79 stories, landmarks & places within ~20 miles — the same local lore RoadyGoat plays as you drive through.
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The Phantom Killer of Texarkana
· Historical Marker
Unsolved 1946 murder spree in Texarkana, Texas in which a hooded attacker killed five people and wounded three over ten weeks, terrorizing the town and inspiring the film The Town That Dreaded Sundown.
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Scott Joplin Mural - Texarkana
· Historical Marker
Scott Joplin grew up in Texarkana, a city split down the middle by the Arkansas-Texas state line. His father played violin, his mother sang and played banjo, and by his early teens, Joplin was playing piano in churches,…
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Texarkana, TX
· Local history
Texarkana sits on land that feels ancient, even if the town itself is relatively young. The rolling hills, a gentle reminder of the Ouachita Mountains to the north, slope southward toward the Red River floodplain. It's…
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Ace of Clubs House
· 0.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Ace of Clubs House in Texarkana, a home unlike any other you'll see on the road. Built in 1884 by J. H. Draughan, its design is inspired by a deck of cards. Three octagonal rooms, like the leaves…
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World War I Memorial
· 0.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the World War I Memorial in Texarkana. This monument honors the men from both Bowie County, Texas, and Miller County, Arkansas, who gave their lives in the Great War between 1917 and 1918. It was…
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Ellis House
· 0.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Ellis House in Texarkana, built in 1893 for local realtor Gaither Booker Ellis and his wife Mary. Local builder Charles R. Korn designed and constructed this two-story Victorian home. Notice the…
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St. James Episcopal Church
· 0.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Texarkana, and right here is the site of St. James Episcopal Church. Local Episcopalians gathered in a hotel back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1876</say-as> to get this congregation…
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Jamison Building
· 0.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Jamison Building in Texarkana, a landmark that opened its doors in 1930. This wasn't just any building; it was the first black business and professional office building in the city. Designed by…
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United States Post Office and Courthouse
· 0.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past a building that's literally split down the middle, and not just by design. This United States Post Office and Courthouse straddles the state line between Texas and Arkansas. Imagine the paperwork!…
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Offenhauser Building
· 0.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Offenhauser Building in Texarkana, a true pioneer of commerce. Built around 1879, it was the very first brick structure in town, housing the First National Bank. Upstairs, the Kelsey &…
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Old Rialto Building
· 0.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Texarkana, and just ahead, you'll see a building that's a real architectural echo of New York City. It's the Old Rialto Building, erected in 1902 by George Fouke, a true pioneer businessman who…
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Saenger Theatre
· 0.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the historic Saenger Theatre in Texarkana! Opened on November 18, 1924, this grand building was designed by Emil Weil as a regional hub for culture and entertainment. It hosted everything from live…
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Joplin, Scott
· 0.4 mi · Historical Marker
(November 24, 1868 - April 1, 1917) Black composer Scott Joplin, often called the "King of Ragtime Music", was born in Texarkana, Texas, five years before the townsite was platted in 1873. His family lived in this…
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Texarkana
· 0.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Texarkana, a city born from a railroad and a crossroads. Back in December <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1873</say-as>, the Texas & Pacific railroad platted this townsite, holding a big…
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Texarkana Union Station
· 0.5 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Stand on the state line as you admire this historic train station, a testament to the golden age of rail travel in America. Texarkana Union Station was built in 1928, right at the Arkansas-Texas border. The state line…
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Sacred Heart Catholic Cemetery
· 0.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Texarkana, a city born from the railroad back in 1873. Just two years later, this Sacred Heart Catholic Cemetery was established when Colonel R.W. Rodgers donated land. His own daughter, Agnes,…
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Runnels, Howell W.
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the home of Howell W. Runnels, built around 1874. Runnels himself arrived in Texas way back in 1842 and served in the Legislature in the late 1850s. But the real story here is his wife, Martha. She…
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Whitaker House
· 0.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the Whitaker House, built before 1891 by Benjamin F. Whitaker. He wasn't just a homeowner; Whitaker was a Texas State Senator and a key player in the lumber and railroad industries, even helping…
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The Texarkana Phantom Killer, 1946
· 0.7 mi
In the spring of nineteen forty-six, Texarkana had a problem it couldn't name. Eight people were attacked over ten weeks — always on weekends, always at night, always in lovers' lanes or quiet roads on the dark edges of…
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Scott Joplin - King of Ragtime
· 1.2 mi · Historical Marker
Texarkana, Texas was the birthplace of Scott Joplin, the King of Ragtime, whose 'Maple Leaf Rag' became the first million-selling piece of sheet music in American history.
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Texarkana, AR
· 1.3 mi · Local history
Texarkana's story is etched into its very name, a confluence of Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana. Founded in the 1870s, its location near the Red River, though slightly elevated at 390 feet, made it a natural crossroads.…
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Dr. A. H. A. and Ruby Jones House
· 1.3 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Texarkana, passing the former home of Dr. A. H. A. Jones and his wife, Ruby. Ruby, a Texarkana native, designed this unique bungalow in 1938, using African American craftsmen to build it. Notice…
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Perot, Henry Ross
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
Henry Ross Perot, a groundbreaking information technology businessman, philanthropist, and two-time presidential candidate, was born on June 27, 1930, in Texarkana, Texas. His parents, Gabriel Ross Perot, Sr., and Lulu…
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Church, Dorothea Towles
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
Dorothea Towles Church, pioneering Black model, was born on July 26, 1922, in Texarkana, Texas. She was the seventh of eight children born to Thomas Elsworth Towles of Alabama and Anabella Clark of Arkansas. Her father…
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Grigson, James Paul, Jr.
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, Texas, the birthplace of James Paul Grigson, Jr., a man controversially known as 'Dr. Death.' Grigson was a forensic psychiatrist who testified in over 150 capital murder cases, often…
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Johnson, Eliza Eubanks Peterson
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Texarkana, you're driving past the former stomping grounds of Eliza E. Peterson. Born in 1874, she became a national leader in the temperance movement and a suffragist. As president of the Texas Woman's…
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Mathews, Edwin Lee [Eddie]
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, a town that gave baseball fans one of the game's all-time sluggers: Eddie Mathews. Born right here in nineteen thirty-one, Mathews grew up to be a star for the Milwaukee Braves. In…
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Weiss, Julius
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, and right here is where a German immigrant named Julius Weiss gave the King of Ragtime, Scott Joplin, his very first formal music lessons. Born in Saxony around 1840, Weiss arrived in…
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Baxter, Jesse Randall [J.R.]
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, a city that became the heart of the gospel music world. Right here, in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1926</say-as>, Jesse Randall Baxter, known as 'Pap,' teamed up with V. O.…
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Buchanan, William
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, a city that owes much of its early growth to the towering pine trees that once stood here. In 1873, William Buchanan arrived and saw opportunity. He started with a small sawmill,…
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Jamison, Garling Uriah, Sr.
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, and right here is a place with a story. In 1930, Dr. Garling Uriah Jamison, a prominent African-American physician, opened the Jamison Building. It was the first building in the region…
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King, John Jefferson
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, and right here on Broad and State Streets, a deadly confrontation unfolded back in 1893. John Jefferson King, the county judge, had a public feud with William Allen, the editor of the…
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Munz, TX
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Cass County, and right here is where Munz City used to be. It was founded in the early 1900s by the Munzheimer brothers, who envisioned a bustling railroad hub. They built the Northeast Texas…
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Nelson, Harrison D., Jr. [Peppermint Harris]
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
Right here in Texarkana, Texas, you're passing through the birthplace of a blues legend known as "Peppermint Harris." Born Harrison D. Nelson, Jr. in 1925, he moved to Houston and started playing the blues…
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Texarkana, TX
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, a city literally split down the middle! Right here, on the Texas-Arkansas border, this town was born from a railroad handshake. In 1873, the Texas and Pacific Railroad met the Cairo and…
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Vaughan, Horace Worth
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through what was once Marion County, where Horace Worth Vaughan was born back in 1867. Vaughan became a lawyer and a politician, rising through the ranks in Texarkana. He was a fierce advocate for…
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Connally, Lucile Ferguson Sanderson Sheppard
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, a town that sits right on the Texas-Arkansas border. This is where Lucile Sanderson was born in 1890. She grew up here, studied music in Virginia and D.C., and eventually married Morris…
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Taylor, Jasper
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, a town that claims to be the birthplace of Jasper Taylor, a pioneering jazz percussionist born in 1894. Taylor left Texas in 1912 to join a Wild West Show, and by 1913, he was playing…
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Texarkana and Fort Smith Railway
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, a city that owes its existence to ambitious railroad dreams. The Texarkana and Fort Smith Railway, originally chartered in 1885, was meant to connect this city to the Red River, and…
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Allen, Augustus Calhoun
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bowie County, Texas, perhaps near Texarkana, where Augustus Calhoun Allen made his home after the Civil War. But before that, Allen was a Confederate officer, a captain in the Nineteenth Texas…
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Estes, William Lee
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bowie County, possibly near Texarkana, where William Lee Estes built a remarkable career. After earning his law degree from the University of Texas in 1894, Estes returned to Texarkana and quickly…
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Stilwell, Henry Wesley
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, a city that owes much of its modern educational landscape to Henry W. Stilwell. Born near Lone Oak in 1886, Stilwell dedicated his life to shaping Texas schools. After years teaching…
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Tilson, William Harrison
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bowie County, heading towards Texarkana, and right here is a place that saw a lot of political action. William Harrison Tilson was a lawyer, a Confederate soldier, and a key figure in state…
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Wright Patman Lake
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving near Texarkana, heading toward Wright Patman Lake. This massive body of water, originally called the Texarkana Reservoir, was born from a massive engineering effort. Construction on the dam began way back…
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Wright, Lammar
· 2.7 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Texarkana, Texas, the birthplace of Lammar Wright, a jazz trumpeter whose searing solos helped define the sound of early jazz. Born in 1905 or 1907, Wright joined Bennie Moten's band in Kansas…
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Wake Village, TX
· 3.4 mi
Wake Village is a place where the ordinary can quickly become extraordinary. Drive around, and you might think it’s just another quiet Texas town. But those of us who live here know there's more to the story.
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UIL 4A Football State Champions — 2 titles
· 4.4 mi
Pleasant Grove High School (Texarkana, TX): Most recent: 35-21 over Wimberley · 2019 4A Division 2 final.
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Texas HS Baseball Playoff Hits 2026: Pleasant Grove (Texarkana)
· 4.4 mi
Pleasant Grove (Texarkana), TX placed on the Texas high school baseball PLAYOFF HITS leaderboard for the 2026 postseason: Hunter Rose (17 hits, #8 in TX).
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Texas HS Baseball Playoff Leaders 2026: Pleasant Grove (Texarkana)
· 4.4 mi
Pleasant Grove (Texarkana) put 4 players on the statewide leaderboards of the 2026 Texas high school baseball playoffs. Hunter Rose had the fewest hits allowed per inning in the state, 17 hits (8th in the state), 13 RBI…
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Town of Nash
· 4.5 mi · Historical Marker
You're cruising through Nash, a town with a name that changed as much as its population. It started around 1873 as 'T. C. Junction,' right where the Texas & Pacific Railroad cut across the landscape. By 1884, the post…
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Caddo Indian Village
· 4.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Bowie County, not far from Texarkana, where for a thousand years, a sophisticated civilization thrived. From around 800 to 1800 AD, the Caddo people lived here, believing they were the only…
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Trammels Trace
· 4.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving near Texarkana, and right here, you're crossing into Texas via Trammels Trace. This wasn't just any road; it was the 1813 entry point for countless pioneers, including Stephen F. Austin himself, Sam…
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French in Texas
· 4.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through the heart of French activity in Texas, long before it was Texas! Back in <say-as interpret-as="date" format="y">1685</say-as>, La Salle planted a colony on the coast. But right near here, in…
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First Disciples of Christ in Texas
· 4.7 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Texarkana, and we're heading back to 1831. Collin McKinney and his family were holding informal worship services at McKinney's Landing, defying Mexican law that demanded allegiance to the Catholic…
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Old Rondo Cemetery
· 4.9 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Pause for a moment and imagine this quiet cemetery filled with the somber sounds of a nation at war. In 1862, Confederate troops stationed here in Rondo were struck by a devastating measles epidemic as the Union Army…
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DeGolyer, Everette Lee
· 5.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through East Texas, not far from Nash, where Everette Lee DeGolyer made history in the oil fields. In 1922, he instigated the very first geophysical survey of an oilfield in the United States, right here…
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Nash, TX (Bowie County)
· 5.2 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Nash, Texas, a town born from the railroads. Back in the 1870s, this spot was just a junction where a branch line from Marshall met the main Texas and Pacific line. Folks called it…
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Nash, TX
· 5.5 mi
Nash, Texas, might seem like a quiet spot on the map, but it's a place with its own story etched into the landscape. This is Red River country, a little higher than the plains around it, where the land feeds into the…
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Red Lick, TX
· 7.8 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Red Lick, a town that got its name from a simple, natural phenomenon. Back in the 1860s, folks noticed that a nearby hill, made of red clay, was a popular spot for deer to get their salt. They…
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Red Lick Methodist Church
· 8.0 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Red Lick Methodist Church. Founded around 1885, services have been held here since the 1890s on land donated by the Bob Bonner family. Early services were held in a shared building,…
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Cemetery for Old Harrison Chapel
· 8.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Old Harrison Chapel Cemetery, a resting place founded way back in 1840 by Texas pioneers Charles Moores and his wife, Mary Harrison. Their chapel, named for her parents, was an all-faiths spot where…
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Redwater
· 12.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Redwater, a town with a name that tells a story. It started as Mooresville in 1840, but then a sawmill popped up in 1875, attracting workers who, well, let's just say they weren't too keen on…
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Redwater, TX
· 12.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Redwater, Texas, a town with a name that tells a story. It started out in the 1870s as Ingersoll, named for a famous agnostic. But the folks here had a change of heart. In 1886, a massive revival…
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Hooks, TX
· 13.3 mi
Hooks, Texas, might seem like just another quiet spot in Bowie County, but it's got a story to tell, and more than a few interesting characters have walked these streets. You can feel it in the air – a kind of…
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Hooks, Robert Warren
· 14.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Bowie County, near the town of Hooks, which owes its name to a prominent planter family. Robert Warren Hooks, born in Alabama in 1836, moved with his family to this area around 1848. His father…
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Hooks, TX
· 14.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving west of Texarkana, and right here is Hooks, Texas. This community started way back in the late 1830s, growing up around the plantation of Warren Hooks. For decades, it was a quiet spot, gaining a post…
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Hooks, Warren H.
· 14.1 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Hooks, Texas, a town named after a man who became one of Northeast Texas's largest landowners. Warren Hooks arrived from Alabama in the late 1840s, eventually owning over 13,000 acres and a…
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Hooks
· 14.6 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving through Hooks, Texas, a town that owes its name to Warren Hooks, who established a supply center here on his plantation way back in 1848. For decades, farming was the name of the game, with cotton and…
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Epperson's Ferry
· 17.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of Epperson's Ferry, a crossing that's seen a lot of Texas history. Long before Mark Epperson set up his ferry here before 1837, this natural crossing was used by Caddo Indians. Later,…
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Richmond, AR
· 17.3 mi
Richmond, Arkansas, isn't a place that shouts from the rooftops, but it holds its history close. The land, slightly elevated above the waters of Millwood Lake, whispers of cotton fields and hard work. The arrival of the…
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Crenshaw Site
· 18.0 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine a place where ancient rituals unfolded centuries before European contact. That's the Crenshaw Site, a significant Caddo ceremonial center right here in Miller County. Beginning perhaps as early as 900 AD, and…
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Ashdown, AR
· 18.2 mi · Local history
Ashdown, Arkansas, owes its existence to the iron horse. Carved from the Red River plains in the late 19th century, its establishment as a town directly correlates with the expansion of the railroad. Named for a…
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Maud United Methodist Church
· 18.2 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past the site of the Maud United Methodist Church, which began as a mission in 1874. The town's founder, Samuel Knapp, donated the land for the church, and the original building was moved here in 1880.…
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Maud, TX
· 18.4 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Maud, a community in Bowie County that owes its existence to the railroad. Before the St. Louis Southwestern Railway arrived in 1870, this area, known as the Red River Country, saw little…
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Liberty Cemetery, Old, and Site of Enon Primitive Baptist Church
· 19.4 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past Old Liberty Cemetery, a resting place for folks dating back to 1850. It's also the site of the original Enon Primitive Baptist Church, organized way back in 1845. In 1861, church trustees got four…
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Dooley's Ferry Fortifications Historic District
· 19.9 mi · Scraped Hmdb
Imagine the Red River churning, the air thick with tension – this unassuming spot was once a crucial defense against a Union invasion. In late 1864, Confederate troops, under the command of Major-General John B.…
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Mathews - Powell House
· 19.9 mi · Historical Marker
You're driving past a grand Victorian home, built in 1878 by William Franklin Mathews. Mathews was a Confederate veteran who came to Queen City right when it was founded, becoming a successful merchant. The house saw…
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Bloomburg, TX
· 19.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through northeastern Cass County, not far from the Arkansas border. Right here is Bloomburg, a town that owes its existence to the railroad. Before 1895, this was just an area with scattered settlement.…
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Queen City, TX
· 19.9 mi · Tsha Handbook
You're driving through Queen City, Texas, a town born from the railroad in 1877. It quickly became a hub, boasting sawmills, a gristmill, and even an iron foundry hoping to tap into local ore. That foundry didn't last,…