Details for Old Texas Ranger Trail

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5019003823

Data

Marker Number 3823
Atlas Number 5019003823
Marker Title Old Texas Ranger Trail
Index Entry Texas Ranger Trail, Old
Address
City Bandera
County Bandera
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 493006
UTM Northing 3288487
Subject Codes roads; rangers; Native Americans
Marker Year 1968
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Corner of Main Street and Pecan Street, facing courthouse, Bandera.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text This winding, 100-mile trail from San Antonio to Kerrville was, during the 19th century, a strategic patrol road traveled by Texas Rangers to protect the surrounding area from hostile Indian attacks. During uneasy pioneer days roads such as this, regularly scouted by Rangers, helped promote early white settlement by strengthening frontier defense. Because Bandera was located midway on the trail and because Bandera Pass, 10 miles north, frequently harbored Indian ambushers, the town became a focal point for Ranger activities along the road. Perhaps the best-known battle to occur on the old route happened in Bandera Pass in the spring of 1841. At that time a company of 40 Texas Rangers, under intrepid Indian fighter Capt. "Jack" Hays, was on a scouting mission in the Guadalupe Mountains. Halfway through the pass, they were suddenly attacked by several hundred wild Comanches who lay hidden in the brush and behind boulders in the narrow gorge. A bloody fight ensued, much of it hand-to-hand combat with Bowie knives; but after their chief was slain, the Indians withdrew and finally escaped. Thus the Rangers and this trail helped remove the Indian menace and open the frontier across Texas. (1968)