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Historical Markers and War Memorials in Galveston TX 77550

 
"Old Red" image, Touch for more information
By Jim Evans, August 16, 2015
"Old Red"
GEOGRAPHIC SORT
1Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7539 — "Old Red"(Ashbel Smith Building)
Near The Strand Street east of 11th Street, on the left when traveling east.
First, and originally the only, building of University of Texas Medical Branch. Master architect Nicholas J. Clayton designed the massive Romanesque structure. It was dedicated October 5, 1891. Although rooms were almost devoid of equipment, . . . — Map (db m90111) HM
2Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 8240 — "The Cradle"
On Avenue O 1/2 at 29th Street, on the right when traveling west on Avenue O 1/2.
Building in which in 1891 Misses Betty Ballinger and Hally Bryan founded the Daughters of the Republic of Texas, a society for historical preservation. This Victorian structure was then library of "The Oaks," family home of the founders, who . . . — Map (db m59424) HM
3Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — [Galveston County] 1901-1965
Near 722 Moody Avenue at Winnie Street.
After 1900 the Port of Galveston emerged as the second largest in the United States. Following completion of a deep water channel to Texas City in 1904, the mainland’s major petroleum petro-chemical plants, tin smelter and allied industries, had . . . — Map (db m50098) HM
4Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — [Galveston County] Early History
Near Moody Avenue at Winnie Street.
General Xavier Mina, hoping to establish a settlement at what is now the Galveston County mainland, arrived and set up breastworks at Virginia Point in 1816. Between 1815 and 1817, three leaders of expeditions against Spanish Mexico, Mina, . . . — Map (db m143811) HM
5Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 11567 — SS Selma
Near Seawolf Parkway.
Steel shortages during World War I led the U.S. to build experimental concrete ships, the largest of which was the SS Selma, today partially submerged in Galveston Bay and visible from this site. It was built in Mobile, Alabama, and named to . . . — Map (db m127633) HM
6Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7513 — 1871 Thomas Jefferson League Building
Near Strand Street at 23rd Street, on the left when traveling west.
The Strand, known as "Wall Street of the Southwest," served as the central business district of early Galveston. A fire, set in 1869 to cover a robbery at Cohn Brothers, a clothing emporium, burned a mile wide area. It began at this site, once . . . — Map (db m65061) HM
7Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7478 — 1894 Grand Opera House
On Post Office Street just from 21st Street.
Designed by Frank Cox of New Orleans, this Romanesque revival structure served as an opera house, hotel, and restaurant when it opened for its first season in 1895. Converted to a movie theater in the 1920s, it was restored in the 1970s and 1980s . . . — Map (db m26968) HM
8Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7531 — A. Wilkins Miller Cottage
On Winnie Street west of 17th Street, on the right when traveling east.
A. Wilkins Miller had this residence built by Galveston contractor R.B. Garnett in 1895. As president of Miller & Vidor Lumber Co., one of the largest in the state, Miller was responsible for the growth of the timber industry in much of southeast . . . — Map (db m51226) HM
9Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 9917 — Adriance-Springer House
On Broadway Avenue J (State Highway 87) at 17th Street, on the right when traveling east on Broadway Avenue J.
This house was built in 1914 for the family of businessman John Adriance, who was instrumental in Galveston's early development. It was sold in 1929 to business and civic leader Oscar Springer, whose family continued to live here until 1960. . . . — Map (db m137983) HM
10Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 17947 — Albertson Home
On Avenue N 1/2 0 miles east of Moody Avenue, on the right when traveling east.
This historic house was built in 1870 by Charles Albertson in the Lost Bayou section of the current San Jacinto historical district. Albertson was a cotton buyer active in Galveston until 1900. The great storm of 1900 left the house seriously . . . — Map (db m143621) HM
11Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 9920 — American National Insurance Company
On 20th Street at Mechanic Street, in the median on 20th Street.
Founded in 1905 by Galveston business pioneer W. L. Moody, Jr. (1865-1954), American National opened for business on third floor of the Moody Building at 22nd and Strand streets in Galveston. At that time the home office staff numbered ten. By . . . — Map (db m55628) HM
12Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Armour & Company Building1916
On 23rd Street south of Harborside Drive (State Highway 275), on the right when traveling south.
When Galveston was founded in 1836, this entire city block was set aside for use by the Republic of Texas as the site of a customs house. Gail Borden, the inventor of condensed milk, was the first Collector of Customs for the Republic in Galveston. . . . — Map (db m130423) HM
13Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 9924 — Ashton Villa, 1859
On Broadway (Avenue J) at 24th Street, on the right when traveling west on Broadway (Avenue J).
Mediterranean style architecture. European materials. Confederate and Federal headquarters in Civil War. Recorded Texas Historic Landmark - 1967 — Map (db m56219) HM
14Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 58 — Baden-Sproule House
On 37th Street at Avenue P 1/2, on the right when traveling south on 37th Street.
Designed by noted Galveston architect Nicholas J. Clayton, this house was built in 1899 by Ida B. Baden on land once known as Thomas Borden's farm. West Island landowner John D. Settle sold Miss Baden the land and assisted her in the architectural . . . — Map (db m59425) HM
15Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Battle of Galveston
Near Wharf Road 0.1 miles west of 21st Street.
As part of the Union blockade of the Texas coast, Commander W. B. Renshaw led his small fleet into Galveston harbor to demand the surrender of this most important Texas port on October 4, 1862. Largely unguarded, as it was considered indefensible, . . . — Map (db m36154) HM
16Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Berlocher Row1858
On Mechanic Street west of 23rd Street, on the left when traveling west.
One of the earliest commercial blocks in Galveston, this row of three three-story brick buildings was constructed for John Berlocher by builder John Brown. The easternmost building, 2309 Mechanic, was erected in 1858. The westernmost, 2315 Mechanic, . . . — Map (db m127493) HM
17Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 11572 — Bernard Moore Temple(November 4, 1843 - October 5, 1901)
Near Avenue K west of 40th Street.
Virginia-born B. M. Temple served in the Confederate army during the Civil War (1861-1865), then moved west to begin a noted career in civil engineering. As Chief Engineer for the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railroad, 1879-1884, he . . . — Map (db m127583) HM
18Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Bernardo de Galvez1746-1786
Near Seawall Boulevard at 21st Street Rear, on the right when traveling south.
Supported the American Revolution by defeating the British along the Gulf Coast. He had Texas Longhorn cattle driven to Louisiana to aid his campaign - thus giving Texas a connection with the American Revolution. — Map (db m71154) HM
19Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 13815 — Best-Lucas House
On Sealy Avenue east of 12th Street, on the right when traveling east.
Catherine Best purchased this site in February 1866. In July of that year, sister-in-law Anne Best, wife of Louis Best, bought the improved lot from Catherine and her husband, William, a carpenter by trade. More improvements had been made by 1871, . . . — Map (db m140049) HM
20Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 12810 — Boddeker House
On Broadway (State Highway 87) west of 11th Street, on the right when traveling west.
The son of German immigrants, Joseph Boddeker came to Galveston with his parents about 1850. After service in the Civil War, he worked as a riverboat pilot and purchased this lot for his family home in the 1870s. When the original Boddeker House was . . . — Map (db m140061) HM
21Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7527 — C. F. Marschner Building
On Mechanic Street east of 20th Street, on the right when traveling west.
Erected in 1905-06 by local contractor Otto Haase, this building housed the Texas Bottling Works and the family residence of C. F. and Marie Marschner. Shortly before the completion of the building, C. F. Marschner died. His widow inherited the . . . — Map (db m55632) HM
22Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7449 — Captain William S. Fisher
On Avenue K west of 40th Street, on the right when traveling east.
Born in Virginia. Captain of a company at San Jacinto, 1836 and in command of the Mier Expedition, 1842. Died in Galveston in 1845. — Map (db m127598) HM
23Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 17278 — Carl and Hilda Biehl House
On Broadway Avenue J east of 15th Street, on the right when traveling west.
In 1902, Galveston was still recovering from the most devastating hurricane in recorded history. Many buildings were badly damaged, including the house at 1416 Broadway. In the early 1900s, Carl Christian Biehl immigrated to Galveston from Germany. . . . — Map (db m138002) HM
24Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 107 — Carmelo "Charles" Bertolino(September 4, 1887 - March 8, 1960)
On Seawall Boulevard at 10th Street, on the right when traveling east on Seawall Boulevard.
Born in Galveston in 1887, Carmelo Bertolino was the son of Salvatore Bertolino (d.1891) and Rosalia Trapani Bertolino (d.1942), who immigrated to Texas from Palermo, Italy in the early 1880s. Salvatore Bertolino drowned in Galveston Bay when . . . — Map (db m51271) HM
25Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7182 — Catherine Isabel Cox Sherman
On Avenue K east of 43rd Street, on the right when traveling east.
Wife of General Sidney Sherman Born April 27, 1815 Died January 20, 1865 — Map (db m127533) HM
26Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Central Wharf1840
On Kempner Street at Harborside Drive (State Highway 275), on the right when traveling north on Kempner Street.
In early Galveston much of the waterfront activity centered around these wharves. In 1854, the Galveston wharves were consolidated under the present Wharf Company, but the first wharves were built by private citizens. Menard's Wharf at the foot of . . . — Map (db m130425) HM
27Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Clarke & Courts BuildingNational Register of Historic Places
On Mechanic Street west of 24th Street, on the right when traveling west.
Clarke and Courts Building 2400 Mechanic Built in 1890 Listed in the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Department of the Interior — Map (db m130426) HM
28Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 8234 — Clarke-Jockusch Home
Near Sealy Avenue near 18th Street, on the right when traveling west. Reported missing.
This large Victorian home was built in 1895 by Captain Charles Clarke, a prominent figure in the Galveston shipping industry. In 1928 the house was purchased by grain exporter Julius W. Jockusch, who served as consul in Belgium and later . . . — Map (db m57411) HM
29Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7188 — Confederate Mariner: Leon Smith
On Moody Avenue (21st Street) at Avenue H, on the right when traveling north on Moody Avenue (21st Street).
"Lion" of Texas coastal defense during the Civil War. Commanded marine department of military district. Born in New England, went to sea at 13. By age 20 was a captain. In 1850's commanded on the Galveston to New Orleans run of Southern Mail . . . — Map (db m36129) HM
30Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 8237 — Congregation B'nai Israel Synagogue
On 22nd Street at Sealy Avenue, on the right when traveling north on 22nd Street.
Erected in 1870. Cultural and religious center for 85 years. Second oldest temple in Texas. Converted to Masonic Temple in 1953. Henry Cohen, rabbi from 1888-1950, was noted advisor and beloved humanitarian to the entire city. . . . — Map (db m150151) HM
31Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Custom House, Post Office and United States Court House
On Postoffice Street (Avenue E) east of 20th Street, on the right when traveling east.
Authorized by The Congress of the United States * March 4, 1854 * Construction completed * March 31, 1864 * This was the first building erected by the United States of America for civil uses in the State of Texas . . . — Map (db m118965) HM
32Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 9 — David Ayers(August 10, 1793-October 25, 1881)
Near Avenue K west of 40th Street.
A veteran of the War of 1812, David Ayers brought his family to Texas in 1833. On behalf of the American Bible Society, they distributed bibles to new settlers. Settling first in San Patricio, Ayers moved to Washington County, where he became a . . . — Map (db m127585) HM
33Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Davidson Building1890
On Ship Mechanic Row Street west of 23rd Street, on the left when traveling west.
During the last quarter of the 19th century Galveston Island was a major center of commerce for the Southwestern United States. Finished goods arrived at Galveston's natural deep water port from across the world, while cotton and other raw . . . — Map (db m118997) HM
34Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 16848 — Davidson-Penland House
On Postoffice Street west of 12th Street, on the right when traveling east.
Constructed between 1866 and 1868, this house belonged to a number of significant Galveston residents. Captain John Davidson, an immigrant from Norway and early Galveston settler, built it. In 1870, two years after Davidson died in an attempt to . . . — Map (db m140036) HM
35Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Dignified Resignation
Near Moody Avenue south of Winnie Street, on the left when traveling south.
Erected to the Soldiers and Sailors of the Confederate States of America by The Veuve Jefferson Davis Chapter No. 17, United Daughters of the Confederacy 1911 Galveston Texas ”There has never been an armed force which in . . . — Map (db m118299) WM
36Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7450 — Dr. Frederick K. and Lucy Adelaide Fisher House
On Bernardo de Galvez Avenue at 35th Street, on the right when traveling east on Bernardo de Galvez Avenue.
Dr. Frederick K. Fisher (1852-1920) and his wife Lucy Adelaide (Selkirk) (1856-1939) purchased this property in February 1888 and had this house built that same year. Both members of pioneer Texas families, the Fishers were active in local civic . . . — Map (db m142759) HM
37Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7435 — Eaton Memorial Chapel
On 22nd Street at Ball Street, on the left when traveling north on 22nd Street.
Designed by noted architect Nicholas Clayton. Gothic revival style. Dedicated as memorial in 1882 to the Rev. Benjamin Eaton, founding rector, 1841-71. Half of funds provided by the Ladies' Parochial Society; half by financier Henry Rosenberg. . . . — Map (db m58134) HM
38Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Exploration
Near Moody Avenue near Winnie Street.
The first recorded history of Galveston Island occurred in 1528 with the shipwreck of Cabeza de Vaca and his crewmen. They were survivors of Alvarez de Pineda’s ill-fated expedition to Florida and were held captive here by the Karankawa Indians. De . . . — Map (db m143812) HM
39Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Federal Building 1857
On 20th Street south of Postoffice Street (Avenue E), on the right when traveling north.
In 1854, a congressional appropriation was secured for the erection of a government building in Galveston for the customs, post office departments, the United States Court, and the United States Marshal. Three lots on the southeast corner . . . — Map (db m118960) HM
40Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7537 — First Navy of the Republic of Texas
Near 20th Street 0.1 miles north of Wharf Road, on the left when traveling north.
Dedicated to the First Navy of the Republic of Texas Established by Governor Henry Smith November 25th, 1835 The Fleet Brutus • Independence Liberty • Invincible Commemorating the heroism of its personnel . . . — Map (db m65031) HM WM
41Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7444 — First Presbyterian ChurchFirst Church in Galveston
On 19th Street at Church Street, on the right when traveling south on 19th Street.
Organized New Year's Day, 1840, in the "Academy," an old building on the northwest corner of this intersection. Rev. John McCullough, church organizer, became pastor. Original building was finished 1843; present structure started 1872; . . . — Map (db m51228) HM
42Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7484 — Former Site of Heidenheimer's Castle
On Sealy Avenue at 16th Street, on the right when traveling west on Sealy Avenue.
In 1857 John S. Sydnor (1812-1869), former Galveston mayor, built the original two-story, eight-room structure at this site. Samson Heidenheimer (1834-1891) bought it in 1884. The German-born Heidenheimer began with a $100 loan and built a fortune . . . — Map (db m128845) HM
43Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Fort San Jacinto
On Seawall Boulevard at Boddecker Drive, on the left when traveling east on Seawall Boulevard.
The northeastern tip of Galveston Island has seen defense fortifications since the early 1800's. Crude Spanish and French forts (1816-1818) gave way to small sand forts and batteries constructed by the Republic of Texas from 1836 to 1844. In 1863 . . . — Map (db m78508) HM
44Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 11889 — Franklin-Wandless House
On Avenue M at 20th Street, on the right when traveling west on Avenue M.
Built in 1886 to replace a house destroyed in the great Strand fire, this was the home of Robert Morris and Sarah Franklin. Robert Franklin (1839-1923) was the son of Benjamin C. Franklin, the Battle of San Jacinto veteran for whom Franklin County . . . — Map (db m59423) HM
45Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7454 — Frederich-Erhard House
On Ball Street at 14th Street, on the right when traveling west on Ball Street.
Galveston native and banker William John Frederich, Sr. (1852-1898), had this house built for his family in 1894. After his death, his widow Jeanne sold the home to his nephew, Frederich William Erhard, in 1909. The home remained in the Erhard . . . — Map (db m59378) HM
46Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 64 — Fredrick William Beissner House
On 17th Street at Ball Street, on the right when traveling south on 17th Street.
Designed by Galveston architect William H. Roystone for local real estate agent Frederick William Beissner (1854-1905) and his wife Mary, this Victorian-era home was built in 1888. Its elaborate Eastlake details include turned posts, jigsawn porch . . . — Map (db m60498) HM
47Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 13269 — Galveston Artillery Club
Near 31st Street at Avenue N 1/2, on the left when traveling north.
By 1840, a year after its incorporation, the city of Galveston was home to approximately 1,200 residents, the entry point for scores of immigrants and a major coastal shipping port. Ongoing tensions between the young Republic of Texas and Mexico had . . . — Map (db m59444) HM
48Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7458 — Galveston Children's Home
On 21st Street, on the right when traveling south.
Founded in 1878 by George Dealey (1829-1891), the Galveston Children's Home moved to this location in 1880. Henry Rosenberg gave money to construct a massive Gothic revival building here in 1894-95. It was destroyed by the storm of 1900. Newspaper . . . — Map (db m51269) HM
49Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Galveston County Communities
Near Avenue H east of Moody Avenue, on the right when traveling west.
Communities of Galveston County were established as follows: Algoa was named following the 1900 storm for a British Tanker which ran aground there. Alta Loma was given the Spanish Name, “High Ground,” by a development . . . — Map (db m118298) HM
50Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7468 — Galveston Garten Verein
On Avenue O at 27th Street, on the right when traveling west on Avenue O.
In design of a Teutonic Club; all stockholders were of German descent. Center for city's social life, 1876-1923, complex had an octagonal dance pavilion, tennis courts, bowling and tenpin alleys, bandstand, fountains. The complex was site of . . . — Map (db m56238) HM
51Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 13717 — Galveston Historical Foundation
On Post Office Street at 20th Street, on the right when traveling east on Post Office Street.
In 1871, twelve men formed the Galveston Historical Society to preserve the history of Texas by collecting important documents. The group and its archive grew, but in 1880, the secretary died, telling no one where to find the collection. In 1885, . . . — Map (db m118966) HM
52Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Galveston Immigration Stations
On Strand St., on the right when traveling west.
Galveston was the port of entry for thousands of immigrants who settled in Texas and the southwest. Federal laws enacted in 1875 ended the unrestricted entry of immigrants into the country and led to the establishment of the area's first U.S. . . . — Map (db m30449) HM
53Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7457 — Galveston in the Republic of Texas
On Moody Avenue (21st Street) at Avenue G, on the right when traveling north on Moody Avenue (21st Street).
Galveston Island, for centuries a crossroads for Indians, privateers, Spanish and French explorers, for a time was capital of the Republic of Texas. This was during the Texas War for Independence, when Santa Anna was making his 1836 invasion. On . . . — Map (db m36130) HM
54Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7470 — Galveston Island
Near Ferry Road (State Highway 87) 0.2 miles north of Avalon Way.
Few spots have played a more exciting role in the life of Texas than Galveston Island. Cabeza de Vaca, the Spanish explorer, wrote of the cannibalistic Karankawa Indians when he was shipwrecked here in 1528. The island became headquarters for . . . — Map (db m70785) HM
55Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7471 — Galveston Medical College(originally located one mile west)
Near The Strand Street east of 11th Street.
First medical college in Texas and predecessor of the University of Texas Medical Branch, the school opened in 1865 as a branch of Soule University at Chappell Hill. Although equipment during the first session consisted of one skeleton, one . . . — Map (db m87301) HM
56Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7473 — Galveston Office of the National Weather Service
On 25th Street at Avenue F, on the right when traveling south on 25th Street.
First weather service office in Texas, and one of first in the United States; established April 19, 1871, slightly over a year after Congress passed an act in Feb. 1870 creating the Public Weather Service of the United States under the Army Signal . . . — Map (db m56267) HM
57Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 1826 — Galveston Orphans Home
On Moody Avenue south of Avenue M Rear, on the right when traveling south.
The Island City Orphans Home of the 1870s and 1880s was created to provide refuge for Protestant and Jewish children in Galveston. The orphanage operated out of its original wooden structure for the next twelve years, narrowly escaping destruction . . . — Map (db m103074) HM
58Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7474 — Galveston Quarantine Stations
Near Seawolf Parkway.
Unregulated entry of immigrants through the Port of Galveston in the late 1830s greatly contributed to local outbreaks of yellow fever and other communicable diseases. The young city instituted quarantine measures in 1839 and in 1853 built Texas' . . . — Map (db m127634) HM
59Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Galveston World War I Honor Roll
On Seawall Boulevard east of 28th Street, on the left when traveling east.
1917   Honor Roll   1918 We with uncovered head salute the sacred dead who went and who return not. McDonald, Margaret • Astal, Douglas N. • Berg, George • Bone, Albert R. • Brown, William H. • Burke, C.T. • Carrague, Michael T. • . . . — Map (db m90705) WM
60Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7459 — Galveston, C. S. A.
Near North Holiday Drive, on the right when traveling south.
Most important Texas seaport during the Civil War. Had consulates of England, France and Spain and worldwide recognition as a cotton exporter. Set up defenses including 10 mud forts and gun batteries on beaches, at railroad depot and on Pelican . . . — Map (db m59397) HM
61Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7460 — Galveston: Gateway to Texas
Near Seawolf Parkway.
From the time of the earliest documented history, the Gulf of Mexico has been the main point of entry into Texas. Some settlers of the 1820s even came by keelboat, going ashore along the way to kill game, in the same way an overland party would live . . . — Map (db m127635) HM
62Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7183 — General Sidney Sherman
On Broadway at 7th Street, in the median on Broadway.
Born in Massachusetts July 26. 1805. Came to Texas February 1836 as captain of a company of volunteers he had recruited in Kentucky and Ohio. Commanded the second regiment of volunteers at San Jacinto. First to sound the immortal war cry opening the . . . — Map (db m49823) HM
63Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 278 — George Campbell Childress(January 8, 1804 - October 6, 1841)
Near Moody Avenue at Winnie Street, on the left when traveling south.
Born into a prominent Nashville, Tennessee, family, George Campbell Childress attended Davidson Academy (later the University of Nashville). He was admitted to the bar in 1828, the same year he married Margaret Vance. She died in 1835, soon after . . . — Map (db m50006) HM
64Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 325 — George Campbell Childress
On Avenue K west of 40th Street, on the right when traveling east.
. . . — Map (db m127601) HM
65Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7428 — George Dealey(Jan. 20, 1829 - March 31, 1891)
On 21st Street near Avenue M, on the right when traveling south.
Born in Liverpool, England, George Dealey moved to Galveston in 1870 with his wife, Mary Ann (Nellins) Dealey (1829-1913), and their nine children. Dealey was a deeply religious man, who engaged in many charitable activities. In 1878 he persuaded . . . — Map (db m87269) HM
66Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7453 — George Fox House
On Ball Street at 14th Street, on the right when traveling west on Ball Street.
Shortly after the Civil War George Fox (d. 1906) joined his father's Galveston bakery, established in 1837. A successful merchant by the turn of the century, Fox built this home for his wife Elizabeth (Benison) and family about 1903. It probably . . . — Map (db m138003) HM
67Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7181 — George Seeligson Home
On Avenue H west of 12th Street, on the right when traveling west. Reported missing.
Galveston-born George Seeligson (1841-1912) was a prominent local merchant. In 1872 he married Maria Davenport (1847-1928). He built this 1875 house on another lot in this block. Like many fine Galveston homes, it combines Greek Revival and . . . — Map (db m143569) HM
68Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7477 — Grace Episcopal Church
On 36th Street at Avenue L, on the right when traveling south on 36th Street.
Founded 1874 as a mission of Trinity Church. In 1876 became an independent parish under the Rev. Jeremiah Ward, Rector. Dedicated in 1895 by Bishop G. H. Kinsolving, the building was made possible by a bequest from civic leader Henry Rosenberg. . . . — Map (db m56226) HM
69Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Greenleve, Block & Co. Building1882
On Strand Street west of 23rd Street, on the right when traveling west.
This building, designed by Nicholas J. Clayton, was erected in 1882 for the wholesale drygoods firm of Greenleve, Block & Co. at a cost of $65,000. It was built of Philadelphia pressed brick and cut stone, with supportive and decorative iron columns . . . — Map (db m130413) HM
70Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7433 — Greensville S. Dowell(September 1822 - June 9, 1881)
Near Avenue K east of 43rd Street.
Virginia native Dr. Greensville S. Dowell moved to Texas in 1853. During the Civil War he served as a surgeon in the Confederate army in Galveston. He was instrumental in the founding of the Galveston Medical Society, Texas Medical College and . . . — Map (db m127582) HM
71Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7480 — Gulf, Colorado,& Santa Fe Railway Company
On Santa Fe Place at 26th Street, on the right when traveling west on Santa Fe Place.
In 1874 Galveston County voters narrowly approved $500,000 in bonds to finance construction of a railroad line from the city of Galveston that would bypass Houston, its business rival, and reach across Texas and beyond to Santa Fe, New Mexico. Henry . . . — Map (db m59386) HM
72Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7482 — Hagemann-Cobb House
On Avenue L at 33rd Street, on the right when traveling east on Avenue L.
This elaborate Italianate-Queen Anne style house was built in 1892 by Galveston grocer John Hagemann and his wife Jerusha. In 1932 the home was purchased by Thomas and Laura Ella Cobb. A city health inspector, Cobb was the head of the local Brewer's . . . — Map (db m56209) HM
73Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7485 — Heidenheimer-Hunter Building
Near Kempner Street. Reported missing.
Built in 1878 as a commercial venture by Samson Heidenheimer (d. 1891), this building was first occupied by the George Seeligson Wholesale Grocery business. It was leased to H. Marwitz & Co. in 1880. Owned by Hermann Marwitz, the company did . . . — Map (db m153330) HM
74Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Hendley Row1859
On Strand Street west of 20th Street, on the right when traveling west.
The Firm of William Hendley & Co. was founded in 1845. The partnership consisted of William Hendley, Capt. Joseph J. Hendley, John L. Sleight, and Phillip Gildersleeve. This firm, with Brower and Neilson of New York, started the "Texas and New . . . — Map (db m119195) HM
75Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7487 — Hendley's Row
On Strand Street west of 20th Street, on the right when traveling west.
The commercial house of William Hendley & Co. was established in 1845 by William Hendley (1798-1873), his brother Joseph J. Hendley (d. 1887), John L. Sleight (1810-73), and Phillip Gildersleeve (1819-53). At the same time, they started the Texas . . . — Map (db m65072) HM
76Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7488 — Henry C. Henck, Jr. House
On Avenue N-1/2 west of 20th Street, on the left when traveling east.
Built in 1893 as rental property, this house was an early investment of brothers August J. and Henry C. Henck, Jr., who began a real estate business in Galveston in 1901. H. C. Henck, Jr. chose it as his own residence in 1898, and it remained in the . . . — Map (db m139975) HM
77Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7501 — Henry Journeay
Near Avenue K west of 40th Street.
Who served in the Army of Texas, 1836 and was a member of the Mier Expedition, 1842 Born in New York June 23, 1815 Died July 2, 1870 — Map (db m127602) HM
78Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7165 — Henry Rosenberg Home
Near 13th Street. Reported missing.
Built 1859. Architectural and historical interest: formerly widely known for its art treasures and paintings. Much of the materials were imported from Switzerland. Elegant in design. Handcarved-plaster ceilings. Has 8 marble fireplaces. Outside . . . — Map (db m153284) HM
79Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7494 — Hotel Galvez
Near Seawall Boulevard.
Built at a cost of $1,000,000, this hotel was financed by local businessmen and public subscribers to help the economy of Galveston following the 1900 hurricane. Completed in 1911, it was designed by the St. Louis firm of Mauran and Russell. The . . . — Map (db m35925) HM
80Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 14875 — Hutchings House
On Avenue O at 29th Street, on the right when traveling west on Avenue O.
John Henry Hutchings was born in North Carolina in 1822. After living in New Orleans for several years, he moved to Galveston in 1845. Two years later he entered into a partnership with John Sealy to sell dry goods in Sabine Pass. They returned to . . . — Map (db m56275) HM
81Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7495 — Hutchings House
Near Avenue O at 29th Street, on the right when traveling west.
Erected in 1856 for businessman John Henry Hutchings and his new wife Minnie (Knox), this structure was designed to resemble an Italian villa. It was damaged in an 1885 storm, and noted architect Nicholas Clayton did the extensive repair and . . . — Map (db m56276) HM
82Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — Hutchings, Sealy & Co.1897
On Strand Street east of 24th Street, on the right when traveling west.
This impressive building contains grey and pink granite, red Texas sandstone, and buff colored terra cotta. Designed in the Neo-Renaissance style by Galveston architect Nicholas J. Clayton, it was built in 1895 for the banking firm of Ball, . . . — Map (db m119197) HM
83Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7496 — Hutchings, Sealy & Co. Buildings
On Strand Street at 24th Street, on the right when traveling west on Strand Street.
Four decades after joining in partnership, George Ball, John Henry Hutchings, and John Sealy employed prominent Galveston architect Nicholas J. Clayton to design office buildings for their Ball, Hutchings & Co. commission and banking operations. . . . — Map (db m70556) HM
84Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7505 — Isaac H. and Henrietta Kempner House
On Broadway Avenue J (State Highway 87) at 15th Street, on the right when traveling west on Broadway Avenue J.
At the time of his death in 1894 Polish immigrant Harris Kempner, age 57, was a leading Galveston businessman with interests in banking, insurance, railroads, and cotton. Isaac Herbert Kempner, age 21 and the eldest of Harris Kempner's eight . . . — Map (db m137967) HM
85Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7520 — Isabella Offenbach Maas Residence
On Sealy Avenue at 18th Street, on the right when traveling east on Sealy Avenue.
Built in 1886, this residence was shared by Isabella O. Maas and her daughter and son-in-law, Rosana and Nathan Redlich. Active in civic and charitable organizations, Mrs. Maas lived here until her death in 1891. Dr. W.C. Fisher, city health . . . — Map (db m138041) HM
86Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7517 — J. Levy & Bro.
On Broadway at Kempner Street, on the right when traveling west on Broadway.
Joseph Levy (1844-1922) with his brother Bernard "Ben" Levy (1849-1908) established the J. Levy & Bro. livery business in Galveston in 1868. Raised in the family livestock business in the French region of Alsace, the Levy brothers came to America . . . — Map (db m157711) HM
87Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7186 — J.F. Smith House
On Broadway 0.1 miles east of 23rd Street, on the right when traveling east.
Designed by Nathaniel Tobey, Jr., and built in 1884 for the family of John Francis Smith, this house is an excellent example of Italianate architecture. Prominent features of the house include paired brackets, a bay window, balcony, and hood . . . — Map (db m142589) HM
88Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 16682 — Jack Johnson
On Avenue M at 26th Street, on the right when traveling east on Avenue M.
Galveston native Arthur John "Jack" Johnson (1878-1946) was the first African American World Heavyweight Boxing Champion. He grew up in Galveston's East End and honed his fighting skills working on the wharves. During the 1900 storm, Johnson . . . — Map (db m154257) HM
89Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 9922 — Jackie Andrews Private School
Near Church Street west of 18th Street, on the left when traveling west. Reported missing.
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark - 1962 — Map (db m142556) HM
90Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7532 — Jacobs Home
On Church Street east of Christopher Columbus Boulevard, on the left when traveling west.
In 1884, Mrs. Barbara Lenz (Lentz) Jacobs (1831-1908), the widow of Christopher Jacobs, purchased a small cottage on this lot from Ferdinand and Caroline Möller (Miller). In 1885, Mrs. Jacobs, a prominent midwife, built a new, two-story house . . . — Map (db m140395) HM
91Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7519 — James Love(1795-1874)
On 40th Street at Avenue K, on the right when traveling south on 40th Street.
A veteran of the War of 1812, James Love, a lawyer, came to Texas in 1837 with his wife Lucy (Ballinger). He helped found Galveston, and was a political ally of Mirabeau B. Lamar. Love served as a delegate to the 1845 Annexation Convention, judge of . . . — Map (db m50031) HM
92Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7426 — James N. Davis House
On 24th Street south of Avenue M, on the right when traveling south.
James Nathaniel "Nat" Davis (d. 1902) built this two-story galleried residence in 1899. The designer was Charles W. Bulger, a Galveston architect. As a reporter for the Galveston Daily News, Davis wrote some of the earliest accounts of the . . . — Map (db m140046) HM
93Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 18526 — James S. Waters House
On Church Street 0.1 miles west of 11th Street, on the right when traveling west.
The East End Historic District, which initiated development in the area immediately east of Galveston’s Downtown Business District, saw its busiest period of construction during the last two decades of the 19th century. Many of the city’s . . . — Map (db m142535) HM
94Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7508 — Jean Lafitte
On Harborside Drive, on the left when traveling west.
Notorious pirate. Settled here in 1817 with his buccaneers and ships; under Mexican flag, continued his forays against Spanish shipping in the Gulf. On this site, he built his home, Maison Rouge (Red House), which was part of his fort; and upper . . . — Map (db m143632) HM
95Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7489 — John and Eliza Hertford House
On Broadway Avenue J (State Highway 87) east of 16th Street, on the right when traveling east.
John and Eliza Hertford bought three lots at this site in 1867 and built this house by 1869, the year of John's death. Eliza and her children continued to reside here until 1878. This house, originally a Greek revival-influenced design, was later . . . — Map (db m137973) HM
96Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7525 — John Bankhead Magruder(August 15, 1810 - February 19, 1871)
Near 40th Street at Avenue K.
Virginia native John Bankhead Magruder graduated from the U.S. Military Academy at West Point in 1830. For meritorious service in the Mexican War (1846-48) Magruder was promoted to lieutenant colonel. He later resigned from the U.S. Army to join . . . — Map (db m50047) HM
97Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7498 — John M. Jones House
On Avenue M at 18th Street, on the right when traveling east on Avenue M.
John Maxwell Jones, a native of Delaware, came to Galveston in 1839 and opened a jewelry store on The Strand. Active in area commerce, he helped organize the First National Bank of Galveston. His wife Henrietta was the daughter of French composer . . . — Map (db m142546) HM
98Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 11583 — John Overton Trueheart(ca. 1802-March 13, 1874)
Near Avenue K east of 43rd Street.
After coming to Texas from Virginia about 1838, John Trueheart received a land grant for his service with Jack Hays' Rangers. He then began a partnership in a Galveston General Land Agency with Memucan Hunt and returned to Virginia for his wife Anne . . . — Map (db m127581) HM
99Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7187 — John Smith House
On 36th Street at Avenue L, on the right when traveling north on 36th Street.
Irish immigrant and Galveston police officer John Smith had this home constructed at 3601 Post Office Street in 1890, where it later served to shelter victims of the 1900 storm. It was moved to this site in 1927. The home features an unusual . . . — Map (db m143612) HM
100Texas (Galveston County), Galveston — 7168 — Julius H. Ruhl Residence
On Sealy Avenue at 15th Street, on the right when traveling west on Sealy Avenue.
A native of Prussia, Julius H. Ruhl came to Galveston in 1872. He served as cashier and clerk for the mercantile firm of Kauffman & Runge until his death in 1882. This home, which Ruhl had constructed in 1874-75, remained in his family until 1962. . . . — Map (db m57449) HM

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Nov. 25, 2020