Details for McLennan's Bluff

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5145003303

Data

Marker Number 3303
Atlas Number 5145003303
Marker Title McLennan's Bluff
Index Entry
Address CR 347
City Rosebud
County Falls
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 690181
UTM Northing 3438886
Subject Codes natual features; pioneers; Scottish immigrants/immigration
Marker Year 1986
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location From Rosebud, 1.5 mi. W on FM 1963, 0.5 mi. N on CR 347, E side of the road, NE side of Rosebud Lake. Marker reported damaged (cracked and leaning) Feb. 2020.
Private Property No
Marker Condition Damaged
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text Once known as "Sugar Loaf," this bluff overlooking Pond Creek was a landmark to early settlers in area. In 1835, Neil McLennan, a native of Scotland, built his home here, on land that had been granted to him as a member of Sterling Clack Robertson's Colony. The present town of Rosebud is located on part of Neil McLennan's land grant. McLennan's brother Laughlin settled his family about one mile north of this site. During the spring of 1836, Indians killed Laughlin McLennan, his wife and his mother, and captured three of his sons. As a result, the Neil McLennan family spent much of their ten years in Falls County in the nearby town of Nashville, a haven for settlers that had been begun by Sterling Robertson. In 1839, while a member of Capt. George Erath's scouting expedition, Neil McLennan first saw the territory that was to become McLennan County. He returned there in 1846, built a home, and lived there until his death in 1867. As part of the earliest Anglo settlement in this part of Texas, the McLennan family helped open the frontier for later immigrants. Their part in the area's history has been remembered with the naming of this bluff and the neighboring county. (1986)

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