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After filtering for Texas, 30 entries match your criteria.
 
 

Historical Markers and War Memorials in Ellis County, Texas

 
Clickable Map of Ellis 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 Ellis County, TX (30) Dallas County, TX (343) Henderson County, TX (22) Hill County, TX (41) Johnson County, TX (7) Kaufman County, TX (92) Navarro County, TX (67) Tarrant County, TX (124)  EllisCounty(30) Ellis County (30)  DallasCounty(343) Dallas County (343)  HendersonCounty(22) Henderson County (22)  HillCounty(41) Hill County (41)  JohnsonCounty(7) Johnson County (7)  KaufmanCounty(92) Kaufman County (92)  NavarroCounty(67) Navarro County (67)  TarrantCounty(124) Tarrant County (124)
Adjacent to Ellis County, Texas
    Dallas County (343)
    Henderson County (22)
    Hill County (41)
    Johnson County (7)
    Kaufman County (92)
    Navarro County (67)
    Tarrant County (124)
 
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
1Texas (Ellis County), Ennis — 11863 — Thomas C. Neel(1825-1863)
Georgia native Thomas C. Neel married Willia E. Latimer in 1848. The couple moved their family to Texas in 1854 and to Ellis County in 1855. They established a cotton and wheat plantation near what would become Ennis. Neel called his wife "Will" and . . . — Map (db m152969) HM
2Texas (Ellis County), Forreston — 7088 — Chambers' Creek
Named in honor of Thomas Jefferson Chambers (1802-1865) to whom the first land grant within present Ellis County was made in 1834 by the Mexican government Also known as Howe's Settlement in honor of William R. Howe, first settler in . . . — Map (db m117286) HM
3Texas (Ellis County), Italy — 7153 — General Edward H. Tarrant
3 miles northeast from here was buried General Edward H. Tarrant Veteran of the War of 1812, member of the Texas Congress and a courageous Indian fighter • Born in North Carolina, 1796 • Died in Parker County, Texas, August . . . — Map (db m117285) HM
4Texas (Ellis County), Italy — 7109 — John Marr Hardeman
A soldier in the Army of Texas in 1836 • Born in Tennessee, Feb- ruary 2, 1804; died October 15, 1891 His wife Mary Hardeman Born in Tennessee, February 12, 1812 • Died February 19, 1857 — Map (db m117284) HM
5Texas (Ellis County), Milford — 7117 — James McDaniel
Served in the Army of Texas in 1836 • Born in Alabama, September 10, 1810 • Died January 11, 1885 His wife Isabella Weir McDaniel Born in Alabama, March 8, 1818 • Died May 4, 1897 — Map (db m117283) HM
6Texas (Ellis County), Milford — 7115 — Thomas J. Jordan
Soldier in the Texas Army in 1836 • Born in Tennessee June 17, 1808 • Died November 24, 1880 His wife Stacy Choate Jordan Born in Tennessee, October 15, 1816 • Died January 27, 1884 — Map (db m117282) HM
7Texas (Ellis County), Reagor Springs — 11865 — Richardson Cemetery(1 mile southwest)
John I. Richardson (1839-1922), county surveyor, Mason, and veteran of the 12th Texas Confederate Cavalry, married Ann Elizabeth Reagor (1849-1923) in 1865. Both were descendants of the family for which Reagor Springs was named. A cousin, Robert S. . . . — Map (db m152970) HM
8Texas (Ellis County), Red Oak — 7093 — Ellis County
Created December 20, 1849 from Navarro County Organized August 5, 1850 Named in honor of Richard Ellis, 1781-1846 a Virginian by birth and education Jurist and statesman of Alabama 1813-1825 Moved to Texas in 1825 President . . . — Map (db m152372) HM
9Texas (Ellis County), Red Oak — 7142 — Red Oak Cemetery
Originally known as the Kemble Cemetery, this graveyard began as a family burial ground. Abraham Kemble acquired the land on which the cemetery is located about 1860. He and his wife Mary were both buried here in 1867. In 1892 Kemble descendants . . . — Map (db m152247) HM
10Texas (Ellis County), Rockett — 7083 — Bell's Chapel Cemetery
Founded 1875. Site for church and cemetery was given on Dec. 27, 1875, by local landowners John and Elizabeth Gibbons. This tract and some later purchases were deeded to the Methodist Episcopal Church South. Church and cemetery were named in . . . — Map (db m93219) HM
11Texas (Ellis County), Rockett — 11861 — Graves Cemetery
Robert Russell Graves (1814-1897) came from Alabama to Texas in 1838 with his wife Esther (Hinkle) Graves (1815-1865), their children, and her father Joseph Hinkle (1771-1859). They came to Ellis County in 1857 and settled on 510 acres purchased . . . — Map (db m139120) HM
12Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7120 — 1889 Masonic Lodge Hall
A tin cornice decorated with Masonic emblems tops this three-story brick building constructed in 1889 for Waxahachie Lodge No. 90, A.F.& A.M. The first floor was rented to retail stores, the second occupied by professional offices, and the third . . . — Map (db m152271) HM
13Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 12451 — Bessie Coleman(1892-1926)
Born in Atlanta, Texas, pioneer aviatrix Bessie Coleman grew up and went to school in a Waxahachie neighborhood a few blocks north of this site. At age 23 she moved to Chicago and first expressed her desire to fly. Since there were no flight schools . . . — Map (db m152250) HM
14Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7092 — Ellis County Courthouse
Ellis County's first courthouse was made of cedar logs and built here in 1850. A second courthouse was built on this square in 1853 and a third in 1874. In 1894 Virginia native and San Antonio architect James Riely Gordon was commissioned to design . . . — Map (db m151374) HM
15Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 11858 — First Presbyterian Church Building
The Rev. J. A. Smiley organized the First Presbyterian Church in 1871 with 16 charter members. The first church building was erected in 1876 and replaced by this structure in 1916-17. After this congregation merged with another church in 1979, the . . . — Map (db m151236) HM
16Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 13593 — Getzendaner Memorial Park
Established in 1889, Getzendaner Memorial Park was originally named West End Park as part of Waxahachie’s West End addition. By the early 20th century, it became Chautauqua Park, named for the annual retreat held on its grounds through 1930. . . . — Map (db m151999) HM
17Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7108 — Hancock Building
Businessman William F. Lewis and Ellis County Judge M.B. Templeton built this Victorian commercial structure in 1890. Decorative brickwork and cast iron columns highlight the facade. William Pitt Hancock (1872-1955), a well-known defense attorney, . . . — Map (db m152275) HM
18Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — Henry Curry1890 - 1962
"Baseball happens to be my hobby" "I wouldn't trade hobbies with any man" Henry Curry, from 1927-1961, became the catalyst for baseball activity in Waxahachie and Ellis County. He expended his time, energy, expertise and money for baseball . . . — Map (db m152115) HM
19Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7072 — Homesite of Dr. D.G. Thompson
A native Texan, Dixon Gillespie Thompson received his medical degree from Louisville Medical School in Kentucky and trained at several hospitals in the east. He married Rufa Jones in 1882 and built this residence for his family in 1883 - 84. In . . . — Map (db m151193) HM
20Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — M K & T Railroad
The Missouri Kansas & Texas Railroad of Texas was incorporated on Dec. 31, 1891. Track was laid to Waxahachie in 1889 under the name of the Dallas & Waco Railway Company. Passenger service was discontinued in 1964. The line remained in . . . — Map (db m152303) HM
21Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7149 — N. P. Sims Library and Lyceum
A pioneer among privately-endowed Texas libraries. Situated in Getzendaner Park, which had been donated to the city on Dec. 31, 1895, by Capt. W.H. Getzendaner (1834-1909), an attorney, Confederate veteran, banker, and president of the Dallas & Waco . . . — Map (db m151256) HM
22Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7071 — Oak Lawn School
Oak Lawn began as an elementary school for blacks in 1887 on North Aiken Street. In 1893 the school moved to this site. By the end of the 19th Century, High School classes had been added to the curriculum. Two of the first graduates, Prince . . . — Map (db m135282) HM
23Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7094 — Old Ellis County Jail
Due to overcrowding in the existing jail facility, this structure was completed in 1888. The Ellis County Commissioners Court awarded the contract to Pauly Jail Building and Manufacturing Company of St. Louis, Missouri. A round turret with conical . . . — Map (db m122133) HM
24Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7137 — Parson's CavalryC.S.A.
Originally comprised of men from Ellis and surrounding counties. Organized for Civil War service at Rockett's Spring (4 mi. E. of this site), Sept. 1861, unit was trained and commanded by Col. William H Parsons, Mexican War veteran, colorful . . . — Map (db m52008) HM
25Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 13956 — Paul Richards Park
This ballpark has hosted athletic events since the early 20th century. By 1914, local officials began planning for a field to attract a major league baseball team to train in Waxahachie. After various team representatives visited in 1915, local . . . — Map (db m151261) HM
26Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7067 — Richard Ellis
By birth and education, a Virginian; through residence, 1813-1825, an Alabaman jurist In that year, Texas claimed him — As president of the Constitutional Convention in 1836 and as a member of the Congress of the young republic, he . . . — Map (db m152358) HM
27Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7069 — Rogers Street Bridge
Located on an early Waxahachie Creek fording site that served pioneer settlers of the area, this truss bridge was built in 1889. It was manufactured by the Wrought Iron Bridge Company of Canton, Ohio, and was one of thirteen approved by Ellis County . . . — Map (db m151995) HM
28Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7989 — Site of a Confederate Powder Mill
. . . — Map (db m152285) HM
29Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7077 — Waxahachie Chautauqua Building
Some 25 years after Chautauqua cultural programs originated in New York State, annual Chautauqua assemblies in Waxahachie began in 1899. Large crowds from North and East Texas and Oklahoma camped here, studying literature and the arts, attending . . . — Map (db m152000) HM
30Texas (Ellis County), Waxahachie — 7157 — Waxahachie City Cemetery
The first burial here occurred on Jan. 1, 1852, after the death of pioneer merchant Silas Killough (b. 1805), one of the founders of this community. The original 4.16 acre tract was given in 1858 to trustees of the Methodist church by Emory W. . . . — Map (db m151260) HM
 
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Nov. 17, 2020