Southlake in Tarrant County, Texas — The American South (West South Central)
Dove Community
The 1843 Bird's Fort Treaty between the Republic of Texas and several Native American tribes opened this area for new immigrants. In the ensuing years, about 35 related families arrived from Platte County, Missouri, and settlers for other parts of the United States migrated to this area to claim land offered by the Peters Colony. They settled along Denton Creek, south near present-day Grapevine, and west near what is now Roanoke. In February of 1846, area residents organized the Lonesome Dove Baptist Church. In 1847, members built a long log structure approximately four miles northwest of Grapevine in the eastern Cross Timbers. The Lonesome Dove School also began about that time, and the Rev. John Allen Freeman served as schoolteacher as well as church pastor for ten years.
In 1849, the state legislature created Tarrant County, with Birdville as a county seat, and the U.S. Army established Fort Worth as a frontier fort. The small village of Dove developed by the 1870s. A general store and post office operated at the intersection of Dove and Lonesome Dove roads, and the community became a farming center for cotton, melon and dairy production. Included as part of the community were Lonesome Dove Cemetery just north of the church site, the Dove Branch swimming hole, used for recreation as well as baptisms, and Dove School, which closed in 1919 when Carroll School was built in the newly-named Carroll Common School District.
The Federal Government completed Lake Grapevine in 1952, requiring a number of families to relocate from the northern portion of the Dove community. In 1979, the city of Southlake annexed Dove, but evidence of the early area community remains.
Erected 2005 by Texas Historical Commission. (Marker Number 16615.)
Topics. This historical marker is listed in this topic list: Settlements & Settlers. A significant historical month for this entry is February 1846.
Location. Marker is missing. It was located near 32° 58.416′ N, 97° 7.63′ W. Marker was in Southlake, Texas, in Tarrant County. It was at the intersection of Lonesome Dove Road and Alexandrea Court, on the right when traveling south on Lonesome Dove Road. Church has recently done significant landscaping to the front of the property where this marker used to stand. The marker is nowhere to be found. Touch for map. Marker was at or near this postal address: 2380 Lonesome Dove Road, Southlake TX 76092, United States of America. Touch for directions.
Regionally, this marker was in the Prairies & Lakes Region and in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metropolitan Area. It was also in the American South. Globally, it was in North America, a Gulf of Mexico state, the Western Hemisphere, the Western World, and the Anglosphere. Historically, it found itself in what was once New Spain, the Republic of Texas, and one of the Confederate States of America.
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 3 miles of this location, measured as the crow flies: Absalom H. Chivers Cemetery (approx. 1.2 miles away); Carroll School (approx. 1.4 miles away); State Troopers H.D. Murphy and Edward Wheeler (approx. 1.7 miles away); Hood Cemetery (approx. 2.4 miles away); Shockey-Huffman Homestead & Family Farm - Solana's Roots (approx. 2½ miles away); White's Chapel Cemetery (approx. 2.7 miles away); Thomas Easter Cemetery (approx. 2.7 miles away); White's Chapel (approx. 2.8 miles away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Southlake.
Another marker is no longer nearby. Lonesome Dove Baptist Church Cemetery (was here, next to this marker but has been confirmed missing).
More about this marker. The church has recently worked on the front lawn area of their land where this marker used to stand. There is no sign of it now, so I'm unsure if it will be put back up.
Credits. This page was last revised on April 16, 2025. It was originally submitted on July 2, 2023, by Morgan Petermann of Hurst, Texas. This page has been viewed 517 times since then and 95 times this year. Last updated on April 16, 2025, by Matthew G French of Fort Worth, Texas. Photos: 1, 2. submitted on July 2, 2023, by Morgan Petermann of Hurst, Texas. • Devry Becker Jones was the editor who published this page.

