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“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
124 entries match your criteria. Entries 101 through 124 are listed here. ⊲ Previous 100
 
 

Historical Markers and War Memorials in Tarrant County, Texas

 
Clickable Map of Tarrant 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 Tarrant County, TX (124) Dallas County, TX (345) Denton County, TX (25) Ellis County, TX (30) Johnson County, TX (7) Parker County, TX (14) Wise County, TX (29)  TarrantCounty(124) Tarrant County (124)  DallasCounty(345) Dallas County (345)  DentonCounty(25) Denton County (25)  EllisCounty(30) Ellis County (30)  JohnsonCounty(7) Johnson County (7)  ParkerCounty(14) Parker County (14)  WiseCounty(29) Wise County (29)
Adjacent to Tarrant County, Texas
    Dallas County (345)
    Denton County (25)
    Ellis County (30)
    Johnson County (7)
    Parker County (14)
    Wise County (29)
 
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
101Texas (Tarrant County), Fort Worth — 3569 — The Neil P. Anderson Building
Neil P. Anderson (1847-1912) lived in Fort Worth by 1882. A talented broker, he helped this city set the pace for cotton trading in the inland markets of the southwest. His firm had Sanguinet & Staats design this “Cotton Exchange” with . . . — Map (db m52830) HM
102Texas (Tarrant County), Fort Worth — The Site of Camp Worth
This stone marks the site of Camp Worth, a United States Military Post named in Honor of General William J. Worth and Commanded by Major Ripley A. Arnold 1849-1853. The camp protected the frontier against Indians, and was the beginning of the City . . . — Map (db m52717) HM
103Texas (Tarrant County), Fort Worth — 12 — The Wild Bunch
When professional photographer John Swartz snapped this famous photograph of five young men in 1901, he had no idea it would end up on a “wanted” poster. Swartz and his brothers, considered Fort Worth’s premier photographers, were . . . — Map (db m52284) HM
104Texas (Tarrant County), Fort Worth — 5465 — Thomas B. Saunders Family
A native of North Carolina, Thomas Bailey Saunders (1816-1902) migrated to Texas in 1850 and started a cattle ranch near Gonzales. After the Civil War he completed cattle drives to markets in New Orleans and Kansas before settling in Bexar County. . . . — Map (db m53413) HM
105Texas (Tarrant County), Fort Worth — Vietnam War Memorial
Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 503rd Infantry, 173d Airborne Brigade (Separate) Thanks the citizens of Fort Worth, Texas for their unwavering support during the Vietnam War. Fort Worth will forever be in the hearts of the men of Charlie . . . — Map (db m156913) WM
106Texas (Tarrant County), Fort Worth — 15766 — Westbrook Estate
The Roy A. and Gladys Westbrook House is a 2½ story Tudor Revival style home constructed in 1928. The house sits on a 1.5 acre blufftop site in the Park Hill neighborhood that overlooks the Fort Worth Zoo and Forest Park. The Park Hill . . . — Map (db m94351) HM
107Texas (Tarrant County), Fort Worth — 5833 — William John Marsh(June 24, 1880 - Feb. 1, 1971)
Born near Liverpool, England, William John Marsh was an accomplished organist and musician when he came to Fort Worth in 1904 to enter the cotton business. In addition to his bookkeeping work, he served as organist and choir master for two area . . . — Map (db m146804) HM
108Texas (Tarrant County), Grapevine — 1635 — First Baptist Churchof Grapevine
Baptists in the Grapevine Prairie area began meeting in their own homes as early as 1846. Worship services later were held in a log schoolhouse on what is now Dooley Street in the community of Grapevine. On December 25, 1869, the pioneers gathered . . . — Map (db m147397) HM
109Texas (Tarrant County), Grapevine — 2253 — Grapevine
Wild mustang grapes growing profusely in this area inspired the name "Grape Vine" for this community. Ambrose Foster (1794?-1847) and his wife Susannah Medlin (1796-1876) were among the first settlers in 1845, from Platte County, Missouri. The . . . — Map (db m147807) HM
110Texas (Tarrant County), Grapevine — 8673 — J.E. Foust & SonFuneral Directors
John E. Foust (1861-1926) moved to Grapevine in 1880 and started a general merchandise store which stocked coffins. He gradually added other services and with the help of his wife Daisy (Huitt) (1876-1963) established a funeral company. A civic . . . — Map (db m147395) HM
111Texas (Tarrant County), Grapevine — 2736 — James Tracy Morehead(Mar.27, 1809- Aug. 6, 1897)
James Tracy Morehead (Mar.27, 1809 - Aug. 6, 1897) Virginia native James Tracy Morehead came to Texas with his family in 1852, settling in newly organized Tarrant County. Two years later, he was chosen to serve as the county's third chief . . . — Map (db m146155) HM
112Texas (Tarrant County), Grapevine — 17960 — Nash Farm
Established in 1859, the Nash Farm constitutes one of the last remaining agrarian sites from the 19th century in North Texas in the region where there was once a pervasive landscape of farmsteads. Thomas Jefferson Nash, Elizabeth Mouser Nash and . . . — Map (db m147393) HM
113Texas (Tarrant County), Grapevine — 5197 — Tarrant County State Bank Building
Constructed in 1897, this building served as retail space until it was purchased and remodeled by the Tarrant County State Bank in 1921. It became the offices of the Grapevine Sun newspaper in 1947. Displaying Classical Revival style elements, the . . . — Map (db m147398) HM
114Texas (Tarrant County), Grapevine — 5508 — Torian Log Cabin
This cabin of hand-hewn logs was built along a creek at the edge of the Cross Timbers near the pioneer community of Dove. It originally stood on a headright settled in 1845 by Francis Throop, a Peters colonist from Missouri. J.C.Wiley bought the . . . — Map (db m147396) HM
115Texas (Tarrant County), Haltom City — 2387 — Harper's Rest Cemetery
Henry Jackson Harper (1844-1928) brought his family to this area from Tennessee in 1894. This cemetery was begun when the child of a family traveling through the area died and was buried in grove of trees on the Harper Farm. Harper's grandson, . . . — Map (db m147241) HM
116Texas (Tarrant County), Kennedale — 18476 — Kennedale Independent School District
Known for its farming and brick manufacturing, the town of Kennedale was not officially incorporated until 1947. However, the town's citizens recognized early the need for educational facilities for area families. To accommodate their need, the . . . — Map (db m105033) HM
117Texas (Tarrant County), Mansfield — 12207 — Hudson Cemetery
When John Dickson and Winnie (Traylor) Hudson's daughter Ary Mae died in 1878, she was the first person to be buried on the family land. Her twin, Ara Bell, who had been buried in Montague County earlier that year, was later reinterred beside Ary . . . — Map (db m146143) HM
118Texas (Tarrant County), North Richland Hills — 116 — Alfred Madison Hightower(January 8, 1824 - April 10, 1897)
Alfred M. Hightower came to Smithfield from Illinois with his family in 1858 and became a rancher. When the debate over secession arose, Hightower opposed it, but when the Civil War began, he sided with the South. As a mounted rifleman in the . . . — Map (db m148160) HM
119Texas (Tarrant County), Saginaw — 17777 — Saginaw Cemetery
In the 1890s, John Allebaugh Bowman led 19 people to Tarrant County on a three-week journey from Missouri. John and his brother, Frederick Kline Bowman, owned adjoining properties midway between Haslet and Saginaw. John founded Saginaw Cemetery . . . — Map (db m146875) HM
120Texas (Tarrant County), Saginaw — 13984 — Saginaw School
Jarvis J. Green settled here in 1882 and named the site for his former home of Saginaw, Michigan. The Fort Worth and Denver and Santa Fe railroads later crossed here, and in 1892 the first school opened. It was a tuition school on McLeroy . . . — Map (db m146874) HM
121Texas (Tarrant County), Saginaw — 17854 — Saginaw United Methodist Church
In 1914, Saginaw was a small farming community with a population of 100. The town already had a Baptist Church and a Church of Christ that were organized in 1911. So, on July 19, 1914, eight women and two men organized a Methodist Church in . . . — Map (db m146922) HM
122Texas (Tarrant County), Westworth Village — 14057 — Consolidated Vultee Aircraft Corporation Plant No. 4
Prior to World War II, the U.S. aircraft industry focused primarily on producing aircraft for civilian airlines; few manufacturers specialized in military airplane construction. In the fall of 1940, the War Department determined that expected future . . . — Map (db m137869) HM
123Texas (Tarrant County), Westworth Village — 18383 — Fort Worth Army Air Field
By January 1941, negotiations between Fort Worth civic advocates, led by Amon G. Carter, and the U.S. Army yielded an agreement to construct an aircraft plant near the city to build B-24 Liberator bombers. Legislation later authorized the creation . . . — Map (db m106248) HM
124Texas (Tarrant County), Westworth Village — 18384 — Horace Seaver Carswell, Jr.Major, United States Army Air Corps
Horace Seaver Carswell, Jr. was born on July 18, 1916, to Horace S. and Bertha Rea Carswell of Fort Worth. He attended North Side High School where he excelled in athletics. Graduating in 1934, Carswell entered Texas A&M College and later . . . — Map (db m106247) HM

124 entries matched your criteria. Entries 101 through 124 are listed above. ⊲ Previous 100
 
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Nov. 25, 2020