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“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
9 entries match your criteria.
 
 

Historical Markers and War Memorials in Real County, Texas

 
Clickable Map of Real County, Texas and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Real County, TX (9) Bandera County, TX (26) Edwards County, TX (9) Kerr County, TX (40) Uvalde County, TX (33)  RealCounty(9) Real County (9)  BanderaCounty(26) Bandera County (26)  EdwardsCounty(9) Edwards County (9)  KerrCounty(40) Kerr County (40)  UvaldeCounty(33) Uvalde County (33)
Adjacent to Real County, Texas
    Bandera County (26)
    Edwards County (9)
    Kerr County (40)
    Uvalde County (33)
 
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
1Texas (Real County), Barksdale — 5638 — Vance Cemetery
On Ranch Road 335 7 miles north of Texas Highway 55, on the right when traveling south.
One of the earliest settlers of this area was Henry Wells (1850-1923), who first came to the Nueces Canyon in 1866. He founded the town of Bullhead in 1873. The name was changed to Vance in the mid-1880s. In 1875 a guest in the home of the . . . — Map (db m24485) HM
2Texas (Real County), Camp Wood — 4749 — Site of Camp Wood
Established May 20, 1857, as a means of preventing Indian raids on the San Antonio—El Paso route and the Rio Grande Valley • Abandoned March 15th, 1861, when Federal troops were withdrawn from Texas. — Map (db m24382) HM
3Texas (Real County), Camp Wood — 4547 — Site of the Mission San Lorenzo De La Santa Cruz
On SR 55 0.5 miles north of Ranch Road 337, on the left when traveling north.
Founded by the Franciscan Missionaries among the Lipan Apache Indians in 1762 • Abandoned in 1769 — Map (db m24381) HM
4Texas (Real County), Leakey — 2792 — John Leakey
On Market Street (U.S. 83) south of Main Street, on the right when traveling north.
Tennessee native John Leakey (1824-1900) came to Texas in 1847, settling for a time in Henderson County where he was a brickmason and rancher. He and his wife Nancy (Patterson) moved to Uvalde County in 1852 near present day Sabinal. A desire to . . . — Map (db m111322) HM
5Texas (Real County), Leakey — 3057 — Leakey Cemetery
On 6th Street (Ranch to Market Road 337E) at School Street, on the right when traveling east on 6th Street.
Originally known as the Floral Cemetery and serving an earlier community by that name, this cemetery dates to at least 1881. Land for the graveyard was sold by John and Nancy Leakey for one dollar and a cemetery plot. The oldest documented . . . — Map (db m111323) HM
6Texas (Real County), Leakey — 4211 — Real County
On 4th Street at Market Street (U.S. 83), on the right when traveling west on 4th Street.
Located on the Edwards Plateau, Real County is in an area of rolling terrain broken by the canyons of the Frio River. Because of raids by Comanche, Apache, and Lipan Apache Indians, white settlement was hindered until after 1881. Mission San . . . — Map (db m111320) HM
7Texas (Real County), Leakey — 17266 — Real County
On 4th Street east of Market Street (U.S. 83), on the right when traveling west.
The location of Real County lies at the southern edge of the Edwards Plateau along the Balcones Escarpment, an area of rugged mountains and canyons named for the Frio, Sabinal and Nueces Rivers. The county line between Edwards County and Bandera . . . — Map (db m111321) HM
8Texas (Real County), Leakey — 11692 — Real County Courthouse
On 4th Street east of Market Street (U.S. 83), on the right when traveling west.
Leakey was the county seat of Edwards County from 1883 to 1891 when a vote moved the seat to Rocksprings. Real County, named for businessman and State Senator Julius Real, was organized from parts of Edwards, Kerr and Bandera counties in April 1913. . . . — Map (db m111300) HM
9Texas (Real County), Leakey — 4831 — Site of McLaurin Massacre(Last Indian Raid in Frio Canyon)
On Ranch Road 336 north of McClure Crossing, on the right when traveling north.
On April 19, 1881, Catherine "Kate" Ringer McLaurin (Sometimes McLauren) was with her three small children and 14-year old Allen Lease in the garden when a band of Lipan Apaches started to plunder her home. Lease, thinking there were pigs in the . . . — Map (db m111361) HM
 
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Nov. 25, 2020