Temple, TX RoadyGoat
Temple feels like a warm, friendly hug. You know, a lot of folks don’t realize the kind of talent that’s come out of this place. Take Sammy Baugh, for instance.
Everything Temple is known for
Temple, Texas, located in Central Texas, has a musical identity shaped by artists who call it home and songs that mention the city. Seven artists are from Temple, including the Latin music artist Little Joe and country artist Garrett Smith. The city is also mentioned in eight songs, such as "All My Ex's Live in Texas" by George Strait and "Rockabilly Blues (Texas 1955)" by Johnny Cash.
Songs written about the waterways and highways that run near Temple.
Temple feels like a warm, friendly hug. You know, a lot of folks don’t realize the kind of talent that’s come out of this place. Take Sammy Baugh, for instance.
Temple, Texas, feels like a familiar, warm hug, and that feeling is woven into its very beginnings. The town owes its existence to the railroads. Imagine the late 19th century: Central Texas, ripe for development, and the iron horse pushing its way through. Temple sprang up in 1881, named for Bernard Moore Temple, a railroad official. The rails brought commerce, people, and opportunity. It incorporated quickly in 1882, solidifying its place on the map. The slightly rolling terrain, sitting higher than Dallas, became a hub for agriculture and trade. The town grew, and with it, a spirit of resilience and community. While agriculture remained important, Temple eventually diversified its economy. Healthcare became a major pillar, alongside manufacturing, providing stability and opportunity for generations. And Temple has always celebrated its own. Just outside town, a legend was born: Sammy Baugh, the Pro Football Hall of Famer whose name echoes through the history of the sport. The Friday night lights shine bright at Temple High School, where the Wildcats have brought home state football championships, a testament to the community's pride and passion.
Temple, Texas, nestled in the rolling hills just a bit higher than Dallas, wasn't always Temple. Before the railroad came snaking through this part of Central Texas, it was just open land. But in 1881, everything changed. The railroad needed a town, a hub, and so one sprang up almost overnight. And who got the honor of having their name attached to this new, bustling place? Bernard Moore Temple, that's who. He was a big shot with the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway, and naming the town after him was a way to say thank you for bringing the iron horse and all its possibilities. It's a simple story, really, no grand legends or mythical origins. Just a practical decision that reflects the town's roots. Temple is a place built on connection and industry. The railroad brought people and opportunity, and even now, healthcare and manufacturing keep the town humming. It's a place named after a man who helped build it, and the name "Temple" quietly reminds us of that history every day.
Samuel Adrian (Sammy) Baugh, star quarterback at Texas Christian University and record-setting passer for the Washington Redskins of the National Football League, was born on March 17, 1914, in Temple, Texas. He was the son of James Valentine Baugh and Lucy (Ray) Baugh. In 1931 the family moved to Sweetwater, where Baugh starred for Sweetwater High School before entering Texas Christian University in 1933. Baugh became the Horned Frogs’ starting tailback when Leo Robert “Dutch” Meyer took over as coach in 1934 and led TCU to a 29-7-2 record over the next three seasons. Baugh was named to All-American teams in 1935 and 1936 and led TCU to victories over Louisiana State University in the 1936 Sugar Bowl and over Marquette University in the 1937 Cotton Bowl . His college passing record included a total of 39 touchdowns and 3,384 yards. Baugh’s first love was baseball, however, and he claimed that he earned his famous nickname, “Slingin’ Sammy,” for his throwing ability as a third baseman on the TCU baseball team, not for his passing prowess. After graduating from TCU he joined the Pampa Roadrunners, a semiprofessional baseball team, and at a tournament in Denver, Colorado, Rogers Hornsby signed him to a baseball contract with the St. Louis Cardinals of the National League. After leading the College All-Stars to a 7-0 upset of the National Football League champion Green Bay Packers in the annual College All-Star football game in Chicago, Baugh spent the summer of 1937 playing shortstop for the Cardinals’ minor league affiliates in Rochester and Columbus. The Redskins, who were moving from Boston to Washington for the 1937 season, offered Baugh $4,000 to forsake baseball. Baugh later recalled that he asked for $8,000 to join the team and eventually received it. He enjoyed a sensational rookie season—throwing a record 81 passes for 1,127 yards. He led the NFL in passing and took the Redskins to the league title. Afterwards NFL president Joe F. Carr said of Baugh, “In one short season, his first as a professional, he became football’s greatest thrill.” His record of 335 yards passing by a rookie quarterback in a playoff game stood until 2012. Baugh went on to lead the NFL in passing five more times during the 1940s and at one time held literally every NFL single-game, season, and career passing record. He is credited as leading football’s offensive revolution that fundamentally changed the game. He led the Redskins to another championship in 1942 and played in a total of five championship games. He also led the league in punting from 1940 to 1943 and set the highest-ever season punting average of 51.4 in 1940. As a defensive back, he was the first player to make four interceptions in one game. In 1943 he led in passing, punting, and interceptions. His 70.3 passing completion percentage in the 1945 season topped NFL records and remained in the top five in 2014. He was named to the all-NFL team seven times. So great was his fame that in 1941 he starred in King of the Texas Rangers , a Republic Studios movie serial. Honored by the Washington Redskins on “Sammy Baugh Day” at Griffith Stadium on November 23, 1947, Baugh passed for 355 yards and 6 touchdowns. He passed for a total of 21,886 yards during his professional career, and his number, #33, was later retired by the Redskins. Before his sixteenth and final NFL season, in 1952, Baugh worked as a part-time assistant coach at Hardin-Simmons University. After he retired from the NFL he joined the Hardin-Simmons staff as a full-time assistant, then was appointed head coach in 1955. In five seasons as head coach Baugh compiled a 23-28 record at Hardin-Simmons, although the team did win the Border Conference and went to the Sun Bowl in 1958. In 1959 Baugh was the second coach hired by the fledgling American Football League (AFL), which was challenging the NFL’s monopoly on professional football. Baugh coached the New York Titans (later the New York Jets) for the first two years of their ex
Built 1907 for James E. and Miriam A. Ferguson, each later elected twice to governor's office in Texas. Mrs. Ferguson was the first woman elected Governor in any state. During their terms the Texas Highway Department and public schools achieved great importance. This was family home until Jim Ferguson became Governor in 1915, and again from 1917 to 1925, when Mrs. Ferguson was first inaugurated. Recorded Texas Historic Landmark - 1967
Officially opened on May 17, 1953, Cora Anderson Negro Hospital offered medical services to the growing African American population of Temple and Greater Bell County. The hospital featured 16 patient rooms and a surgical suite. It was located only two blocks from Scott & White Hospital and Clinic, thereby providing African American patients access to technology and specialized care that was previously denied to them. The hospital was administered by a Public Advisory Board comprised of an equal number of African American and white citizens. Final decisions were made by the Scott & White Board of Trustees. U. S. Senator Lyndon Baines Johnson served on the Scott & White Board of Trustees at this time and partook in the fundraising campaign. Cora Woods Campbell Anderson, the largest individual donor to the campaign, was known community-wide for her commitment to helping out college students and families with financial issues and generously giving to the Negro Hospital Project. The Advisory Board unanimously agreed to name the facility after her. Once the facility opened, Scott & White physicians provided care, but the nurses and support staff were overwhelmingly African American. The hospital operated until December 1963 when Scott & White moved to integrate facilities at South 31st Street. In late 1969, the Bell County Commissioners Court acquired the building. Now called the Cora Anderson Building of the Bell County Health District, the Public Health District runs the facility as an outpatient health clinic, though it preserves the building’s original mission of serving the poor and disenfranchised.
Known as "Father of Forestry in Texas." Came to Temple, 1888, as a banker. Planted first tree (a pecan) in town; this led to establishing Arbor Day in Texas in 1889, through legislation introduced by Sen. Geo. W. Tyler. In 1914 Jones organized Texas Forestry Association, which saw creation of Texas Department of Forestry, signed into law in 1915 by Gov. James E. Ferguson. For 60 years, Jones advocated conservation. A state forest at Conroe and this park bear his name. A fellowship in Forestry Conservation and Research has been established by his family. (1970)
John Bird, soldier and Indian fighter, was born in what was later Perry County, Tennessee, in 1795, the son of William Bird. After service under Andrew Jackson in the War of 1812 he returned to Tennessee, where he married Sarah Denton. The couple had four children. The Bird family moved to Stephen F. Austin 's Texas colony in June 1830 and the next year received a league of land in what later became Burleson County. Bird was elected captain in the colony's militia and in 1832 led a column of volunteers up the Brazos River on an expedition against the Comanches. During the Texas Revolution he commanded a unit of Texas cavalry against the Mexicans near San Antonio in 1835, and in March 1836 he commanded sixty volunteers in defense of the western frontier on the Brazos. On April 2, 1839, Bird was elected captain of a company of rangers, which he led to Fort Milam on the Texas frontier. He and a single companion, N. Brookshire, set out on the morning of April 20, 1839, scouting for Indians. After crossing the Little River on the morning of May 25, the two encountered a party of Comanches skinning buffalo. The Indians fled but returned on the following morning, May 26, heavily reinforced, and stampeded a herd of buffalo thorough the rangers' camp. Bird and his men pursued the retreating Indians for four miles before discovering that they had ridden into a trap laid by an estimate 300 warriors. The rangers attempted to fall back to Fort Milam but were overtaken and attacked after about a quarter of a mile, at about 3:00 p.m. The rangers repulsed several mounted charges by the Comanches but were severely beset by Indians on foot, who approached Bird's position by way of a sheltered ravine. At sunset, however, the Indians withdrew, "yelling like devils," according to one survivor of the fight. Five of the rangers had been killed, including Bird, who was shot through the heart by an arrow. "He was the bravest of the brave," according to one of the rangers, "and died encouraging his men to fight like heroes." Comanche deaths were variously estimated at between thirty and seventy-five. Despite having successfully defended themselves in what is now known as the Bird's Creek Indian Fight , the rangers were too badly weakened to sustain their position any longer and immediately began their retreat toward Fort Smith, which they reached at 2:00 a.m. on May 27. Reinforced at Nashville and commanded by N. Brookshire, they returned to the field to bury their dead and found that Bird and the others had been mutilated by the Comanches. The rangers set out in pursuit of their enemies but were unable to catch them. They took revenge on the body of a Comanche chief who had been killed in the battle and buried near the Indians' abandoned camp. At the time of his death Bird owned 354 acres of land in Austin County. Blair Alexander was named administrator of his estate. A marker commemorating the Bird's Creek Fight was erected near Temple by the Texas Historical Commission .
William Goodrich Jones, acclaimed as the "father of Texas forestry," was born in New York on November 11, 1860, the son of John Maxwell and Henrietta (Offenbach) Jones. His father was a merchant, watchmaker, and jeweler of Galveston, Texas, with interests both in the East and abroad, and his mother was the sister of French composer Jacques Offenbach. Because of the looming Civil War , John Jones left his family with friends and hastened back to Texas. His wife and three small children joined him later, completing the trip from New Orleans by ship despite the Union blockade. The family soon moved to Houston to escape the naval warfare and soon after the war returned to New York. In 1873 they went to Europe for two years, and young Goodrich studied in a German grammar school. In the summer his father took him on a walking tour of the Black Forest, where they talked with rangers and forestry workers. There the younger Jones gained a deep appreciation of the beauty and commercial advantages of a well-managed forest. The continuous planting, cultivating, and cutting rotation enabled the villagers to make their livings from the forest, generation after generation. The maxim that when one cuts a tree from the forest he must plant another in its place became one of the abiding principles of Jones's life. Upon return to the United States, he entered Princeton, where he graduated in 1883 with a degree in business. After serving an apprenticeship in banks in Galveston and South Texas, he became president of a new bank in Temple. There he soon established himself as a civic and business leader. Wherever he went he urged the townspeople to plant trees, and soon Temple looked like "a green oasis in a sea of black plowed land." To promote tree planting statewide, Jones advocated the adoption of an official Arbor Day. The state legislature so designated February 22, but later changed the day to the third Friday in January. During his early years Jones made repeated trips through East Texas, observing the developing lumber industry , which followed the penetration of the piney woods by the railroads. In 1898 B. E. Fernow, chief of the United States Bureau of Forestry, made a trip to Texas and asked Jones to make a survey of the region and write a report on the condition and future of forestry in Texas. The resulting document became a blueprint for conservationists in Texas. Jones denounced the haste and waste of the large logging operators and predicted that under current methods the great forest would disappear within twenty-five years. He recommended that the state and federal governments cooperate to regulate a planned-cutting, sustained-yield, systematic reforestation program that would prolong the life of the Texas forest indefinitely. When President Theodore Roosevelt and chief forester Gifford Pinchot called a White House Conference on Conservation, Jones attended as one of the Texas delegates. After this meeting Jones led in organizing a conservation agency for Texas. In 1914 he gathered key lumbermen, conservationists, and public officials together for a meeting in Temple to found the Texas Forestry Association ; Jones served as its president until 1921. With assistance from the United States Forest Service, this group drafted legislation to establish a state department of forestry and lobbied for its enactment. Jones proved to be a very able lobbyist, and, after some compromises, the bill passed and the Texas Department of Forestry became a reality. Jones and the TFA participated in choosing the chief forester and in expanding the department, which, in 1926, became the Texas Forest Service . During the 1920s Jones led a drive to enact a severance tax on timber cut in Texas. Though this effort failed, the legislature provided more funds for the TFS, which developed a pine-seedling nursery and expanded fire-protection services. Later the state authorized a system of Texas state forests, one of which has been named the W. Goodrich Jones
The original 1974 filming location is now a BBQ restaurant. Life imitates art.
A small-town local favorite on US Highway 77 in Rosebud, about 36 miles south of Waco. Texas country cooking — chicken fried steak, pork chops, liver and…
6 alumni who reached major-college or pro sports
Temple High School has a proud tradition of athletes who have gone on to compete at the highest levels of college and professional sports. The Wildcats have seen several of their own make their mark, including Ki Aldrich, an NFL center for the Chicago Cardinals and Washington Redskins, and Brad Dusek, an NFL linebacker also for the Washington Redskins. Rufus Granderson played as an AFL defensive tackle for the Dallas Texans, showcasing the depth of talent from Temple.
More recently, Tre Hawkins III has made his way to the NFL as a cornerback for the New York Giants. Dan Remsberg also played as an NFL tackle. The current generation continues this legacy, with Taurean York playing college football as a linebacker for the Texas A&M Aggies, demonstrating the ongoing success of Temple High School's athletic program.
Tre Hawkins III played as an NFL cornerback for the New York Giants.
318 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
Temple feels like a warm, friendly hug. You know, a lot of folks don’t realize the kind of talent that’s come out of this place. Take Sammy Baugh, for instance.
You're driving through Temple, and right here is the site of a library with a story that's all about community power! Back in 1900, two women's clubs, the Literary Club and the Self Culture Club, joined forces to create…
You're driving past Temple, where for over a century, one newspaper has shaped the very landscape. The Temple Daily Telegram, born in 1907, grew from humble beginnings into a powerful voice for Central Texas. By 1929,…
You're cruising through Temple, Texas, a town born from the iron horse! Back in 1881, the Santa Fe Railroad laid its tracks here, and the town sprung up, named for a Santa Fe official. Imagine: June 29th, 1881, a grand…
You're driving through Temple, and right here, a banker named W. Goodrich Jones had a big idea. He arrived in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1888</say-as>, a time when this prairie town needed trees. Jones…
You're driving through Temple, and just a little ways back, this marker honors the 42nd reunion of Hood's Texas Brigade. These Confederate veterans met annually, starting in 1872, with their final reunion in 1934. This…
You're driving through Temple, and right here, you're passing the former site of the Y.M.C.A. Back in 1898, the Santa Fe Railroad started this organization to give lodging and recreation to its workers. But it wasn't…
You're driving past the Christ Episcopal Church of Temple, a beautiful Gothic Revival building. It started as a mission way back in 1889, but it wasn't until 1902 that it became a full parish. After a public fundraising…
You're driving past the First Christian Church of Temple. When this town was founded by the Santa Fe Railroad in 1880, churches got free land if they built here. A group of Christians took that offer, organizing their…
You're driving through Temple, and right here is the First United Methodist Church. Organized in 1882, it was one of the very first institutions established in this city, just a year after Temple itself was founded. The…
Built 1907 for James E. and Miriam A. Ferguson, each later elected twice to governor's office in Texas. Mrs. Ferguson was the first woman elected Governor in any state. During their terms the Texas Highway Department…
You're driving past the site of the First Presbyterian Church of Temple. This congregation was the very first church established in Temple, organized way back on October 19, 1881. Twenty-four charter members, dismissed…
Officially opened on May 17, 1953, Cora Anderson Negro Hospital offered medical services to the growing African American population of Temple and Greater Bell County. The hospital featured 16 patient rooms and a…
You're driving through Temple, and right here stands a piece of German heritage. In 1882, German immigrants founded this congregation, calling it Friedens, or Peace Church. The very next year, in 1883, this sanctuary…
You're driving past Wayman Chapel A.M.E. Church, a cornerstone of Temple's African American community. It all started back in 1883, when missionary elder George Connor organized the congregation. They built their first…
You're driving past the Dr. John S. and Mary McCelvey House, completed around 1906. Notice the concrete blocks it's built from – they were cast right on the Horne family plantation near Waco! Dr. McCelvey was a…
You're driving through Temple, and right here, you're passing the site of a century of women's civic leadership. After Temple's first women's club successfully founded a library and disbanded, this City Federation rose…
You're driving past the C.L. Walker residence, a home built in 1912 by contractor Will Campbell for the Walker family. C.L. Walker himself served as Temple's mayor from 1922 to 1924, and he and his wife Daisy lived here…
You're driving past the site of Immanuel Baptist Church. It began as a West Side Mission shortly after 1900, organized as Emmanuel Baptist in 1913. The church built its first new structure in 1923 and later formally…
Known as "Father of Forestry in Texas." Came to Temple, 1888, as a banker. Planted first tree (a pecan) in town; this led to establishing Arbor Day in Texas in 1889, through legislation introduced by Sen. Geo. W. Tyler.…
You're driving past the Santa Fe Memorial Hospital in Temple. This was the very first hospital in town, opening its doors in 1891, specifically for the employees of the booming Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railroad. The…
You're driving past the former home of Omar L. Fletcher, a Bell County native who built a business empire right here. Fletcher Enterprises, a major banking and industrial firm, grew from a family business started way…
You're driving through Temple, and right here is the site of the First Lutheran Church. It started in 1886 as Bethlehem Evangelical Lutheran Church, organized by Rev. Carl Kreutzenstein for the city's German-speaking…
You're driving past the former home of James Andrew Fletcher, a true Temple titan. Born right here in Bell County in 1858, Fletcher built a business empire. By 1907, he and his son Omar took over a local business,…
You're driving past the site of the Bird Creek Battlefield, a pivotal clash in Texas Ranger history. On May 26th, 1839, Captain John Bird and just 34 Texas Rangers faced a massive force of 240 Native Americans right…
You're driving past the site of a remarkable life, that of Raleigh Richardson White, Sr. Born into wealth in Missouri, he defied his father to join the Confederate army, even serving under the legendary Nathan Bedford…
You're driving past Hillcrest Cemetery in Temple. What started as a simple family graveyard in the 1870s, known then as Williamson Branch, grew into a sprawling urban resting place. In 1884, the landowners deeded the…
You're driving past the site of a medical pioneer in Temple. Raleigh R. White, Jr., a Mississippi native, came to Texas in 1882. After graduating from Tulane's medical school, he was hired in 1895 as the house physician…
You're driving past Seven Star Cemetery, a place with a name that whispers of freedom. Though its exact beginnings are lost to time, many believe this was a burial ground for African Americans in the 1860s, possibly…
You're driving through Temple, Texas, the home of a man whose ambition and innovation reshaped modern furniture and building design. Ralph Wilson, Sr., started with just a high school education and a move to California…
You're driving past the site of a Texas medical giant, Dr. Arthur Carroll Scott, Sr. Born in Gainesville in 1865, Scott graduated medical school in 1886 and quickly rose through the ranks. By 1892, he was Chief Surgeon…
You're driving past the site of a true medical pioneer! Claudia Potter, born in 1881, became one of Texas's first female doctors. After graduating from UT Medical Branch in 1904, she made history right here at Scott and…
You're driving through Temple, and right here is the story of Dr. George Brindley. A Texas native, he graduated from medical school in 1911 and came straight to the Temple Sanitarium, which you might know today as Scott…
The old Dunbar High School in Temple, Texas (now Meridith-Dunbar Early Childhood Academy) is where Charles 'Mean Joe' Greene played on a team with a losing record before a scholarship to North Texas State. There the…
You're driving past the site of a unique medical retreat. This humble log cabin, originally two small corn cribs, was the private study of Dr. Arthur Carroll Scott, co-founder of the renowned Scott and White Memorial…
You're driving past the site of a fierce clash on May 26, 1839. Captain John Bird and his Ranger force of 34 men faced overwhelming odds, battling 240 Indians. Though Captain Bird, Sergeant Weaver, Jesse Nash, H.M.C.…
This three-mile stretch of Interstate 35 between Belton and Temple is named for Trooper Thomas Nipper. On the afternoon of November 4, 2017, Nipper was conducting a traffic stop on the southbound shoulder when a Chevy…
You're driving past the site of what used to be Lake Polk Park, a place born from a railroad's need for water. Right after founding Temple, the Gulf, Colorado, and Santa Fe Railroad Company built a dam on Bird Creek. By…
You're driving past the heart of what started as a railroad town. In 1881, the Gulf, Colorado, and Santa Fe Railway laid out Temple. Just ten years later, they opened a hospital for their workers. Two ambitious doctors,…
You're driving past the site of a pioneering medical institution in Temple. Raleigh R. White, Jr., a young doctor fresh out of Tulane at just 21, arrived here in 1895. He was hired as the house physician at the Gulf,…
You're driving past the site of a true Texas medical pioneer, Dr. Claudia Potter. Born in 1881, she graduated from UT Medical Branch in 1904, one of only six women to do so. Hired in 1906, she became the first woman…
You're driving past the site of a true Texas medical pioneer! Arthur Carroll Scott, Sr., M.D., born in Gainesville, arrived in Temple in 1892 to become Chief Surgeon for the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Hospital. He…
You're driving past the former site of the Scott & White School of Nursing in Temple. Founded in 1904 by Doctors Scott and White, this school was part of their Temple Sanitarium, aiming to train nurses in the Florence…
You're driving past the site of a pioneer in Texas nursing. Wilma Carlton, born in 1882, came from humble beginnings in Milam County. After her father's tragic death in 1899, she left Texas to train as a nurse in…
You're driving past the heart of Temple, and right here is the story of Dr. George V. Brindley, Sr. Born on a farm, he graduated medical school in 1911 and immediately joined the Temple Sanitarium. He rose through the…
You're driving through Temple, and right here is the site of a groundbreaking arts organization. Back in 1958, during a national surge in the arts, a group of Temple women, led by violinist Nora Lee Wendland, decided to…
You're driving past Lancaster Cemetery, a place with roots stretching back to 1851. That's when Thomas Lancaster, a farmer and rancher, arrived in Bell County and decided to set aside this very spot for neighbors to…
You're driving through Temple, Texas, home of Joseph Dennis, a Tennessee native who arrived here in 1849 with his wife and children. After Bell County was formed in 1850, Dennis was crucial in choosing the spot for the…
You're driving past the site of a hospital founded by a group of dedicated women. Back in 1893, the Temple Charter of the International Order of the King's Daughters and Sons, a Protestant ecumenical group, came…
You're driving past the site of the King's Daughters Hospital School of Nursing in Temple. Nursing training started here way back in 1897, with formal classes beginning in 1903. The school officially got its charter in…
Samuel Adrian (Sammy) Baugh, star quarterback at Texas Christian University and record-setting passer for the Washington Redskins of the National Football League, was born on March 17, 1914, in Temple, Texas. He was the…
John Bird, soldier and Indian fighter, was born in what was later Perry County, Tennessee, in 1795, the son of William Bird. After service under Andrew Jackson in the War of 1812 he returned to Tennessee, where he…
William Goodrich Jones, acclaimed as the "father of Texas forestry," was born in New York on November 11, 1860, the son of John Maxwell and Henrietta (Offenbach) Jones. His father was a merchant, watchmaker, and jeweler…
You're driving through Central Texas, and right here in Temple, a musical legend was born. In 1959, José María de León Hernández, known to the world as Little Joe, formed his band, initially called Little Joe and the…
You're driving through Bell County, and right here is the area that Frank Mayborn helped shape. He wasn't just a newspaper publisher; he was a kingmaker and a military booster. In the late 1930s, as president of the…
You're driving through Central Texas, and right here in Temple, you're passing the historic Scott and White Memorial Hospital. For over forty years, this was the domain of Dr. Claudia Potter, a true pioneer. Born in…
You're driving through Temple, Texas, a city that owes much of its medical legacy to Dr. Arthur Carroll Scott. Born near Gainesville in 1865, Scott returned to Texas after his medical training in New York. He quickly…
You're driving through Central Texas, and right here in Temple, a legend was born. Elmore Rual 'Rip' Torn, a name synonymous with intense acting, got his start right here. After studying agriculture and then theater at…
You're driving past the site of a pioneering Texas aviation factory. Back in 1927, George Williams and his partners formed the Texas Aero Corporation right here in Temple. They designed and built the Temple Monoplane, a…
You're driving through Central Texas, maybe even passing through Temple, the birthplace of Clifford 'Boots' Douglas. Born in 1908, Douglas became one of the state's top jazz bandleaders during the 1930s. He got his…
You're driving through Temple, and right here is the Olin E. Teague Veterans Center. Its story begins back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1942</say-as> as McCloskey General Hospital. It was a massive…
You're driving through Travis County, and right here, Leslie Clay Procter Jr. made a name for himself fighting corruption. Born in Temple, Procter was a decorated Marine who served in both World War II and the Korean…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, and you might be passing near the town of Temple, where Dr. Levi James Russell lived. He was a doctor and a botanist, but he also held some radical views for his time. In fact,…
You're driving through Temple, the heart of a medical empire that started with a couple of ambitious doctors. Arthur Scott, originally from Gainesville, came here in 1892 to run the Santa Fe Railroad hospital. He soon…
You're driving through Temple, Texas, a city named for the man who built the railroad that made it possible. Bernard Moore Temple was a Confederate veteran turned railway engineer. In 1881, he was surveying a line for…
You're driving through Temple, Texas, a city that owes much of its medical legacy to Dr. Raleigh R. White, Jr. After graduating medical school at just twenty years old, he came to Temple in 1895 to take a position as a…
You're driving through Central Texas, maybe near Temple, and you're thinking about taking to the skies. Well, back in December 1941, a young A.J. High, just seventeen, was determined to fly. He'd scraped together some…
You're driving through North Texas, maybe near Temple or Fort Worth, where William Archibald Barclay made his musical mark. Born in Temple in 1907, this prodigy was playing piano as soon as his hands could reach the…
You're driving through Central Texas, perhaps near Temple, where Dr. George Valter Brindley spent over half a century shaping one of the region's most important medical institutions. Born in Auburn back in 1886,…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, and right here in Temple, George Cassety Pendleton built a remarkable career. Born in Tennessee in 1845, his family moved to Ellis County when he was just twelve. After serving…
You're driving through Temple, a town that owes its very existence to the railroad. Back in 1880, Jonathan Moore sold land to the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway for a construction camp. It was first called Temple…
You're driving through Temple, Texas, a town that was home to Alexander Dienst, Jr. While he was a practicing dentist, Dienst was also a passionate historian and collector, especially focused on the Texas Navy. His…
You're driving through Temple, Texas, where Richard Tudor Fleming was born in 1890. Back in college at the University of Texas, Fleming was more than just a pole vaulter and yearbook editor. He was one of the…
You're driving through Central Texas, maybe near Temple, where Cecil Herbert Lang, Sr. was born back in 1891. He became a Presbyterian minister, serving churches all over the South. But Lang wasn't just a preacher; he…
You're driving through Temple, and right here is the site of the Blackland Experiment Station, Substation Number 5. Authorized by the Texas Legislature back in 1909, this research facility opened in 1911. Texas A&M…
You're driving past Temple's oldest home, built way back in 1874. That's seven years before the city of Temple even existed! It was built by F. L. Wright, a Confederate veteran who settled here in 1867. Imagine, this…
You're driving past Little Flock Cemetery and Primitive Baptist Church. This place started with land donated by J.W. and Mary Moore, who ran a local gristmill and cotton gin. The first burial here, around 1860, was a…
You're driving past the historic Green Oaks Farm, a place that's been central to this area since before Texas was even a republic. It all started with the Maximo Moreno land grant back in 1834. Moses and Barzilla…
You're driving past the Stokes-Nelson Cemetery, a small family graveyard that's a reminder of Bell County's pioneer heritage. The family settled here in the late 1850s, and the cemetery began in 1858 with the burial of…
You're driving past the K.M. Jones Family Cemetery, a resting place for a true Texas pioneer. Keeton McLemore Jones himself was buried here in 1890, but his story goes way back. He fought in the Texas War for…
You're driving through Temple, a town that grew fast in the late 1800s. Just a decade after Temple was founded, plans for this church began. It was chartered in 1892 as Memorial Mission Chapel, with just 12 members. The…
You're driving past the area where John Leggett Marshall lived out his long life. Born in Illinois in 1811, he came to Texas with his family way back in 1829. He worked as a farmer and blacksmith, but when Texas fought…
You're driving past the Greathouse Cemetery, a final resting place with roots stretching back to the Texas frontier. Reverend Early Greathouse, a minister and former Alabama legislator, arrived here in 1870. He built…
You're driving through Temple, and right here is the site of the First Baptist Church. But this congregation started way back in 1874, just a mile west of here, as Pleasant Hill Baptist Church. Their first little…
You're driving past Hill Cemetery, established back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1852</say-as>. It was recognized as a Historic Texas Cemetery in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">2005</say-as>.
Lake Belton (Temple, TX) placed on the 5A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Logan Winkler (3 HR).
You're driving past the area where Jeff Hamilton lived for over fifty years. Born a slave in Kentucky, he was brought to Texas as a child and became Sam Houston's personal servant and companion to his sons. Hamilton…
You're driving past the site of a vital piece of Texas industry: the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railroad Bridge, or the Katy Bridge. When the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railroad initially bypassed Belton, the town rallied…
You're driving through what used to be Pendleton, a town founded by James Taylor Gaines. He was a ferryman on the Sabine River, bringing four-fifths of the colonists across from the United States. But Gaines is most…
You're driving past the site of Pendleton, a town that started life as Pendletonville in the 1880s. It was renamed in 1904 for George C. Pendleton, a true Texas political powerhouse. Pendleton served as a State…
Pendleton, Texas, sits nestled in the heart of what was once the Brazos River bottomlands. The land here is rich, dark alluvial soil, laid down over millennia by the meandering river. This soil, so fertile, is what drew…
You're driving through Bell County, near Troy, where Willis L. Harrison, a surgeon and preacher, made his mark. In the late 1890s, he served in the Texas Senate as one of only two Populists. He championed a bill to…
You're driving past the site of Norman Austin's final home and business in Belton. Born in New York in 1811, Austin arrived in Texas in 1835 and immediately joined the fight for independence. He survived the Goliad…
You're driving north on I-35, and right here is Troy, Texas. This town didn't just appear; it grew up around a railroad station built in 1882. It actually supplanted an earlier community, also called Troy, that was two…
You're driving through Freestone County, and right here, you're passing the site of what was once Troy, also known as Pine Bluff. Established around 1847 by a handful of families, Troy quickly became the most important…
You're driving through Belton, passing the site of the First Presbyterian Church. A congregation was established here in 1860 with just eight members. Over the years, the church building moved to a few different…
You're passing the Wedemeyer House, a distinctive Victorian home built in 1891. It's connected to one of Bell County's historic private schools. Charles Wedemeyer, who had a career in education at Baylor and other…
You're cruising past the Curtis Mansion in Belton. Built in 1902 by cotton broker William Ray Miller, some folks called it 'A Monument to King Cotton' thanks to its impressive cost. Miller and his family lived here only…
You're driving past the Ele Baggett house, a beautiful Queen Anne home built starting in 1892. Look for the sunbursts in the gables and those fish-scale shingles! Ele and his wife Mary built this place, but Ele had…
You're driving past the site of Hvezda Texasu, the first Czech lodge of the SPJST in Bell County. Back in January of 1903, Frank Motl and J.F. Sefcik gathered Seaton men in a blacksmith shop to form this benevolent…
You're driving past the site where Jeff Hamilton lived out his later years in Belton. Born a slave in Kentucky, Hamilton's life took a dramatic turn when Sam Houston himself rescued him from a cruel master at a slave…
You're driving past the birthplace of a true Texas legend, Robert Emmet Bledsoe Baylor. Born in Kentucky in 1793, Baylor was a lawmaker and judge who served in Congress before heading to Texas in 1839. He became an…
You're driving past the resting place of the Reverend George Washington Baines, a towering figure in early Texas Baptist life. Born in North Carolina in 1809, he moved to Texas in 1850, quickly earning a reputation as a…
You're driving past the former site of Tennessee Valley, a community that thrived for nearly a century. It was named in 1851 when eight families from Tennessee arrived, seeking fertile land nestled between the Sparta…
You're driving past the site of a pioneering nursing school, the Scott and White School of Nursing. Founded in 1904 by doctors Arthur C. Scott and Raleigh White, Jr., it was part of their Temple Sanitarium. Modeled…
You're driving past the birthplace of higher education for Baptist women in Texas. Back on October 7, 1841, the Union Baptist Association met in Fayette County and formed the Texas Baptist Educational Society. Their…
You're driving through Belton, and right here is a reminder of how the Civil War changed education across Texas. Before the war, Baylor University was thriving, but by 1861, things took a turn. State funding for…
You're driving past the site of the Mary Allen Oliver Cemetery, a resting place established in the heart of Bell County. It all started in 1885 when Franklin Allen was buried here, the first to be laid to rest on his…
You're driving through Belton, and right here is the site of the First Baptist Church. It was organized way back in the summer of 1853 with just eight charter members. They met in a small frame building on Pearl Street.…
You're driving past the site of the Belton House, built in 1850 by Sarah Lawler. Back then, it was little more than a shed, but Mrs. Lawler used it to board the workmen who were busy surveying and building this very…
You're driving through Belton, and right here is the site of a mercantile empire that spanned a century. It started way back in 1869 with Henry Mansfield Cook's first store. By 1876, his business in Buffalo was stocking…
You're driving past the Fellrath Building in Belton, a structure that's seen nearly a century of commerce. Built sometime between 1881 and 1891, it first housed a hardware and buggy shop, then a grain company. But in…
You're driving past the First United Methodist Church of Belton, a cornerstone of this community since 1850. It started as part of a circuit, a traveling ministry, until 1869. By the 1880s, the congregation needed more…
You're driving past the site of the old Bell County Jail in Belton. The first jail here, a simple log structure, went up in 1854. But it was this limestone building, finished in 1873, that made history. In 1874,…
You're driving past the site of the Central Manufacturing Company, founded right here in Belton back in 1893 by a Scotsman named Robert Naismith. Initially powered by steam, this shop supplied and repaired machine parts…
Hey road-trippers! You're passing through Belton, Texas, where you might just be driving by the oldest active women's club in Bell County. That's the Woman's Wednesday Club, founded way back in 1898. It started with…
You're driving past the site of three Bell County courthouses, right here in Belton! It all started back in 1850 when the county was created. Before the first official courthouse, county business was handled in a…
You're driving past the old Carnegie Library in Belton, a beautiful Beaux Arts building completed in 1904. This wasn't just any library; it was funded by a generous donation from industrialist Andrew Carnegie himself.…
You're driving past the home of Captain A.J. Harris, built in 1866 right here in Belton. Harris was a state senator, a Confederate veteran, and a lawyer. This limestone house, quarried nearby, has a unique construction…
You're driving past the Bell County Courthouse in Belton, a stunning example of Renaissance Revival architecture. Designed by Jasper N. Preston & Son, this courthouse was completed in 1885. Notice the arched passageways…
Belton is a place where Texas history feels close enough to touch. You can almost hear the echo of cattle hooves and cowboys’ calls from the days when the Chisholm Trail ran right through town. That strategic location,…
You're driving past the site where Sarah Ann Hardin Kelton lived, a woman who showed mercy in the heat of revolution. After the decisive victory at San Jacinto, many Mexican officers and soldiers found themselves in her…
You're driving through Belton, Texas, where William Whitaker Reed made his mark. Reed arrived in Texas with his family back in 1833, settling near the Little River. He and his brother fought in the Republic of Texas…
You're driving past the resting place of James H. Isbell, a veteran of the Battle of San Jacinto. Born in Tennessee in 1814, Isbell fought for Texas's independence. He passed away in 1858. His wife, Amanda, born in…
You're driving through Belton, and right here is the site of a historic educational journey for African Americans. Back in 1882, Mrs. Aleck McGee was hired to teach the first colored school. Then, in 1890, Fisk…
You're driving past the site of a frontier fort, once known as Fort Griffin, or maybe Fort Smith, or even Little River Fort. In November of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1836</say-as>, George B. Erath and…
You're driving past the Clark House in Belton, a home with a story that stretches back to the 1890s. Built in the early 1890s, it was a wedding gift in 1895 from prominent businessman Peter Hammersmith to his son, John…
Peyton sits on land that remembers the ancient Gulf Coast, even though the waves receded long ago. The slightly rolling hills you see – barely hills, really – are the remnants of those old shorelines, sandy soil topped…
Look to your right, past the modern homes, and you might catch a glimpse of the Muehlhause House. Fred Muehlhause, a German immigrant, arrived in Texas in 1885. He became a shoemaker and eventually opened the Belton…
You're driving past the Seaton Cemetery, a final resting place for many Czech immigrants who settled this area in the late 1800s. The community of Lost Prairie-Seaton had a post office, school, store, and even a saloon.…
You're driving past the Little River-Wilson Valley Cemetery, a final resting place for a pioneering family. In 1867, the Wilson brothers and their families left Mississippi, seeking to escape the devastation of the…
Right here in Belton, you're driving past the birthplace of a remarkable experiment in female independence. In the late 1860s, Martha McWhirter gathered a group of women seeking spiritual and financial autonomy. Tired…
You're driving through Central Texas, and right here is the birthplace of George Rufus Brown, a man who helped build modern Texas and beyond. Born in Belton in 1898, Brown returned to Texas after a mining accident and…
You're driving near Belton, where a business empire got its start with eighteen mules. In 1914, Herman Brown received those mules instead of back wages, and decided to go into the construction business. By 1919, with a…
You're driving through Central Texas, perhaps near Belton, where a charismatic figure named James E. 'Pa' Ferguson got his start. He wasn't born into politics, but worked fields, railroads, and eventually practiced law.…
You're driving through Central Texas, perhaps near Belton, and you might be passing a historical marker honoring Jeff Hamilton. Born a slave in Kentucky in 1840, he was brought to Fort Bend County, Texas, as a young…
You're driving through Central Texas, and right here in Belton, Luther Rector Hare got his start. Born in Indiana in 1851, Hare moved to Belton as a boy. He went on to West Point, graduating in 1874, and joined the…
You're driving through Central Texas, and right here, in the early 1900s, a young jazz musician named Tom Howell was making a name for himself. Born in Belton in 1906, Howell grew up surrounded by music. His father ran…
You're driving through Belton, Texas, where in 1866, Martha White McWhirter experienced a profound religious revelation. After losing family members, she believed she had been 'sanctified' and began leading a women's…
You're driving through Central Texas, and right here in Belton, Walton Harris Walker was born. He rose through the ranks of the U.S. Army, serving in World War I and World War II, even earning commendations from General…
You're driving through Navarro County, not far from where Samuel Tabor Allen met a violent end. Allen, an early Texas public figure, was part of the prerepublic political scene, even getting arrested with William B.…
You're driving through Belton, Texas, a town with a name change and a dramatic origin story. It started as Nolan Springs in the late 1840s, named for adventurer Philip Nolan. When Bell County formed in 1850, Nolan…
You're driving through Central Texas, maybe near Belton, and right here is the story of Silas Hare. He was a soldier, a lawyer, and an explorer who found himself in a desperate situation. In 1858, Hare joined an…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, right near Belton. This town elected its first mayor in 1860, and that man was Xenophon Boone Saunders. Now, Saunders was a staunch opponent of secession, even stumping against…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, an area that was just a wild frontier when Moses Allen first arrived. He came here from Louisiana in 1826, drawn by the promise of land and a new life. Allen fought in the…
You're driving through Bell County, and right here in Belton, Julien Paul Blitz, a Belgian-born musician, made his mark. In 1906, he taught at Baylor Female College. The very next year, he composed the "Bell County…
You're driving through Central Texas, maybe near Belton, where Franklin Lodowick Denison spent the last decade of his life. He was a man of many trades: lawyer, journalist, and even a Confederate officer. Denison…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, near Belton. Right here, back in 1850, a man named Joseph Dennis was tasked with choosing the exact spot for the county seat. He was part of a commission that had to decide…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, and right here is where Alfred Evans made his mark. He fought in two wars before even settling in Texas in 1838, seeing action in Florida during the Second Seminole War and…
You're driving past Belton, Texas, the birthplace of Ina Caddell Marrs. Around 1875, she was born here and went on to become a powerful force in education and social reform. In 1920, Ina was elected president of the…
You're driving through Central Texas, and right here in Belton is where the highest-numbered Texas cavalry regiment was organized: the Thirty-sixth Texas Cavalry. <break time="400ms"/> Organized on March 22, 1862, these…
You're driving through Central Texas, heading toward Belton. Right here, in what is now Bell County, lived Orville Thomas Tyler, a man who wore many hats. He arrived in Texas in 1834, eventually settling near the site…
You're driving through Central Texas, perhaps near Belton, where Thornton Hardie Bowman arrived in 1871. After service in the Civil War and education in France, Bowman settled here to teach school, practice law, and…
You're driving through Central Texas, perhaps near Belton, where Dr. Henry Clay Ghent made his mark. He came to Texas after serving as a Confederate surgeon during the Civil War. In 1872, he was elected to the…
You're driving through Bell County, and right here in Belton, Andrew Jackson Harris was a man who wore many hats. After serving in the Confederate Army, he came to Texas in 1865 and found his calling in education.…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, where Robert A. Myers started his military career. Born in Tennessee in 1841, Myers moved to Bell County with his family in 1855. When the Civil War broke out in 1861, he…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, where a significant piece of state history was shaped by George W. Tyler. Born in 1851, Tyler became a lawyer and politician. During his time in the Texas Senate from 1888 to…
Erasmus Walker arrived in Texas in 1853, setting up shop in Belton. He was a lawyer, a judge, and even a state representative for Bell and Lampasas counties. But Walker also had a hand in founding the First Presbyterian…
You're driving through Bell County, and right here is a place that rewrites North American history. This is the Gault Site, and it's home to the oldest securely dated engravings ever found in the Americas. Imagine, over…
You're driving through Bell County, and right here in White Hall, you're passing the birthplace of Jemima Belle Hamilton Lawson. In 1920, she became the first African-American registered nurse in this county, earning…
You're driving through Bell County, named for a true Texas hero: Peter Hansborough Bell. He arrived in Texas before it was even a republic, fighting at the Battle of San Jacinto. Bell then joined the Texas Rangers,…
You're driving through Little River Academy, a community with roots stretching back to the Texas frontier. Right here, in 1836, settlers built Fort Griffin, also known as Little River Fort, to defend against Native…
You're driving through what is now Bell County, in a place that was once vital to the Republic of Texas. In November 1836, construction began on Little River Fort, a stockade designed to protect settlers from Comanche…
You're driving through Bell County, near Holland and Rogers. Right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1834</say-as>, Michael Reed became the first American settler to receive a land grant in what would…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, and right here is the birthplace of Earl Welton Caldwell, better known as 'Teach.' Now, that nickname wasn't from the classroom, but from his early baseball career. Caldwell…
You're driving through southeastern Bell County, near Donahoe Creek. This spot was named for the creek itself, which honors a merchant who explored this area way back in 1841 as part of the ill-fated Texan Santa Fe…
You're driving through Texas, and you might be passing communities where a significant population shift has happened recently. Since the mid-1960s, when U.S. immigration laws changed, the Korean population in Texas has…
You're driving through Bell County, not far from Temple. Right here, in what's now New Colony, Czech families seeking a new start settled in 1905. Just two years later, in January of 1907, pioneers gathered on the Vine…
You're driving through eastern Bell County, not far from Temple. Right here was Ocker, Texas, a community founded by Czech settlers in the 1880s. It got its post office in 1888, named for the local shopkeeper and first…
You're driving through Bell County, near Rogers, on Highway 36. Right here, you're passing through what used to be Reed's Lake, a community that started as a natural wonder. Long before settlers arrived, this spot was a…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, where David Decatur Rosborough settled in 1854. He wasn't just a farmer and rancher; in 1859, he led an expedition prospecting for gold along the Pecos River! Returning home,…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, where merchant Robert M. White took up arms to defend settlers. In the 1850s, White commanded local militia companies, like the "Bell County Rovers" and "Bob White's Ranging…
You're driving through Bell County, just south of Belton. Right here is the area once known as Armstrong. It all started back in 1916 with a schoolhouse. C.I. Armstrong donated land for a new school district, and the…
You're driving through Bell County, a place with a history as rugged as its landscape. For centuries, this land was home to the Tonkawa people, skilled hunters who followed the buffalo. Later, Lipan Apaches, Wacos, and…
You're driving near Belton, Texas, where the Leon River used to flow freely. Right here, the Belton Dam and Reservoir were built. Construction kicked off in July 1949, and by April 1954, this massive structure was…
You're driving through Bell County, near the town of Cyclone. It was founded around 1883 by Czech families. When they gathered to choose a name, one settler joked it would take a cyclone to get them all together! So,…
You're driving through Central Texas, near the town of Little River. This waterway you might be crossing, or perhaps just seeing on the map, has gone by a few names. In 1716, Spanish explorer Domingo Ramón called it the…
You're driving through Bell County, just northwest of Temple. Right here is the community of Moffat. It all started back in February of 1857, founded by Amelia Vancil and Chauncey Warren Moffet. For a while, it went by…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, near where J. Eddie Weems was born in 1896. Weems was a remarkable man: an English professor, a Church of Christ minister, and a pioneering track and field coach. He started…
You're driving through Bell County, and right here is the site of Willingham Springs. It all started back in 1852 when Archibald Willingham, the first Anglo settler in Salado, moved his family to this area. A small…
You're driving south of Killeen on Farm Road 2484, right here in Bell County, and you're passing through the tiny community of Youngsport. Its story starts before 1850, when Michael Young, a former ship's captain,…
You're driving past the site of Wilson Van Dyke's home here in Bell County. Van Dyke was a South Carolinian who came to Texas and joined the Somervell Expedition in 1842, hoping to push the Mexican Army out. He crossed…
You're driving past the site of Moffat, a town named after Dr. Chauncy W. Moffet, though his name was misspelled from the start. He and his wife Amelia founded this community in 1857. Dr. Moffet, a Union loyalist, was…
You're driving past the site of Summers' Mill, built way back in 1866. Imagine the scene: parts for this mill, crucial for grinding corn into bread, arrived all the way from Houston pulled by ox-team. This mill didn't…
You're driving through Bell County, and right here is the site of the very first settlement in the area. It all started back in 1834 with men from the Sterling Robertson colony. Later, in 1859, John Burnett Reed built a…
You're driving past the site of Elm Grove Baptist Church. A revival in 1911 at the Elm Grove School led to the congregation continuing to use the building after the school closed in 1915. The church used the original…
You're driving past Moffat Cemetery, a final resting place that began as a family and Masonic burial ground. The oldest marked grave here belongs to Mary Marshall, who died in 1861. Later, in 1869, two acres were set…
You're driving through Bell County, named for a Texas Governor. Settlement here kicked off in 1847, and the county was officially created in 1850. By 1860, nearly 4,800 people called this place home. They were busy, too…
You're driving past the site of Little River Fort, built in November of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1836</say-as>! A unit of about twenty Texas Rangers, led by Lt. George B. Erath, threw up a stockade and…
You're driving through the site of Zabcikville, a community with a name that changed hands more than once. It all started in 1856 when Jan Zabcik Sr. and his family traveled all the way from Moravia to Texas. They…
You're driving past the site of Bell County's very first water-powered mill! Built way back in 1847 by Robert Childers, a pioneer who also fought Indians and served in the Army of Texas. He sold it in 1856 to G.W.…
You're driving past the site of Dulaney's Mill, a busy farm complex that was the heart of this community. John Thornton Dulaney arrived in Texas in 1849, after trying his luck in the California gold rush. He built his…
You're driving past a piece of Texas industry history! This building, originally built in 1912, was the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway's Planing Mill in Temple. Imagine workers here, crafting replacement wooden…
You're driving through Ocker, a farming community founded by Czech immigrants in the late 1870s. These devoted families, followers of the Unity of the Brethren faith, first worshipped in their homes. Encouraged by…
You're driving past the site of Blevins, a community that started around 1860 with the Barron family. By the 1870s, Reverend Isaac Taylor was already teaching local kids. The Blevins School opened in 1885, and by 1916,…
You're driving past Blevins Cemetery, a final resting place that tells a story of Texas grit. It began in 1875 with the burial of Amanda Ruble Taylor, who arrived here in 1855, born back when Texas was its own republic.…
You're driving past the site where a unique piece of Texas history was born. On February 27, 1901, nine men of Czechoslovakian descent gathered to form the Farmers Mutual Protective Association of Texas. This wasn't…
You're driving past Stampede Creek, but this creek's name has a wild origin story. Back in 1839, Captain John Bird and his 34 Texas Rangers fought a fierce battle with over 200 Caddo, Kickapoo, and Comanche warriors…
You're driving past the site of a Texas legend! This land was home to Miriam Wallace from her birth in 1875 until her marriage in 1899. She'd later become the first woman elected governor of any state, serving two…
You're cruising through Rogers, Texas, a town that exploded thanks to cotton! Founded in 1881 and named for a railroad official, Rogers became a boomtown fast. By 1884, this place had a post office and stores, and it…
You're driving past the Frank and Julia Bockholt Home, a house that's seen over a century of Texas life. The Bockholts themselves took over this property in 1933, though the house was expanded in 1912. Frank was known…
Rogers, Texas sits squarely in the Blackland Prairie, that band of rich, dark soil that once made Central Texas the cotton capital of the world. That's the first key to understanding the town — the land. Cotton drew…
You're driving through Rogers, Texas, the birthplace of Joe Tex, born Joseph Arrington Jr. on August 8, 1935. He was a soul singer who pioneered a unique style, slowing down tempos and 'rapping' spoken verses in the…
You're driving through Bell County, Texas, near Rogers, the birthplace of Alvin Ailey. Born in 1931, Ailey would go on to become a world-renowned dancer, choreographer, and founder of the Alvin Ailey American Dance…
You're driving through Rogers, a town that owes its existence to the railroad. Established on the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway and named for railroad director John D. Rogers, this community quickly grew. By 1884,…
You're driving through Westphalia, a community founded by German Catholics. Soon after arriving in 1879, settlers planned a school. The Westphalia Little School opened its doors in 1884, initially in a building that had…
You're driving past Westphalia, Texas, where German immigrants settled in 1879, seeking better land. They quickly bought land for a church and school, and by 1884, their first church building was ready. But disaster…
You're driving past the only physical remnant of the old Post Oak community. This cemetery started as a family burial ground for Isham McMillin back in 1855. Look closely, and you might see the oldest marked grave, that…
You're driving past the First United Methodist Church of Rogers. This congregation started way back in 1880, before the town of Rogers even existed, as Centennial Methodist Church in Gindale. It moved to Rogers in 1889,…
You're driving through Barclay, a town that owes its start to William Anderson Barclay. In 1877, he opened a general store, becoming a leader in farming and business. He even served as the town's first postmaster. As…
You're driving past the birthplace of Roy Bedichek, a giant of Texas education and culture. Born in Illinois in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1878</say-as>, he came to Falls County as a boy and was educated…
You're driving through southeast Bell County, near where County Line Baptist Church began. Organized in 1856 as Eanon Baptist Church, it started meeting in a local family's home. Though it declined during the Civil War,…
You're driving past the Moody Cemetery, a final resting place for many of this town's early pioneers. The idea for this burial ground came about soon after Moody was founded in 1881, as folks sought a closer spot than…
You're driving through Bell County, past the site of the New Colony School. In 1905, Czech families seeking a new start moved here, establishing the Nova Osada, or New Colony. By 1909, their children were learning in…
You're driving through Moody, and right here is the Howard House, built in 1900. Charles Howard, who arrived in Moody when the town was founded in 1881, became a successful businessman. He built this elegant home for…
You're driving through Central Texas, maybe near Moody, where Fred Acree started his remarkable life. Back in 1892, at just fourteen years old, he bought a bookcase full of old books and began a lifelong passion for…
You're driving through Moody, a town born from the railroad. In 1881, the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway laid track right through here, connecting Temple and Fort Worth. They named this spot Moody in honor of…
You're driving past the Hill House in Moody. George Hill arrived in Texas as a boy, eventually settling in this town. After working in a local hardware store and buying it out, he had this home built for his family in…
You're driving through Moody, Texas, and this town has a story tied to the railroad. Back in 1881, the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railroad decided to bypass the older settlement of Perry, just a couple miles north. So, a…
You're driving past the Kuykendall House in Moody. In 1900, Dr. P.M. Kuykendall, a prominent physician, built this beautiful Victorian home. He ordered the plans from a St. Louis architect, and the house features…
You're driving through Moody, Texas, and right here is Moody United Methodist Church. This congregation started way back in 1855 as a union church in the old settlement of Perry, just a couple miles northeast of here.…
Moody, Texas, sits right on the edge of the Blackland Prairie, where the soil turns rich and dark. For years, it was a quiet town, known mostly for the railroad that still rumbles through. But lately, something’s been…
You're driving past the Eddy Methodist Church, a place that's been serving this community for over a century. It all started back in 1868, when Methodists in the area built a simple sanctuary near a cedar log toll…
You're driving past Naler Cemetery, a resting place that started with a family tragedy. In 1863, Joseph Naler buried his wife Polly here, on land he'd settled just 12 years earlier after migrating from Georgia. Naler…
You're driving past the Flowers House, a reminder of the cotton boom that once fueled this area. Built in 1910, this home was designed by Roy E. Lane, a prominent architect who left his mark on Waco. Look for the…
You're driving past the site of the First Baptist Church of Eddy. It started life way back in 1875 as Sage Chapel. The congregation packed up their little frame church and moved it two miles east to the new town of Eddy…
Salado (Salado, TX) placed on the 4A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: BJ Amann (4 HR); Landen Noske (3 HR).
You're driving past the Moody-Leon United Methodist Church, a testament to German immigrant faith in Bell County. Established way back in 1877 by Reverend F. Von Schulenbach, this congregation was brought together by…
You're driving past the Fowler House in Salado, built in 1872. This home belonged to Josiah Fowler, a settler who came here from Tennessee. He fought in the Confederacy, and after the war, he became a college teacher…
You're driving south of Temple on Highway 95, and you're passing through Holland. This town got its start back in 1874 when James R. Holland settled here. But what really put Holland on the map was his steam cotton gin,…
You're driving through Barclay, and right here is the history of Salem Lutheran Church. It all started in November of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1901</say-as>, with just 17 members meeting in a schoolhouse.…
You're driving past West Salado Cemetery, a quiet reminder of the community's early black history. Following the Civil War, former slaves settled in this area, and this cemetery began around the 1870s. The earliest…
You're driving through Bell County, near Salado, the birthplace of Eliza Sophia "Birdie" Johnson. In 1920, Birdie Johnson made history. She and her husband were elected delegates to the Democratic National Convention.…
You're driving through Central Texas, not far from where a printer and soldier named Martin Carroll Wing met his end. Wing came to Texas to fight in the Revolution, landing in Matagorda and hearing the guns of San…
You're driving through Salado, a town that owes its start to pioneers like Herman Aiken. He arrived in Texas back in 1833, a young man ready for adventure. Aiken fought in the Texas Revolution and the Mexican War, but…
You're driving through Central Texas, and you might be passing near Salado, the home of Elijah Sterling Clack Robertson. Born in Tennessee in 1820, Robertson came to Texas in 1832 and quickly became fluent in Spanish.…
You're driving through what used to be wild Texas frontier country. Right here, along the San Saba River, Archibald Johnson Rose settled in 1860. He wasn't just ranching; he built a community with mills and a school.…
You're driving through Salado, Texas, and right here are the Salado Springs. For thousands of years, this was Tawakoni and even earlier Paleo-Indian land. Spanish explorer Juan Antonio Bustillo y Ceballos may have…
You're driving through Salado, a town born from a dream of education and culture. Right here, in October of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1859</say-as>, Colonel Elijah Sterling C. Robertson offered land to…
You're driving through Bell County, near Salado, where Archibald Willingham became the first permanent settler. He arrived in Texas in January <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1839</say-as>, already an older man,…
You're driving through Central Texas, a land that was once wild frontier. Right here, in what is now Burnet County, Welborn Barton set up his medical practice back in the 1850s. He was a doctor, but life on the Texas…
You're driving through Central Texas, not far from Salado. Right here, Milton Wesley Damron was a man of many hats. He was a county official, a justice of the peace, and even served on the first grand jury in Bell…
You're driving through Central Texas, maybe near Salado, and you're passing through land that Alexander Russell once called home. He came to Texas in 1834, just before the Revolution, and fought at Gonzales and…
You're driving through Bell County right now, and not far from here in Salado, Texans of Scottish descent have been gathering for decades. Since 1961, an annual 'Gathering of the Clans' brings together folks celebrating…
Salado might seem like a quiet Hill Country town nestled along I-35, but it has some stories to tell. The echoes of history whisper through the very air. You can almost picture the scene down at one of the older…
You're driving past the site of the M. H. Denman Cabin, built way back in 1867. This wasn't just any old shack; it was constructed from hand-hewn, square cedar logs, all joined together with wooden pegs. Imagine the…
Bruceville-Eddy might seem like just another blur of highway signs along I-35, easily missed between Waco and Temple. But it’s got a story, like every place does, and a few interesting characters have called it home.
You're driving past the site of the William R. Alexander Distillery, which met a crucial wartime need right here in Salado. Back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1862</say-as>, Governor Lubbock ordered all…
You're driving through Bell County, near Rogers, where John Robert Craddock settled after coming to Texas from Kentucky in 1833. He served in the Republic of Texas Army in 1836, fighting bravely at the pivotal Battle of…
You're driving past Twelve Oaks, a Greek Revival mansion built of stone quarried right here on the property. It was built for B.D. McKie, a Texas doctor who saw action and was wounded in both the Mexican and Civil Wars.…
You're driving past the Salado United Methodist Church. Back in 1854, a traveling preacher named Thomas Gilmore held a revival and started a Methodist church and Sunday school right here in Salado. Over the years, this…
You're driving through Bruceville-Eddy, a town born from a rivalry between two railroad stops. <break time="400ms"/> Back in 1882, the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad laid tracks, creating two stations: Bruceville,…
You're driving through Salado, and just ahead is the site of a church with a long history. This Church of Christ congregation started way back in March of 1859, meeting first under a simple brush arbor. Two of its early…
You're driving through Moody, Texas, and right here is the Welborn-Bostick Home. This land has been in the same family for over 120 years, making it the oldest continuously family-owned property in Moody. James Irby…
You're driving past Salado, Texas, home of Major Archibald Johnson Rose. This guy struck gold in California back in 1849, then brought his family and fortune to Texas. He fought in Indian battles and served as a…
You're cruising past one of the rarest bridges in America! This 87-foot lenticular truss bridge is a unique design, patented in 1878 by William O. Douglas. It's shaped like a lens, with a curved top and bottom. While…
You're cruising past the Norton-Orgain House in Salado, a home built around 1872. Notice the cool architectural mix: sturdy Doric columns downstairs, and more decorative Victorian ones up top. This house has seen some…
Hey road-trippers, take a look at this grand old house you're passing! This is the Major A.J. Rose House, built between 1870 and 1872. Notice that perfect symmetry? That's classic Greek Revival architecture. This home…
You're driving past the Salado Methodist Church, a place that's been a spiritual home for generations. This congregation started way back in 1854, meeting at a site on Salado Creek. The building you see was erected in…
You're driving past the home of Wellborn Barton, a pioneer physician who served this region for decades. Barton lived here from 1821 to 1883, a long life dedicated to healing and community. He was also a trustee for…
You're driving past the former home of John Henry Mayfield and his wife Ettie. They moved to Holland around 1908, where John ran a local cotton gin. This house, built in 1914 by local contractors Frank Wood & Sons,…
The Stagecoach Inn in Salado sat at the crossroads of nearly every major route through central Texas, and its guest register reads like a roll call of nineteenth-century American history. Sam Houston gave a speech from…
You're driving past the George Washington Baines House, built in the 1860s. From 1870 to 1883, this was home to the Rev. George Washington Baines himself. He was a true pioneer: a Baptist preacher, missionary, editor,…
You're driving past the site of the home of Orville Thomas Tyler, a true pioneer Texan who lived from 1810 to 1886. Tyler was a man of many hats: he served as County Judge, represented this area in the Legislature, and…
You're driving through Holland, Texas, where a group of local women decided to get together back in 1914. <break time="400ms"/> They formed a study club, aiming for cultural advancement, but they quickly became so much…
You're driving through Nolanville, a community with roots stretching back to the earliest days of Bell County. <break time="400ms"/> It started as Nolan Valley, named for the creek that itself honored the explorer…
You're driving past the site of the Davis Mill, built way back in 1864 by William A. Davis. This wasn't just any mill; it was the first stone mill in the area to boast a carding machine! They added a sawmill and a…
You're driving past the site of the First Baptist Church of Salado, a congregation with roots stretching back to 1854. Back then, Baptists held revivals on the banks of Salado Creek. By 1860, Baptists, Methodists,…
Pull over, because right here, you're standing on history – imagine weary travelers pulling up after days on the Chisholm Trail! This is the Stagecoach Inn in Salado, and it's believed to be the oldest building still…
Ever wonder what it took to build a state? This spot, near Salado, Texas, was once home to Salado College, a vital center of learning in the mid-19th century.Founded in 1860, Salado College aimed to provide a classical…
You're driving past the site where Rev. James E. Ferguson, an Alabama native, began his Texas ministry in 1847. For 20 years, he rode circuits across central and southeast Texas, serving Methodist communities. He…
You're driving past Salado Cemetery, a resting place established in 1856 on land donated by E.S.C. Robertson. This isn't just any graveyard; it's the final home for some seriously distinguished Texans. Look for the…
You're driving past the site where Robert Bonner Halley built his life and career in Texas. Halley arrived here with his family around 1853, quickly becoming a key figure in the community. He partnered to run a…
You're driving past the site of a remarkable educational partnership in Salado. Samuel and Charlotte Jones arrived here in 1884, teaching at Salado College. By 1890, they were running their own school, Thomas Arnold…
This unassuming spot was once the heart of a sprawling plantation, a window into a complex and often painful chapter of Texas history. Col. Elijah Sterling Clack Robertson, a prominent figure in the region, built this…
You're driving past the birthplace of Mary Elizabeth Carpenter, a true trailblazer in journalism and politics. She wasn't just any student at the University of Texas; she was the first woman ever elected vice president…
You're driving past the site of Bryant Station, a frontier village established by Major Benjamin F. Bryant. He was a San Jacinto veteran and appointed Indian Agent in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1842</say-as>…
You're driving past the home of Elijah Sterling Clack Robertson, a key figure in early Bell County. Robertson built this house between 1856 and 1860, right around the time he was helping found Salado College. He was a…
You're driving past the Robertson Home, a rare ante-bellum plantation complex right here in Salado. Built by Colonel E.S.C. Robertson and his wife Mary Elizabeth, this place has been continuously occupied by the fifth…
You're driving past the site of Major Bryant's home and trading post. He was a prominent figure in early Milam County, establishing a key hub for settlers and commerce. This wasn't just a home; it was a vital center of…
You're driving past the First Baptist Church of Moody, a congregation with roots stretching back to 1855. It was organized over two miles north in a community called Perry, with Elder S.G. O'Bryan as its first pastor.…
You're driving through Falls County, passing Union Cemetery. Donated by the Jackson family, this burial ground was named to serve all the surrounding communities. The first recorded burial here was little Mary Braswell…
You're driving past the last vestige of the Perry community, established by pioneer settlers here in McLennan County. Look around – all that remains is this cemetery. It began with the burial of Jane Leach, a…
You're driving past the site of St. Paul Lutheran Church. German farmers organized a congregation in the late 1870s, formally chartering it in 1883. They built their first sanctuary by 1896, then moved to this location…
You're driving past the site of Bruceville Baptist Church, a congregation with roots going back over 125 years. It started around 1870 as Salem Baptist Church in the town of Mastersville, holding services in homes and…
You're driving past the site of Bruceville Methodist Church, a congregation with roots stretching back to the Civil War era. Local tradition says it began as Cedar Bridge Methodist, holding services near a cedar bridge…
You're driving past Pleasant Hill Cemetery, one of the oldest burial grounds in Bell County. It all started back in 1855 with the first interment, J. Carmack. He was laid to rest on the farm of Fleming Trigg Cox, a…
You're driving past Bruceville, Texas, where a Scottish immigrant named Martin Irons spent his final years. Irons, a machinist by trade, became a powerful union leader in the late 1800s. He helped organize workers for…
You're cruising through Nolanville, and right here is the site of a school that's been educating kids for over a century. The first log schoolhouse went up around 1854, just as Bell County was dividing into districts.…
Bruceville. It’s a quiet place now, just a few hundred folks nestled in the Brazos River watershed. Cotton and grain fields still roll out from town, just like they did when W.W. Bruce laid things out back in '82. But…
Ever wonder where Texans went for outdoor fun nearly a century ago? Mother Neff State Park, just ahead, has been a beloved escape since the 1930s. Isabella Neff, affectionately known as Mother Neff, and her son Noah…
You're driving past the site of the old Wilson School near Rosebud. Its story starts in the 1890s, when William Anderson Barclay donated land for a simple clapboard schoolhouse. Inside, two rooms served as classrooms:…
You're driving past the site of the old Live Oak community, a place that began shortly after the Civil War. Originally known as Camden, then Rupee, it had stores, a cotton gin, and even a Masonic lodge. The earliest…
You're driving past Comanche Gap, a natural break in the mountains that served as a crucial Indian trail and an escape route. Imagine this: March of <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1859</say-as>. The Comanches…
You're driving past the Odle Log Cabin near Valley Mills. This sturdy oak structure was built around 1860 by John Odle, a Tennessee native who arrived in Texas in 1843. He and his wife Lucinda raised thirteen children…
You're driving through Harker Heights, a town that owes its existence to two landowners and a demand for water. In 1957, Pinckney Cox and Harley Kern started selling off their land, creating a new community. But with…
You're driving past Bartlett, Texas, and right here is a marker about something that changed rural life forever. Even though this town had electricity back in 1905, the farms surrounding it? Still dark for another…
This city's story is deeply tied to a major military installation nearby. As Fort Hood grew into a permanent Army post in the 1950s, the surrounding civilian population also began to increase. Land owned by two hog…
Harker Heights (Harker Heights, TX) placed on the 6A Texas high school baseball stat leaderboards for the 2026 season: Cannon Culp (0.473 avg, 1 HR); Nate Brown (0.444 avg, 3 HR); Seth Martin (0.425 avg, 1 HR).
You're driving past the site of Val Verde Baptist Church, a congregation with roots going back to 1875. Eight Baptist members, wanting a church closer to home, organized this group. The first pastor was J. S. Mullins.…
You're driving through Mooreville, Texas, a community founded by an Irishman named Robert Moore in the 1850s. He opened a general store right here, and soon other families joined him. By 1865, Confederate veteran Edward…
You're driving through Harker Heights, near where John Granberry Herrington and his wife Elvira Jane settled in Bell County in 1873. After building their home and farm, John Herrington passed away in 1903. His family…
You're driving through Bell County, past the former home of Daniel McKay. Born in Maine in 1814, McKay arrived in Texas in 1834, just in time to join Sterling C. Robertson's Colony. He fought in the decisive Battle of…
You're driving past the Donahoe Cemetery, a final resting place for folks who settled this part of Texas back in the 1860s. The Leatherman family established it, and the earliest marked grave belongs to their infant…
You're driving past the site of Eagle Springs Baptist Church. This congregation started way back as the Church of Onion Creek, but their first log building burned down in 1854. By 1858, they’d built a new place here and…
You're driving past the site of Donahoe, a community that started along fertile Donahoe Creek back in the late 1840s. Samuel Gibbs Leatherman arrived in 1854, opening the first store and bringing in the first doctor. He…
You're driving past Hope Lutheran Memorial Park. The German Evangelical Lutheran Hoffnung Church bought this land in 1902 for a burial ground. Early graves here include Josef Neuman, who died in 1903, and J.C. Richter,…
You're driving past Cedar Knob Cemetery, a final resting place with a story that stretches back to the earliest days of settlement along the Lampasas River. It all started with Parker Milton Levy, who came here in 1842…
You're driving through Lott, Texas, a town that owes its very existence to the railroad. Back in 1889, the San Antonio and Arkansas Pass Railroad needed a stop between Cameron and Waco. The Texas Townsite Company bought…
You're driving through Falls County, heading towards the town of Lott. You might wonder how this place got its name. It's named for Uriah Lott, a determined railroad promoter who dreamed of connecting South Texas. Lott…
You're driving through Falls County, and right here is the story of Cedar Springs, or as it was known for a bit, Viesca. It started as Mill Tract, named for the springs and cedar grove nearby. In 1879, a post office…
You're driving through Central Texas, near Lott, the birthplace of Alice Glass Kirkpatrick. She wasn't just any Texan; she was a close confidante and political supporter of Lyndon B. Johnson. In 1937, Alice encouraged…
You're driving through Lott, Texas, a town born from the rails. In 1890, the San Antonio and Aransas Pass Railway pushed through this area, and with it, Lott was founded. It was named for Uriah Lott, the very president…
You're driving through Falls County, not far from Lott. Right here, you might have passed through the community once known as Rupee. It started in the early 1870s as Live Oak, named for the trees where the first Baptist…
You're driving through Falls County, Texas, near the town of Lott, where Benjamin Glover Shields, a man who'd already served in Congress and as a diplomat, settled in 1851. Shields arrived with a strong conviction:…
You're driving past the United Methodist Church of Lott, a congregation that started way back in January of 1890. That’s the same year this town was officially incorporated! Early services were held in the Masonic…
You're driving past the site of Lott's first Catholic church, Sacred Heart. Back in the early 1900s, a priest named Father Pfiffner would travel from Marlin once a month to hold Mass for just seven local German Catholic…
You're driving through Buckholts, where Czech immigrants founded a Brethren congregation. In 1894, they held their first services here, using the Czech language. The congregation built this sanctuary in 1913, later…