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Historical Markers in Honey Grove, Texas

 
Clickable Map of Fannin 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 Fannin County, TX (97) Collin County, TX (180) Delta County, TX (8) Grayson County, TX (104) Hunt County, TX (66) Lamar County, TX (49) Bryan County, OK (16)  FanninCounty(97) Fannin County (97)  CollinCounty(180) Collin County (180)  DeltaCounty(8) Delta County (8)  GraysonCounty(104) Grayson County (104)  HuntCounty(66) Hunt County (66)  LamarCounty(49) Lamar County (49)  BryanCountyOklahoma(16) Bryan County (16)
Bonham is the county seat for Fannin County
Honey Grove is in Fannin County
      Fannin County (97)  
ADJACENT TO FANNIN COUNTY
      Collin County (180)  
      Delta County (8)  
      Grayson County (104)  
      Hunt County (66)  
      Lamar County (49)  
      Bryan County, Oklahoma (16)  
 
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1 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8945 — Benjamin Stuart Walcott(October 17, 1809 - November 22, 1878)
Near 5th Street (Farm to Market Road 100) at Oak Street.
Founder and developer of Honey Grove, B.S. Walcott was a native of New England. He came to this area in 1846 and in 1848 married Elizabeth (Betsey) Gilmer (1815-65). Walcott opened the first store here in Samuel Erwin's log cabin and constructed the . . . Map (db m234279) HM
2 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8857 — Church of St. Mark, the Evangelist, Episcopal
On 8th Street at Market Street, on the right when traveling south on 8th Street.
This congregation was organized in 1876 by the Rt. Rev. Alexander C. Garrett, Bishop of the Missionary District of Northern Texas, and later Bishop of Dallas. In 1883, this building was constructed during the ministry of the Rev. J.P. Lytton. Of . . . Map (db m234272) HM
3 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8862 — Crockett Park
On Market Street West at South Piner Street, on the right when traveling west on Market Street West.
Named for David Crockett (1786-1836), the colorful Tennessee pioneer and congressman who rallied to cause of Texas in her war for independence. Late in 1835, Crockett traveled by riverboat, horseback, and on foot, entering Texas along the Red River . . . Map (db m234224) HM
4 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8863 — Dial Home
On North 8th Street at Hickory Street, on the right when traveling north on North 8th Street.
This Queen Anne house was built in 1890, seventeen years after the town of Honey Grove was chartered. It was constructed for William H. and Martha (O'Kelley) Gross. A prominent area lawyer, Gross served as the first city attorney for Honey Grove. In . . . Map (db m234273) HM
5 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8933 — Erwin Evans Smith(August 22, 1886 - September 4, 1947)
On 5th Street at Oak Street on 5th Street.
Artist-photographer Erwin Evans Smith, a Fannin County native, was enchanted as a youth with the culture and folklore of ranching in the southwest. He studied art in Chicago and Boston in hopes of becoming a western sculptor. For several summers in . . . Map (db m234294) HM
6 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 11874 — First Baptist Church of Honey Grove
On Hickory Street at 8th Street, on the right when traveling east on Hickory Street.
Originally organized in November of 1847 by pastor W.M. Pickett, a missionary from the Southern Baptist Convention Home Mission Board, the First Baptist Church of Honey Grove met in a log schoolhouse at nearby Allen's Chapel. Nine charter members . . . Map (db m234269) HM
7 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8899 — Honey Grove City Hall
On Hickory Street east of 5th Street (State Highway 34), on the left when traveling east.
In 1885, ten years after the town of Honey Grove was incorporated, Mayor J. P. Gilmer brought to the attention of the City Council the need for a city hall and jail building. This structure was completed four years later. It is Fannin County's only . . . Map (db m127943) HM
8 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8900 — Honey Grove Lodge No. 164, A.F. & A.M.
On North 6th Street at Hickory Street, on the right when traveling north on North 6th Street.
Granted a dispensation by the Grand Lodge of Texas in 1854, the Honey Grove Masonic Lodge was officially chartered in 1856. Early meetings were held in the attic of the Old Smith Hotel on the town square and on the second floor of the Walcott School . . . Map (db m234265) HM
9 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8891 — James G. Gilmer(1814-1846)
Near 5th Street (Farm to Market Road 100) at Oak Street.
One of the courageous men who helped civilize the wilderness. Moved here from Kentucky in 1845 with his wife Elizabeth (Parrish) and children William S., George A., and Thomas S. James P. Gilmer, the fourth son, is said to have been first . . . Map (db m234280) HM
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10 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8898 — James Thomas Holt(Aug 21, 1841 - Sept. 4, 1919)
On 5th Street at Oak Street on 5th Street.
A native Virginian, James Thomas ("Tank") Holt came to Fannin County with his parents in 1849. After serving in the Confederate Cavalry during the Civil War (1861-65), he started a freighting operation. He invested his profits in such ventures as . . . Map (db m234283) HM
11 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8912 — McKenzie Methodist Church
On 7th Street north of Pecan Street, on the left when traveling north.
This church traces its history to early Methodist services held in the Union Church of Honey Grove in the 1840s. Methodist members of the Union Church erected their first church building here in 1881 and named it for J. W. P. McKenzie, a pioneer . . . Map (db m127944) HM
12 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8917 — Oakwood Cemetery
On 5th Street (Farm to Market Road 100) at Oak Street on 5th Street.
Established in 1846, this cemetery was originally known as the Walcott graveyard. The earliest documented burial in the cemetery is that of James G. Gilmer (1814-1846). A native of Kentucky, Gilmer came to Texas in the late 1830s and settled in this . . . Map (db m234281) HM
13 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8870 — Samuel Augustus Erwin(March 17, 1786 - July 13, 1854)
Near 5th Street (Farm to Market Road 100) at Oak Street.
Virginia-born Samuel Erwin was married in 1819 in Tennessee to Sally Rodgers Crisp (1795-1860), in a ceremony performed by local magistrate David Crockett. First settler in the Honey Grove area, Erwin arrived here in 1837 and surveyed land grants . . . Map (db m234278) HM
14 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — 8849 — Site of Bralley-Pendleton School
On 8th Street at Pacific Street West, on the right when traveling south on 8th Street.
The first school for African Americans in Honey Grove began in 1882 with 20 students and one teacher. The school was named for F.M. Bralley, an early superintendent. By 1911 there were 188 students and two teachers. Bralley became a high school in . . . Map (db m234225) HM
15 Texas, Fannin County, Honey Grove — Site of Oakwood Chapel1907 - 1986
On 5th Street (Farm to Market Road 100) at Oak Street on 5th Street.
The white clapboard octagon chapel was built by the Twentieth Century Club in 1907. The chapel portico was supported by two white columns on which was mounted this marble plaque. The chapel was furnished with pews, a pump organ and wood burning . . . Map (db m234282) HM
 
 
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Apr. 24, 2024