Details for McClure-McReynolds-Fowler Home

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5001008777

Data

Marker Number 8777
Atlas Number 5001008777
Marker Title McClure-McReynolds-Fowler Home
Index Entry McClure-McReynolds-Fowler Home
Address 921 N. Perry St.
City Palestine
County Anderson
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 251290
UTM Northing 3517788
Subject Codes houses, residential buildings
Marker Year 1970
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 921 N. Perry St., Palestine
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Built in 1849 by Judge Alexander E. McClure (1815 - 1870), who came from Tennessee to Texas in 1840 and lived for a number of years at Old Fort Houston. Judge McClure was the first district clerk in Anderson County, co-owner of the "Trinity Advocate," and one of the most prominent lawyers in East Texas. The house was purchased from the McClures in 1884 by Zachariah Aycock McReynolds (1846 - 1928), who immigrated to Texas in 1875 from Adairsville, Georgia. He was a Confederate veteran who had fought in the sieges at Vicksburg and Atlanta in the Civil War, 1861-1865. About 1890 the house was remodeled using the old timber, including well preserved hand-hewn sills. From 1880 to 1908, Z. A. McReynolds held the offices of district clerk, county clerk, county judge, tax collector, and postmaster. In 1934 Colonel Godfrey Rees Fowler (1876 - 1958) and his wife Ella Sue (McReynolds) returned to Palestine to retire to her old family home. Colonel Fowler was a grandson of Judge John H. Reagan (first Texas Railroad Commission chairman). Fowler had fought in the Spanish-American War, the Philippine insurrection, the Nicaraguan uprising, and World War I. The McClures and McReynoldses have been the only property owners since 1848. (1970)

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