Details for Alexander Cockrell_Sarah Horton Cockrell

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5113006654

Data

Marker Number 6654
Atlas Number 5113006654
Marker Title Alexander Cockrell_Sarah Horton Cockrell
Index Entry Cockrell, Alexander; Cockrell, Sarah Horton
Address
City Dallas
County Dallas
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 705313
UTM Northing 3628872
Subject Codes Business topics, general; pioneers; women, women's history topics; military topics
Marker Year 1973
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location South Houston St, south side of Dealey Plaza
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Alexander Cockrell (June 8, 1820 - April 3, 1858) Sarah Horton Cockrell (Jan. 13, 1819 - April 26, 1892) Alexander Cockrell came to Dallas area in 1845. After serving in the war with Mexico (1846-47), he filed on 640 acres in the Peters Colony, and married Sarah Horton on Sept. 9, 1847. Cockress operated a freight line to Houston, Jefferson, and Shreveport until 1852, when he purchased remainder of the Dallas townsite from John Neely Bryan (1810 - 1877), the "Father of Dallas." Cockrell promoted growth of the village in the mid-1850s by building a brick factory, a sawmill, and a bridge across the Trinity River, replacing a ferry he had bought from Bryan. Cockrell's influence on Dallas' prosperity ended April 3, 1858, when he met an untimely death in an altercation over an unpaid debt. Sarah Horton Cockrell became the first woman in Dallas to exert economic influence outside the home. She completed the unfinished St. Nicholas Hotel, and rebuilt it after the fire of July 8, 1860; operated the ferry after the bridge collapsed in 1858 until a new span was erected in 1872; and, added a flour mill and other businesses to the community. The Cockrells' enterprises played a vital role in the establishment of Dallas as an early regional trade center. (1973)

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