Details for Flower Mound

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5121001926

Data

Marker Number 1926
Atlas Number 5121001926
Marker Title Flower Mound
Index Entry Flower Mound
Address
City Flower Mound
County Denton
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 680551
UTM Northing 3654452
Subject Codes cities and towns; geology
Marker Year 1984
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location on Flower Mound Road (FM 3040) just east of intersection with Long Prairie Road (FM 2499), Flower Mound
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Settlers of the Peters Colony named this smooth, dome-shaped hill for the abundant wild flowers that grow on it. Rising fifty feet above the surrounding prairie, Flower Mound, long has been a point of interest in the area. According to local legends, no structure was ever constructed on top of the mound, nor has any tree grown here. Before W. S. Peters began bringing settlers to the land issued him by the Republic of Texas Congress, Wichita Indians inhabited the area. During the 1840s, Peters colonists began moving to the prairie in search of good farmland. In 1844, John R. Wizwell was granted 640 acres of land that included the mound. His widow, Edy, later remarried and sold this land to George L. Beavers. Flower Mound remained in the Beavers family well into the twentieth century. Although the hill has remained in private ownership, it historically has been identified with the community that grew up around it. Flower Mound Presbyterian Church was the first to officially use the name in 1854. Once a sprawling agricultural community, Flower Mound has begun to expand with the urban growth of nearby Dallas and Fort Worth, leaving this formation as a historic reminder of its pioneer days. (1984)

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