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

Historical Markers and War Memorials in Lancaster

 
Clickable Map of Dallas 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 Dallas County, TX (330) Collin County, TX (17) Denton County, TX (25) Ellis County, TX (30) Kaufman County, TX (92) Rockwall County, TX (5) Tarrant County, TX (124)  DallasCounty(330) Dallas County (330)  CollinCounty(17) Collin County (17)  DentonCounty(25) Denton County (25)  EllisCounty(30) Ellis County (30)  KaufmanCounty(92) Kaufman County (92)  RockwallCounty(5) Rockwall County (5)  TarrantCounty(124) Tarrant County (124)
Lancaster, Texas and Vicinity
    Dallas County (330)
    Collin County (17)
    Denton County (25)
    Ellis County (30)
    Kaufman County (92)
    Rockwall County (5)
    Tarrant County (124)
 
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GEOGRAPHIC SORT
1Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 6688 — Edgewood Cemetery
Earliest grave here is that of Lizzie Richardson, a pioneer child who died in the summer of 1845. The site for the cemetery was chosen by Roderick Rawlins, one of the area's first settlers; he was buried here in 1848. Among the graves in the older . . . — Map (db m152508) HM
2Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 6691 — First Baptist Church of Lancaster
During the 1840s and 1850s, Lancaster Baptists met periodically in private homes. On Sept. 29, 1867, fourteen charter members gathered to organize the Missionary Baptist Church. They worshiped first in the Masonic Hall, a two-story frame building . . . — Map (db m152516) HM
3Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 6696 — First Christian Church(Disciples of Christ) of Lancaster
On July 5, 1846, Roderick Rawlins (1776 - 1848) and 13 settlers began this fellowship. They met in homes and a one-room log schoolhouse. For years ordained members and itinerant preachers led services. After disruptions of the Civil War, the . . . — Map (db m152539) HM
4Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 6703 — First Presbyterian Church, U.S. of Lancaster
In 1856 the Rev. Michael Dickson and nine charter members met in a crude cabinet workshop to organize this church. Services were first held in an early schoolhouse, shared with other denominations. After the Civil War, the Ladies Aid Society . . . — Map (db m152523) HM
5Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 6707 — First United Methodist Church of Lancaster
Itinerant preachers often met with local Methodists in early days of settlement. Organized on May 25, 1868, by the Rev. Andrew Davis, this is one of the oldest churches in North Texas. Services were held in Masonic Hall until a church building was . . . — Map (db m152524) HM
6Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 6733 — Former Site of The Head House
Lucy Frances Jeffries (1840-1931) of Virginia married Henry Head, and while bringing up their four children discovered her talent for cooking. From 1891 to 1918, in her large home on this site, Mrs. Head operated a boarding house famous for good . . . — Map (db m150202) HM
7Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 17295 — Lancaster Education
The first log school in Lancaster was built in 1846 at Clear Springs one mile north of the original settlement of Hardscrabble. In 1863, as more families moved in, the Masonic Lodge building served as a school. Education was available to all . . . — Map (db m152502) HM
8Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — Marshal Peter Monroe Solomon
This was the site of the Valley View Station, a stop on the Interurban Train Line between Lancaster and Waco. On November 2, 1912, Lancaster City Marshal Peter (P.M.) Solomon and Deputy Tom Ellis boarded a southbound Interurban Train in Lancaster . . . — Map (db m152611)
9Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 6841 — Pleasant Run
Madison Moultrie Miller (1814-60) came west from Alabama and served under W. W. "Bigfoot" Wallace in 1844-45 as a Texas Ranger. Settling here in 1846 with a motherless daughter and son, he soon married Mary (Polly) Parks Rawlins, daughter of this . . . — Map (db m152608) HM
10Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 16923 — Rocky Crest School
In 1868, Lancaster’s first school for African American children opened in a former Confederate pistol factory. Soon after, “Lancaster Colored School” on Keller Branch served 73 students. In 1906, trustees allowed adults to offer night . . . — Map (db m152506) HM
11Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 6655 — Site of Confederate Arms Factory
Established by Joseph H. Sherrard, William L. Killem, Pleasant Taylor and John M. Crockett in 1862 to manufacture pistols for the State of Texas. — Map (db m152507) HM
12Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 6874 — St. Paul Freewill Baptist Church
According to oral tradition, this congregation was organized in 1870 by the freed Blacks of the Lancaster community. Land for a church building was acquired in the late 1870s, during the pastorate of the Rev. Augustus Ferrin, but the sanctuary was . . . — Map (db m152541) HM
13Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 6754 — The Town of Lancaster
Founded by A. Bledsoe (1801 - 1882), from Kentucky, joined by his son-in-law, Roderick A. Rawlins (1833 - 1910), and Mrs. Mildred Parks Rawlins (1789 - 1875). The elder Rawlins family came to this locality in 1844. Bledsoe, later to become Texas . . . — Map (db m152519) HM
14Texas (Dallas County), Lancaster — 6891 — W. A. Strain Home
This residence was built for W. A. (1861 - 1907) and Minnie (White) Strain (1867 - 1957), whose pioneer family bought this property in 1846. Begun in 1895, the structure was completed in late 1896. Noted architect James E. Flanders of the Dallas . . . — Map (db m152540) HM
 
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Nov. 8, 2020