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After filtering for Texas, 29 entries match your criteria.
 
 

Historical Markers and War Memorials in Liberty County, Texas

 
Clickable Map of Liberty 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 Liberty County, TX (29) Chambers County, TX (24) Hardin County, TX (6) Harris County, TX (306) Jefferson County, TX (64) Montgomery County, TX (30) Polk County, TX (27) San Jacinto County, TX (16)  LibertyCounty(29) Liberty County (29)  ChambersCounty(24) Chambers County (24)  HardinCounty(6) Hardin County (6)  HarrisCounty(306) Harris County (306)  JeffersonCounty(64) Jefferson County (64)  MontgomeryCounty(30) Montgomery County (30)  PolkCounty(27) Polk County (27)  SanJacintoCounty(16) San Jacinto County (16)
Adjacent to Liberty County, Texas
    Chambers County (24)
    Hardin County (6)
    Harris County (306)
    Jefferson County (64)
    Montgomery County (30)
    Polk County (27)
    San Jacinto County (16)
 
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
1Texas (Liberty County), Cleveland — 16908 — Riggs Cemetery
On Interstate 69 1 mile south of Farm to Market Road 105, in the median.
Established 1892 Historic Texas Cemetery - 2010 Marker is property of the State of Texas — Map (db m156848) HM
2Texas (Liberty County), Dayton — 17880 — Dayton's Old School
On West Houston Street at Hill Street, on the right when traveling east on West Houston Street.
Dayton began as part of the City of Liberty. The children who lived here were either educated at home, across the river in the main part of Liberty, or not at all. In 1849, a board of trustees formed a committee to establish a school for these . . . — Map (db m128338) HM
3Texas (Liberty County), Dayton — 9652 — First Methodist Church of Dayton
On South Cleveland Street at West Houston Street, on the right when traveling south on South Cleveland Street.
Methodist worship services were conducted in West Liberty, later known as Dayton, as early as 1855. By 1900 the First Methodist Church had a full-time pastor, the Rev. G. T. Newberry, who conducted services in the Dayton schoolhouse on North Main . . . — Map (db m128339) HM
4Texas (Liberty County), Dayton — 9683 — The Runaway Scrape
On U.S. 90, on the right when traveling east.
Famous flight of Texians to escape Santa Anna's invading Mexican army. Tales of the Alamo butchery on March 6, 1836, and the continuing retreat of Gen. Sam Houston's army prompted colonists to abandon homes and property and seek refuge in east . . . — Map (db m128333) HM
5Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 15587 — Atascosito
On Farm to Market Road 1011 at North Main Street (State Highway 146), on the right when traveling north on Road 1011.
A Spanish settlement on the Atascosito road was established here in 1757 to prevent French trade with the Indians. Four and one-half miles west of here the road crossed the Trinity. There Alonso de Leon, Spanish explorer, crossed in 1690. The road . . . — Map (db m116714) HM
6Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9675 — Captain William M. Logan
On Sam Houston Street west of Main Street (Highway 227), on the right when traveling west.
Born in North Carolina September 17, 1802 Moved to Liberty 1832 Died in Houston, November 22, 1839 Organized and commanded 3rd Co. 2nd Regiment Texas Volunteers Battle of San Jacinto First sheriff of Liberty County . . . — Map (db m117004) HM
7Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9642 — Casa Consistatorial (Courthouse Square)
On Trinity Street, on the left when traveling west.
Originally one of the five squares platted for public use in 1831 by J. Francisco Madero, General Land Commissioner appointed by the Mexican government to survey and grant long-awaited land titles to Texan colonists of the Atascosito area in . . . — Map (db m128337) HM
8Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 14366 — Col. Edward Bradford Pickett
On Sam Houston Street, on the right when traveling west.
Edward Bradford Pickett was a war veteran, lawyer and State Senator who resided in Liberty County. He was born in 1823 or 1824 in Statesville (Wilson Co.), Tennessee. In 1848, he enlisted as a private, serving in the U.S.-Mexico War. By 1851, . . . — Map (db m117038) HM
9Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — Commercial CornerLiberty County Historic Landmark
On Main Street, on the right when traveling north.
The commercial buildings near the courthouse square have played important roles in the economic development of Liberty. German immigrant Henry Steusoff opened a dry goods store in 1866 and a grocery store in 1899 in this block. In 1896 the new . . . — Map (db m117036) HM
10Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9679 — Homesite of George Orr
On Farm to Market Road 1011 at North Main Street (State Highway 146), on the right when traveling north on Highway 1011.
George Orr first came to Texas in 1813 as a member of the Gutierrez-Magee Expedition. He returned in 1821 with his family and established a home at this site on the Old Atascosito Road. The Orr home was an important stopping place for travelers. Orr . . . — Map (db m117003) HM
11Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 17840 — James B. Woods
On Travis Street, on the right when traveling south.
James B. Woods, the third representative of the Municipality of Liberty to sign the Texas Declaration of Independence, was born on January 21, 1802 in Kentucky. He arrived in Texas in 1830 and settled in the Atascosito Libertad area of Mexico (now . . . — Map (db m116825) HM
12Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9671 — Lallemand, Riguad and Other French Settlers
On U.S. 90, on the right when traveling east.
To Generals Charles Lallemand, Antoine Rigaud, the veterans of the Napoleonic Wars and other French settlers, who, after many trials and adventures, came to Texas in the spring of 1818 to found on the banks of the Trinity River the . . . — Map (db m128335) HM
13Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9636 — Liberty Bicentennial Observance1756 • 1956
On Farm to Market Road 1011 at North Main Street (State Highway 146), on the left when traveling south on Highway 1011.
Atascosito, established Indian Village prior to 1690. Established as District on Atascosito Road by Spanish government in 1857 to prevent French trade with Indians. — Map (db m117190) HM
14Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9670 — Liberty County
On Main Street, on the right when traveling south.
The home of the Orcoquisac Indians. An East – West trail across the region traveled by Alonso De Leon in 1690 became the “La Bahia” or “Lower Road” of the 18th century and the Opelousas Road of the 19th. At the point . . . — Map (db m117041) HM
15Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9669 — Liberty County
On U.S. 90 0.7 miles east of Texas Highway 146, on the right when traveling west.
A trail across this region traveled and described by Alonso de Leon in 1690 became the "La Bahía" or "Lower Road" in the 18th century. First settlement, Atascocita, established in 1757. The town established May 5, 1831 as the "Villa de la Santísima . . . — Map (db m121260) HM
16Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9673 — Liberty Methodist Church
On Main Street, on the right when traveling south.
Late in 1840, the Rev. Hugh Fields, migrating to Texas from Mississippi, preached the first Methodist sermon in Liberty in the log courthouse. Liberty was one of 17 communities in the Republic of Texas to receive a ministerial appointment from the . . . — Map (db m116826) HM
17Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9677 — Mexican Hill
On U.S. 90, on the right when traveling west.
Following the decisive Battle of San Jacinto in the Texas War for Independence, most of the Mexicans captured in the battle were taken to Galveston. Problems concerning a lack of provisions and the threat of attack persuaded Texas President David G. . . . — Map (db m128334) HM
18Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 13537 — Ott Hotel
On Travis Street, on the right when traveling south.
Built to capitalize on oil boom prosperity, the Ott Hotel became a Liberty landmark. The regional economy in the early 20th century focused on trade, timber and agriculture. The discovery of large oil fields, including Batson (15 mi. NE) and South . . . — Map (db m116824) HM
19Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9680 — Plaza Constitucional(Municipal Square)
On Travis Street south of Trinity Street, on the right when traveling south.
J. Francisco Madero, appointed by Mexican government to grant land titles, platted Liberty town tract, 1831, with 49 squares in inner city. Five were set aside for public usage — this square has always been site of municipal buildings. In . . . — Map (db m116713) HM
20Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9648 — Plaza de Carcel y Casas de CorreccionSquare of the Jail and Houses of Correction
On Main Street, on the right when traveling north.
Originally mapped 1831, according to laws of "Coahuila and Texas", then the northernmost state of Mexico. Prison sentences were to be worked out here. By 1885, though, this square was in the mercantile section of town, and the plaza to the east . . . — Map (db m116829) HM
21Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9682 — Plaza de MercadoMarket Place
On Main Street at Sam Houston Street, on the right when traveling north on Main Street.
Originally mapped in 1831 as a public plaza by the Mexican government, this was one of five such squares in the town of Liberty. Although this plaza was sold early to private individuals and did not become a public square, it has always been part of . . . — Map (db m116827) HM
22Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9681 — Plaza Iglesia Parroquial(Parish Church Square)
On Sam Houston Street west of Milam Street, on the right when traveling west.
This block of the inner town of Liberty was set aside and designated for Catholic use in 1831 by J. Francisco Madero, commissioner for the Mexican state of Coahuila-Texas. In April 1846, the Methodist Episcopal Church petitioned the town board . . . — Map (db m116712) HM
23Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9664 — Sam Houston in Liberty County
On Main Street (State Road 227) at Sam Houston Street, on the left when traveling north on Main Street.
Pioneer, lawyer, statesman, and leader of the Texas victory over Mexico at San Jacinto, General Sam Houston began a relationship with Liberty County in 1833 that was based on land ownership which continued until his death in 1863. During those years . . . — Map (db m117002) HM
24Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — Sam Houston's Law Office
On Sam Houston Street at Main Street, on the right when traveling east on Sam Houston Street.
In memory of Sam Houston who during the 1840's occupied as an office a building which stood on this site. — Map (db m117037) HM
25Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9687 — Seven Pines
On Sam Houston Street west of Main Street, on the right when traveling east.
Benjamin Franklin Hardin (1803-1878) came to this area with other members of his family in 1826. Settling in the Atascosito District of the Mexican state of Coahuila y Texas, Franklin Hardin was named surveyor of the district in 1834. As a member of . . . — Map (db m116711) HM
26Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9691 — Site of Liberty's Ursuline Convent
On Sam Houston Street at Austin Street, on the right when traveling east on Sam Houston Street.
In 1859 Bishop John Mary Odin sent a group of Ursulines from Galveston to Liberty to establish a convent and girls' school. Under the leadership of an energetic French nun, Mother Ambroise, the Sisters bought land at this site and erected two frame . . . — Map (db m116710) HM
27Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 18457 — Tarver Abstract Company
On Main Street, on the right when traveling north.
For well over one hundred years, the Tarver Abstract Company has provided real property title information to the citizens of Liberty County. Thomas Carey Tarver (1846-1925), a native of Tennessee, moved to Texas as a young boy. He served in the . . . — Map (db m117062) HM
28Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9686 — The Seven Courthouses of Liberty County
On Sam Houston Street west of Main Street, on the right when traveling west.
The town of Liberty served as the seat of government for the municipality of Liberty, one of 23 territories in Texas established by Mexico in the 1830s. The first courthouse was erected here in 1831 and was made of hewn logs. Municipalities were . . . — Map (db m116709) HM
29Texas (Liberty County), Liberty — 9690 — The Trinity River
On U.S. 90, on the right when traveling east.
As the longest river with its drainage basin entirely within Texas, the Trinity River's watershed covers 18,000 square miles flowing 715 river miles through 37 Texas counties. Native Americans referred to the Trinity as the Arkikosa or . . . — Map (db m128336) HM
 
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Nov. 17, 2020