Details for Santa Anna, C.S.A.

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5083004573

Data

Marker Number 4573
Atlas Number 5083004573
Marker Title Santa Anna, C.S.A.
Index Entry Santa Anna, C.S.A.
Address 704 Wallis Avenue
City Santa Anna
County Coleman
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 469280
UTM Northing 3511803
Subject Codes cities and towns; Civil War; Native Americans
Marker Year 1965
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location 704 Wallis Avenue, Santa Anna Visitor Center, courtyard and gazebo
Private Property
Marker Condition
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Mountain and town named in honor of man in power here in 1840's, a Comanche chief friendly to Texans. Santa Anna in 1846 visited President Polk in Washington during U.S. negotiations to annex Texas. Also signed and kept until his death of cholera in 1849 peace treaties that allowed the German Emigration Company to settle lands north of the Llano River. Comanches used Santa Anna peaks as signal points. Early surveyors, travelers, explorers and settlers took them as guide points. In 1857, nearby United States Cavalry at Camp Colorado kept lookouts here. In the Civil War, 1861-65, frontier kept lookouts here. At foot of mountain, with sentries on heights watching at the pass the military road from San Antonio northeastward to Fort Belknap, a strategic outpost guarding Texas from invasion by Indians and Federal troops. During the 1870's thousands of longhorns went through the gap, over the western cattle trail. In 1879, "The Gap" had a store and post office to supply the cattle drives. When Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe built here in 1886, settlers moved from The Gap to the railroad, starting the present town. Quarries in the mountain yield fine sands for the manufacturing of glass. (1965)

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