Details for Cyrus Maxwell Campbell

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5000018936

Data

Marker Number 18936
Atlas Number 5000018936
Marker Title Cyrus Maxwell Campbell
Index Entry Campbell, Cyrus Maxwell
Address 1873 N. 1st St.
City Temple
County Bell
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 659175
UTM Northing 3443241
Subject Codes businesses; merchants; lumber topics; cities and towns; planning and development; military topics; Civil War; agriculture
Marker Year 2018
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Hillcrest Cemetery. Maxwell family plot is near the center of the cemetery.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text (September 14, 1839 - January 27, 1921) Born to Cyrus C. Campbell (1810-1883) and Rebecca Elizabeth Robbins (1818-1846), Cyrus Maxwell Campbell was raised near Travis (Austin County). At the age of 21, he enlisted in the Confederate army at the beginning of the Civil War, serving in the Lone Star Rifles and later Company F, 16th Texas Infantry Regiment, where he achieved the rank of captain. Following the war, Campbell's father gave him a 100-acre tract in Washington County, which Cyrus began improving with the aid of Freedmen. On December 29, 1867, he married Lydia Ann "Annie" Dever (1845-1912), and they raised cattle and hogs on their farm. Campbell dabbled in politics and was a partner in a mercantile business but, by 1883, he sold his holdings and settled in Belton with his wife and children with intentions of launching a lumber business, C.M. Campbell & Sons Lumber. By 1888, Campbell, with partner Irwin A. Lovitt (1854-1920), opened Campbell & Lovitt Lumber in Temple. The Belton and Temple stores prospered, and Campbell expanded to Killeen, San Antonio and other locations. In 1896, Campbell moved his family to Temple and built a stately home on North Main Street. His sons later managed several of the family lumber yards. The Campbells' lumber enterprises flourished, spurred by the county's remarkable growth and the subsequent need for lumber. However, by the 1930s, amid the Depression, the company closed. Cyrus Campbell was among a group of entrepreneurs who assisted the growth and development of Bell County, transforming it from tent cities to permanent communities. (2018)

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