaker Pemberton. Born in Marshall in 1892, Dr. Pemberton came to Houston in 1924 after earning his medical…
-
Pennzoil Place
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through downtown Houston, and right here is Pennzoil Place. Completed in 1975, it wasn't just another office building. Its unique design, a pair of towers with tilted roofs and splayed inner walls,…
-
Pérez, Eloy Nuñez
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to Eloy Nuñez Pérez, a legend in the Tejano music scene. Born in Bastrop in 1923, Pérez became a bandleader in Houston after World War II. In 1949, he formed Eloy…
-
Perry, Heman Edward
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Heman Edward Perry. He wasn't born into wealth, but this young man had big dreams. After trying his hand at farming and other ventures, Perry saw a need. He recognized…
-
Photography
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Texas, in December of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1843</say-as>, the very first photograph was likely taken. A Mrs. Davis advertised her services in Houston, probably the first person to capture…
-
Poe, George Washington
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the heart of the Texas Revolution, and right here, George Washington Poe was a key player. Born around 1800, Poe arrived in Texas in 1834 and quickly rose through the ranks. He…
-
Polk, Naomi
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to Naomi Polk, a remarkable self-taught artist born in 1892. She grew up in the Fourth Ward, a community with deep roots, where her grandmother had been brought from…
-
Prostitution
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, in towns big and small, you might have been passing through what was known as a 'vice district.' From the Civil War to World War I, especially between 1870 and 1910,…
-
Quebedeaux, Walter Arnim, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that grew fast and sometimes dirty. But right here, in the mid-1950s, a scientist named Walter Quebedeaux Jr. was changing the game for pollution control. He didn't just talk about…
-
Reaben, James Elliott
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, where artist James Reaben channeled his struggles and fears into his work. Diagnosed with AIDS in 1987, his art became a powerful expression of his impending death. Pieces like 'Monitor'…
-
Reyna, Maria Torres
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here on Seventy-fifth Street, you're passing the former site of Reyna's Florist. In a time when few women or minorities owned businesses, María Torres Reyna opened this shop in…
-
Reynolds, Allen C.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Houston, but back in the 1820s, this land was just starting to be claimed. Allen C. Reynolds, a veteran of the War of 1812, moved his family to Texas in 1826. He applied for a Mexican…
-
Reynolds, Teddy
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Teddy "Cry Cry" Reynolds, a blues pianist and singer who made his mark on the Texas music scene. Born in 1931, Reynolds learned piano at his grandmother's knee and by…
-
Robinson, Judson Wilbur, Jr
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that Judson Wilbur Robinson, Jr. dedicated his life to. He wasn't just a businessman; he was a trailblazer. Robinson helped launch KCOH radio in <say-as interpret-as="date"…
-
Robinson, Margarette
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that broke barriers thanks to pioneers like Margarette Robinson. In 1956, she was the first Black student at St. Clare's Hospital School of Nursing in New York. When she returned…
-
Rodriguez, David Roland
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of David Roland Rodriguez, a true Texas original. Born in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="m d y">January 1 1952</say-as>, he faced a childhood challenge with polio. But…
-
Ross, Helene Elaine Cole
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here in the Fifth Ward, you're passing the legacy of Helene Elaine Cole Ross. She wasn't just a businesswoman; she was a pioneer. In 1938, she and her husband, Burnett, along…
-
Rothko Chapel
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston right now, past a place that challenges the very idea of a chapel. It's the Rothko Chapel, a stark, windowless building designed by Philip Johnson and artist Mark Rothko himself. Inside,…
-
Ruiz, John Joseph
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a great deal to Dr. John Joseph Ruiz. Born in Mexico in 1903, he came to Texas, graduated from UT's Pharmacy School in Galveston in 1925, and then earned his medical…
-
Rutherford B. H. Yates Museum, Inc.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, right here in Freedmen's Town. This Queen Anne cottage, built between 1912 and 1913, was the home of Rutherford B. H. Yates, Sr., a printer and educator. But this house is more than just…
-
Salas Aldaz, Fernando
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to immigrants like Fernando Salas Aldaz. He came from Mexico with degrees in engineering and agriculture, but found his calling right here as a jeweler. He didn't…
-
Scanlan, Thomas Howe
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to Thomas Howe Scanlan. Born in Ireland, he made a fortune smuggling cotton during the Civil War, then invested heavily in Houston real estate. During…
-
Selph, Leon [Pappy]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Leon "Pappy" Selph, a true founding father of honky-tonk music. While still a teenager, he was teaching songs to W. Lee O'Daniel's Light Crust Doughboys – yes, *that*…
-
SER-Jobs For Progress
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a vital organization for the Mexican-American community got its start. In 1964, SER-Jobs for Progress was founded, initially as a placement center. But it quickly…
-
Shearn, Charles
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, and right here in what is now Houston, Charles Shearn played a role in Texas's fight for independence. Born in England, he came to Texas in 1834. Just a year later, he found himself…
-
Silver Slipper Lounge
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston's Fifth Ward, and right here is the Silver Slipper Lounge. Opened in 1962 as Alfred's Place by Alfred Cormier, this club became a cornerstone for zydeco and blues music. Zydeco, a…
-
St. George Orthodox Christian Church
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of St. George Orthodox Church. It began in 1928 with a small group of Middle Eastern immigrants. They didn't have a building, so the Ladies Altar Society cooked…
-
Stage Canteen (Houston, 1942–1945)
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, back in World War II, the basement of the Auditorium Hotel was transformed into something truly special: the Stage Canteen. <break time="400ms"/> Imagine a circus-themed…
-
Star Bottling Works
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing the birthplace of a Texas soft drink legacy. Back in 1880, the Star Bottling Works opened its doors, becoming Houston's contribution to the booming soda…
-
Staub, John Fanz
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and you're passing by some of the most iconic homes in the city, many of them designed by John Fanz Staub. He arrived here in 1921, sent from New York to oversee a few houses. He liked…
-
Stevens, James H.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on ambition and, in the mid-1800s, on railroads. Right here, James H. Stevens arrived in 1840, a young man from Kentucky who quickly became a merchant and a key player in…
-
Stone, Ronald Coleman
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that knows its news anchors. Right here, Ron Stone became the voice many Texans trusted. Recruited to KHOU-TV in 1961, he eventually took over as anchorman. Later, at KPRC-TV, he…
-
Stuart, David Finney
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Dr. David Finney Stuart practiced medicine, rising through the ranks of Confederate surgeons. His story took a dramatic turn on January 11, 1863, at Arkansas Post.…
-
Swearingen, William Chapline
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the Republic of Texas, and right here, you're passing through the story of William Chapline Swearingen. He arrived in Texas in January of <say-as interpret-as="date"…
-
Symonds, Henry Gardiner
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the heart of Texas industry. Right here, H. Gardiner Symonds took a company formed to move natural gas across the country during World War II and turned it into a titan. In 1943, he…
-
Tapscott, Horace
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where jazz pianist and activist Horace Tapscott was born in 1934. While he spent much of his life in Los Angeles, Tapscott's early years in Houston's Third Ward were…
-
Texas Air
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of an airline empire that reshaped American air travel. It all started in 1969 with Jet Capital Corporation, founded by Frank Lorenzo. This company eventually refinanced…
-
Texas Woman's Fair
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where, back in 1915, women decided to host the first-ever Texas Woman's Fair. They wanted to showcase their skills in everything from housekeeping and childcare to…
-
Crusaders
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the birthplace of a band that blended jazz with funk and rock, creating a sound that hit the charts and even toured with the Rolling Stones! The Crusaders, originally known as…
-
Pilgrim Travelers
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, where in the 1930s, a gospel group called the Pilgrim Travelers got their start. Organizing around the Pleasant Grove Baptist Church, these singers developed a unique, percussive 'walking…
-
Thomas, Albert
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through a place that witnessed a pivotal moment in American history. In 1963, Congressman Albert Thomas was considering retirement. But President John F.…
-
Thomas, Hociel
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the birthplace of Hociel Thomas, a blues and boogie-woogie piano prodigy born in 1904. She came from an incredible musical dynasty; her aunt was blues legend Sippie Wallace,…
-
Tierney, Gene
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became home to one of Hollywood's most iconic leading ladies, Gene Tierney. Born in New York and a star of classic films like 'Laura' and 'Leave Her to Heaven', Tierney faced…
-
Topek, Nathan Harold
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to Dr. Nathan Topek. Born here in 1926, Topek became a gynecologist who championed a revolutionary medical test. In 1949, he studied the Pap smear, a new technique…
-
Townes, Edgar E.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on oil. Right here, Edgar E. Townes began his career in law in 1903, drawn by the Spindletop discovery. He'd go on to write the original charter for the Humble Oil and…
-
Tracy, Elizabeth Strong
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to Elizabeth Strong Tracy, a Northern woman who came south in 1861. While her husband worked for the Houston Telegraph, she joined other ladies at the courthouse,…
-
Tracy, James Glover
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, in the heart of Reconstruction Texas, you were passing through the stomping grounds of James Glover Tracy. Born in Illinois, Tracy arrived in Texas in 1859, starting as a…
-
Tryon, William Milton
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Southeast Texas, maybe near Houston, where William Milton Tryon arrived in 1841. He was the second Baptist missionary sent to Texas, tasked with spreading the word across this new republic. Right…
-
University of Houston-University Park
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the central campus of the University of Houston. It all started back in 1926 with a plan by Houston school superintendent Edison E. Oberholtzer for a local college. It…
-
Vallbona, Carlos
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became a beacon of hope for polio survivors, thanks in large part to Dr. Carlos Vallbona. Arriving in Texas in 1955, he joined the Southwestern Poliomyelitis Respiratory…
-
Veasey, Medwick N. [Joe Medwick]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Joe Medwick, a prolific blues and R&B songwriter. Born Medwick Veasey in 1931, he adopted his famous name from a baseball player. Medwick was a fixture at Shady's…
-
Vidor, Florence Arto
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Florence Arto Vidor, a captivating actress who rose from the local scene to Hollywood stardom. Born in 1895, she honed her craft in Houston's public schools and convent…
-
Vinson, Eddie [Cleanhead]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of blues legend Eddie 'Cleanhead' Vinson. He got that nickname after a disastrous attempt to straighten his hair with lye! Vinson's musical journey began right here,…
-
Walsh, Olga Rose Sherwin [Sally]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot of its modern look to Sally Walsh. Born Olga Rose Sherwin, she adopted the name Sally and found herself working for the famous designer Hans Knoll in New York.…
-
Weingarten, Joseph
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a Texas grocery giant. Joseph Weingarten, born in Poland, started his American journey right here in Texas, first in Richmond, then Houston. In 1901, he and his father…
-
Williams, Lester
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that launched a blues legend. Lester Williams, born in Groveton but a Houstonian at heart, was a blues guitarist and vocalist who honed his craft right here. After serving in…
-
Wilson, Isabel Brown
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city known for its energy sector, but right here is where Isabel Brown Wilson made her mark. Born in 1931, she was more than just a daughter of a prominent family; she was a journalist,…
-
Wilson, Robert
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to a man named Robert Wilson. Back in the late 1820s, Wilson partnered with John Richardson Harris to develop this very area, then called Harrisburg. Wilson was a…
-
Wortham, Gus Sessions
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by giants like Gus Sessions Wortham. Born in Mexia in 1891, Wortham came to Houston and, with his father, founded an insurance agency in 1915. But his real impact came when…
-
Wright, Elva Anis
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a true medical pioneer made her mark. Dr. Elva Anis Wright arrived in Houston in 1910, a time when tuberculosis, or consumption, was the deadliest disease in…
-
Cleveland, William Davis
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the legacy of William Davis Cleveland, a merchant who helped build this city's economy from the ground up. After serving in the Civil War, Cleveland returned to Houston and…
-
Grand Central Station, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of the old Grand Central Station. This massive hub for rail travel served the city from 1887 until 1959. Imagine this place buzzing with activity! In 1934, a…
-
First National Bank Building, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here at Main and Franklin streets, you're passing the site of a true Texas landmark. In 1905, this was the brand new First National Bank building, and it was a game-changer for…
-
Goldberg, Edgar
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Texas's first statewide Jewish newspaper. Right here, Edgar Goldberg launched the Texas Jewish Herald in 1908. He envisioned it as a voice for all Texas Jews, printing…
-
Pro-Family Rally (1977)
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1977</say-as>, you're driving past the site of a massive clash of ideologies. While the National Women's Conference was happening nearby, thousands of…
-
Jefferson Davis Hospital
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of the former Jefferson Davis Hospital. Opened in 1925, this public charity hospital served the city for over sixty years. It was built on the grounds of an old…
-
Manda Ann Convalescent Home, Incorporated
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of a dream realized for African Americans seeking quality care. Back in 1970, Jay Roy Roberts, Sr., inspired by a fifteen-year vision, founded the Manda Ann…
-
Institute for Spirituality and Health
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the Institute for Spirituality and Health. Originally named the Institute of Religion, it was founded in 1955 as a member of the Texas Medical Center. Its mission? To…
-
Lusk, Charles Miles
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that once had a legendary spot for horse racing fans: the Turf Exchange Saloon & Restaurant. From 1899 to 1907, Charles Lusk ran this bustling establishment, complete with a…
-
Lusk, Charles Michael
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Dr. Charles Michael Lusk opened his osteopathy practice back in 1913. He wasn't just a doctor; Lusk was a Houston legend in athletics, even captaining the winning…
-
Lusk, Mae Estella Selden
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Brazoria County, and right here, Mae Lusk became an independent oil producer out of necessity. In 1940, her husband, Charles, died, leaving Mae, then 48, to manage his oil business. She dove in,…
-
Guardiola, Gloria
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the heart of Mexican American activism, and right here in Houston, Gloria Guardiola was making waves. After teaching briefly in Bay City, she quit, frustrated by discrimination. She…
-
Healthcare for the Homeless–Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that's been tackling homelessness with compassion for decades. Right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1999</say-as>, Healthcare for the Homeless-Houston, or HHH,…
-
Fall, Florence King Long
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to the vision of Florence King Long Fall. She wasn't just a clubwoman; she was a driving force behind bringing art to the people. In 1916, she helped secure land…
-
Tony's Restaurant
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here on Richmond Avenue is the site of Tony's Restaurant, a legendary Houston establishment that opened its doors back in 1965. Chef Tony Vallone trained in Paris and brought a…
-
Club Femenino Chapultepec
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1931</say-as>, a group of young Mexican American women formed the Club Femenino Chapultepec. They were tired of being denied…
-
Welch, Louie William
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that exploded onto the global stage during the 1960s and 70s, and a lot of that growth happened on Louie Welch's watch. As mayor from 1964 to 1974, Welch oversaw a booming era for…
-
Turner, Sylvester
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that knows how to elect its leaders. Sylvester Turner, a name you might recognize, served this city for decades. He first won a seat in the Texas House in 1989, representing…
-
Beal, Perry Weldon
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Perry Weldon Beal, physician, was born in Calvert, Texas, to Perry W. and Edna (Handy) Beal on March 26, 1905. He attended school at the Calvert Colored School then attended Prairie View Normal and Industrial College…
-
Covington, Jennie Belle Murphy
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Jennie Belle (Ladybelle) Murphy Covington, African-American civic leader, was born on September 21, 1881, in Clinton, DeWitt County, Texas, the daughter of Rachel Thomas. She was raised in Dement by her aunt and uncle,…
-
De-Ro-Loc No-Tsu-Oh
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
The De-Ro-Loc No-Tsu-Oh (“Colored Houston” spelled backwards) Carnival originated in the fall of 1909 as a completely separate festival from the larger No-Tsu-Oh event. The concept for this carnival was originated by…
-
McElroy, George Albert
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
George Albert McElroy, pioneer journalist, newspaper editor, and teacher, was born in Houston, Texas, on May 25, 1922, to Philomena (Woodley) McElroy and Hugh McElroy . His father Hugh McElroy was one of the decorated…
-
Mease, Quentin Ronald
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Quentin Ronald "Quent" Mease, one of Houston's most influential African-American community leaders during the mid-to-late twentieth century, was born on October 25, 1908, in the now abandoned mining town of Buxton,…
-
Richardson, Clifton Frederick, Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Clifton Frederick Richardson was a Black editor, publisher, journalist, political activist, and civic booster in Houston during the period of 1911-1939. Both as an editor and journalist and as a political activist he…
-
Tinsley, Eleanor Whilden
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Eleanor Whilden Tinsley, Houston councilwoman and school board chair, daughter of W. C. “Tom” Whilden and Georgiabel (Burleson) Whilden, was born on October 31, 1926, in Dallas, Texas. Eleanor grew up in Dallas…
-
Thomas, Helen Darden
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Helen Darden Thomas, conservative activist, was born on July 1, 1905, in Cleburne, Texas, to Ida Mercedes (Muse) Darden and Bert A. Darden. After Bert Darden died in 1906, Ida moved with Helen into the home of her…
-
Married Ladies Social, Art and Charity Club of America
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
On September 8, 1902, twelve women of Houston's affluent African American community held a meeting in the home of Mrs. Mary Crawford in Houston to establish a nonprofit club known as the Married Ladies Social, Art and…
-
Allen, Samuel Ezekiel
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, and right here, you're passing through the heart of what was once a vast ranching empire. Samuel Ezekiel Allen inherited land from his father and consolidated it, eventually owning…
-
American General Corporation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a Texas giant in the insurance world. Right here, in 1926, the American General Insurance Company was born. It was a pioneering venture, one of the nation's first to…
-
Anderson, Ralph Alexander, Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to Ralph "Andy" Anderson, Sr. He wasn't just a sportswriter for the Houston Post and Press; he was a true humanitarian. Back in the day, he helped start sandlot…
-
Aronsfeld, Gerson Henry
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to Gerson Henry Aronsfeld, a pioneering optometrist. Aronsfeld was a major force in establishing optometry as a profession in Texas. He served as president of the…
-
Aves, Charles Marion
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to the oil industry. Right here, you're passing through the territory of Dr. Charles Marion Aves. He wasn't just any doctor; he was a pioneer in industrial…
-
Barnstone, Howard
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by the vision of architect Howard Barnstone. He moved here in 1948, bringing a modernist style influenced by giants like Philip Johnson and Mies van der Rohe. Barnstone…
-
Becnel, Veronica Nia Dorian
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its preserved African-American heritage to Veronica Dorian Becnel. A community activist and professor at the University of Houston, Becnel dedicated her career to…
-
Blyden, Larry
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Larry Blyden, a stage and television actor who was born Ivan Lawrence Blieden in 1925. He honed his craft right here, attending local schools and working with the…
-
Botts, Walter Browne
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became home to a prominent lawyer and Confederate officer, Walter Browne Botts. Botts, a graduate of the Virginia Military Institute, came to Houston in 1857 and partnered…
-
Briscoe, Birdsall Parmenas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city known for its stunning architecture, and much of that beauty owes a debt to Birdsall Parmenas Briscoe. Born in Harrisburg back in 1876, Briscoe learned his craft right here in…
-
Brown, Aaron B.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Aaron B. Brown made his mark. Born in Ohio, Brown came to Texas in 1857, becoming the superintendent of bridges for the Texas and New Orleans Railroad. He was…
-
Browne, John Thomas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to immigrants like John Thomas Browne. He arrived in Texas as a young boy with his family, fleeing famine in Ireland. After a tough start, including losing his…
-
Browning-Ferris Industries
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a garbage empire. Right here, accountant Tom Fatjo Jr. started American Refuse Systems in 1967 with just a few trucks collecting residential waste. By 1968, he was…
-
Brumby, William McDuffie
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to Dr. William McDuffie Brumby. In 1900, he was appointed Houston's city health officer. Right here, he tackled major epidemics like smallpox and yellow fever. But…
-
Bryant, Ira Babington, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its Black history to educators like Ira Babington Bryant, Jr. Born in Crockett in 1904, Bryant became a passionate advocate for teaching Black history in Texas…
-
Buckley, Constantine W.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the Republic of Texas, maybe near the Brazos River. Right here, Constantine Buckley started over. He lost his business in Georgia in the panic of 1837, arriving in Texas destitute in…
-
Burke, Andrew Jackson
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city with a rich history, and right here is a place connected to Andrew Jackson Burke. Burke arrived in Texas in 1837, settling in Houston and quickly becoming a prominent merchant. He…
-
Cameron Iron Works, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Cameron Iron Works. It started in 1920, a small shop with just five men and a couple of machines, fixing oil drilling rigs. But they quickly innovated, patenting a…
-
Catney, Dave
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was once home to Dave Catney, a gifted jazz pianist and composer. Though his music found its way into TV and film, Catney is best remembered for his vital role in building…
-
Caudill, William Wayne
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became a hub for innovative architecture thanks to William Wayne Caudill. After serving in World War II, Caudill returned to Texas and, with partners, founded an architectural…
-
Club Cultural Recreativo México Bello
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing the area where, back in 1924, a group of Mexican American men founded the Club Cultural Recreativo México Bello. Their goal was to foster understanding…
-
Club Terpsicore
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where, back in 1937, a group of young Mexican-American women founded Club Terpsicore. Named after the muse of dance, this exclusive club had a strict limit of thirteen…
-
Comité Patriótico Mexicano
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that's always been a melting pot. Back in the 1930s, when pressure to assimilate was high, a group called the Comité Patriótico Mexicano stepped up. They sponsored social,…
-
Congregation Emanu El, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of Congregation Emanu El, a Reform Jewish congregation founded in 1944. Its founders believed Judaism was a religion of 'perpetual growth and development,' free…
-
Cook, Gustave
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Fort Bend County, or perhaps Houston, and you're passing through the story of Gustave Cook. He wasn't just a lawyer and judge; he was a decorated Confederate soldier. Cook enlisted in…
-
Courtlandt Place Historic District
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through Courtlandt Place. Back in the early 1900s, Houston was a chaotic city. So, developers bought this land in 1906 and created Courtlandt Place as an…
-
Cruger, Jacob W.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the heart of early Texas journalism! Right here, Jacob Cruger arrived in Texas in 1836, a young printer from New York. By 1837, he was running the post office in Houston and partnered with Dr.…
-
Cullen Foundation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the heart of Texas's oil boom. Right here, in 1947, Hugh Roy and Lillie C. Cullen established the Cullen Foundation. They poured their immense oil wealth into this charitable trust,…
-
Cullinan, Nina J.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city forever shaped by Nina Cullinan's vision. While her father helped build Texas's oil industry, Nina dedicated her life to enriching its culture. She was a driving force behind the…
-
Davis, Fannie Breedlove
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, and right here, in Houston, Fannie Breedlove Davis was launching a powerful voice for missions. In 1889, she founded the Texas Baptist Worker, a publication that…
-
Dickey, George E.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its architectural character to George E. Dickey. Arriving in 1878, Dickey became one of the city's most prolific architects. He designed grand hotels, bustling…
-
Diverseworks
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the home of DiverseWorks. Founded in 1982 by local artists who felt overlooked by the city's established galleries, DiverseWorks aimed to be a hub for contemporary art.…
-
Dixon, Hortense Selena Williams
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was shaped by incredible minds like Hortense Selena Williams Dixon. Born right here in 1926, Dixon was a trailblazer in education and civic leadership. She earned her…
-
Dumble, Edwin Theodore
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on industry, and right here is where Edwin Theodore Dumble, a pioneering geologist, made his mark. He served as Texas State Geologist, but his real innovation was in the oil…
-
Elkins, James Anderson
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its modern financial and legal landscape to James Anderson Elkins. Born in Huntsville in 1879, Elkins moved to Houston in 1917, co-founding the law firm Vinson…
-
Elles, Norma Bertha
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that benefited greatly from the medical expertise and community spirit of Dr. Norma Bertha Elles. She returned to Houston in 1912, a specialist in ophthalmology after studying in…
-
Evans, Joseph Wood
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot of its port success to Joseph Wood Evans. This cotton broker arrived in town in 1901 and dedicated himself to making Houston a major shipping hub. He led the…
-
Fairchild, Thornton McNair
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that Thornton McNair Fairchild helped build, not just with schools, but with vital businesses for the Black community. Born right here in 1875, Fairchild was an educator, but he…
-
Fernandez, Ramon
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where Ramón Fernández made a real difference. Born in Mexico in 1900, he came to Houston after university and settled in the Northside neighborhood. From 1926 to 1936,…
-
First Ward, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the historic First Ward. Established way back in 1840, it was one of the city's original four wards, defined by its location northwest of the intersection of Main Street…
-
Fletcher, Herbert Herrick
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing the corner of San Jacinto and Rusk streets. This was the home of Fletcher's Book Store, opened in 1925 by Herbert Herrick Fletcher. Fletcher wasn't just a…
-
Ford, James Martin [Jimmy]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of jazz saxophonist James Martin Ford. Born in 1927, Ford made a name for himself as the first Caucasian to join Milt Larkin's jazz band right here in Houston. He was known…
-
Freed, Frank
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became home to a remarkable painter named Frank Freed. After serving in World War II, Freed returned to Houston and, in 1948, began his artistic career. He developed a unique…
-
Frostown, TX
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, where you are now, was once Frostown. Named for the Frost family who settled here in the 1830s, this community was a bustling early part of what would become Houston.…
-
Gentry, Abram Morris
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to railroad visionary Abram Morris Gentry. Back in 1859, Gentry was the driving force behind the Texas and New Orleans Railroad, securing its charter and personally…
-
Gillette, Henry Flavel
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the site of the Bayland Orphans' Home, a place that became a lifeline for countless children after the Civil War. Right here, in 1867, Henry Flavel Gillette was chosen to lead this…
-
Goar, Everett Logan
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a great deal to the dedication of Dr. Everett Logan Goar. He arrived here in 1911, a young doctor who would go on to become a leading ophthalmologist. During World War I,…
-
Golightly, Thomas Jefferson
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the Republic of Texas, and right here in Houston, a man named Thomas Jefferson Golightly played a small but poignant role in its fight for independence. He served as an orderly…
-
Gomez, Refugio
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city with a rich history of community support. Right here, back in 1932, a local shoemaker named Jesús Sánchez died, and his family couldn't afford his funeral. That sparked a movement.…
-
Gordon Jewelry Corporation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a retail giant. Meyer Morris Gordon, an immigrant from Lithuania, started it all in 1905, not with jewelry, but with a general store. By 1916, he partnered up for his…
-
Gray, Edwin Fairfax
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the Houston area, and right here is where Edwin Fairfax Gray spent his final years. Born in Virginia in 1829, Gray came to Texas as a boy and joined the Texas Navy. He even sailed with Commodore…
-
Gray, Peter W.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, heading towards the coast, and right here is where Peter W. Gray built a remarkable career. Born in Virginia in 1819, he came to Texas with his family and studied law. He served in the…
-
Gregory Institute
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of the Gregory Institute. Established in 1870, this was a vital high school for Black children during Reconstruction, named for Gen. Edgar M. Gregory, the first…
-
Guseman, Tanny Charles
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the legacy of Tanny Charles Guseman. Born Gaetano Cusumano in Brownsville in 1884, Guseman learned the cobbler trade from his father. But he saw…
-
Heiner, Eugene T.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be the heart of Texas's architectural boom, thanks to Eugene T. Heiner. This New York-born architect landed in Houston in 1878 and spent the next two decades designing some of the…
-
Houston Academy
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that's had not one, but THREE schools named Houston Academy! The first opened way back in 1844, but it was the second one, chartered in 1856, that really made a splash. Imagine…
-
Houston Ballet
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that's become a major hub for dance, far from the traditional coasts. Back in the 1950s, after seeing popular touring companies, Houstonians decided to build their own legacy. In…
-
Houston Direct Navigation Company
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, Buffalo Bayou was once a major shipping highway. Back in 1866, the Houston Direct Navigation Company was chartered to keep that traffic flowing, bypassing expensive…
-
Houston Heights Public Library
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the Houston Heights Public Library, a building that's been a cornerstone of this neighborhood since 1926. It's one of the oldest library buildings in the entire Houston…
-
Houston Intercontinental Airport
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, and right here is the site of a massive undertaking that aimed to give this city the worldwide image it deserved. Back in 1957, officials realized Houston needed a new, bigger airport to…
-
Houston International University
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of a unique experiment in education: Houston International University. Established in 1970 as Hispanic International University, it aimed to offer alternative…
-
Houston Post
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a major Texas newspaper, the Houston Post, once called home. It was founded way back in 1880 and went through a lot of changes. It was an early adopter of Linotype…
-
Houston Tap Railroad
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a piece of Texas history was laid down. Back in 1856, Houston citizens voted overwhelmingly to tax themselves – on property, taverns, even billiard tables – to…
-
Hutcheson, Joseph Chappell
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a key moment in the founding of the University of Texas happened. Joseph Chappell Hutcheson, a Confederate veteran and lawyer, was elected to the Texas Legislature…
-
Hutcheson, Joseph Chappell, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that's been home to a remarkable legal mind: Joseph Chappell Hutcheson, Jr. He wasn't just any judge; he was appointed to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas…
-
Jacquet, Russell
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that nurtured a jazz legend. Trumpeter Russell Jacquet moved here as a child around 1923. His father, Gilbert, a Creole musician himself, encouraged Russell and his brothers,…
-
Jesse H. Jones Hall For the Performing Arts
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're in Houston, and right here is where a landmark of Texas culture took shape. Back in 1962, the Houston Endowment, a foundation created by oilman Jesse H. Jones and his wife, pledged to fund a brand new performing…
-
Johnston, Rienzi Melville
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that Rienzi Melville Johnston helped shape as a powerful newspaper editor. Born in Georgia in 1849, Johnston's career began young, even serving as a drummer in the Confederate…
-
Kennon, Paul Atherton
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by the vision of architect Paul Atherton Kennon. Born in Louisiana, Kennon came to Texas to study architecture on a football scholarship at Texas A&M in 1951. He was…
-
Keyes, Joe
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of jazz trumpeter Joe Keyes, born around 1907. He cut his teeth right here, playing with local bands like Johnson's Joymakers in the late 1920s. Keyes went on to play with…
-
King, Charles Leonidas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of the First Presbyterian Church, a congregation with roots stretching back to 1839. But in 1932, this church faced a crisis. Fires had destroyed their…
-
King, Ester Lee
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to Ester Lee King, a passionate social activist and cultural nationalist. Born in 1943, King dedicated his life to fighting for human rights and promoting African and…
-
Kirkham, Harold Laurens Dundas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to pioneers like Harold Laurens Dundas Kirkham. Born in England, Kirkham came to Texas at seventeen, eventually becoming a pioneer in plastic surgery. He trained…
-
Las Hermanas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a powerful voice for Hispanic Catholic women. <break time="400ms"/> Right here in 1970, Gloria Gallardo and Gregoria Ortega started Las Hermanas. <break time="400ms"/>…
-
Lawndale Art Center
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the Lawndale Art Center. Founded in 1979 as the Lawndale Art and Performance Center, this place was built to give local artists a stage and a gallery. It quickly became…
-
Lawrence, John William Blount
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city with a history as winding as the bayous that surround it. Right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1862</say-as>, John William Blount Lawrence was a man on a mission.…
-
Levy, Lewis A.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to pioneers like Lewis A. Levy. Born in Holland in 1799, Levy arrived here in 1841 after living in other major American cities. He became a successful merchant,…
-
Looscan, Michael
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, and right here in Houston, Michael Looscan built a life after fighting for the Confederacy. Born in Ireland in 1838, Looscan came to Texas and became a lawyer just as the Civil War…
-
MacGregor, Henry Frederick
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to businessmen like Henry Frederick MacGregor. He arrived here from New Hampshire in 1873 and spent the next fifty years building up Texas. MacGregor was a major…
-
Manchester, TX (Harris County)
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Manchester, a neighborhood on the Houston Ship Channel, and you might not realize you're passing through a place that was almost a major port. Back in 1914, developers offered land and channel…
-
Manly, John Haywood
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, near Houston, where John Haywood Manly once served as a state legislator. Back in 1859, Manly represented Harris County in the Texas House. He was a staunch supporter of Sam Houston…
-
McGowen, Ernest Boyd, Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much to leaders like Ernest Boyd McGowen, Sr. He wasn't just a minister; McGowen was a trailblazer in local politics. Elected to the Houston City Council in 1979, he was…
-
Memorial Healthcare System
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the heart of a healthcare system that started with a mission of compassion. Back in 1904, Reverend Dennis R. Pevoto opened a charitable institution, open to everyone,…
-
Milsaps, John Ephraim Thomas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the legacy of John Milsaps, a man who loved books so much he sometimes went hungry to buy them. He was a Salvation Army officer, a world traveler who served in places like…
-
Mohl, Aurelia Hadley
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city where Aurelia Hadley Mohl made her mark as a pioneering journalist. Back in 1856, she stepped in to manage the literary department of the Houston Telegraph, becoming a paid…
-
Murillo, Jesus
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that grew up alongside artist and photographer Jesús Murillo. Born in Mexico in 1895, Murillo brought his talents to Houston in 1920, and then returned for good in 1923. He worked…
-
National Convenience Stores
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the territory of a Texas business giant: National Convenience Stores. Founded in 1959 as the National Drive-In Grocery Corporation, this company grew like wildfire. By…
-
Neuhaus, Hugo Victor, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a significant chapter of Texas modern architecture unfolded, thanks to Hugo Victor Neuhaus Jr. After serving in World War II, Neuhaus returned to Houston and…
-
Northrop, Joseph Walter, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by the vision of architects like Joseph Walter Northrop, Jr. He arrived in 1911, sent here to oversee the construction of Rice Institute, now Rice University. By 1914,…
-
Parker, Edwin B.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the heart of Texas industry, and right here in Houston, Edwin B. Parker built a remarkable career. After earning his law degree from the University of Texas, Parker became a partner…
-
Pellegrini, Snider de
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, not far from Houston, where a grand experiment in French colonization once took root. In 1842, a man named Snider de Pellegrini arrived, representing a French company with big…
-
Philosophical Society of Texas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, a state known for its rugged history and booming economy. But way back in 1837, right here in Houston, the Republic of Texas's capital, a group of its brightest minds founded the…
-
Port Terminal Railroad Association
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on shipping and industry. Right here, in 1924, the Port Terminal Railroad Association was born. Before this, getting goods in and out of the Port of Houston was a tangled…
-
Public-Health Nursing
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, in Houston, you're passing through the birthplace of public-health nursing in the Lone Star State. It wasn't until 1908 that a formal program began, sparked by a school…
-
Quanex Corporation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the headquarters of Quanex Corporation. But did you know this industrial giant got its start as Michigan Seamless Tube Company? During World War II, this company was a powerhouse,…
-
Red, Samuel Clark
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to Dr. Samuel Clark Red. Born in Washington County in 1861, Red came back to Houston after medical school and became a pioneer. He and his uncle opened the city's…
-
Ring, Elizabeth L. Fitzsimmons
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to Elizabeth Fitzsimmons Ring. For over fifty years, she was a tireless advocate for public services, especially libraries. In 1899, she led a campaign that…
-
Robert A. Welch Foundation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the home of a foundation built on a staggering fortune. Businessman Robert Alonzo Welch died in 1952, leaving behind an estate worth over 29 million dollars. His will…
-
Robinson, Lonal
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city with a rich Black history. Right here, Lonal Robinson found his calling. After serving in the Army and studying in Illinois, he moved to Houston in 1982. Just a year later, in…
-
Roper, Mary Withers
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to Mary Withers Roper, a woman who wore many hats: teacher, missionary, and a key figure in the Texas woman suffrage movement. In 1903, she was right here in Houston,…
-
Sakowitz, Bernard
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the heart of what was once a retail revolution. Bernard Sakowitz, born in Galveston but a Houstonian through and through, took his family's store…
-
Sakowitz, Simon
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to the vision of Simon Sakowitz. He arrived in Texas from Ukraine as a young man, and after a failed farming venture in Dickinson, he and his brothers found their…
-
Sakowitz, Tobias
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing the legacy of Tobias Sakowitz. Born in Ukraine, he joined his family in Galveston as a teenager, working in their store. In 1902, he and his brother Simon…
-
San Jacinto Centennial Association
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, the San Jacinto Centennial Association was chartered back in 1935. Their mission? To make sure Texas's 100th birthday in 1936 was a HUGE deal! They coordinated Houston's…
-
Simmons, David Andrew
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to David Andrew Simmons. Born in Galveston in 1897, Simmons became a titan of the legal world. He was the youngest president of the American Bar Association in…
-
Sixth Ward, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston's Sixth Ward, a neighborhood that really took shape in the late 1800s. It started as part of a larger ward but officially became the Sixth Ward in 1876. This area became known for its…
-
Smith, Frank Chesley
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the legacy of Frank Chesley Smith, a business executive who helped shape the natural gas industry in Texas. Smith took the helm of Houston Natural Gas Corporation in 1933,…
-
Smith, John N. O.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, and right here in Houston is where John N. O. Smith made his mark. He fought in the Battle of San Jacinto, helping Texas win its independence. After the revolution, he stayed in…
-
South Texas College of Law
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the South Texas College of Law. It opened its doors way back in 1923, originally sharing space with the downtown YMCA. Over the decades, this place has seen some major…
-
St. Thomas High School
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is St. Thomas High School, a college prep school for boys that's been educating Texans since 1900. Founded by the Basilian Fathers, it started as St. Thomas College,…
-
Stanley, John H. Stephen
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to one of Texas's earliest photographic pioneers. John H. Stephen Stanley, an Englishman, arrived here in December 1845, convinced by Ashbel Smith to make Texas his…
-
Streeruwitz, Wilhelm H. Ritter Von
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that once hosted a man who walked away from a title of nobility. Wilhelm von Streeruwitz was born a count in Bohemia, studied mining, and worked in Pennsylvania. He arrived in…
-
Sullivan, Maurice Joseph
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by the vision of architects like Maurice Joseph Sullivan. He arrived here in 1912, first serving as the city architect before launching his own practice. Sullivan…
-
Sunnyside, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Sunnyside, a historic African American community in south Houston. It all started back in 1912, when H. H. Holmes platted land in this then-rural area. This became Sunnyside Place, the oldest…
-
Sysco
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the heart of Sysco, the nation's biggest food distributor. It all started in 1969 when John Baugh, a Waco native who'd worked his way up through the grocery business, merged nine small…
-
Texas Transportation Company
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, and right here is where a piece of Texas's industrial past comes alive. In 1876, Charles Morgan completed the Texas Transportation Company railroad, an eight-mile line connecting Clinton to…
-
Texas Western Railway
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a railroad dream once ran. The Western Narrow Gauge Railway Company, chartered way back in 1870, was Texas's first narrow gauge line. Its ambitious plan? To…
-
Red Krayola [Aka the Red Crayola]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where a band with a name dispute rocked the psychedelic scene. In 1966, Mayo Thompson and friends formed The Red Crayola, pushing musical boundaries. They signed with…
-
Tips, Kern
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city where Kern Tips got his start. Born in 1904, Tips became a legendary sportscaster, known statewide as the "Voice of the Southwest Conference." For over thirty years, he brought…
-
Tomkins, Augustus M.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Harrisburg County, near Houston, a place that saw its share of rough justice in the Republic of Texas. Augustus Tomkins was a lawyer and district attorney here in the late 1830s.…
-
Trinity Episcopal Church, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here on Main Street is Trinity Episcopal Church. It started small in the 1890s as a "cottage mission," meeting in members' parlors. By the 1930s and 40s, it had grown to be the…
-
Turner, Benjamin Weems
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes part of its medical legacy to Dr. Benjamin Weems Turner. Born in Bonney, Texas, back in 1889, Turner went on to study at Johns Hopkins before returning to Houston. In…
-
University of St. Thomas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, right past the University of St. Thomas. It opened its doors in September of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1947</say-as>, with just forty freshmen and eight teachers. It was…
-
University of Texas Dental Branch at Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the University of Texas Dental Branch. It's the oldest state dental school in Texas, and it's produced more dentists for our state than any other school. It all started…
-
University of Texas Mental Sciences Institute
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, near the Texas Medical Center. Right here is the site of the University of Texas Mental Sciences Institute, born from a pilot project back in 1955. It started small, with just two…
-
Vermeersch, Elizabeth [Sister Mary Benitia]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city where a remarkable woman saw a need and decided to fill it. Sister Mary Benitia Vermeersch, originally from Belgium, was principal of Our Lady of Guadalupe School in 1915. Seeing…
-
Vinson and Elkins
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of a legal giant. Back in 1917, two ambitious Texas lawyers, William Vinson and James Elkins, joined forces. They saw opportunity in the booming Texas oil and gas industry,…
-
Watkin, William Ward
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by the vision of architect William Ward Watkin. Arriving in 1910 to oversee the construction of the Rice Institute, Watkin fell in love with the city. He stayed, becoming a…
-
White Oak Bayou
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston right now, and you might be right alongside White Oak Bayou. This waterway has seen a major transformation. Starting in the 1970s, rapid growth turned it into a source of flooding and…
-
Whitfield, John Thomas
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, and right here, in Houston, lived John Thomas Whitfield. He was a Confederate officer who rose to the rank of colonel by the end of the Civil War. But after the war,…
-
Wilkerson, Donald A.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city that became home to tenor saxophonist Donald Wilkerson. He was born in Louisiana, but Houston shaped his sound. Influenced by Texas greats like Illinois Jacquet and Arnett Cobb,…
-
Wilson, James Theodore Dudley
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes part of its early history to James Theodore Dudley Wilson. Born in Missouri in 1820, Wilson arrived in Texas in 1835, just in time to serve as a private in the Texas…
-
Wortham, Elizabeth Lyndall Finley
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its cultural landscape to people like Lyndall Finley Wortham. Back in 1924, long before she became a major Houston benefactor, she financed a remarkable trip…
-
Wynns, Archibald
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, Archibald Wynns was a lawyer and a statesman back in the Republic of Texas. He served in Congress, fought off an invasion, and even pushed for annexation by the United…
-
Japhet, Isidore
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to immigrants like Isidore Japhet. Born in Prussia in 1842, Japhet arrived in Houston in 1865. He started as a bookkeeper, but soon he was running his own saloon…
-
Geiselman, Samuel
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes some of its early business practices to Samuel Geiselman. He arrived from Pennsylvania in 1857 and, when the Civil War hit, saw an opportunity. In 1862, he built a large…
-
Quality Hill, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing through the area that was once Quality Hill. From about 1850 to 1930, this was Houston's very first elite residential neighborhood. Prominent businessmen…
-
Woman's Exchange of Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, right past where the Woman's Exchange used to be. Back in 1886, this was a place where women could sell their handmade goods and crafts, earning an income without facing the social stigma…
-
Barziza, Philip Ignatius, Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a bit of its early history to an Italian nobleman named Philip Ignatius Barziza. Born in Venice in 1796, Barziza came to America seeking an inheritance, but ended up…
-
Spearman, Leonard Hall O’connell, Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Leonard Hall O'Connell Spearman, Sr., an educator, diplomat, and former president of Texas Southern University, was born on July 8, 1929, in Tallahassee, Florida, to Rev. Elvis W. Spearman and Typhenia Spearman, both…
-
Allen, Henry R.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past Houston right now, a city that owes a lot to early developers like Henry R. Allen. Allen arrived from New York in 1837, joining his brothers who were already speculating on land. He quickly became a…
-
Allen, William Youel
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1838</say-as>, a young minister named William Youel Allen stepped off the boat. He'd come all the way from Kentucky to Texas, and…
-
Allright Corporation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became a parking empire thanks to the Allright Corporation. It all started back in 1926, when a Rice University law student named Durell Carothers began working for his…
-
Almeda, TX
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving south of Houston, and right here is Almeda. This community got its start in the early 1880s, thanks to Dr. Willis King, who promoted the townsite. He named it for his daughter, Almeda King. The town grew…
-
Andrews, Frank
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city whose growth Frank Andrews helped shape. Born in Fayetteville in 1864, Andrews became a prominent railroad attorney and state assistant attorney general. In 1895, he moved to…
-
Andrews, Jesse
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that shaped much of the 20th century thanks to lawyers like Jesse Andrews. Born in 1874, Andrews came to Texas and graduated from the University of Texas law school in 1896. He…
-
Askanase, Reuben W.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that Reuben Askanase helped shape. Born in North Dakota and working his way up from selling newspapers to a vice presidency, Askanase arrived in Houston in 1945. He started with a…
-
Bagby, Thomas M.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing the site of the former home of Thomas M. Bagby. He was a businessman and civic leader who arrived in Texas in 1837. In 1847, Bagby made a notable attempt to…
-
Baker, Burke
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is a place named for Burke Baker, a notable businessman and philanthropist. He was born in Waco back in 1887, but made his mark here in Houston. After a career in banking…
-
Barkley, Howard T., Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became a major center for thoracic surgery thanks to Dr. Howard T. Barkley, Sr. After training in New York and serving as a flight surgeon in World War II, Barkley arrived…
-
Bell, Paul Gervais, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to Paul Gervais Bell, Jr. During World War II, Bell served as an officer in the 772nd Tank Destroyer Battalion in the European Theater. He experienced intense combat…
-
Bradley, Palmer
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to figures like Palmer Bradley. Born in Tioga, Texas, Bradley became a prominent attorney and businessman. In 1929, he helped organize the parent company of the…
-
Brown Foundation
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the heart of Texas industry. Right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1951</say-as>, the Brown Foundation was established. It was started by the wealthy Brown family, who…
-
Bruce, Andrew Davis
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to Andrew Davis Bruce. This decorated Army officer fought in World War I and commanded troops in some of the fiercest battles of World War II, including Guam and…
-
Carter, Samuel Fain
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on industry. Right here, Samuel Fain Carter made his mark. Starting in the lumber business in 1881, he climbed the ranks, eventually managing sawmills and returning to…
-
Charity Guild of Catholic Women
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the birthplace of the Charity Guild of Catholic Women. Founded way back in 1922 by Mrs. Lucian Carroll and a group of dedicated women, this organization started with a…
-
Cline, Henry B.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, and right here in Houston, Henry B. Cline was a man of many hats. He was an attorney, a preacher, and even served on the committee to establish Houston's public school…
-
Cook, Felix Lopez, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing the site of a significant achievement in Texas education. Felix Lopez Cook, Jr. was a dedicated educator who spent 36 years with the Houston Independent…
-
Copeland, Murray Marcus
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, where a true pioneer in cancer research, Dr. Murray Marcus Copeland, made his mark. Born in Georgia in 1902, Copeland dedicated his life to fighting cancer. After serving as a colonel in…
-
Croneis, Carey Gardiner
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city deeply shaped by the influence of Carey Gardiner Croneis. While he was born in Ohio and educated at Harvard, Croneis became a pivotal figure in Texas higher education and civic…
-
Dominican College
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, Dominican College once stood. Founded in 1945 by the Sisters of St. Dominic, it grew out of a teacher-training school. This wasn't just any college; it aimed to foster…
-
Eagle, Joe Henry
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is a place that owes a lot to Joe Henry Eagle. He wasn't just a local lawyer; he served six terms in Congress, representing this area. In 1919, Eagle secured a massive…
-
Elgin, Daisy Pettit
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city where Daisy Pettit Elgin was born and died. In the 1920s, she trained in New York, becoming a coloratura soprano with a light, agile voice. Her Houston debut was in 1930,…
-
Fay, Albert Bel
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that Albert Bel Fay helped shape. Born in 1913, Fay was more than just a businessman; he was a key figure in Texas Republican politics and even served as a U.S. Ambassador. He…
-
Fay, Charles Hemphill
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Houston, you're driving past the heart of a career that helped shape the oil industry. Charles Hemphill Fay, a brilliant physicist, spent over two decades with Shell Oil Company, retiring in 1969. His…
-
Fleming, Lamar, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by some of the most influential business minds in Texas history. Lamar Fleming Jr. arrived here in 1924, a seasoned international merchant. He took the reins of Anderson,…
-
Flewellen, Robert Turner
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Washington County, Texas, an area that saw the arrival of Robert Turner Flewellen in 1853. Born in Alabama and educated in medicine up north, Flewellen became a key figure in Texas's…
-
Fondren Library, Rice University
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, home to the Fondren Library at Rice University. It started way back in 1891 as the Rice Institute Library, privately funded by William Marsh Rice himself. For decades, its collection grew…
-
Foster, Joseph Beverly
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that became the center of a groundbreaking medical career. Joseph Beverly Foster, born in Ennis back in 1895, dedicated his life to healing. After earning his medical degree in…
-
Gee, Matthew, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the birthplace of Matthew Gee Jr., a trombonist who jazz critics say was one of the most underrated bop-influenced players. Gee's sound was described as 'driving' and 'plunging,' with…
-
George, Wiley Ransom
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on shipping and industry. Right here, you're passing through the heart of it all, thanks to people like Wiley Ransom George. After getting his law degree, George came back to…
-
Greenwood, James, Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a bit of its medical history to Dr. James Greenwood, Sr. Back in 1912, he opened the Greenwood Sanitarium right here, specializing in neuropsychiatric care. He ran the…
-
Haynes, George E., Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to educators like George E. Haynes, Jr. Born in Victoria in 1920, Haynes moved to Houston's Fifth Ward and became a decorated WWII veteran. After earning advanced…
-
Hirsch, Maurice
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes much of its cultural and civic vibrancy to figures like Maurice Hirsch. Born right here in 1890, Hirsch was more than just a lawyer. He served his country during World…
-
Houston Baptist University
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of Houston Baptist University. Chartered in 1960 as Houston Baptist College, it was the culmination of a Baptist General Convention of Texas effort that began…
-
Houston Belt and Magnolia Park Railway
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, the story of the Houston Belt and Magnolia Park Railway unfolds. Chartered in 1889, this line was meant to connect Buffalo Bayou to the city. But freight didn't pan out as…
-
Houston Metropolitan Research Center
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the Julia Ideson Building, a historic landmark that's seen a lot of history itself. Built in 1926, it served as the city's main library for fifty years. Then, in 1979,…
-
Houston Toad
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Southeast Texas, and right here, you might be passing over the last known home of a unique creature: the Houston Toad. This little guy, only two to three inches long, is brown or reddish-brown and…
-
Houston, Oaklawn and Magnolia Park Railway
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, you're passing over the old stomping grounds of the Houston, Oaklawn and Magnolia Park Railway. Chartered in 1899, this short line stretched just six and a half miles from…
-
Johnson, George [Bud]
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, where George "Bud" Johnson spent most of his life and career. Born here in 1934, Johnson was a journalist and activist known as the "Old African Warrior." After graduating from Texas…
-
Kilman, Edward Wolf
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city where Edward Wolf Kilman spent most of his career. For over forty years, Kilman was a journalist for the Houston Post, eventually becoming editor of the editorial page. But he's…
-
Kincaide, Deane
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're cruising through Houston, the birthplace of jazz saxophonist and arranger Deane Kincaide. Born in 1911, Kincaide left Texas as a child but became a major force in big band jazz. He played with legendary figures…
-
Lenz, Louis
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to Louis Lenz, a man who dedicated his retirement to collecting Texas history. After a career as a civil engineer, working everywhere from Uruguay to Louisiana, Lenz…
-
Malone, Clarence M., Sr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by titans of industry. One such titan was Clarence M. Malone, Sr. Starting in banking in 1910, he went on to organize the Guardian Trust Company in 1917. Malone was a…
-
Massie, Josiah C.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, maybe even near Houston. Right here, Dr. Josiah Massie was practicing medicine on the Texas frontier. In 1854, he wrote a book to teach other doctors about his methods, called 'A…
-
McAnelly, Cornelius
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, Cornelius McAnelly was a doctor, a soldier, and a politician. He arrived in town around 1840, opening a medical practice after studying at places like Transylvania…
-
Morse, Robert Emmett
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city where Robert Emmett Morse was born and began his career. After serving in World War I, Morse returned to Houston and dove into real estate development. But his real calling came…
-
Muir, Andrew Forest
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the city where historian Andrew Forest Muir spent his life. Born here in 1916, Muir became a leading authority on William Marsh Rice, the man who founded Rice University. Muir was a key…
-
Peden, Edward Andrew
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on commerce and industry. Right here, you're passing through the legacy of Edward Andrew Peden. Born in Georgia in 1868, Peden arrived in Houston in 1882 and started as a…
-
Pierpont, William
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the Republic of Texas, and right here, in the early days, a man named William Pierpont was making his mark. He arrived from Ohio in the mid-1830s, likely settling first in Shelby…
-
Rice, Jonas Shearn
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on commerce and industry. Right here, Jonas Shearn Rice played a key role in shaping that landscape. Born in 1855, he started as a railroad clerk before diving into…
-
Richardson, Alfred Stephen
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, not far from where Alfred Stephen Richardson represented this area in the Ninth Texas Legislature. Born in Wallis, Austin County, Richardson studied law at Harvard before practicing…
-
Richardson, James Milton
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the heart of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas. Right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1952</say-as>, James Milton Richardson arrived to become dean of Christ Church…
-
Sarah Campbell Blaffer Gallery
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, right past the University of Houston campus. Here, in the Fine Arts Building, you'll find the Blaffer Gallery. Founded in 1973, it was named for Sarah Campbell Blaffer, an heiress who…
-
Schachtel, Hyman Judah
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, where Rabbi Hyman Judah Schachtel served as the chief rabbi of Congregation Beth Israel for over thirty years. Born in London, he came to America as a child and was ordained in 1931. He…
-
Smith, Angie Frank
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to a major leader in the reunification of American Methodism. A. Frank Smith, born in Elgin, Texas, became a bishop in 1930 and was assigned to the Houston area in…
-
Southern Bible College
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that once hosted Southern Bible College. It opened its doors in 1958 with just forty-three students, aiming to train ministers and provide general education. By 1974, enrollment…
-
Stenzel, Henryk Bronislaw
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, passing by a legacy of scientific discovery. Right here, Henryk Stenzel, a world-renowned paleontologist, made his mark. Born in Poland, he came to Texas in 1925, initially teaching at…
-
Stewart, Charles
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that owes a lot to the political career of Charles Stewart. Stewart, a lawyer who got his start in Marlin, moved to Houston in 1866. He served as Houston's city attorney and later…
-
Sweeton, Clyde A.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city built on big business and bigger legal battles. Right here, Clyde Sweeton was a titan of the courtroom. Hired in 1924 by James Anderson Elkins, Sweeton became the lead trial…
-
Tallichet, Jules Henri
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city shaped by industry and law. Right here, Jules Henri Tallichet, a name you might not know, was once called the 'dean of Texas railroad lawyers.' Born in Tennessee, he came to Texas…
-
Townes, John Charles, Jr.
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the Upper Gulf Coast, near Houston, where John Charles Townes Jr. made his mark. Born in Georgetown in 1886, he earned his law degree from the University of Texas. After serving in World War I,…
-
Trinity River Authority
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, and right here, the Trinity River Authority is hard at work. Established way back in 1955, this agency was created to manage the mighty Trinity River basin. Its mission? Flood…
-
Underground Water
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, a state where the ground beneath your feet holds a hidden treasure: vast underground water resources. Did you know that most of the water powering Texas cities, farms, and industries comes…
-
University of Houston College of Pharmacy
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, the heart of a major medical hub. Back on October 16, 1946, the University of Houston Board of Regents approved the establishment of the College of Pharmacy. It opened its doors in 1947…
-
University of Houston System
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the heart of the University of Houston System. It was officially established in 1977 by the Texas Legislature, marking the institution's 50th anniversary. At that time,…
-
University of Houston-Downtown
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in downtown Houston, you're driving past the University of Houston-Downtown. It may look like a modern campus, but its roots go back to 1942, when it started as a business school aimed at serving the city's…
-
University of Texas School of Public Health
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the University of Texas School of Public Health. It took a long time to get this place off the ground! The Texas legislature authorized it way back in 1947, but didn't…
-
Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Houston
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, right past a massive medical complex. This sprawling facility, now the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, started life in 1946 as a U.S. Navy hospital. It operated for rehabilitation until…
-
Weaver, Paul
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the heart of Texas's oil country, and right here, the work of Paul Weaver changed how we find it. In 1926, Weaver joined Gulf Oil, eventually becoming chief geologist. He pioneered the use of…
-
Weiser, Harry Boyer
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, a city that was home to Harry Boyer Weiser, a chemistry professor who made a name for himself in the early to mid-20th century. Weiser arrived at Rice Institute in 1915, eventually…
-
Wharton, Clarence Ray
· 12.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the heart of Houston, a city shaped by industry and ambition. Right here, in this bustling metropolis, Clarence Ray Wharton built a remarkable career. Born in Tarrant County in 1873, Wharton…
-
Beyonce's First Stage: Tips and Hair Dryers at Tina's Salon
· 12.7 mi
Tina Knowles opened the Headliners salon in 1990, on Montrose Boulevard until 1995 and then at 2442 Bissonnet St (the building still operates as a salon). Per Texas Monthly, the salon 'was the girls' unofficial stage':…
-
Nassau Bay: Buzz Aldrin's Backyard Pole Vault and the Street of Moonwalkers
· 12.7 mi
Nassau Bay was master-planned starting in 1962 expressly for the new Manned Spacecraft Center across NASA Road 1; more than 60 astronauts have lived in this one small city, including moonwalkers Alan Bean, Gene Cernan…
-
West, Emily D.
· 12.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Morgan's Point, and right here is where the legend of the 'Yellow Rose of Texas' really took hold. Emily D. West, a free Black woman from Connecticut, arrived in Texas in December 1835. Just months…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: North Forest (Houston)
· 12.7 mi
North Forest (Houston, TX) placed on the 4A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Irvin Palacios (0.607 avg, 1 HR); Domarius Green (0.500 avg, 2 HR).
-
River Oaks Theatre
· 12.7 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Catch a show at this historic movie theater, a beloved landmark in Houston's Neartown community since the 1930s. The River Oaks Theatre opened its doors in 1939, during the golden age of cinema. Designed in the Art Deco…
-
Gribble-Hofheinz Huse
· 12.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Gribble-Hofheinz House, built in 1896 as a summer retreat for Houston businessman Risdon Gribble. It was designed to catch the bay breezes. Then, in 1950, Roy Hofheinz, the visionary behind the…
-
College Memorial Park Cemetery
· 12.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past College Memorial Park Cemetery, one of Houston's oldest African-American graveyards, founded way back in 1896. It served as the primary burial ground for the city's Black community, especially after…
-
Haydon, George W.
· 12.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near the mouth of the San Jacinto River, an area that was once the frontier of the Texas Republic. Right here, in October of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1841</say-as>, Father George W. Haydon,…
-
Morgan's Point, TX
· 12.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past Morgan's Point, a place that's worn a few names over the years. It started around 1822 as a settlement by Nicholas Rightor, then became Hunter's Point, and later Clopper's Point. But it's the arrival…
-
New Washington, TX
· 12.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Morgan's Point, right where Buffalo Bayou meets San Jacinto Bay. Back in 1836, this spot was called New Washington, and it was the temporary home of Texas's ad interim government. Just days before…
-
Zavala, Emily West de
· 12.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be the Republic of Texas, and right here near Morgan's Point, you're passing by the home of Emily West de Zavala. She was the wife of Lorenzo de Zavala, the first vice president of…
-
Shoreacres, TX
· 12.7 mi
Shoreacres was born as a sales brochure. In February 1925 a development outfit called Shoreacres, Incorporated filed its plat for a resort-style community on upper Galveston Bay, and the town simply took the developer's…
-
Friendswood, TX
· 12.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Friendswood, a community founded by English Quakers seeking a place to practice their faith away from what they called 'intolerable' plains life in Kansas. They found this spot in 1895, a place…
-
Religious Society of Friends
· 12.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the Houston area, and right here is Friendswood. But this wasn't always a town. Back in 1895, a group of Quakers, known for their opposition to slavery, settled here. They bought over 1,500 acres…
-
The Night the Bay Came Ashore
· 12.8 mi
Out on the bay at Shoreacres stands the Houston Yacht Club — chartered back in eighteen-ninety-seven, the oldest yacht club in Texas. For generations it doubled as a storm refuge, and it earned that the hard way. In…
-
Woodland Drive: Where the First Man on the Moon Mowed His Lawn
· 12.9 mi
Neil Armstrong bought a mid-century home on Woodland Drive in El Lago in 1964 and lived there through Gemini 8 and the Apollo 11 Moon landing. He and Ed White, America's first spacewalker, bought three adjacent lots…
-
El Lago, TX
· 12.9 mi
El Lago is Spanish for the lake, and a glance at the map explains it: the town sits where Taylor Lake meets Clear Lake, water on two sides. The name arrived with the subdivisions, El Lago and El Lago Estates, laid out…
-
The White House on Galveston Bay
· 12.9 mi
On Bayridge Road at Morgan's Point stands a scaled-down replica of the White House. Houston architect Alfred C. Finn, who would later design the San Jacinto Monument a few miles up the channel, drew it for oilman Ross…
-
Bay Ridge/Morgan's Point
· 12.9 mi · Historical Marker
Driving along Galveston Bay, you're passing through Morgan's Point, originally named for Colonel James Morgan. By 1893, this bluff was a prime summer getaway for Houston's wealthy, offering cool breezes and amazing…
-
Governor Ross Sterling Mansion
· 12.9 mi · Historical Marker
Hey road-trippers! You're cruising past the former Governor Ross Sterling Mansion, a place that was once the largest private home in Texas. Completed in 1927, architect Alfred C. Finn designed it as a scaled-down White…
-
Forum of Civics
· 12.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Forum of Civics in Houston. Built around 1880, this place served as the John Smith School until 1920. It was restored in 1927 by Will Hogg, and today stands as a memorial to Will and Mike Hogg, a…
-
St. Thomas High School
· 12.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the site of St. Thomas High School. It started way back in 1900 as St. Thomas College, housed in a former monastery. The Basilian fathers who founded it were the first…
-
Hellfighters at Goose Creek: When John Wayne Set Baytown's Bay on Fire
· 13.0 mi
You're overlooking Tabbs Bay near Bayland Park in Baytown, where Hollywood came to play with fire. The 1968 film Hellfighters, starring John Wayne as an oil-well firefighter inspired by the real-life Red Adair, shot its…
-
Bayland's Lost Children
· 13.0 mi
Down here on the Goose Creek bayfront, in eighteen-sixty-six, Texas chartered the Bayland Orphans Home to take in children left fatherless by the Civil War. For two decades it raised and schooled orphans on the bay…
-
Bayland Orphanage
· 13.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Bayland Orphanage, born from the ashes of the Civil War. In 1866, Henry Gillette and others saw the need for a home for children whose fathers died fighting for the Confederacy. The…
-
Morgan's Point Cemetery
· 13.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Morgan's Point Cemetery, a final resting place with a story as dramatic as the Texas coast itself. Colonel James Morgan, a Texas revolutionary soldier, bought this land back in 1834 for his estate,…
-
Wade and Mamie Irvin House
· 13.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Wade and Mamie Irvin House, built in 1927. It was the summer home for Wade, a Houston business leader and founder of Citizens State Bank, and his wife Mamie. They were known for their lavish…
-
Swishahouse: The Northside Mixtape Label That Took Houston Rap National
· 13.2 mi
Swishahouse was founded in 1997 on Houston's Northside by DJ Michael '5000' Watts and OG Ron C (business partner G-Dash joined in 1999, when it became an official label). It was the north side's answer to the…
-
Beer Can House
· 13.2 mi · Historical Marker
John Milkovisch was a retired upholsterer for the Southern Pacific Railroad who didn't like mowing his lawn. In 1968, he started inlaying thousands of marbles, rocks, and metal pieces into concrete to cover his yard.…
-
River Oaks, TX
· 13.2 mi
River Oaks, a place of manicured lawns and quiet dignity, holds more stories than its hushed streets readily reveal.
-
Schauer Filling Station
· 13.2 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine filling up your Model T at this vintage gas station, one of Houston's first, now a nostalgic reminder of early automotive travel. The Schauer Filling Station was built in 1929 at 1400 Oxford Street. It was a…
-
Milroy, John
· 13.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston Heights, a neighborhood that owes its start to the Omaha and South Texas Land Company. Back in 1891, they bought this land and began developing it. John Milroy, an early investor in the…
-
Hugo Victor Neuhaus, Jr. House
· 13.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston, and you might be passing the former home of Hugo Victor Neuhaus, Jr. This wasn't just any house; it was a showcase of the International style of architecture, designed by Neuhaus himself…
-
Beer Can House
· 13.3 mi · Historical Marker
In 1968, John Milkovisch, a retired upholsterer for the Southern Pacific Railroad, started inlaying thousands of marbles, rocks, and metal pieces into the concrete around his Houston home because he was tired of mowing…
-
Isaiah P. Walker House
· 13.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Isaiah P. Walker House, a unique weekend retreat built during the late 1920s and early 30s when Houstonians flocked to Shoreacres for fishing and boating on Galveston Bay. Walker, a VP at Stowers…
-
The Paupers Under the Lawns
· 13.4 mi
These quiet, expensive streets in West University Place sit on top of something most residents never hear about. In eighteen-ninety-four, Harris County moved its poor farm out here, and in nineteen-oh-four it set aside…
-
Houston Heights
· 13.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston Heights right now, a neighborhood that started as a grand experiment in the 1890s. Representatives from Omaha, Nebraska, came here in 1890 looking for land to develop. Led by folks like…
-
Houston Heights City Hall and Fire Station
· 13.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the old Houston Heights City Hall and Fire Station. After the original city hall burned down in 1912, they commissioned this building, designed by architect A. C. Pigg. Completed in 1914, it housed…
-
Grace United Methodist Church
· 13.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston Heights, and right here, a congregation that started with just a handful of women in 1905 is still going strong. They formed the Home Missionary Society, and soon after, the Heights…
-
Houston Yacht Club
· 13.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past the Houston Yacht Club, a place with a history as dynamic as the waters it sails. It all started back in 1897, when a group of Houston bigwigs decided they needed a place to dock their dreams. They…
-
Shepherd Drive Methodist Church
· 13.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Shepherd Drive Methodist Church in Conroe. Back in 1899, a group of Methodists organized a church here, calling it the McAshan and City Mission Methodist Church. Their first sanctuary,…
-
Bayou Bend
· 13.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, past the former home of Ima Hogg, a true Texas cultural force. Built in 1927 by Ima and her brothers, this mansion, Bayou Bend, became a showcase for their incredible collections spanning…
-
Gov. John B. Connally, Jr. Home
· 13.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, past the former home of John Connally, Jr., a Texas Governor and U.S. Secretary of the Treasury. He and his wife, Nellie, moved into this mid-century modern house in 1969, right after his…
-
Humble Oil & Refining Company
· 13.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of what became the massive ExxonMobil refinery complex, but it all started back in 1909 with Ross S. Sterling investing in an oil field. Two years later, he and five partners formed the…
-
West University Place, TX
· 13.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through West University Place, a Houston suburb that really took off in the 1920s and 30s. It all started back in 1910 when Governor Ben W. Cooper of Tennessee picked this spot for a community of country…
-
Heights Church of Christ
· 13.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the Heights Church of Christ. It started back in 1915, making it the second Church of Christ congregation ever founded in this city. The first building went up in 1916,…
-
Derricks in the Bay: Texas's First Offshore Oilfield
· 13.6 mi
In 1903 farmer John I. Gaillard noticed gas bubbling at the mouth of Goose Creek; first oil came June 2, 1908, but the field truly came in on August 23, 1916, when a 10,000-barrel gusher ignited a boom of tents and…
-
River Oaks: Houston's Grandest Neighborhood, Born of an Oilman's Grudge
· 13.6 mi
You're in River Oaks, the most exclusive neighborhood in Houston, Texas -- roughly 1,100 acres of estates laid out along Buffalo Bayou west of downtown. Its origin is a story of rivalry between oilmen. In 1916, Texaco…
-
Miss Ima: The Name Everyone Jokes About, the Sister Who Never Existed
· 13.6 mi
Ima Hogg (1882-1975) was the daughter of Texas Governor Jim Hogg; her name came from 'The Fate of Marvin,' a Civil War epic poem by her uncle Thomas Hogg featuring a heroine named Ima (whether her father noticed the pun…
-
The House That 50,000 Beer Cans Built
· 13.6 mi
John Milkovisch, an upholsterer for the Southern Pacific Railroad, began transforming his modest house at 222 Malone St in 1968 because he was 'sick of mowing the grass,' inlaying the yard with marbles, rocks and…
-
Cool Water, Cold Ground
· 13.6 mi
Southside Place opened on Easter Sunday in nineteen-twenty-five, built around a swimming pool and a park to lure buyers off the Bellaire Boulevard streetcar line. It was a bright, cheerful place — and it sat on the edge…
-
Beer Can House
· 13.6 mi · Things to Do
A house covered in 50000 flattened beer cans. 18 years of drinking and decorating.
-
West University Place, TX
· 13.6 mi
The origin of the name "West University Place" is directly tied to its academic neighbor. The community was developed in 1917, and its name stems from its close proximity to the Rice Institute, which is now known as…
-
St. John's School, Houston (Justise Winslow)
· 13.6 mi
St. John's School in Houston is where Justise Winslow was the 2013 Gatorade Texas Player of the Year, averaging about 27 points and 13 rebounds as a senior. He started for Duke's 2015 national championship team and was…
-
Robert E. Lee High School
· 13.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past the site of the original Robert E. Lee High School in Baytown. Back in 1919, folks realized they needed a real school, so they formed the Goose Creek Independent School District. Prominent architect…
-
Seabrook, TX
· 13.6 mi
Seabrook is one of the few Texas towns named for somebody's first name. Seabrook W. Sydnor bought a piece of the old Ritson Morris league on Galveston Bay in 1895, and the post office that opened that same year took his…
-
Barker, David
· 13.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former home of David Barker, a major player in Houston's early growth. Built in 1910, this American Four Square residence was his home during his third term as mayor of Houston Heights. Notice…
-
Matthews-Johnson House
· 13.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston, and right here is the Matthews-Johnson House, built in 1915. It's a beautiful example of an early Craftsman bungalow, with some late Victorian flair. Notice the hipped roof and that…
-
St. Luke Missionary Baptist Church
· 13.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of St. Luke Missionary Baptist Church, a Houston institution that predates its own property purchase. Members gathered under a brush arbor until 1918, when they built their first wooden…
-
Benbrook, TX
· 13.6 mi · Local history
Benbrook, a place of rolling plains and post oaks, carries a history quieter than the roar of boats on Benbrook Lake. The name itself whispers of military service, honoring General Benbrook, though the community truly…
-
Rushmore Academy Is Real: Wes Anderson's Own Houston School
· 13.7 mi
Wes Anderson shot Rushmore (1998) in his hometown of Houston. Rushmore Academy is St. John's School (2401 Claremont Lane, north of Westheimer, near River Oaks), Anderson's own alma mater; Grover Cleveland High School,…
-
Southside Place, TX
· 13.7 mi
Southside Place opened for business on Easter Day 1925, a brand-new subdivision by Houston developer Edlo Crain, built on land that had once been the Harris County Poor Farm. Crain's sales strategy was ahead of its…
-
Cooley, Daniel Denton
· 13.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through the historic Houston Heights right now, a community that owes much of its existence to Daniel Denton Cooley. Born in New York, Cooley came to Texas in 1892, sent by the American Loan and Trust…
-
West University Place, City of
· 13.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through West University Place, a city born from a politician's vision. Back in 1910, Tennessee politician Ben W. Hooper and his partners formed the West End Realty Company. They bought land near the…
-
Dr. Penn B. and Annie A. Thornton House
· 13.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Houston, and right here is the Dr. Penn B. and Annie A. Thornton House. Built in 1905, this home was a showcase for early 20th-century Houston Heights living. Dr. Thornton was a doctor and…
-
Galveston County Poor Farm
· 13.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Galveston County Poor Farm, a place that cared for the county's most vulnerable citizens. Back in 1886, county officials decided to buy land for this purpose. By June 1887, they owned…
-
The Rancher Who Refused to Saw Off History
· 14.0 mi
George Washington Butler arrived from Louisiana in 1854 and built the roughly 2,000-acre ranch and cattle station that became League City. By the 1920s the cattle industry was deliberately breeding the longhorn OUT of…
-
Joe Tex: The Soul Star Raised in Baytown
· 14.0 mi
Soul star Joe Tex, born Joseph Arrington Jr. in Rogers, Texas, in 1935, was raised in Baytown from the age of five. He sang in school and church choirs here before winning amateur-night contests at Harlem's Apollo…
-
Highlands, TX
· 14.0 mi
Highlands is named for elevation you can actually see. The community sits on the east bank of the San Jacinto River, and that bank stands noticeably higher than the west one. Simple as that, the high lands. The name was…
-
RaeLynn - Baytown, Texas
· 14.1 mi
RaeLynn, born Racheal Lynn Woodward in Baytown in 1994, broke out on season 2 of The Voice in 2012, where both coaches who turned fought over her and she joined Team Blake. Her 2014 single 'God Made Girls' reached…
-
Temple Lodge No. 4 A.F. & A.M.
· 14.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Temple Lodge No. 4, the first Masonic Lodge chartered in the Republic of Texas! It was officially founded on May 10, 1838, in the brand-new capital city of Houston. Imagine, the Senate…
-
Sam Houston High School
· 14.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Sam Houston High School, a Texas institution with roots stretching back to 1856. It started as the Houston Academy, funded by a $5,000 bequest from Mayor James H. Stevens. Imagine this:…
-
Dyersdale: A Map Dot Named for One of Austin's Old Three Hundred
· 14.2 mi
You're in Dyersdale, a small community on FM 527 and the old Missouri Pacific line (formerly the Beaumont, Sour Lake and Western Railway) about six miles northeast of Houston in northeastern Harris County, Texas. It is…
-
Morris, Ritson, and Elmwood Plantation
· 14.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Elmwood Plantation, once home to Ritson Morris. Morris arrived in Texas around 1827, settling first in Nacogdoches before moving here to join his father-in-law. He received a Mexican land…
-
Baytown, TX
· 14.2 mi
Baytown, as the name suggests, owes its existence and identity to the bay. It’s a straightforward name, born of its geography, firmly planted where Galveston Bay meets the Houston Ship Channel. Incorporated in 1948, the…
-
T. J. and Mary Lelia Dick House
· 14.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the T.J. and Mary Lelia Dick House, built back in 1904. It's a classic two-story home with a double gallery, the kind you might imagine on a sprawling ranch. T.J. Dick was a big deal in Galveston,…
-
First Baptist Church of League City
· 14.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through League City, and right here is the site of the First Baptist Church. It was organized way back on December 4th, 1887, in the Clear Creek Schoolhouse. It took a few years, but the first permanent…
-
Madison High School (Vince Young)
· 14.3 mi
James Madison High School (13719 White Heather Dr., Houston, TX), home of the Marlins, is where Vince Young became a high school legend. He started at quarterback for three years, piled up 12,987 yards of total offense,…
-
Independence Heights
· 14.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, past the site of Independence Heights, a community founded by Black families around 1908. They bought lots and built their own homes, establishing a school by 1911. Imagine the hustle:…
-
Leeland - Baytown, Texas
· 14.3 mi
Leeland, the worship band fronted by Leeland Mooring, formed in Baytown in 2004. Their 2006 debut album Sound of Melodies earned a Grammy nomination, the first of four Grammy nominations for the band. Their 2019…
-
League Park
· 14.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through League City, and right here is the site of League Park, a place that was the heart of this community for decades. It was all thanks to John Charles League, a land developer who bought this area in…
-
League City, TX
· 14.4 mi · Local history
League City sits where it does because of the water – Clear Creek, that is. It defines the northern edge of town, but more than that, it provided the initial access and resources that attracted settlers in the late 19th…
-
Booker T. Washington High School
· 14.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Booker T. Washington High School, a true landmark in Houston's history. Founded in 1893 as Colored High School, it was the very first high school in Houston open to African American…
-
White Cemetery
· 14.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the White Cemetery, a final resting place for some of Texas's earliest settlers. Reuben White, one of Stephen F. Austin's original 'Old 300' colonists, received a Mexican land grant right here in…
-
Teas Nursery Company
· 14.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of what became Teas Nursery Company, a Houston institution that started way back in 1843. John C. Teas began selling apples from his backyard in Indiana, but it was his son, Edward, who…
-
Almeda
· 14.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Almeda, a town that started with big dreams of citrus in the 1890s. Illinois investors bought this land near an old railroad line, hoping the mild Texas climate would make it a paradise for growing…
-
The Baytown Sun
· 14.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Baytown, and right here is the birthplace of its local news. The Baytown Sun started life in 1919 as the Goose Creek Gasser, a weekly paper serving three oil boom towns. Just two months later, the…
-
The Brunson: Baytown's Streamline-Moderne Movie Palace
· 14.6 mi
The Brunson Theater at 311 W. Texas Avenue opened August 23, 1949 with Donald O'Connor in 'Yes Sir, That's My Baby,' built for a reported $100,000 and designed by architect Leon C. Kyburz. Its Streamline-Moderne facade…
-
Baytown Post Office
· 14.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the old Baytown Post Office, built way back in 1936. For nearly fifty years, this was the heart of mail service for the whole area. Take a look at the architecture – it’s an early International…
-
Prehistoric Indian Campsite
· 14.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past a prehistoric Indian campsite, right here in Seabrook. Look for the clues in the ground – mostly clam shells! Archeologists call these 'shell middens.' For centuries, Native American groups harvested…
-
Rooster's: Fifty Years of Steak on Old Baytown's Texas Avenue
· 14.7 mi
You're in Old Baytown near the longtime home of Rooster's Steakhouse at 6 West Texas Avenue, opened in 1977 and run by the Cox family for close to fifty years. Its dining room doubled as a museum of Baytown memory:…
-
Within, TX
· 14.7 mi · Local history
Within, Texas, wasn’t always Within. It started, like so many towns in this part of the state, as a scattering of homesteads drawn by the promise of fertile land and open sky. The Blackland Prairie proved good for…
-
Clear Lake Shores, TX
· 14.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Clear Lake Shores, a community that got its start as a dream of profit in the Roaring Twenties. Promoters bought up land around this very lake, carving it into small lots, hoping to sell them as…
-
Seabrook, TX
· 14.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Seabrook, a community that owes its existence to a commuter train and a desire for summer escapes. <break time="400ms"/> In 1900, Seabrook Sydnor's father, John, helped plat this town, named for…
-
Magnolia Creek Cemetery
· 14.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Magnolia Creek Cemetery, a resting place named for the nearby watercourse. Its story begins in 1855 with the Perkins and Coward families, who settled this area. The first person laid to rest here was…
-
Camp Logan Mutiny - Houston 1917
· 14.8 mi · Historical Marker
On August 23, 1917, Black soldiers of the 24th Infantry Regiment marched on Houston after enduring racial abuse from local police. 19 soldiers were executed in the largest murder trial in U.S. history.
-
Harris, Captain William Plunkett
· 14.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a true Texas pioneer, Captain William Plunkett Harris. Born in New York, Harris arrived in Texas in 1830, drawn to the opportunities here. He partnered in a mill operation and later…
-
K'Nesseth Israel Synagogue
· 14.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Baytown, and right here is the K'Nesseth Israel Synagogue. Back in 1928, twenty members formed this congregation to serve the growing Jewish population, spurred by the Goose Creek oil boom. They…
-
Smith, Ashbel, M. D.
· 14.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Evergreen Plantation, home of Dr. Ashbel Smith. Born in Connecticut in 1805, he earned his medical degree from Yale and studied in France before coming to Texas in 1837, just after the…
-
Bellaire, TX
· 15.1 mi
Bellaire was a real-estate pitch from the very start, and so was the name. In 1908 William Wright Baldwin, a railroad executive who ran the South End Land Company, bought up part of the old Rice Ranch and set out to…
-
Before the Boardwalk: Kemah's Casino Days
· 15.1 mi
From the 1920s through the 1950s, Kemah's little waterfront was a glittering illegal casino strip, with gambling houses like the Chili Bowl and the Kemah Den drawing crowds from Houston. The operation was tied to…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Shadow Creek (Pearland)
· 15.1 mi
Shadow Creek (Pearland, TX) placed on the 6A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Lubin Rincon (0.474 avg, 1 HR).
-
League City, TX
· 15.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through League City, a place with roots stretching back to the earliest days of Texas settlement. It all started in 1831 when Father Miguel Muldoon bought land here, part of Stephen F. Austin's colony.…
-
South End Land Company
· 15.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Bellaire, Texas, a town born from a vision to create an 'elite residential area.' The South End Land Company, chartered in 1902, purchased over 9,000 acres west of Houston with dreams of development.…
-
Baldwin, William Wright
· 15.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bellaire, Texas, a community with a name that evokes fresh Gulf breezes. And that's exactly how William Wright Baldwin, a railroad executive, chose to name it in 1908. He bought land just west of…
-
Bellaire, TX
· 15.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bellaire, a Houston suburb that owes its existence to a railroad executive. In 1908, William Wright Baldwin, vice president of the Burlington Railroad, bought this land and envisioned a new…
-
Virgin Mary Oak Tree
· 15.1 mi · Things to Do
An oak tree in the Garden Oaks neighborhood where passersby report seeing the image of the Virgin of Guadalupe in the bark and leave flowers and religious…
-
2019 UIL 5A Division 1 Football State Champions
· 15.2 mi
Shadow Creek High School (Alvin, TX): Most recent: 28-22 over Denton Ryan · 2019 5A Division 1 final.
-
Barrett, TX
· 15.3 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here, just south of U.S. Highway 90 in Harris County, you're driving through the heart of what began as Barrett's Settlement. It was founded after the Civil War by Harrison Barrett, a formerly enslaved man who…
-
Barrett, TX
· 15.3 mi
Barrett began as one man's long family reunion. After 1865, Harrison Barrett spent years tracking down his scattered relatives, and he found every one of them except a single sister. In 1889 he bought land in piney…
-
Baytown, TX
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Baytown, a city that owes its existence to oil. Right here, in 1916, the Goose Creek oilfield became famous as the first offshore drilling operation in Texas. This discovery led to the founding of…
-
Goose Creek Oilfield
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past what used to be the Goose Creek Oilfield, right here in Harris County. Back in 1903, John Gaillard noticed gas bubbles popping up in the water. He confirmed it was natural gas, a sure sign of oil! It…
-
Baytown Mexican School (DeZavala Elemenary)
· 15.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Baytown's first school for Mexican American children, established way back in 1923. Initially, classes were held in a recreation hall, and high school students taught young Spanish…
-
Barrett, Harrison
· 15.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Barrett's Settlement, a community founded by Harrison Barrett. Born into slavery around 1845, Barrett was determined to reunite his family after emancipation in 1865. He successfully…
-
Texan Capture of Mexican Dispatchers
· 15.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through southwest Harris County, not far from where the fate of Texas was decided. It's April of 1836, just weeks after the fall of the Alamo. General Houston's army is on the move, and so is Santa…
-
Allen, Joseph Hugh
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Baytown, right where Joe Allen got his start. Born here in 1940, Allen was a decorated Army veteran before returning to Baytown to attend Lee College. He then won a seat in the Texas House of…
-
Old Town, TX
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Baytown, Texas, a place born from boom and disaster. Back in 1916, this area was called Goose Creek, a roughneck settlement that exploded onto the scene with a major oil strike. But just months…
-
Cedar Bayou, TX
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Baytown, but this area was once known as Cedar Bayou. The first recorded burial here dates all the way back to 1810. For decades, it served as a vital shipping port, sending bricks and…
-
Lee College
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Baytown, a place born out of the Great Depression. Back in 1934, voters here decided to create Lee Junior College, a place for local students to get a college education. Classes started that…
-
Eddie V. Gray Wetlands Center
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Baytown, right on the banks of Goose Creek. This area is home to the Eddie V. Gray Wetlands Center. It all started back in 1992 when local businessman Eddie V. Gray pitched the idea of preserving…
-
The Texas Killing Fields — I-45 Corridor, League City
· 15.5 mi
The twenty-five-mile stretch of Interstate Forty-Five between Houston and Galveston has a name most locals know and most visitors don't: the Killing Fields. Since the early nineteen seventies, the remains of more than…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Sterling (Baytown)
· 15.5 mi
Sterling (Baytown, TX) placed on the 5A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Rafael Romo (0.477 avg).
-
Bellaire Streetcar Line
· 15.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Bellaire, and right here is where the story of the 'Toonerville Trolley' began. In 1909, developers started building a streetcar line to connect this burgeoning town with Houston. Imagine a single…
-
Bellaire Presbyterian Church
· 15.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Bellaire Presbyterian Church, the oldest continuing congregation in this community. It all started back in 1911 as a non-denominational church, meeting in the local schoolhouse and even…
-
Bellaire
· 15.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Bellaire, a town with a name that means 'good air' in French. It was founded in 1908 by William Wright Baldwin, president of the South End Land Company. He bought part of the vast ranch once owned…
-
Jackson, Humphrey
· 15.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the spot where Humphrey Jackson, a man who walked away from slavery and found his way to Texas, settled near the San Jacinto River. Born in Ireland in 1784, he fought in the Battle of New Orleans…
-
San Jacinto Battleground State Historical Park
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past the site of the final, decisive battle of the Texas Revolution. Right here, on April 21st, 1836, Sam Houston's army launched a surprise attack on Santa Anna's forces. In just 18 minutes, Texas won…
-
San Jacinto River
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near the San Jacinto River, a waterway with a name that echoes across Texas history. This river, or perhaps one of its forks, might be the very place where Texas secured its independence. On April 21st,…
-
San Jacinto, Battle of
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, Texas, near the San Jacinto River. Right here, on April 21st, 1836, the fate of Texas was decided in just eighteen minutes. You're near the site of the Battle of San…
-
Astrodome
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the legendary Astrodome. Opened in 1965, it was the world's first fully air-conditioned, enclosed, domed sports stadium. Voters approved the bonds for this marvel back…
-
Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railway
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, you're witnessing the very dawn of the railroad age in the state. This is the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos and Colorado Railway, the first track ever laid and operated in Texas.…
-
Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right now, you're passing over a piece of history that literally connected the state. It's the Galveston, Harrisburg and San Antonio Railway, but it started life in 1850 as the Buffalo…
-
Houston Riot of 1917
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, and right here is where one of the most explosive racial incidents of World War I took place. In the summer of 1917, Black soldiers of the Twenty-fourth Infantry were stationed at Camp…
-
San Jacinto Monument and Museum
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near the Houston Ship Channel, and right here stands the San Jacinto Monument, a towering tribute to Texas independence. Built between 1936 and 1939, this striking Moderne skyscraper is faced with Texas…
-
Mattress Mack - Gallery Furniture
· 15.9 mi · Biographical
Jim McIngvale, known as 'Mattress Mack,' founded Gallery Furniture at 6006 North Freeway in Houston in 1981. He opened his stores as shelters during Hurricanes Katrina (2005), Harvey (2017), Tropical Storm Imelda…
-
Acres Homes Transit Company
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Acres Homes, a community just northwest of downtown Houston. Back in 1959, residents found themselves without reliable public transportation after the local bus line shut down. Many relied on…
-
Briscoe, Mary Jane Harris
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through the Houston area, and right here is where a piece of Texas history unfolded. Mary Jane Harris, known as the 'Belle of Buffalo Bayou,' arrived in Harrisburg in 1836. She was a shareholder in the…
-
Clear Lake City, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Harris County, you're driving through a community born from the space race. In 1961, NASA chose this very area, on land once owned by the West family ranch, for its Manned Spacecraft Center. By 1962,…
-
Cooley, Daniel Denton
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is where the story of Houston Heights began. Back in 1891, a land company bought over 1,700 acres just west of downtown. Daniel Denton Cooley, known as the 'Father of…
-
Freedmen's Settlements
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through an area that was once dotted with 'freedom colonies' – communities founded by formerly enslaved Texans after the Civil War. These weren't just random settlements; they were acts of defiance and…
-
Frenchtown, Houston
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, near the Fifth Ward, and you're passing through the echoes of Frenchtown. This wasn't a French colony, but a vibrant community of about 500 Creoles of French, Spanish, and African descent…
-
Goose Creek, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Goose Creek, Texas, a town born from oil. In 1915, the Goose Creek oilfield exploded onto the scene, creating a boomtown called Old Town. But a well explosion that same year buried…
-
Harris, John Richardson
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once a key port in early Texas. Right here, John Richardson Harris, a New Yorker who met Moses Austin in Missouri, decided to stake his claim. In 1824, he arrived in Texas and bought over…
-
Houston Astros
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, home of a baseball team that started as the Colt .45s back in 1962. They played in a temporary stadium while waiting for a marvel of engineering: the Astrodome, which opened in 1965. This…
-
Hubbard, Oliphant Lockwood
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, and right here, in what was once Independence Heights, a community founded by and for African Americans, stands a testament to resilience. Oliphant Lockwood Hubbard, a former principal,…
-
Independence Heights, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Independence Heights, a pioneering Black community founded northeast of Houston in 1910. The Wright Land Company developed this area specifically for African Americans, making…
-
McCormick, Margaret
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, near the San Jacinto River, the site of a remarkable Texas pioneer. Margaret McCormick, originally from Ireland, arrived in 1824 and, after her husband's tragic drowning that same…
-
Tin Hall Dance Hall
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Cypress, Texas, and right here is the site of Harris County's oldest honky-tonk: the Tin Hall Dance Hall. It's been hosting public events since 1889, though the original building burned down just a…
-
Whiting, Hervey
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, Texas, but back in 1833, this was a wild frontier. Hervey Whiting and his family arrived by sea, only to be shipwrecked near Velasco! Thankfully, neighbors helped them…
-
Texas Institute for Rehabilitation and Research [TIRR Memorial Hermann]
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here, the story of fighting polio unfolded. Between 1948 and 1949, over 4,000 Texans contracted the disease, with Houston and Harris County hit particularly hard. In response,…
-
Addicks, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Addicks, Texas, a community with a story as turbulent as the coastal weather. It started around 1850 as Bear Creek, settled by German immigrants. They built a life here, with a…
-
Alief, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Alief, originally Dairy and Dairy Station. It all started in 1895 when Francis Meston hired W. D. Twitchell to plat the town. Meston even donated land for the cemetery in 1900. But…
-
Allen Ranch
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, and right here, in what is now Harris County, once stood the largest ranch in the region. The Allen Ranch, established in the early 1840s, started with Samuel William Allen rounding up wild…
-
Berry, Joseph
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, but back in 1826, this was the Texas frontier. Joseph Berry, a gunsmith, came here with his family. He served in the Texas Rangers, even helping build a fort near…
-
Bordersville, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Bordersville, a Black community founded in 1927. When a sawmill in nearby Humble closed, workers were displaced. Edgar Borders stepped in, opening his own mill and offering shacks…
-
Breece, Thomas H.
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Harrisburg, Texas, a town that played a role in the Texas Revolution. Right here, Captain Thomas H. Breece led a company of the New Orleans Greys, a group of mechanics who left their…
-
Bryant, Charles W.
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, a region that was the focus of intense political debate during Reconstruction. Charles W. Bryant, born a slave in Kentucky around 1830, arrived in Texas after the Civil…
-
Daugherty, Jacamiah Seaman
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, and right here, Jacamiah Daugherty, a name you might not know, but he was a big deal in Texas development. Back in 1894, he bought 6,000 acres, got a railroad spur built, and…
-
Eleventh Texas Infantry
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the heart of the Confederacy's Trans-Mississippi Department. Right here, near Houston, the Eleventh Texas Infantry was mustered into service in the winter of 1861. This regiment,…
-
Glenwood Cemetery
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is Glenwood Cemetery, a place that was more than just a graveyard when it opened in 1872. It was designed as a beautiful, park-like space, one of the first in the city,…
-
Harris County
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, a place that owes its start to a pioneer named John R. Harris. Back in 1826, he laid out the town of Harrisburg right here, at the head of navigation on Buffalo Bayou. He even built…
-
Harris County Boys School Site
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, and right here is a site that tells us about some of the earliest Texans. For thousands of years, dating back over 5,000 years ago, Native Americans used this land as a campsite. They…
-
Harris, DeWitt Clinton
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past Harrisburg, Texas, a place that played a role in the very first sparks of the Texas Revolution. Right here, in June of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1835</say-as>, DeWitt Clinton Harris and…
-
Harris, Jane Birdsall
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Harrisburg, Texas, a place that played a crucial role in the Texas Revolution. Right here, in March and April of 1836, Jane Birdsall Harris opened her home to the provisional…
-
Houston Heights, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston Heights, a suburb planned and built from the ground up starting in 1891. Imagine this: 1,175 acres laid out with streets named after American colleges, a brand new electric streetcar…
-
Hunter, Johnson Calhoun
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, and right here, in 1822, Johnson Calhoun Hunter and his family faced a shipwreck just offshore on Galveston Island. He was one of Stephen F. Austin's original Old Three…
-
Lee, El Franco
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, and right here, El Franco Lee made history. Born in Houston, Lee was inspired by community programs and the Black Panther Party's efforts to help disadvantaged youth. He started his…
-
LH7 Ranch
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through western Harris County, near Addicks, and you're passing through the heart of the historic LH7 Ranch. Established in 1907 by Emil Henry Marks, this ranch became famous for a unique reason: it…
-
Lynch's Ferry
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near where the San Jacinto River meets Buffalo Bayou, and right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1836</say-as>, this spot was a crucial escape route. This was Lynch's Ferry, established by…
-
Lynch, Nathaniel
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Nathaniel Lynch's land, near the San Jacinto River. He was one of Stephen F. Austin's first colonists, arriving in 1822. By 1825, he'd established a steam sawmill and a settlement…
-
Lynchburg, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near the San Jacinto River, and right here is Lynchburg, originally known as Lynch's Ferry. Back in 1822, Nathaniel Lynch established this crossing, making it a key spot even before the Battle of San…
-
Macomb, David B.
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Harrisburg, a key spot in early Texas history. David B. Macomb arrived in Texas in 1835 and quickly became a delegate to the Consultation. He was deeply concerned with defending our…
-
Magnolia Park, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, near the Ship Channel, and you're passing through Magnolia Park. This community started in 1890, named for the thousands of magnolias planted by developers. But it's the story of its…
-
Moonshine Hill, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Humble, Texas, in Harris County, and right here is the site of Moonshine Hill. It wasn't named for illegal spirits, but for a pumping station. In 1904, oil was discovered, and this place exploded.…
-
Pelly, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Pelly, a community born from a Texas oil boom. Right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1916</say-as>, explosions and fires rocked the Goose Creek oilfield. Oilfield workers and their…
-
Reily, James
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, a region that once saw James Reily, a prominent lawyer and diplomat, serve as a Texas legislator. But his story took a military turn. Reily commanded the Fourth Texas…
-
Scott, William
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what's now Harris County, near the San Jacinto River. Right here, William Scott, one of Stephen F. Austin's original colonists, built his home, Point Pleasant, back in 1824. He wasn't just a…
-
Shipbuilding
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through a region that played a massive role in building the ships that sailed the world, especially during wartime. Before World War I, Texas shipbuilding was small-scale, mostly fishing boats and river…
-
Taylor, Hilliard
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Oklahoma now, but this story starts right here in Houston. Hilliard Taylor, born into slavery in Arkansas, arrived in Texas in 1865. Just six years later, in 1871, he became one of Houston's first…
-
Ben Taub Hospital
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is Ben Taub Hospital, a name you might recognize. But did you know this public hospital was born out of years of controversy? Plans started way back in 1949 to replace an…
-
Vince, Allen
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
Allen Vince, one of Stephen F. Austin 's Old Three Hundred , and his brothers, William, Robert, and Richard Vince , whose family originally came from Georgia, was born about 1785. Vince was a widower whose two sons…
-
Wooster Common School No. 38
· 15.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Wooster, a town that sprang up thanks to Quincy Adams Wooster, who moved here from Iowa in 1891, impressed by the Texas coast. He platted the town in 1893. During World War II, the area…
-
Kemah
· 15.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Kemah, a town with roots stretching all the way back to Stephen F. Austin's original colonists. In 1824, Michael Gouldrich received a Mexican land grant right here. Fast forward to the late 1800s,…
-
Ashe, Samuel Swann
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Harris County, you're driving through an area that saw service from Samuel Swann Ashe. He wasn't born here, but after returning from his education in North Carolina, he worked on a ranch in this very…
-
Baker Botts
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, and right here, the law firm of Baker Botts got its start way back in 1866 as Gray and Botts. From its early days, it became a powerhouse in representing railroads, eventually…
-
Barker, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving west on I-10, and right here is Barker. It sprang up in 1895 when the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad laid tracks, named for the contractor Ed Barker. George Miller built a home that served as an inn,…
-
Bayland Orphans' Home For Boys
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, and right here, on the west side of Galveston Bay, was the original site of the Bayland Orphans' Home for Boys. Chartered in 1866 by Texas Confederate veterans, it began as a home for…
-
Beauchamps Springs, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Houston, and right here, in Beauchamps Springs, you're passing through a place that was once a vital water source for the young city. Back in 1838, Houston Water Works tried to pipe water from these…
-
Bloodgood, William
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what's now Harris County, but back in 1824, this was the wild frontier. William Bloodgood, one of Stephen F. Austin's original Old Three Hundred colonists, arrived right here. He was a carpenter…
-
Brinson, Enoch
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, an area that was a frontier when Enoch Brinson arrived. He was one of Stephen F. Austin's original colonists, settling here before August 7, 1824. Brinson was a farmer,…
-
Cook, Joseph Jarvis
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Harrisburg, Texas, right in the heart of the Civil War. Joseph Jarvis Cook, a planter and a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy, arrived here in 1861. As a Federal blockade loomed,…
-
Cypress, TX (Harris County)
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Cypress, Texas, a community northwest of Houston. German immigrants settled here along Cypress Creek in the 1840s, joining Anglo-Americans already ranching. A memorable landmark, Tin Hall, started…
-
Earle, Thomas
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Stephen F. Austin's colony, and right here in Harris County, Thomas Earle was making his mark. An early settler, Earle received his land grant in 1824 and settled on Buffalo Bayou.…
-
Harris, David
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, a place that was once home to David Harris. He was an early settler, one of Stephen F. Austin's Old Three Hundred colonists, arriving here sometime around 1823. David…
-
Harris, William Plunkett
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Harrisburg, a place that played a key role in the Texas Revolution. William Plunkett Harris, a shipowner, was right in the thick of it. In 1832, he used his ships, the Nelson and the Mecana, to help…
-
Klein, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what's now Klein, Texas, a community with roots stretching back to the 1840s. German immigrants settled here, calling it Big Cypress. Then, in 1854, Adam Klein arrived with his wife, Friederika.…
-
North Harris Montgomery Community College District
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through north Harris County, and right here is where a community's vision took root in the early 1970s. Residents, concerned about the lack of higher education options north of Houston, launched a…
-
Rose Hill, TX (Harris County)
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Rose Hill, a community that started out as Spring Creek. In 1852, German immigrants, led by Johann Heinrich Theisz, founded one of Texas's oldest Lutheran congregations here: Salem…
-
Sheldon Reservoir
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving east of Houston, and right here is Sheldon Reservoir. It began life in 1943, not as a park, but as a critical water source for wartime industries along the Houston Ship Channel. The federal government…
-
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Houston, and right here is the University of Texas Health Science Center. Established in 1972, it's a massive hub for medical education and research, all nestled within the Texas Medical Center.…
-
Westfield, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving north of Houston on I-45, and right here is Westfield. It started in 1846 when a German immigrant, Herman Tautenhahn, built a general store. The town itself was established in 1870, named for a landowner…
-
Wooster, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Wooster, Texas, right here in Harris County. It all started in 1891 when Quincy Adams Wooster bought over a thousand acres of land, some of it originally part of Stephen F.…
-
Dobie, William
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what's now Harris County, and the name Dobie might ring a bell, especially if you know Texas literary giant J. Frank Dobie. But the story starts with his ancestor, William Dobie. After facing…
-
Fairbanks, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Fairbanks, Texas, right here in Harris County. This community started life in 1893, named for its founder. Before that, Southern Pacific trainmen called this spot Gum Island,…
-
Harris, Lewis Birdsall
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Harrisburg County, Texas. Right here, in 1836, Lewis Birdsall Harris arrived in Texas fresh from New York. He immediately enlisted in the Texas army, serving for the summer. After…
-
Hockley, TX
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Hockley, a community named for George Washington Hockley himself, who established it way back in 1835. Just a year later, in April of 1836, the Texas Army camped right here near the settlement.…
-
Moore, Edward Weaver
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, and you're passing through the territory once represented by Edward Weaver Moore. He was a Texas legislator who married Helen Paxton in the Governor's Mansion in Austin…
-
Navigation Districts
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, and right here, you might be passing through a navigation district, created by law way back in 1909. These districts are all about improving our waterways for better shipping. They can…
-
Warren Central Railroad
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Hockley in Harris County, and right here, a short-lived industrial dream once lay. In 1930, the Warren Central Railroad was chartered to build seventeen miles of track, connecting Katy to a…
-
White, Reuben
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Mexican Texas, and right here, Reuben White was building a life. He was one of Stephen F. Austin's original Old Three Hundred colonists, arriving in 1824. White farmed and raised…
-
Winfield, Edward H.
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once the heart of the Republic of Texas, and right here, Edward H. Winfield was a man who wore many hats. Arriving in Texas in 1835, he served as a major in the army during the…
-
Loise
· 15.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harris County, Texas, where a young enslaved girl named Loise was caught in a legal battle. Around age ten, she was valued at just $100, but by the time she was due to inherit, her value had…
-
Bell Prairie
· 16.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past what used to be Bell Prairie, a grand plantation home on Galveston Bay. It was built by Henry Gillette, a Connecticut educator who came to Texas in <say-as interpret-as="date"…
-
Kemah, TX
· 16.0 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving along Galveston Bay, and right here is Kemah. This community started out in 1898 as Evergreen, named for the Texas and New Orleans Railroad that laid its tracks here. For a while, it was even called Shell…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: MacArthur (Houston)
· 16.3 mi
MacArthur (Houston, TX) placed on the 6A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Artemio Mata (0.455 avg, 4 HR).
-
Acres Home, TX
· 16.4 mi · Local history
Acres Home, that sprawling stretch of northwest Houston, wasn't planned. It just sort of... happened. Back in the early 20th century, when Houston was booming, developers started carving up large tracts of land into…
-
First Baptist Church of Houston
· 16.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Houston's First Baptist Church, a congregation that started meeting informally way back in 1838. It was officially organized in 1841 with just 16 members. Their first pastor, William…
-
Aldine, TX
· 16.4 mi · Local history
Aldine sits on the flat, coastal plain of southeast Texas, a landscape sculpted by ancient seas and the slow, patient meandering of rivers. The ground is mostly sandy loam, a fertile mix deposited over millennia by the…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Westbury (Houston)
· 16.6 mi
Westbury (Houston, TX) placed on the 5A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Noah Johnson (0.473 avg); Isaiah Jones (0.450 avg).
-
Sprague, Carl Tyler [Doc]
· 16.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving past Manvel, Texas, right where Carl "Doc" Sprague was born. <break time="400ms"/> Back in 1925, Sprague, who worked as an athletic trainer at Texas A&M, wrote to Victor Records suggesting they record his…
-
Manvel, TX
· 16.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Manvel, Texas, a town that started life as Pomona. But there was already a Pomona out west, so this one needed a new name. It was renamed Manvel, after a big shot president of the Atchison, Topeka…
-
The Crosby Fair & Rodeo: Eighty Years of Boots and Barbecue
· 17.0 mi
You're near the Crosby Fairgrounds on FM 2100, home of the Crosby Fair and Rodeo. Founded in 1946 as a nonprofit supporting Crosby-area youth, it marked eighty years of tradition in 2026, making it one of the…
-
Christie's: Houston's Oldest Restaurant and the Sale That Required a Name Change
· 17.1 mi
Christie's Seafood & Steaks (6029 Westheimer Rd) is Houston's oldest continuously operating restaurant, though its first 17 years were spent on the Galveston waterfront: Greek immigrant Theodosios Christofidis,…
-
Schlobohm Cemetery
· 17.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Schlobohm Cemetery, a resting place for a Texas Revolution veteran. Johann Schlobohm arrived in Texas by 1836, enlisting in the Zavalla Guards. His unit arrived in Galveston just before the…
-
The Black Hope Horror
· 17.2 mi
In nineteen-eighty, Ben and Jean Williams bought a brand-new house in the Newport subdivision out here in Crosby. Three years later their neighbors, the Haneys, dug into their own backyard for a swimming pool and pulled…
-
C. E. King High School - Dillon Mitchell Sprint
· 17.2 mi · Sports News
You're rolling through Sheldon, on the northeast edge of Houston, near C. E. King High School. C. E. King just put a sophomore on the national track map. His name is Dillon Mitchell. At the U. I. L. six A state…
-
Jackson, Humphrey and Sarah Merriman
· 17.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the resting place of Humphrey and Sarah Merriman Jackson, pioneers who arrived in Texas in 1823 as part of Stephen F. Austin's "Old 300" colony. They settled east of the San Jacinto River, and…
-
Faith United Methodist Church
· 17.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Faith United Methodist Church, a testament to resilience and community. This congregation was born from the merger of two historic African-American Methodist churches, Warren Chapel and…
-
Northwest Mall: The Mall the Freeway Killed
· 17.4 mi
Northwest Mall opened in 1968 as one of Houston's big enclosed shopping centers, anchored by Foley's and JCPenney. But the freeways that were supposed to bring shoppers ended up choking it: rebuilding the nearby…
-
Cedar Bayou United Methodist Church
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Cedar Bayou United Methodist Church, a congregation that began way back in eighteen forty-four. It all started at the home of Hance Baker, organized by Reverend Robert Alexander, a missionary on the…
-
Cedar Bayou Masonic Lodge No. 321, A. F. & A. M.
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a community cornerstone! Cedar Bayou Masonic Lodge No. 321 received its charter way back on June 18, 1870, with thirteen members. They built their own hall by 1876, and get this – they…
-
Cedar Bayou Masonic Lodge No. 321, A. F. & A. M.
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Cedar Bayou Masonic Lodge, built between 1875 and 1876. Imagine the lumber, shipped all the way from Florida, arriving by schooner just in the nick of time to avoid a devastating…
-
Manvel, TX
· 17.5 mi · Local history
The story of Manvel's growth is one of steady, accelerating expansion. It began with the W.R. Booth family settling along Chocolate Bayou in 1857. By 1877, the arrival of the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railroad marked…
-
Ellender, Joseph William
· 17.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a remarkable life, that of Joseph William Ellender. Born in Britain in 1840, Ellender’s journey to Texas was anything but ordinary. Shipwrecked off Iceland in 1866, he was rescued by a…
-
Galilee Missionary Baptist Church
· 17.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Acres Homes, a Houston neighborhood that really took off in the early 1900s, thanks to affordable land sales. By the 1930s, it was a thriving African American community. And right here, Galilee…
-
Crosby, TX
· 17.6 mi
Crosby has worn three names, and the original was the most colorful. Early travelers knew this spot as Lick Skillet, the story being that ox-team drivers camped here, drank the sweet spring water, and licked their…
-
Greater Ward A.M.E. Church
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Greater Ward A.M.E. Church, the oldest African Methodist Episcopal congregation in Houston's Acres Homes community. Organized in February 1913 and named for Bishop Thomas M. D. Ward, its…
-
Acres Homes Community
· 17.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Houston, and we're passing through a piece of history: Acres Homes. Back in 1910, land developer Alfred A. Wright started selling parcels of land for cheap, attracting African Americans looking…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Manvel (Manvel)
· 17.7 mi
Manvel (Manvel, TX) placed on the 6A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Christian Hamilton (5 HR).
-
McNerney, David Herbert
· 17.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Crosby, Texas, home of a true American hero. On March 22, 1967, First Sergeant David McNerney was leading his company near Polei Doc in Vietnam when they were ambushed. Outnumbered and facing heavy…
-
Jackson, Humphrey
· 17.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Harris County, near Crosby. Right here, in September of 1823, Humphrey Jackson, an Irishman and one of Stephen F. Austin's original Old Three Hundred colonists, built a log cabin. He'd…
-
Crosby, TX
· 17.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Crosby, a community named for a railroad engineer. Right here, back in 1865, Charlie Karcher opened the first store, and this spot quickly became a hub for shipping lumber and farm goods. A post…
-
Willowridge High School (T.J. Ford)
· 18.0 mi
Willowridge High School near Houston (in Fort Bend County) is where T.J. Ford led the team to a 75-1 record over his final two seasons and two state titles. At the University of Texas he won both the Naismith and Wooden…
-
Hunters Creek Village, TX
· 18.1 mi
Hunters Creek Village takes its name from the creek that winds through it down to Buffalo Bayou, and here is the honest part: no record explains who the Hunter was, or whether there even was one. The history books, the…
-
Crosby's Czech Roots and the Town Once Called Lick Skillet
· 18.1 mi
You're in Crosby, a town with Czech roots and a skillet in its past. After the railroad era began, immigrant families from Slovakia, Bohemia, and Moravia settled the farmland here, and their family names still mark the…
-
Crosby: An Old Three Hundred Settler and a Town That Changed Its Name
· 18.1 mi
You're in Crosby, on land settled two centuries ago by one of Stephen F. Austin's Old Three Hundred colonists. Humphrey Jackson, an Irish-born settler, built a log cabin on the San Jacinto River about a half-mile west…
-
Near Home Site of John Peter Sjolander
· 18.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Cedar Bayou, and just ahead is the area where John Peter Sjolander once lived. He arrived in Texas in 1871, a young Swede who'd jump ship in Galveston Bay to escape a cruel captain. He found…
-
Confederate Cemetery
· 18.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Confederate Cemetery in Alvin. Established in the 1890s by John A. Wharton Camp, U.C.V., this was originally a burial ground for Confederate veterans and their families. Later, its use was…
-
Hilshire Village, TX
· 18.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Hilshire Village, a tiny incorporated community west of Houston. Its story really begins in the late 1940s, when Frank Bruess bought thirty acres here. On a trip to Boston, he read about a place…
-
Hilshire Village, TX
· 18.3 mi
Hilshire Village got its name from an English country estate that its founder never even visited. In the late 1940s a developer from Missouri named Frank Bruess bought thirty acres out here and started planning a…
-
Aldine, TX
· 18.3 mi
Aldine's identity is inextricably linked to its namesake, a woman whose presence helped shape the nascent community. The story begins with the construction of the International-Great Northern Railroad through the area…
-
Alvin, TX
· 18.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Alvin, a town that owes its start to a railroad man named Alvin Morgan. Back in the 1870s, Morgan was hired to oversee cattle shipments for the Santa Fe Railroad. He built the first house here in…
-
Richardson, Stephen
· 18.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Brazoria County, and right here, Stephen Richardson, one of Stephen F. Austin's original colonists, faced disaster and rebuilt. Shipwrecked near the Brazos River mouth in 1822, he made…
-
Bacliff, TX
· 18.4 mi · Local history
Bacliff, Texas, a narrow strip of land between Galveston Bay and the mainland, has always been a place where the wind carries whispers of ambition. It's a landscape that shapes a certain kind of resilience, perhaps…
-
Stanton, George Elliott
· 18.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Alvin, George Elliott Stanton took a humble wood and coal yard and transformed it into the first shopping center in town. He and his father started E.J. Stanton and Son back in 1921, selling fuel. By 1922,…
-
Kinkaid School
· 18.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Kinkaid School, Houston's oldest private school, but it started with a real roadblock for its founder. Margaret Hunter Kinkaid wanted to teach, but a rule said married women couldn't work in…
-
First United Methodist Church of Dickinson
· 18.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the First United Methodist Church of Dickinson. Methodists started meeting in homes here way back in 1876. They built their first church and school in 1885, but a devastating storm wiped…
-
42 Inches in One Day: The Night Alvin Set America's Rainfall Record
· 18.6 mi
Tropical Storm Claudette stalled after landfall on July 24, 1979, pinned by a blocking ridge, and unloaded on the coastal plain. An observer in Alvin measured 42 inches of rain in 24 hours on July 25-26, 1979, a new…
-
Nolan Ryan Hometown - Alvin
· 18.6 mi · Historical Marker
Lynn Nolan Ryan Jr. grew up delivering newspapers from a bicycle in this quiet Gulf Coast town south of Houston, and his right arm would become the most feared weapon in baseball history. He threw harder than anyone who…
-
Dickinson Station of the GH&H Railroad
· 18.6 mi · Historical Marker
Hey road-trippers! You're cruising past the site of Dickinson Station, but this spot is more than just a stop on the line. It's the heart of the Galveston, Houston, and Henderson Railroad, chartered way back in 1853.…
-
Townsite of Dickinson
· 18.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Dickinson, the oldest mainland settlement in Galveston County! It all started back in 1821, when John Dickinson, one of Stephen F. Austin's 'Old 300' settlers, claimed this land. The townsite itself…
-
Dickinson, TX
· 18.8 mi
Dickinson is a place shaped by the water that surrounds it. Dickinson Bayou, winding its way to Galveston Bay, is more than just a pretty waterway; it’s the lifeblood of the area, and sometimes, its tormentor. Founded…
-
George Washington Carver High School
· 18.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of George Washington Carver High School, a place that tells a story of growth and change in Houston's Acres Homes community. It started in 1915 as a one-room schoolhouse, serving the area's…
-
Cummings - Smith House
· 18.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Cummings-Smith House, a Victorian beauty with a story of survival. After the devastating 1900 Galveston hurricane wiped out his home, banker Oscar Cummings decided to rebuild. He hired Booth and…
-
Spring Valley Village, TX
· 18.8 mi
Spring Valley Village is named for a place it is not, because the name it wanted was taken. This was Spring Branch, heart of the German farm settlement that grew up along Spring Branch Creek starting in 1848, families…
-
First Presbyterian Church of alvin
· 18.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Alvin, and right here is the site of the First Presbyterian Church. Its story starts back in 1890, when families moved here for farm work. Among them were Presbyterians who, with help from the…
-
Birchfield - McCown House
· 18.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past the Birchfield-McCown House in Alvin, a Victorian beauty built in 1894 by A.J. Birchfield, the first editor of the Alvin Sun. This grand 12-room house wasn't just a home; it was a sanctuary. During…
-
Dickinson, TX
· 18.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Dickinson, a town with a sweet story. Back in 1899, a group of Sicilian Italians, displaced by floods, found a new home here. They were welcomed by the Italian Consul, who saw Dickinson's…
-
Fresno, TX
· 18.9 mi · Local history
This community's story is one of steady growth, particularly in recent decades. The area began with land patented in 1880, once surrounded by cotton plantations. A post office arrived in 1910, and by 1914, it had a…
-
Piney Point Village, TX
· 18.9 mi
Piney Point Village carries one of the oldest place names in Harris County. A grove of tall pines stood at a southward bend of Buffalo Bayou, and on the flat, nearly featureless prairie those trees could be seen for…
-
Evergreen Cemetery
· 19.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past where Henry Runge laid out the town of Arcadia back in 1890, near Hall's Station. Soon after, Evergreen Cemetery was established to serve this growing community. The first known burial was Susan…
-
Alvin High School (Nolan Ryan)
· 19.1 mi
Alvin High School (802 South Johnson St., Alvin, TX) launched Nolan Ryan, baseball's all-time strikeout king. In the spring of 1965 he went 19-3 with 211 strikeouts and carried the Alvin Yellow Jackets to the Texas…
-
Saltgrass: The Steakhouse Named for a Grass
· 19.1 mi
The first Saltgrass Steak House opened in March 1991 along the Katy Freeway — Interstate 10 — in Houston. Its name traces back through the Salt Grass Trail to the real thing: salt grass, a hardy grass of the Texas Gulf…
-
Beach City, TX
· 19.3 mi
Beach City, Texas, a quiet community nestled along Galveston Bay, has seen its share of notable figures pass through its sandy streets. While it might not boast a Hollywood Walk of Fame, the area has been a backdrop for…
-
Kinkaid - 2025 Texas SPC Division 4A state football champion
· 19.3 mi · Sports News
You're near The Kinkaid School in Piney Point Village, on Houston's west side. Last December, the Falcons beat Bellaire Episcopal thirty-one to twenty-one to win the S P C Division four A state football championship.…
-
Old City Cemetery
· 19.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Alvin's Old City Cemetery, which became Oak Park Cemetery in 1953. Established as the city's first burial ground, it was acquired by the city in 1892. Look for the oldest readable stone, marking the…
-
The First Cabin in the Dark
· 19.4 mi
Long before the Memorial Villages, this was raw prairie and pine. In eighteen-thirty-nine a German immigrant named Jacob Schroeder took a six-hundred-forty-acre Republic of Texas land grant and built a log cabin right…
-
Dyer House, Old, 1890
· 19.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past the Old Dyer House, a Victorian beauty built way back in 1890. Imagine this: J. T. Dyer, the builder, was hammering away with square nails, using heart pine and cypress. But things got dangerous!…
-
Aldine's Wandering Headstone
· 19.5 mi
Here's a true Aldine mystery. Around two-thousand-one, a man walked into the Northeast News office out on Aldine Mail Route Road carrying a hundred-pound marble headstone — German inscription, a pair of clasped hands…
-
Aldine: When North Houston Was Fig Country
· 19.5 mi
You're in Aldine, which began as a stop called Prairie Switch on the International-Great Northern Railroad, whose tracks came through in 1873; the Aldine post office followed in 1896. Around the turn of the century,…
-
Alvin, TX
· 19.5 mi · Local history
Alvin remembers Allison. While the city is known as the birthplace of Nolan Ryan, and for its strong baseball tradition at Alvin High, it’s hard to talk about Alvin without acknowledging the devastation from Tropical…
-
Aldine
· 19.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Aldine, Texas, a place that once bloomed with figs and oranges. The railroad rolled in back in 1873, bringing settlers, many of Swedish descent, to this fertile land. They cultivated Satsuma oranges,…
-
Hedwig Village, TX
· 19.6 mi
Hedwig Village is named for an actual Hedwig: Hedwig Jankowski Schroeder, who arrived from Germany in 1906, a young woman coming to Houston to join her sister, who ran a hotel and saloon. That same year she married…
-
Hedwig Village, TX
· 19.6 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Hedwig Village, a small community just west of Houston. Its story starts with Hedwig Jankowski, who came all the way from Germany in 1906. She settled here, met and married Henry Schroeder, and…
-
The Spring and the Millpond
· 19.7 mi
Piney Point was a grove of pines on a bend of Buffalo Bayou, a landmark on the old San Felipe-to-Harrisburg trail. In eighteen-twenty-four, John D. Taylor took the westernmost of Stephen F. Austin's 'Old Three Hundred'…
-
Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Aldine (Houston)
· 19.7 mi
Aldine (Houston, TX) placed on the 6A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Raul Careaga (0.429 avg); Jansyel Barbosa (3 HR).
-
Texas HS Baseball Playoff Leaders 2026: Spring Branch Memorial (Houston)
· 19.7 mi
Spring Branch Memorial (Houston) put 5 players on the statewide leaderboards of the 2026 Texas high school baseball playoffs. Ben Fuqua had the 2nd-fewest hits allowed per inning in the state. Wyatt Baskin had the…
-
St. Peter Church
· 19.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past St. Peter Church in Houston, a place with roots stretching back to 1848. That's when five German immigrant families founded this congregation. They started in a log cabin in 1854, but by 1864, this…
-
First Methodist Church of Alvin
· 19.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the First Methodist Church of Alvin, a congregation that's been serving this community for over a century. It all started back in 1881 when a traveling preacher, Reverend Peter Nicholson, founded the…
-
San Leon
· 19.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past San Leon, a peninsula with a history as varied as the bays surrounding it. Amos Edwards and his family were the first Anglo settlers here in 1828. By 1837, a townsite was platted, but it faded back…
-
Duke Community
· 20.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Arcola, and just ahead is the site of Duke, a community that boomed thanks to sugar. Back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1824</say-as>, settlers like David Fitzgerald and Thomas Barnett, a…
-
Daniel Perry
· 20.0 mi · Historical Marker
Driving through Arcola, you're passing the story of Daniel Perry, a man who wore many hats in early Texas. Born in Mississippi in 1791, Perry arrived in Texas in 1832. He fought in the Texas Army at the decisive Battle…
-
The Fitzgerald and Fenn Families
· 20.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Arcola area, once home to the Fitzgerald and Fenn families, pioneers who arrived in Texas as early as 1821. David Fitzgerald, a veteran of two wars, came first. His son-in-law, Eli Fenn, arrived…