185 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
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Perryville, TX
· Local history
Perryville, Texas, isn't known for skyscrapers or bustling city life. What defines us is the land, and what comes from it. Ranching and farming have been the heartbeat of this town since its very beginning. Situated at…
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Perryville Baptist Church
· Historical Marker
In June 1884 five neighbors gathered to organize the County Line Missionary Baptist Church of Wood County. One month later charter members W. F. Bailey, J. M. Richards, S. M. Lindsey, Mrs. L. T. Bailey, and Mrs. Martha…
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Perryville Methodist Church
· 0.1 mi · Historical Marker
This rural congregation was organized in 1879 by 38 charter members as the Marvin Chapel Methodist Episcopal Church. The Reverend A. K. Hughes served as the first pastor. J. D. Hallonquist donated land to the church in…
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Soules Chapel Methodist Church
· 5.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Soules Chapel Methodist Church, a name with a direct link to one of Methodism's founding figures. <break time="400ms"/> Bishop Joshua Soule, the first bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South,…
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Smyrna Baptist Church
· 6.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving near Winnsboro, where the Smyrna Baptist Church was organized in June of 1869. It started with 18 members meeting under a pine tree. Later, in 1878, a Sabbath school was organized, and their original…
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Shady Grove Cemetery
· 6.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Shady Grove Cemetery, one of Wood County's oldest burial grounds. It started with pioneer settlers like Reuben Elledge, who arrived around <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1845</say-as>.…
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Little Hope Missionary Baptist Church
· 7.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Little Hope Missionary Baptist Church, organized in 1881 by Elder Jacob Ziegler and Deacon P. M. Gunstream. Legend says the church got its name because folks doubted it would last, but it…
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Chalybeate Springs
· 7.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Chalybeate Springs, once a booming resort community. Known first as Musgrove Springs for an early settler, these waters got their later name from a high iron content. In 1881, a…
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Winnsborro, TX
· 7.5 mi
Winnsboro, Texas, might seem like just another small town tucked away in the Piney Woods, but it has a surprisingly rich history of producing remarkable individuals. It’s the kind of place where the Friday night lights…
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Rhonesboro
· 7.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Rhonesboro, a town that boomed and busted with the timber industry. Founded in 1902, it was named for W. M. Rhone, the sole sawmill operator here before the railroad arrived. Suddenly,…
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Matinburg Cemetery
· 7.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Matinburg Cemetery. Local tradition says it started in 1871 when W. P. Jones buried his wife, Delila, here. The land was deeded to Fairview Baptist Church in 1883, and annual spring cleanups…
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Stout, Captain Henry
· 7.8 mi · Historical Marker
Henry Stout came to Texas in 1818 from Tennessee. Reported to have helped David Crockett plan his route to the Alamo, he served in the Republic of Texas Army in 1836, and from 1839 to 1845 was Captain of a Texas Ranger…
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Ferndale Club
· 8.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising past the site of the Ferndale Club, originally called Fern, Fin and Feathers. It started in 1908 as a hunting and fishing club, with members from Pittsburg buying land, building a dam to create Ferndale…
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Harmony I.S.D.
· 8.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Enon, and right here is the site of Harmony Independent School District. Imagine the effort back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1929</say-as> to bring together rural schools from Wood…
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East Point Missionary Baptist Church
· 8.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of East Point Missionary Baptist Church near Winnsboro. Land was donated in 1878 for a church and school. The church itself was established in 1893 by twelve charter members, with services…
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Leesburg Cemetery
· 9.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Leesburg Cemetery, established around 1870. Dwight Hays Townsend donated the land, and the earliest burials are thought to be two children moved from the schoolyard. The oldest marked grave belongs…
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Enon Baptist Church
· 9.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Enon Baptist Church, organized way back on May 13, 1848, in the home of M. S. Long. Charter members included the Davis and Knight families. The original log building was replaced by this…
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Rosewood Cemetery
· 9.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're passing Rosewood Cemetery, born from a railroad boom and a family's grief. When the Marshall and East Texas Railroad cut through here in 1907, the town of Rosewood was organized. A four-year-old boy, Denny Dell…
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Rosewood Baptist Church
· 9.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Rosewood Baptist Church, originally organized in 1872 as Double Springs Baptist Church. When the railroad came through and a town was platted, it was renamed Rosewood Baptist Church in…
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Clearwater Baptist Church
· 9.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving near the site of the Clearwater Baptist Church. Organized in 1869 by Elisha Blanton and nine others, the congregation followed a sawmill owner when he relocated around 1875. They eventually built their…
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Little Mound Baptist Church and Cemetery
· 9.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Little Mound Baptist Church and Cemetery, a place with roots stretching back to the 1860s. The oldest marked grave here belongs to E. Hoggue, who died in 1877. Just a year later, in 1878, the…
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Lee Cemetery
· 9.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Wood County, heading towards Quitman. About 1853, Benjamin and Alice Lee, fresh from North Carolina, settled here and bought over 1200 acres. They ran a massive cotton plantation, using slave…
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First Presbyterian Church of Winnsboro
· 9.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Winnsboro's First Presbyterian Church. Organized in 1871 with former members of the Webster Presbyterian church, their first building was on land donated by Nancy Cook. The congregation…
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Suiter, Mary Elizabeth
· 9.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
Mary Elizabeth Suiter, attorney and state legislator, was born in Winnsboro, Wood, County, Texas, on October 6, 1911. She was the only child of Minnie Bell (Stutsman) Suiter and William David Suiter. She graduated from…
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Carlock Home
· 9.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Carlock Home, built in 1903 by Marcus DeWitt Carlock, Sr. This wasn't just any mansion; Carlock was a prominent attorney, a Confederate courier, and a political leader who even served as a member…
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Winnsboro, TX
· 9.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
Winnsboro (Winnsborough), an incorporated city, is at the junction of State highways 11 and 37, fifteen miles northeast of Quitman in northeastern Wood County and extends into Franklin County. The town, first settled in…
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Oak Hill Missionary Baptist Church
· 10.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Oak Hill Missionary Baptist Church. Organized around 1870, this was the very first Baptist congregation in the Gilmer area. Services kicked off in a humble log schoolhouse nearby. In…
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City Park
· 10.1 mi
City Park in Winnsboro began as a Caddo campground shaded by century-old oaks and fed by a spring. Acquired by Uncle Charlie Moore in eighteen eighty-eight and later A. H. Schluter, it became known as the showplace of…
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First Baptist Church of Winnsboro
· 10.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Winnsboro, where the First Baptist Church began as Providence Baptist in 1872. They changed their name in 1880 and built a sanctuary here in 1904, which was later replaced in 1960. A famous…
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Lankford-Stinson House
· 10.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Lankford-Stinson House in Winnsboro. Built around the early 1890s for a local merchant, this grand home wasn't always this size. It was expanded and remodeled into its current, stately form in…
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Winnsboro Cemetery, Old
· 10.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Old Winnsboro Cemetery, one of the oldest resting places in East Texas. The first burial here was an accident victim, though the exact date is lost to time. The earliest marked grave belongs to…
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Reeves Chapel
· 10.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Pittsburg, Camp County, where a community faced a problem in 1879: no place to bury their dead. Counce Reeves, a Civil War veteran, and his wife Selina stepped up, donating land for both a church…
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New Hope Baptist Church
· 10.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of New Hope Baptist Church, organized in 1875 with 30 members. The congregation met in homes and under brush arbors, with baptisms in Stout's Creek. The church faced funding struggles and…
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New Mine Cemetery
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the New Mine Cemetery, established by the New Mine Baptist Church. Land was deeded in 1892, but the congregation didn't start its own burial ground until 1930, with James M. Quillin as the first to…
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New Mine Baptist Church
· 11.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the New Mine Baptist Church. This congregation was officially organized on September 11, 1892, after Mr. and Mrs. G. O. Hart gave land for a new building. The church was founded so…
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Kelsey Mormon Colony
· 11.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Kelsey, a town with roots in faith and community building. Back in 1898, brothers John and Jim Edgar bought this timber land, paving the way for a Mormon settlement. By 1901, Sunday School and…
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Alex Earp
· 11.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Gilmer, and you're passing the final resting place of Alex Earp. Now, this isn't that Earp, but he was a lawman in his own right. Born in Alabama in 1832, Alex moved to Texas with his family, who…
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Cherokee Trace
· 12.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Camp County, and you're on the historic Cherokee Trace. This wasn't just any path; it was a vital Indian trading route laid out by the Cherokee people themselves, stretching all the way to…
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Bettie Methodist Church
· 12.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Bettie, and right here is the site of the Bettie Methodist Church. Organized in 1892, this sanctuary was built mainly by the Parish brothers, Jeff and Hillard. It's said to be one of the first…
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Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church
· 12.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving by the site of Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church, one of the oldest fellowships in Wood County. It began as Holly Springs Baptist Church of Christ, with its first meeting in 1853 at the home of pastor J. D. J.…
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Shelby, Carroll Hall
· 12.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
Born on January 11, 1923, in Leesburg, Camp County, Texas, Carroll Hall Shelby was a famous automobile driver and designer and, prior to his death, one of the world's longest-living heart transplant recipients. He was…
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Pilgrim, Lonnie Alfred [Bo]
· 12.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, near Pine, where a young man named Lonnie Alfred "Bo" Pilgrim got his start. Born in 1928, he grew up poor, working his grandmother's farm and raising his first chickens. After a stint…
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Harvard, TX
· 12.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Camp County, near Pittsburg, on Highway 271. Right here is where Harvard began, not as a town, but as a railroad switch. In the late 1870s, the St. Louis Southwestern Railway laid track through…
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County Line, TX (Camp County)
· 12.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through far southeastern Camp County, near the Upshur and Morris county lines. Right here is the former community of County Line, named for its location right on the border. By 1884, settlers here were…
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Ebenezer, TX (Camp County)
· 12.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Ebenezer, a farming community founded in the 1850s by families like the Rapes, Devenports, and Laneys, who moved here from Georgia. Israel Braden Rape even donated land for a…
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Leesburg, TX
· 12.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Camp County, heading west of Pittsburg. Right here is Leesburg, a community named for the John Lee family who settled this area. Back in 1874, Leesburg was in the running to become the county…
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Pine, TX
· 12.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what's left of Pine, Texas, a community that's worn a few different hats over the years. It started as Pine Tree in the late 1840s, named for the abundant pines. Then the railroad showed up in the…
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Prairie Creek (Camp County)
· 12.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Camp County, and right here, Prairie Creek flows. Back in 1928, a man named A. W. Smith had a big idea to connect Prairie Creek with another nearby creek, Greasy Creek. He dug a mile-and-a-half…
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Union, TX (Camp County)
· 12.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what remains of Union, a community born from a schoolhouse. Back in the early 1900s, kids in this part of Camp County trekked to separate, one-room schools. But in 1907, folks decided to build a…
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Yellow Bush, TX
· 12.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Camp County, and right here, you're passing the former site of Yellow Bush. It started in the 1870s around a schoolhouse, built by settlers who called the area Yallo Busha, an Indian term meaning…
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Hopewell Church and Cemetery
· 13.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Hopewell Church, established in 1855. It started with a brush arbor and log house before moving to this three-acre plot donated in 1876 for church and cemetery use. The church building…
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Gilmer
· 13.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of early Gilmer, right where the Cherokee Trace used to run. Imagine this spot in 1845 – an oak tree served as the very first Upshur County courthouse! Just a year later, in 1846, Judge O.…
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Texas HS Baseball Leaders 2026: Pittsburg (Pittsburg)
· 13.9 mi
Pittsburg (Pittsburg, TX) placed on the 4A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Lane Hall (3 HR); Keyton Mayben (3 HR).
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Ezekiel Airship, The
· 14.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Pittsburg, Texas, where a Baptist minister named Burrell Cannon had a dream of flight. In late 1902, a full year before the Wright brothers, Cannon and his investors launched the Ezekiel Airship…
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Cotton Belt Depot
· 14.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Pittsburg, and right here is the old Cotton Belt Depot. The railroad first rolled into town in 1880, thanks in part to William Harrison Pitts, the city's founder, who donated land for a depot way…
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Shootout at the Pittsburg Depot
· 14.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a deadly confrontation at the Pittsburg Depot on February 10th, 1885. It started as a domestic dispute between George 'Dallas' Smart, his wife Annie, and U.S. Army Lt. John W. Heard. As…
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Stafford-Paris House
· 14.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Pittsburg, and if you look closely, you might spot the Stafford-Paris House, a beautiful Victorian built in 1899 for Eugene Fore. It's known for its ornate gingerbread woodwork. In 1913, it became…
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Lake Fork Reservoir
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, and right here is Lake Fork Reservoir. It might look like just a big body of water, but it was built for a very specific purpose: to supply water for industry and cities like Dallas…
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Hainesville, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, not far from Quitman, and right here in Hainesville, a mystery from Texas history might be buried beneath your tires. Back in the 1870s, construction workers digging for a mill…
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Holly Springs, TX (Wood County)
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, and right here, you're passing through the area where Holly Springs once stood. This community owes its existence to Peter Magnus Gunstream, a Swedish immigrant and one of the…
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Little Hope, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through eastern Wood County, near Quitman, where the community of Little Hope got its name. In 1881, settlers organized the Little Hope Missionary Baptist Church. Legend has it, they named it that because…
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Speer, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through eastern Wood County, near where the community of Speer once stood. It all started in the early 1840s when Baptist minister Prescott Davis settled here, building bridges over Big Sandy Creek. But…
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Stout, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, near the community of Stout. It all started around 1848, when Captain Henry Stout, one of the earliest settlers, arrived. He wasn't just a settler; he was the first county sheriff and…
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Site of First Carnegie Library in Texas
· 14.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Pittsburg, and right here is the site of the very first Carnegie Library in Texas! Back in 1898, philanthropist Andrew Carnegie donated five thousand dollars to help build it, matching local…
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Bolton Cemetery
· 14.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Camp County, near Pittsburg, where a story of freedom and community unfolds. Back in the 1850s, Ebenezer and Martha Bolton were major plantation owners here. But after Ebenezer's death in 1877,…
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Cloverhill, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, and right here, just a mile north of Cloverhill, was the site of a major oil discovery. In 1943, Bobby Manziel struck oil, kicking off a brief boom for this small community. The…
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Redlands, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, not far from Quitman, and you're passing through the site of Redlands. This community has roots stretching back to the Martin Varner land grant, possibly the earliest white settlement…
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Taddlock Site
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, near the waters of Lake Fork. Right here, over a thousand years ago, was a bustling Caddoan settlement known as the Taddlock Site. Between the years 1037 and 1070, people lived and…
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Webster, TX (Wood County)
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, and right here is the site of Webster, one of the oldest settlements in this area. It all started back in 1854 when Gilbert Smith Matthews bought this land and named it after…
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W.L. Garrett Building
· 14.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Pittsburg, and right here is the W.L. Garrett Building, a landmark that's been part of this town since the 1890s. It started as a simple one-story shop. Then, in 1902, W.L. Garrett bought it for…
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Pittsburg
· 14.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Pittsburg, a town named for one of its earliest settlers. The W. H. Pitts family arrived from Georgia way back in 1854, and soon more folks followed. Pitts himself donated land for a townsite, and it…
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Cartwright, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Cartwright, Texas, way out in Wood County. It wasn't always called Cartwright. Back in the 1850s, settlers called this place 'The Barrens' because it was so isolated and full of…
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Coke, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, heading north of Quitman. Right here is the site of Coke, a community that owes its existence to a black rock. Coal was discovered nearby, and by 1885, this spot had a post office…
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Crow, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, heading southeast of Quitman, and you're passing through the community of Crow. <break time="400ms"/> It started back in 1876 as Graham, a stop on the railroad. <break time="400ms"/>…
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Fouke, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, heading towards Lake Hawkins. Right here, you're passing through the community of Fouke. It started around 1873 as a Black community called Center, with a log building serving as…
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Golden Rule, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, near where a community once known as Greer's Neighborhood sprung up. It was likely named for Gaines Greer, an early landowner and sawmill owner. By 1864, a Baptist church was…
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Golden, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Golden, Texas, a community that owes its start to the railroad. Back in the late 1870s, a sawmill kicked things off, but it was the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad building through in 1881…
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Hoard, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through southern Wood County, and right here is Hoard, once known as Democrat. Before 1870, a schoolhouse called Democrat stood here. The community likely took its name from Hoard's Mill, which operated…
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Mount Pisgah, TX (Wood County)
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Mount Pisgah, a rural community in Wood County. Its story really starts in 1853, not here, but in the nearby community of Holly Springs. That's where the Holly Springs Baptist Church…
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Ogburn, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through eastern Wood County, not far from Quitman. Right here is the site of Ogburn, originally known as Jim Hogg. It all started around 1900 when J.W. Ogburn operated a sawmill. By 1908, Ogburn himself…
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Peach, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, in what was once the community of Peach, also known as Genevie Switch or Elberta. This place owes its existence to timber, specifically the W. G. Ragley Lumber Company. They built a…
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Perryville, TX (Wood County)
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, and right here is Perryville. This community sprung up around the intersection of Farm roads 2088 and 852, eight miles southeast of Winnsboro. Its story really begins in 1853, when…
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Pine Mills, TX
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, near Quitman, on what's now Farm roads 14, 49, and 312. This area wasn't always called Pine Mills. Back in the 1850s, it was known as Liberty Hill, home to a sawmill and a church. By…
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Pleasant Grove, TX (Wood County)
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, heading west of Winnsboro. Right here is the site of Pleasant Grove. It started in 1872, likely named for the big oak trees, when Henry Robinson opened a blacksmith shop. By 1896, it…
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Rock Hill, TX (Wood County)
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, heading north of Quitman. You're passing through the area once known as Rock Hill. Settled as early as 1850 by Andrew Gilbreath, the community got its name from a local geological…
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Smith, TX (Wood County)
· 14.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, near Hawkins, and you might just pass through the old community of Smith. It was also known as Terrapin Neck, named by P.M. Faulk because of all the terrapins on his land near Big…
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Pittsburg, TX
· 14.3 mi · Local history
Pittsburg has always been a town shaped by nature and resilience. You see it in the loblolly pines that surround us, constantly growing back after timber harvests. You see it in the spirit of bouncing back after those…
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Camp County Courthouse
· 14.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Pittsburg, the county seat of Camp County. This impressive courthouse you see was built in 1928, replacing an earlier structure from 1881 that had become too small for the growing county. Designed…
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Pleasant Grove School & Cemetery
· 14.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Pleasant Grove School. Land for this community school and its cemetery was donated in the 1870s, and the school grew from a log cabin to larger buildings. Professor D. Speer named it…
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Cash, Christine Benton
· 14.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, maybe near Pittsburg, and right here is a story of dedication. Christine Cash took over as principal of the Center Point school in 1911. Under her leadership, this community school…
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Pittsburg, TX
· 14.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Pittsburg, Texas, a town with a surprisingly lofty ambition around the turn of the 20th century. In 1901, local mechanic and minister Burrell B. Cannon, inspired by the Book of Ezekiel, built an…
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Sheppard, John L., Home
· 14.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the former home of John L. Sheppard, a prominent Texas figure. The Sheppard family lived in this house from 1884 until 1891. During that time, John L. Sheppard served as both a district attorney and…
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Lightfoot, Jewel Preston
· 14.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Camp County, not far from Pittsburg. Right here is where Jewel Preston Lightfoot, a Texas attorney general, started his legal career. After studying law while working as a telegrapher, he became…
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Rogers, Augustus H.
· 14.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what is now Camp County, Texas, near Pittsburg. Back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1862</say-as>, this was Camp Murrah, where Augustus H. Rogers, a twenty-three-year-old captain, was…
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Camp County
· 14.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Camp County, Texas's third smallest. It was carved out of Upshur County back in 1874. The county seat election that year was a real nail-biter, with Pittsburg winning out over Leesburg and Center…
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Phillips, Charles Thomas
· 14.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Camp County, not far from Pittsburg, where Charles Thomas Phillips served in the Texas House of Representatives. He was a farmer and a Confederate soldier before entering politics. Phillips…
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Harmony Methodist Church and Cemetery
· 14.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Pickton, and just ahead is Harmony Methodist Church and Cemetery. It all started in 1877 when landowner Jesse Odom convinced a traveling preacher to hold a revival. A congregation formed, and by…
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Cypress Church and Cemetery
· 14.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Cypress Church and Cemetery, founded in 1851 as the Associated Cypress Baptist Church. The congregation built a meetinghouse here, and the site also served as a burial ground. Confederate…
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Rockhill Cemetery
· 15.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Rockhill Cemetery, a quiet link to a community that once thrived here. Settled after the Civil War, Rockhill saw many young lives cut short, with childhood mortality being tragically high. The…
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2023 UIL 4A Division 2 Football State Champions
· 15.1 mi
Gilmer High School (Gilmer, TX): Most recent: 28-26 over Bellville · 2023 4A Division 2 final.
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King, Freddie
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, not far from Gilmer, the birthplace of blues legend Freddie King. Born Freddie Christian in 1934, he was playing guitar by age six. After moving to Chicago, he honed his raw,…
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Camp, John Lafayette, Jr.
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texas, maybe not far from Gilmer, where John Lafayette Camp, Jr. got his start. He became a judge, and in 1912, he made a decision that saved the Alamo. Governor Colquitt wanted to turn the shrine…
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Pierson, William
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, and right here, in Gilmer, Texas, a life that would shape state law came to an end in a shocking tragedy. William Pierson, a future Texas Supreme Court Justice, was born in this town…
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Roberts, Meshack
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Harrison County, near Gilmer, where a remarkable man named Meshack Roberts once lived. Born into slavery, Roberts was given land after the Civil War and built a home for his family. But in the…
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Stamps Quartet
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're cruising through North Texas, maybe not too far from Gilmer, where a musical legacy began. Back in 1924, brothers Virgil and Frank Stamps founded the Stamps Quartet. They weren't just singers; they were…
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Camp, John Lafayette
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, perhaps near Gilmer, where John Lafayette Camp made his home. When the Civil War broke out, Camp, already a lawyer and planter, answered the call. He rose to become colonel of the…
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Dickson, William L.
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, perhaps near Gilmer. Back in the late 1800s and early 1900s, this area was home to a remarkable institution: the Dickson Colored Orphan's Home. It was spearheaded by Reverend William…
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Earp, Cullen Redwine
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Upshur County, not far from Gilmer, the home of Cullen Redwine Earp. He was a Confederate officer who fought in over twenty engagements, including Chickamauga and Atlanta. Earp was promoted to…
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Gilmer, TX
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Gilmer, Texas, a town with a name that came from a tragic accident way back in 1844. Right here, in what is now Upshur County, the county seat was to be named for Thomas W. Gilmer. He was a…
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Looney School
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Upshur County, near Gilmer, the site of the Looney School. Established in 1861 by Morgan H. Looney, this wasn't just any school. It was a bustling academy, averaging 200 students annually. They…
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State Colored Orphans' Home
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here, south of Gilmer in Upshur County, you're passing the site of the State Colored Orphans' Home. It began in 1900, founded by African American Baptists who wanted to create a safe haven. Initially known as the…
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Glasco, Jesse Martin
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Upshur County, near Gilmer, where Jesse Martin Glasco made his mark. Born in Tennessee in 1818, Glasco arrived in Texas and became a key figure in this region. For decades, he served as Upshur…
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Upshur Masonic College
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Gilmer, you're driving past the site of a school that had a few names and a few owners! It started in 1851 as the Gilmer Masonic Female Institute, founded by the local Masons. When their lodge disbanded,…
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Upshur County
· 15.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Upshur County, named for a Secretary of State under President John Tyler. This area has been home to people for thousands of years, from Paleo-Indians to Caddoan and Cherokee tribes. But it was…
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Clover Hill Cemetery
· 15.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Wood County, passing Clover Hill Cemetery. This spot was chosen by settlers from Georgia and Alabama back in 1856, who also built their Baptist Church here. In 1868, a young boy known as 'Little…
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First United Methodist Church of Gilmer
· 15.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Gilmer's First United Methodist Church. Organized around 1852, this congregation established both a men's and a women's academy in the 1850s. The church has occupied this site since 1881,…
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Abner, David, Jr.
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Upshur County, Texas, where in 1881, David Abner Jr. made history. Right here, he became the very first African American to graduate from a Texas institution of higher learning, earning his degree…
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Locke, Matthew F.
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, not far from where Matthew F. Locke established the town of LaFayette back in 1850. Locke wasn't just a planter; he was a Confederate Colonel who raised the Tenth Texas Cavalry.…
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Indian Village
· 15.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of an early Cherokee village, established right here at the start of the 1800s. This settlement was a home for these Native Americans and their associated tribes for decades. But by 1839,…
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Coffeeville, TX
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Upshur County, and right here is the site of Coffeeville. It’s one of East Texas’s oldest settlements, named after the pioneering Coffee family. Back in the mid-1800s, this was a bustling stop for…
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Kelsey, TX
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Upshur County, near Gilmer, and you're passing through the quiet community of Kelsey. It wasn't always this way. In 1901, brothers John and Jim Edgar founded this settlement specifically for…
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Lafayette, TX
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be LaFayette in Upshur County. Back in the late 1800s, this area struck gold... well, iron ore, to be exact! A huge deposit discovered in the early 1890s sparked a real mining boom.…
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Croley Funeral Home
· 15.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Gilmer, passing a business that's served this community for over a century. Back in 1890, J.F. Croley bought a hardware store, and saw a need for more than just nails and hammers. He added…
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Bettie, TX
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Upshur County, and right here is Bettie, Texas. Established in the early 1880s, this community owes its existence to the railroad, specifically the Texas and St. Louis Railway. It was named for…
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Glenwood, TX
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through southeastern Upshur County, near Gilmer. Right here, you're passing through the area once known as Glenwood. It started as a plantation before Texas was even officially organized as a county in…
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Grice, TX
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through western Upshur County, near the Big Woods. This area, once known as Hamil's Chapel for a small Baptist church, got its start in the late 1880s. Around 1890, John J. Grice opened a store and post…
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Latch, TX
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Latch, Texas, a community that sprung up in the late 1880s. Originally called Know, it was renamed Latch in 1894 when the post office opened. The town owes its name to L. A. Latch,…
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Rosewood, TX
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what used to be Rosewood, Texas, out here in Upshur County. This community, probably first settled in the late 1880s, went through a few names before landing on Rosewood in 1902. It really boomed…
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Simpsonville, TX (Upshur County)
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what's left of Simpsonville, Texas, a community that's worn a couple of names. It started as Chelsea in the late 1850s, even had a post office for a hot minute. But by April of 1858, it was…
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West Mountain, TX
· 15.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Upshur County, heading southeast of Gilmer, and you're passing through what's left of West Mountain. Founded by Isaac Moody, one of the first settlers here, it got its name from a nearby rise. A…
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Cherokee Trace
· 15.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the area where one of the first major Texas trails was blazed, not by settlers, but by the Cherokee Nation. Around 1821, they needed a route from Nacogdoches to their reservation in Arkansas. To mark…
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Houston, Sam
· 15.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past a spot where Sam Houston, the legendary Texan, stood and spoke not once, but twice, against secession. Back on June 10th, 1857, as a U.S. Senator, he urged Texas to stay with the Union. Then, in…
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Upshur County, C.S.A.
· 15.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Gilmer, Texas, a town that was a vital hub for the Confederacy during the Civil War. While men and boys fought on distant battlefields, Upshur County became a powerhouse of production. Factories here…
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Leather Factories, C.S.A.
· 15.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Gilmer, Texas, right where the Confederacy was keeping its horses shod and its armies moving. During the Civil War, this area was home to vital leather factories. One plant churned out shoes for…
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Gilmer Mirror
· 15.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Gilmer, and right here is the home of the Gilmer Mirror, the oldest continuous business in Upshur County. It started way back on January 1st, 1877, as the 'Upshur County Democrat.' Over the years,…
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Gilmer, TX
· 15.7 mi
Gilmer, Texas. It's a name that might not ring a bell for everyone, but around here, it's synonymous with Friday night lights and sweet potato pie. You can feel the small-town charm just driving in, past the piney woods…
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Unknown Soldier
· 15.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Morris Cemetery in Gilmer, and right here, you're looking at the final resting place of an Unknown Soldier. This is the first grave in this cemetery, and it belongs to a Confederate soldier who died…
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Concord Cemetery
· 16.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Concord Cemetery, established in the 1870s by settlers of the Concord Community. The earliest marked grave here belongs to Velinda Wood, dated July 31st, 1875. Today, it's the final resting place for…
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Gilgal Baptist Church
· 16.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Gilgal Baptist Church, a place with roots stretching back to 1865. Led by the Rev. John Baptist, the founding members built a brush arbor and chose the name "Gilgal" – the Israelites' first…
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Site of the Pioneer Dickson Orphanage
· 16.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of a truly unique Texas institution: the Pioneer Dickson Orphanage. For thirty years, from 1900 to 1929, this was the *only* home in Texas specifically for African American orphans. Founded…
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Pritchett Normal Institute
· 16.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Gilmer, and just off the road here is the site of the Pritchett Normal Institute. Opened in 1901 by the Maberry brothers, this place wasn't just a school; it was a teacher-training powerhouse. It…
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Monticello Missionary Baptist Church
· 16.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Monticello, a community named for Thomas Jefferson's Virginia home. By the 1890s, it boasted stores, mills, gins, and a brick factory. The Monticello Baptist Church, first referenced in 1878,…
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Pine Hill Cumberland Presbyterian Church and Cemetery
· 16.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving by the site of the Pine Hill Cumberland Presbyterian Church, organized in 1864 by J. G. L. Davis and charter members. The property was acquired in 1883, and several church buildings have stood here, the…
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Quitman, TX
· 16.4 mi · Local history
Quitman sits nestled in the East Texas timberlands, a place where the land rolls just enough to keep things interesting. This part of the state, unlike the flat plains further west, is defined by its gentle hills and…
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Camp, Colonel John L.
· 16.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Pittsburg, and right here is the story of Colonel John L. Camp. He arrived in Texas all the way from Alabama back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1849</say-as>, first practicing law and…
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Gilmer
· 16.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Gilmer, a town that got its start way back in 1846. It's named for Thomas W. Gilmer, a big deal in Washington D.C. who pushed hard for Texas to join the U.S. During the Civil War, Gilmer was a…
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Camp County
· 16.6 mi · Historical Marker
Hey road trippers! You're driving through Camp County, Texas, formed way back in 1874. This whole area was carved out of Upshur County and organized just a few months later the same year. It's named for John Lafayette…
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Macedonia School
· 16.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Wood County, and just ahead is the site of the Macedonia School. Established in 1885, this was one of the very first one-teacher schools in the county. It served the community of Macedonia, later…
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Pleasant Grove Cemetery
· 16.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Pleasant Grove Cemetery, a resting place for many of the pioneer families who settled the Lafayette community in the 1850s. The earliest recorded burial here is little Thomas J. Harrison, who died in…
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Indian Cemetery and Villages
· 17.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Wood County, near Quitman, where the land beneath your wheels might just be ancient history. Back in 1966, road construction unearthed an Indian Cemetery and the remnants of six villages. When…
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New Hope Missionary Baptist Church
· 17.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of New Hope Missionary Baptist Church. Organized in 1855 with 15 members, meetings were initially held in a log schoolhouse. The church received its first building in 1872, and the…
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Light Crust Doughboys Hall of Fame and Museum
· 17.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Quitman, Texas, a town that once celebrated a legendary musical act: the Light Crust Doughboys. Formed in 1931, this band became a powerhouse of western swing music, performing across the country…
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Quitman, TX
· 17.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Quitman, Texas, a town founded in 1850 and named for a governor of Mississippi and a hero of the Mexican War. Quitman's early growth was slow, but it became the center of a political battle in…
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Bowling, Charles Taylor
· 17.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, not far from Quitman, where Charles Taylor Bowling was born in 1891. He spent most of his life in Dallas, working as a draftsman for Texas Power and Light for nearly fifty years. But…
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Governor Jim Hogg City Park and RV Park
· 17.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Quitman, in Wood County, and right here south of downtown is Governor Jim Hogg City Park. It started as Quitman City Park back in 1941, but by 1946, it was named Governor Hogg Shrine State…
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Collins-Haines Home
· 17.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Quitman, and you're passing the site of the first brick structure ever built in Wood County. Look to your right! This home was erected in 1859 by James and Harriet Collins, who came here from…
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Black Oak Baptist Church
· 17.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Black Oak Baptist Church, named for the trees around it. The congregation was organized in 1856 by Elders John J. D. Davis and Daniel Ramsey, with eight charter members. The current…
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First Baptist Church of Quitman
· 17.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Quitman, and right here is the site of the First Baptist Church, but its story starts way back in November of 1850. It was organized by pioneer settlers, and get this – the meeting was led by a…
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Lafayette Cemetery
· 17.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through the Lafayette community, named for Matthew F. Locke's son. Locke deeded land here for a cemetery in 1858, though it already held two family burials. The oldest marked grave is T. E. Montgomery,…
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Ebenezer Cemetery
· 17.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Ebenezer Cemetery, officially established in 1857 when Israel B. Rape deeded land for the burial ground. The oldest known burial here is infant Pairlie Clementine Bailey, who died in September 1870.…
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Hogg, James Stephen
· 17.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Quitman, in the heart of Wood County. Look around – this is where James Stephen Hogg started his incredible journey. Born near Rusk in 1851, Hogg was orphaned young and worked his way up from…
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Wood County Courthouse
· 17.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Quitman, the county seat of Wood County, which was created way back in 1850. This courthouse you see has a fiery history! The first log courthouse was replaced by a frame building that burned down…
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Hastings, Capt. F. Marion
· 17.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the home of Captain F. Marion Hastings, a Confederate veteran who served in raids across Missouri, Arkansas, and Louisiana before surrendering in 1865. He moved to Franklin County, Texas, that same…
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Pleasant Hill Methodist Church and Cemetery
· 17.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Franklin County, near Mt. Vernon. Back around 1850, settlers held Methodist camp meetings near a spring, and a lady's remark about it being a 'pleasant place' led to the name Pleasant Hill. The…
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Hogg, James Stephen, Early Home
· 17.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the early home of James Stephen Hogg, the man who would become governor of Texas. He bought this cottage in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1873</say-as>, right here in Quitman. Young Hogg was…
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Jones, J. H., and the Old Settlers Reunion Grounds
· 17.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the historic Old Settlers Reunion Grounds near Quitman. In 1902, a local merchant and former county clerk, J. H. Jones, donated this land to the Old Settlers of Wood County Association. Founded just…
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Stinson, James A., Home
· 18.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the historic home of James A. Stinson, built right here in 1869. Stinson was a Confederate colonel who came to Texas after the Civil War and became a successful sawmill operator and early scientific…
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Home, TX
· 18.1 mi · Local history
Home, Texas? There isn't one. But Malvern, Arkansas, now that's a place with a story to tell. Situated in the Colorado River watershed – albeit the *other* Colorado River, the one that drains into the Gulf of Mexico –…
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Varner, Martin
· 18.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Wood County, heading towards Mineola. Keep an eye out for a marker honoring Martin Varner. He was a volunteer soldier who fought in the decisive Battle of San Jacinto in 1836, the fight that…
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Jobe Cemetery
· 18.1 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through the Jobe community, founded by African American families who settled here in the late 1800s. Brothers Phelix and Sampson Jobe bought land starting in 1881, setting aside a portion for this…
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Varner, Martin
· 18.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Wood County, and right here is the final resting place of Martin Varner. He came to Texas before 1820, a pioneer who partnered with Henry Jones to run a trading post. Varner was one of Stephen F.…
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Rock Hill Baptist Church
· 18.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Quitman, where the Rock Hill Baptist Church was organized in 1870. It started in a schoolhouse on Coke Road, and the first church building wasn't constructed until 1892. The congregation has…
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Flora Lodge No. 119, A.F. & A.M.
· 18.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Flora Lodge, founded as Quitman Masonic Lodge back in 1852. It was named Flora Lodge on Christmas Day of that same year, and its original furniture cost just over ten dollars. The lodge…
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Hawkins, TX
· 19.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Hawkins, Texas, a town that hit the jackpot back in 1940. Until then, it was a quiet community shipping lumber and cotton. But then, Bobby Manziel drilled a wildcat well just north of town,…
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Jarvis Christian College
· 19.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Hawkins, Texas, home to Jarvis Christian College. What's amazing is that this school, founded in 1912, was the only historically Black college still operating that was founded by the Christian…
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Williams, Lillian Richard
· 19.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, not far from Hawkins, Texas. Right here is where Lillian Richard Williams lived. Born in 1891, she grew up on a farm near Fouke. Though she had little formal schooling, she left East…
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Sand Springs, TX (Wood County)
· 19.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Wood County, near Hawkins, in a region once known as Sand Springs. Settlers arrived as early as 1848, drawn by fertile land. By 1852, a post office was established, and the community grew around a…
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Hawkins, TX
· 19.3 mi · Local history
Hawkins, Texas, sits atop a geological oddity: the Hawkins Oil Field. Unlike the flat farmland surrounding it, this area had a unique concentration of oil-bearing structures deep underground. That accident of geology…
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Jarvis Christian College
· 19.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Hawkins, where a vital part of Texas's African American history took root. Back in 1904, the Texas Negro Disciples of Christ and the Christian Women's Board of Missions joined forces to create a…
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Fowler, Homer Thomas Wilson [Wick]
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through North Texas, and right here in Big Sandy is where Homer 'Wick' Fowler got his start. He became one of Texas's most colorful journalists, a crime reporter, a highway patrolman, and even an…
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Thomas, Henry [Ragtime Texas]
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, and right here near Big Sandy, you're passing through the birthplace of Henry 'Ragtime Texas' Thomas. Born in 1874 to former slaves, Thomas hated cotton farming and hit the road around…
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Big Sandy, TX
· 19.5 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Big Sandy, a town that owes its very existence to the railroads. Back in the early 1870s, the Texas and Pacific Railway cut through this area. Then, around 1880, another line, the Tyler Tap,…
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First Election in Wood County
· 19.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Mineola, where Wood County held its very first election on August 5th, 1850. It all happened under a giant post oak tree on Gaines Greer's farm. Twenty men gathered to organize the county, pick a…
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Phelps Home, Ashley
· 19.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Phelps Home in Big Sandy, a house built around 1905 by merchant J. B. Rowe. It was purchased in 1909 by Ashley W. and Ruth Phelps, who ran a local dry goods store. After Ashley's death in 1922,…
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Little Indiana School
· 19.8 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Wood County, near Quitman, where a community called Little Indiana sprung up around 1900. Indiana families, led by John M. Hart and Roland Alexander, came here seeking timber and rich soil. But…