On FM31, on the right when traveling south on FM31.
Bailey Anderson was born in Stafford County, VA about 1760. He moved with his parents John and Sarah (Carney) Anderson to the Newberry district of South Carolina, at 21. He was in the Revolutionary Army, and during the next 11 years saw service in . . . — — Map (db m223879) HM
On West Main Street at North Green Street, on the right when traveling west on West Main Street.
Successor to Fort Crawford and Ash Springs, pioneer settlements of 1840s. Hallsville was founded when Texas & Pacific Railway was built. First train arrived Aug. 17, 1869. Western terminus for a time, and site (1870-73) of T.& P. shops, town . . . — — Map (db m191338) HM
Benjamin T. Baker Pvt Co F Randal's 1st Texas Lancers Benjamin R. Bass Pvt Co K 17th Texas Cav Joseph Bechtold Sgt Co A 14th Texas Inf John W. Harris Sgt Co B Waul's Texas Legion Richard J. Findley Pvt Co D 14th Alabama Reg Orren Perry Forrest . . . — — Map (db m191341) WM
On Church Street at North Oak Street, on the right when traveling west on Church Street.
Chartered in 1856 in the town of Ash Springs, this lodge was named for James F. Taylor (1812-1889), a leading citizen, state legislator, and mason. After the railroad bypassed Ash Springs in the late 1860s the lodge moved to the new town of . . . — — Map (db m191339) HM
On State Highway 154, 0.3 miles east of Grand Avenue, on the right when traveling east.
Although settlement in this area between the forks of Big and Little Cypress creeks began in the 1830s, notable growth did not occur until the arrival of a railroad here in 1891. The railroad was a vital part of a venture financed by John H. Inman, . . . — — Map (db m136301) HM
On Farm to Market Road 134, 0.2 miles north of Concord Road, on the left when traveling north.
A key port on Caddo Lake for traffic to New Orleans, 1830s - 1860s. Founded by Peter Swanson (1789-1849), a civil engineer and planter. Cotton, pelts and other products went out and settlers' goods came in at this landing.
1850s terminal of . . . — — Map (db m191224) HM
On T J Taylor Avenue (State Highway 449) at Kay Street, on the right when traveling north on T J Taylor Avenue.
On December 22, 1912, in the family home 2.7 miles south, was born Claudia Alta Taylor.
She was third child (only daughter) of Thomas Jefferson and Minnie Pattillo Taylor.
Her father had a general store in Karnack for many years. Young “Lady . . . — — Map (db m110848) HM
On Kelly Avenue at Zeugner Drive, on the right when traveling south on Kelly Avenue.
In 1941, as the United States prepared for eventual entry into World War II, the U.S. Army Ordnance Department approached Monsanto Chemical Company of St. Louis about operating a local plant for production of explosives. Initially called Longhorn . . . — — Map (db m110849) HM
Near Park Road 2, 0.1 miles north of Farm to Market Road 2198, on the right when traveling north.
Ancestral home of Texas Caddo Indians, this region gained a distinctive character in the 19th century. From 1806 to 1845 it lay in an area disputed by various countries and designated, from 1819, as the “neutral ground.” Settlers living . . . — — Map (db m110850) HM
On South Washington Avenue at West Fannin Street, on the right when traveling south on South Washington Avenue.
Built about 1880 as a wedding present for Katie (Allen) and Albert Van Hook, this house was designed by Katie's father, architect N. S. Allen. Allen designed many of the important homes and businesses of Shreveport for forty years. The modified . . . — — Map (db m232737) HM
Native of Alabama, Arkansas lawyer,
Colonel commanding 6th Arkansas
Confederate Infantry Regiment at Battle
of Shiloh in Tennessee, Commended for action at Helena and Fort Hindman in Arkansas, Brigader-General in Confederate Army, Commended . . . — — Map (db m191304) HM
On West Houston Street at South Franklin Street, on the right when traveling east on West Houston Street.
Built in 1848 by Albert M. Arnot, a blacksmith, this house features characteristics of Greek revival and Creole styling. Four rooms were originally located on the main floor. The basement area, constructed above ground, housed a dining room, harness . . . — — Map (db m232759) HM
On West Grand Avenue (U.S. 80) at Compress Street on West Grand Avenue.
In 1867 the Rev. William Massey organized the "Colored Baptist Church" in his home. Soon the name "Bethesda" was chosen for the Biblical pool where the sick and troubled went for healing. Members of this congregation included prominent business, . . . — — Map (db m218649) HM
On East Houston Street at South Bolivar Street, on the left when traveling west on East Houston Street.
Renowned architect Cornelius Granberry Lancaster was born
on March 4, 1863, in the city of Marshall. He studied architecture at the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas (now Texas A&M University) from 1892-1895, but did not complete his . . . — — Map (db m218703) HM
Near West Travis Street at South Grove Street, on the right when traveling west.
The servant’s wing, water tower, and the lush gardens are reminders that the Starr family enjoyed a comfortable lifestyle.
Helping Hands
Over the years, the Starr family employed cooks, maids, drivers,
gardeners, handymen, and nurses for . . . — — Map (db m246137) HM
On South Bolivar Street at Crockett Street, on the left when traveling south on South Bolivar Street.
On this site a one-story frame house served as headquarters of the Civil War State Government of Missouri in exile. Governor Thomas C. Reynolds and his staff directed the civil and military affairs of Confederate Missourians from Marshall beginning . . . — — Map (db m232689) HM
On North Grove Street (Farm to Market Road 1997) at Rainey Street on North Grove Street.
Secondary education is a familiar institution in Marshall with academies dating back to the 1840s. During a 1911 banquet for donors to the new Southern Methodist University, Dr. William T. Tardy, the pastor of the First Baptist Church, was present. . . . — — Map (db m191311) HM
On Whetstone Street at Mission Street, on the right when traveling east on Whetstone Street.
On site used since 1867 for worship. First church was built and occupied 1868 when pastor was the Rev. Elijah Blair; second, 1892, under the Rev. Thomas Cole. The Rev. A. J. Newton began drive for third church, completed in 1958 under the Rev. J. F. . . . — — Map (db m232754) HM
On West Austin Street at North Fulton Street, on the right when traveling west on West Austin Street.
John Bryce (1784-1864), Baptist missionary and secret agent for U. S. President John Tyler during Texas annexation negotiations, and the Rev. George Washington Baines, great-grandfather of President Lyndon Baines Johnson, founded this church shortly . . . — — Map (db m218650) HM
On East Houston Street at South Lafayette Street, on the left when traveling west on East Houston Street.
Begun by Littleton Fowler, 1839. Job M. Baker, first pastor. Organized 1845. Built 1861 on site given by Wm. M. and Mary M. Johnston. Bricks hand-molded, beams hand-hewn. Gallery in north end for slave members. Munitions stored in basement during . . . — — Map (db m218652) HM
On West Travis Street at South Fulton Street, on the right when traveling west on West Travis Street.
Educator, NAACP officer and civil rights activist Fred Lewis (1912-2002), managed Ruth Starr Blake's estate after he returned from WWII. Lewis was influential in restoring voting rights for African American Texans. The first White Citizens Party was . . . — — Map (db m218696) HM
On West Austin Street at North Fulton Street, on the left when traveling west on West Austin Street.
Built by Fidel Bircher, this raised Greek revival style cottage was designed by W. R. D. Ward, who sold Bircher the property in 1853. Edwin James Fry (1845-1927), a native Virginian who came to Texas in 1855, bought the residence in 1872 and . . . — — Map (db m218689) HM
On West Houston Street at South Wellington Street, on the left when traveling east on West Houston Street.
(front)
Home Town of Texas Confederate
General Elkanah Greer
(1825-1877)
Born Tennessee. Fought Mexican War. Came to Texas 1848. Commissioned colonel and raised 3rd Texas Cavalry. Attached to Ross' Texas Brigade. Fought at . . . — — Map (db m110890) HM WM
On North Washington Avenue, 0.1 miles north of Ginocchio Street, on the left when traveling north.
Italian-born Charles Ginocchio arrived in Marshall in 1871. He owned several properties near the T & P Railroad Depot, including the site of a notorious 1879 shooting that left Maurice Barrymore wounded and fellow actor Ben Porter Dead. In 1893-96 . . . — — Map (db m110872) HM
On North Washington Avenue at Ginocchio Street, on the right when traveling south on North Washington Avenue.
Italian – American business leader Charles Ginocchio (1844-98) and wife Roxana settled in Marshal in 1871; built this home, 1886.
Architect: C.G. Lancaster, designer of County Courthouse.
In Ginocchio household was a nephew, George J. . . . — — Map (db m110906) HM
On North Fulton Street at West Burleson Street on North Fulton Street.
Only 19th century Texas woman honored by a portrait on money-- the Confederate $100 bill.
In 1850s Lucy introduced ice tea and silk hose to East Texas, in social affairs at Wyalucing -- her family's home which stood at this site and was a . . . — — Map (db m232746) HM
On West Houston Street at South Wellington Street, on the left when traveling east on West Houston Street.
(front)
Home Town Texas First Confederate
Governor
Edward Clark
(1815-1880)
Son of a Georgia governor. Came here in 1842. Member Annexation Convention, 1st and 2nd Texas Legislatures. Participant Mexican War. Secretary of . . . — — Map (db m110895) HM WM
Near East Grand Avenue (U.S. 80) at Columbus Street.
Born in Georgia. Came to Texas in 1842. Served as a member of Annexation Convention. Fought in War with Mexico. Held office as State Representative, Senator, Secretary of State, Lieutenant Governor; Governor in 1861.
Raised and led 14th Texas . . . — — Map (db m191269) HM
On One Tiger Drive at East Avenue, on the right when traveling south on One Tiger Drive.
Originated 1840 as private burial ground, Van Zandt Family. Resting place, many early Texas leaders and patriots:
Isaac Van Zandt (1813-47), Came to Marshall in 1839. County Named in His Honor.
James Harper Starr (1809-90). Land . . . — — Map (db m191302) HM
On Wiley Avenue at Wesson Street, on the left when traveling south on Wiley Avenue.
Henry Bertram Pemberton was born on January 20, 1867 to Charles and Eliza Pemberton. In 1876, Charles and his family moved to Marshall and purchased a house near Wiley College. He died in 1883, leaving Henry to care for his mother and sisters. Henry . . . — — Map (db m232725) HM
On East Rusk Street, 0.1 miles east of North Alamo Blvd, on the left.
Texas & Pacific Railroad shop craftsmen built this residence of handpressed bricks in 1889 for William P. Hagerty (1844-1906), personal engineer of T. & P. President George J. Gould. Stenciled canvas ceilings decorate some rooms. Hagerty, who fled . . . — — Map (db m232752) HM
Near U.S. 80, 0.8 miles west of County Road 2199, on the right when traveling west.
Formed from Shelby County
Created January 28, 1839 Organized June 12, 1842
Named in honor of
Jonas Harrison
A pioneer statesman of New Jersey
who came to Texas in 1820
A member of the First Convention of . . . — — Map (db m119552) HM
On West Houston Street at North Wellington Street, on the left when traveling west on West Houston Street.
The original inhabitants of this area were the Caddo Indians. Anglo settlers, mostly from the southern U.S., began arriving in the 1830’s. Many obtained Mexican land grants in 1835, and population increased following Texas Independence in . . . — — Map (db m110883) HM
On U.S. 80, 0.8 miles west of County Road 2199, on the right when traveling west.
The picnic area on US 80 in Harrison County is an early roadside park developed by the Texas Highway Department -- now Texas Department of Transportation. Constructed in the early 1940's, this park features stone masonry picnic features and entry . . . — — Map (db m120293) HM
On South Washington Avenue at Medill Street, on the right when traveling south on South Washington Avenue.
Born South Carolina. Successful lawyer and businessman in Marshall. Elected to Texas Legislature 1857. At start of Civil War, served as colonel 14th Texas Cavalry. Governor 1863-1865, the most trying years of Confederacy. Debt, need, dependents . . . — — Map (db m232688) HM
On West Houston Street at South Wellington Street, on the left when traveling east on West Houston Street.
(front)
Home Town of Texas Confederate
James Harper Starr
1809 - 1890
Connecticut-born. Came to Texas 1837. A doctor in Nacogdoches. Secretary of the Treasury and Army Surgeon, Republic of Texas. At start of Civil War . . . — — Map (db m124003) HM
On North Washington Avenue at East Burleson Street, on the left when traveling south on North Washington Avenue.
Civil Rights leader James Leonard Farmer, Jr., son of Pearl (Houston) and Dr. James L. Farmer, Sr., was born in Marshall where his father was a professor at Wiley College. The family moved to Atlanta, Georgia, and Austin, Texas, before returning to . . . — — Map (db m232726) HM
On University Avenue at Wiley Avenue on University Avenue.
James Leonard Farmer, Sr., was the son of Carolina and Lorena Wilson Farmer. James Farmer studied at Cookman Institute in Florida before attending Boston University, where he received a bachelors degree in 1913, a Bachelor of Sacred Theology degree . . . — — Map (db m232738) HM
On Billups Street at West Medill Street, on the right when traveling north on Billups Street.
After the Civil War many African Americans in Texas struggled to gather the resources necessary to establish churches in their communities. In 1874 a group of African American residents of this section of Marshall (then known as Hubbard's Hill), led . . . — — Map (db m191332) HM
On North Washington Avenue at East Rusk Street, on the right when traveling south on North Washington Avenue.
Jewish merchant Joe Weisman (1847-1918), born in Syracuse, New York, was one of seven children of Meyer and Mary Doppelmayer Weisman. Joe studied at Bryan-Stratton Business College before following an uncle, Daniel Doppelmayer, to Marshall, Texas in . . . — — Map (db m232733) HM
On East Grand Avenue (U.S. 80) at North Columbus Street on East Grand Avenue.
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, Republic of Texas, 1839-40, 1842-45; district judge, state of Texas, 1846-50. Mills County, Texas was named in his honor. Born in County Antrim, Ireland, Nov. 12, 1817; died Nov. 30, 1871. Octavia (Jones) . . . — — Map (db m218653) HM
On South Washington Avenue at University Avenue, on the right when traveling south on South Washington Avenue.
In April 1909, doctors James F. Rosborough, Rogers Cocke and Frank Littlejohn joined forces to meet the increasing need for a medical facility in Marshall. Established in the home and former sanitarium of Dr. John H. Pope, the new facility was to be . . . — — Map (db m191329) HM
Born in Marshall, received his medical degree from University of Texas. Enlisted in Marshall Light Infantry (local militia), 1890. Ended military career 49 years later as Brevet Lieutenant General. Saw service on Mexican border. In World War I . . . — — Map (db m191303) HM
On West Houston Street at North Wellington Street, on the left when traveling west on West Houston Street.
Two years after Harrison County was created by The Republic of Texas Congress in 1839, landowner Peter Whetstone offered property for a courthouse, a church, and a school in an effort to persuade county officials to locate the seat of government in . . . — — Map (db m110879) HM
On North East End Boulevard South (U.S. 59) at Loop 390 on North East End Boulevard South.
Founded 1839. Named for John Marshall, Chief Justice of U.S. Supreme Court. Supply, ordnance, medical, telegraph and military headquarters during Civil War. The Confederate capital of Missouri was located here. Trade, industry, rail and historical . . . — — Map (db m218691) HM
On North Washington Avenue north of Ginocchio Street, on the left when traveling north.
According to oral tradition and documented evidence, the Boogie Woogie musical genre, with its driving, iconic left-hand rhythm, originated in the area of Marshall, Harrison County, in the early 1870s. During that decade, Marshall became the . . . — — Map (db m136322) HM
On East Grand Avenue (U.S. 80) at North Columbus Street, on the right when traveling west on East Grand Avenue.
Resting place of many early Texas Leaders and Patriots: Edward Clark (1815-80), Governor of Texas, 1861, Colonel, C.S.A.
Walter P. Lane (1817-92), Veteran of Texas Revolution and Mexican War; Brigadier General, C.S.A.
John T. Mills . . . — — Map (db m192010) HM
On North Grove Street (Farm to Market Road 1997) at Rainey Street, on the left when traveling north on North Grove Street.
As part of a 1912 plan to build the College of Marshall (now East Texas Baptist University), Marshall Hall is the oldest building on campus. Marshall Hall was constructed on a high point of the former Van Zandt family plantation. Trustees of the . . . — — Map (db m191309) HM
On Herndon Street, 0.1 miles east of Speed Street, on the left when traveling west.
Among the pioneer settlers of Harrison County were a number of Jewish families, many of whom were German immigrants. The Hebrew Benevolent Society was organized in 1867 with 25 charter members. In 1881 the society purchased a plot of land to be used . . . — — Map (db m191308) HM
Throughout the Civil War, the Confederate Army struggled with the problem of lack of military stores. Following the fall of Vicksburg to Union forces in 1863, the supply of ordnance from Richmond was cut off.
The Trans-Mississippi Department . . . — — Map (db m218692) HM
Near East Grand Avenue (U.S. 80) at North Columbus Street.
As a center of activity for the Confederacy west of the Mississippi, this east Texas town played a major role in the Civil War.
Headquarters of the Trans-Mississippi Department Medical Bureau and Postal Service were here plus two military . . . — — Map (db m191270) HM
On Pine Bluff Road, 1 mile north of State Highway 43, on the right when traveling north.
Before the Civil War (1861-65), the stage road was the main transportation artery between Marshall and Shreveport, providing a link with New Orleans for distant markets. Extending northeast from Marshall, the stage road paralleled the later route of . . . — — Map (db m122873) HM
Matthew Winfred Dogan was born on December 21, 1863 in Pontotoc, Mississippi. His parents, William and Jennie Dogan, were born slaves, but were able to purchase their freedom and that of their six children in 1858. Determined to educate their . . . — — Map (db m232723) HM
Poet, professor, and playwright, Melvin Beaunorus Tolson was born on February 6, 1898 in Kansas City, Missouri, to Rev. Alonzo, a Methodist minister, and Lera Ann (Hurt) Tolson. Melvin graduated high school in 1918 in Kansas City, Missouri and then . . . — — Map (db m232727) HM
On Farm to Market Road 968, 0.3 miles south of U.S. 80, on the right when traveling south.
William McKinney conveyed adjacent land in 1848 for the establishment of a community school. Later, a Union church was included and the site became the center of Grover Community, widespread farm settlement. This cemetery is first noted in records . . . — — Map (db m191335) HM
On East Houston Street at Albert Street, on the right when traveling west on East Houston Street.
The Marshall School Board purchased two acres here in 1903 as the site for this 8-room brick school building designed by prominent architect C. G. Lancaster. Originally called the "East Side School" it opened to Anglo students in 1905. The school . . . — — Map (db m232743) HM
On West Burleson Street at North Franklin Street, on the right when traveling west on West Burleson Street.
On May 23, 1857, during his first Texas gubernatorial race, Sam Houston came to Marshall, the hometown of two of his most outspoken critics, Robert Lougery and Louis T. Wigfall, for a much anticipated debate against his opponent, Hardin Runnels. . . . — — Map (db m110930) HM
On East Travis Street at South Alamo Blvd, on the left when traveling east on East Travis Street.
Early schools for Marshall's African Americans consisted of loosely organized classes held in homes, churches, and lodge halls. In 1894 Professor H. B. Pemberton, Sr., convinced city officials of the need for a school building and a fixed curriculum . . . — — Map (db m232755) HM
On West Burleson Street at North Franklin Street, on the right when traveling west on West Burleson Street.
School originated as Female Department of Marshall University, chartered Jan. 18, 1842, by Republic of Texas.
Marshall Masonic Lodge No. 22 chartered the Female Institute as a separate school in 1850.
Five lodge members (including city's . . . — — Map (db m201889) HM
On West Houston Street at Adkins Street, on the right when traveling east on West Houston Street.
A pioneer institution of higher education, incorporated January 19, 1842. Granted four leagues of land for its support by the Republic of Texas. The leading educational institution in northeast Texas until the Civil War. It later became a part of . . . — — Map (db m232691) HM
On West Burleson Street at North Fulton Street, on the right when traveling west on West Burleson Street.
In 1887 Jewish residents of the Marshall area organized the Moses Montefiore congregation, Adath Israel. Daniel Doppelmayer, a Civil War veteran and one of the pioneer Jewish settlers of the area, was selected as the first president. At his . . . — — Map (db m191291) HM
On East Houston Street at South Bolivar Street, on the right when traveling east on East Houston Street.
A 3-story brick structure built on this site in 1857 by business leader George B. Adkins (1810-76), and called “Adkins House,” ranked as a very fine hotel and served as depot for stage lines, including southern branch of Butterfield Mail, . . . — — Map (db m110874) HM
On West Grand Avenue (U.S. 80) at North Wellington Street, on the right when traveling west on West Grand Avenue.
Texas had very few factories in 1861 when she joined the Confederate States of America and went to war on the issue of States’ Rights. Some of the manufacturing plants necessary to supply military goods were thereupon established in and around . . . — — Map (db m110899) HM
Near East Grand Avenue (U.S. 80) at North Columbus Street.
Born in Louisburg, N.C.; came to Texas 1833. Never carried a gun, though he lived in locality of 1840's Regulator - Moderator Feud, and risked life to help bury Robert Potter (first Secretary of Navy, Republic of Texas), who had been shot by an . . . — — Map (db m191268) HM
On West Travis Street at South Grove Street, on the right when traveling west on West Travis Street.
Four Generations of a Founding Texas Family Called This Place Home
Family patriarch Dr. James Harper Starr was nearing the end of a long and storied career when the Starr family relocated their businesses to Marshall. His son, James . . . — — Map (db m191327) HM
On West Travis Street at South Grove Street on West Travis Street.
Dr. James Harper Starr (1809-1890) was a government official in the Republic of Texas and the Confederacy and a leading physician and businessman. In 1870, Dr. Starr and his son, James Franklin Starr (1844-1902), relocated their land and banking . . . — — Map (db m191328) HM
On East Houston Street at North Washington Avenue, on the left when traveling east on East Houston Street.
left side:
The first telegraph office in the State of Texas
was established at this location on
February 14, 1854.
The Texas and Red River Telegraph Company
merged several times finally becoming
Western Union Telegraph . . . — — Map (db m110885) HM
On North Washington Avenue, 0.1 miles north of Ginocchio Street.
Marshall’s first railroad was conceived as a connection to Red River Steamboat Traffic. Twenty miles of track were laid northeast to Swanson’s Landing on Caddo Lake by 1858.
In 1871, the U.S. Congress authorized the Texas and Pacific Railway . . . — — Map (db m110873) HM
On South Washington Avenue at East Emory Street, on the right when traveling north on South Washington Avenue.
Attorney and plantation owner Chesley Meredith Adams (1813-1859) bought this property in the 1850s and constructed a log house. His widow Martha and her husband the Rev. J. F. Riggs built this frame residence in 1880 to replace the log structure. . . . — — Map (db m232760) HM
On North Washington Avenue, 0.1 miles south of Ginocchio Street, on the left when traveling south.
Born in Alabama, the Rev. Walker Montecue Allen (1819-1899) was a Cumberland Presbyterian minister, author, and teacher.
He moved to Marshall in 1876 with his wife Eliza Ann (Handly) (1829-1902) and their nine children.
They erected this two-story . . . — — Map (db m110911) HM
On West Austin Street at North Fulton Street on West Austin Street.
This residence was erected for John R. (b. 1849) and Sallie Stinson (b. 1857) soon after their marriage in Sept. 1875. The wood framing around the entryway was carved to resemble cut stone. Stinson was a merchant and served one term as mayor of . . . — — Map (db m218648) HM
On West Grand Avenue (U.S. 80), on the right when traveling west.
An orphan, Isaac ("Ike") Hochwald (1865-1956) came to Marshall in 1877 as the ward of Lionel Kahn. He joined Kahn's mercantile firm and became a prosperous businessman. Hochwald was a school trustee, member of several fraternal groups, and one of . . . — — Map (db m218690) HM
On East Austin Street at East Bolivar Street, on the right when traveling west on East Austin Street.
Mose Weisman opened Hub Shoe Store on E. Austin Street in 1897. The Weisman family emigrated from Bavaria, Germany, to Syracuse, New York, and then to Marshall in the late 1840s, becoming part of the town’s thriving Jewish community. Weisman’s . . . — — Map (db m232730) HM
On West Austin Street at North Franklin Street, on the right when traveling west on West Austin Street.
Twenty-five Marshall ladies formed the Ingleside Circulating Book Club in 1887, each member buying a book and making exchanges. When that club and four others organized a federation in 1899, their first civic goal was a city library. Use of a feed . . . — — Map (db m232750) HM
On South Washington Avenue, 0.1 miles south of Crockett Street, on the left when traveling south.
George Gammon Gregg, a leading merchant, built this frame house during the early 1850s. According to family tradition, Confederate veteran James Turner (d. 1913) acquired title to the property after a poker game in 1866. Turner was a noted lawyer . . . — — Map (db m232742) HM
On West Burleson Street, 0.1 miles west of North Grove Street, on the left when traveling west.
The oldest portion of this house was erected about 1856. It was occupied soon afterward by the family of Louis Trezevant Wigfall (1816-1874). A flamboyant political leader, Wigfall strongly advocated secession and states' rights. He served as a . . . — — Map (db m232739) HM
On West Burleson Street at North Grove Street, on the left when traveling west on West Burleson Street.
Originally constructed before the Civil War and modified during the 1880s and again in 1909, this house is significant for its historical associations and for its representation as an evolutionary house form.
In 1856, Mary Britt bought the . . . — — Map (db m232734) HM
On Henley Perry Drrive east of South Bolivar Street, on the left when traveling east.
Built before 1842. Hand-hewn logs, chinked with pipe clay. For strength has butterfly mortising on log ends and beams with tee-braces. Was part of a 2-pen dog-trot house. Moved here, 1938, by Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Key, Jr.
Recorded Texas . . . — — Map (db m96284) HM
On North Grove Street at West Houston Street, on the right when traveling north on North Grove Street.
One of the oldest Episcopal churches in Texas. An outgrowth of 1840s work in Caddo Lake area by the Rev. William Steel of Louisiana, and of appeals for priests made by Frances Cox Henderson (wife of the diplomat, Governor, U.S. Senator, J. Pinckney . . . — — Map (db m218693) HM
On North Grove Street (Farm to Market Road 1997) at Rainey Street, on the left when traveling north on North Grove Street.
Homesite of Isaac Van Zandt (1813-1847), one of founders of Marshall, a noted frontiersman, debater, lawyer, statesman; served in 5th and 6th congresses of Republic of Texas; was Charge d'Affaires to United States, 1842-1844, in governor's race when . . . — — Map (db m191312) HM
On South Washington Avenue at Crockett Street, on the left when traveling north on South Washington Avenue.
Before department store owner Joe Weisman (1848-1918) married Lena Young in 1881, her father deeded this property to Weisman. The first home burned and this structure was built in 1901. The architect was C. G. Lancaster who also designed the . . . — — Map (db m232740) HM
On East Travis Street at South Lafayette Street, on the left when traveling west on East Travis Street.
The Republic of Texas granted Peter Whetstone land that
included this homesite for his participation in the siege of Bexar in December 1835, during the Texas Revolution.
Whetstone gave a portion of the property for a town
square, courthouse, . . . — — Map (db m232731) HM
Founded by Freedmen's Aid Society of the Methodist Church (North) as a co-educational institution dedicated to the education of Black men and women freed by the Civil War. Named for Bishop Isaac W. Wiley (1825-84), Black religious leader. Original . . . — — Map (db m232732) HM