4 entries match your criteria.
Historical Markers in Poteet, Texas
Jourdanton is the county seat for Atascosa County
Poteet is in Atascosa County
Atascosa County (48) ►
ADJACENT TO ATASCOSA COUNTY
Bexar County (638) ►
Frio County (11) ►
Karnes County (33) ►
La Salle County (28) ►
Live Oak County (32) ►
McMullen County (17) ►
Medina County (84) ►
Wilson County (56) ►
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
ADJACENT TO ATASCOSA COUNTY
Bexar County (638) ►
Frio County (11) ►
Karnes County (33) ►
La Salle County (28) ►
Live Oak County (32) ►
McMullen County (17) ►
Medina County (84) ►
Wilson County (56) ►
Touch name on this list to highlight map location.
Touch blue arrow, or on map, to go there.
1 ► Texas, Atascosa County, Poteet — 155 — Amphion and Amphion Cemetery — ![]() |
Amphion traces its beginning to the establishment of Atascosa County's first courthouse which is believed to have been constructed near this site at the county seat of Navatasco in 1857. Amphion, thought to have been named after a figure in Greek . . . — — Map (db m56582) HM |
2 ► Texas, Atascosa County, Poteet — 13595 — Anchorage Cemetery — ![]() |
The family of William and Mary Allen Stiggins emigrated here from Prince Edward Island, Canada, in 1882. Included in the group were their daughter Mary Jane (1855-1935), who had studied medicine, and her fiancé Thomas Whittet (1838-1913), a former . . . — — Map (db m56633) HM |
3 ► Texas, Atascosa County, Poteet — 4092 — Poteet — ![]() |
The town of Poteet traces its history to the 1880s, when Francis Marion Poteet (1833-1907) established a mercantile store northeast of this area. A blacksmith and farmer as well as a merchant, Poteet began providing mail service to his customers. . . . — — Map (db m56603) HM |
4 ► Texas, Atascosa County, Poteet — 4819 — Site of Jose Antonio Navarro Ranch Headquarters — (2.3 Mi. SSE) — ![]() |
This land had once been allocated in the 1700s as a ranch for Mission San Jose in San Antonio (20 mi. N), but in the 1820s was left unsettled. In 1828 prominent San Antonio resident Jose Antonio Navarro (1795-1871) beseeched the Governor of the . . . — — Map (db m111187) HM |